Secretly pleased, she hopes that perhaps this arrangement might lead to more than friendship. But Hank’s loved hard and lost, with his engagement to one of the popular town girls going south two years earlier. He’s sworn to never lose his heart to another—including Miss Lucy Thoroughgood.
A teenage orphan, Chayton, could be the key to thawing Hank’s heart—but danger follows the embittered boy. Will Hank be able to give Chayton the home he yearns for—or will the boy’s past bring only sorrow to those he cares for? When a Lakota premonition becomes reality, Lucy’s life hangs in the balance. Will Hank have the chance to let Lucy know how wrong he was?
EXCERPT
In the quiet of the barn filled
with the smell of fresh hay, horse manure, and leather tack, Hank sensed rather
than heard someone enter the building. Ah,
the smell of sunshine and roses. Must be Lucille Thoroughgood. Without turning
to look at her, he set the pitchfork against the wall of Lonesome’s stall.
“What do you want, Lucy?” he grumbled as a greeting.
“Mr. Wilding, I have something I’d
like to propose to you.” Her voice sounded tense. When he turned to face her,
he saw those blue eyes dart away from his to peer at the straw on the floor.
She promptly straightened her spine and must have forced herself to look him
straight in the eye. Her starched manner made him want to mess with her.
“A proposal?” He moved closer to
her…maybe too close. He felt something shift in his chest like a warning bell.
“Well now, I haven’t ever had a lady propose
to me before,” he joked, badly, just to get her goat. Generally, women were not
to be trusted. He’d learned that lesson the hard way. But Lucy was his old
friend since grade school. Even though she must have been born straight-laced
and proper, she spoke her truth, plain and simple. Beneath that barbed wire
exterior beat a heart of gold.
Lucy propped her fists on her hips
and he thought she looked like a charming sugar bowl all ruffled up in her pink
flowered dress and her sweet, straw hat that sat askew on her gleaming brown
hair. She knitted those brows together and narrowed her eyes at him. “I’m not
proposing marriage to you, Mr. Wilding. I’m proposing a business deal…sort of.”