Blurb:
Becoming
a husband and family man in the middle of a raging land feud wasn’t the
destiny Galen Callahan saw for himself. But once he laid eyes on Rose
Carstairs, he knew the bouncy blonde with the warrior heart was his
future. Now, with Rancho Diablo under siege, the eldest Callahan sibling
will do whatever it takes to protect his new wife and triplets.
Except Rose refuses to be protected! No husband of
hers can stop her from fighting by his side while keeping their newborn
sons out of the line of fire. With Callahan lives and legacy on the
line, Galen has a new mission: to vanquish a dangerous enemy and bring
his family together in time for Christmas!
Excerpt
Galen
Chacon Callahan looked over Rancho Diablo, where dark smoke filled the
sky above the canyons with smudges of black. He put his binoculars to
his eyes, studying the smoke as it grew a
He turned as his sister, Ashlyn, drove up in the jeep. “It’s not a wildfire,” she said.
“No.”
Rancho Diablo was safely separated from the fire by the canyons, but if
someone was sending up signals near the expansive ranch, it would be a
message the Callahans couldn’t ignore. “It’s the land Storm Cash has
offered to sell us.”
“I know. I wonder if the elderly farmer who sold
that land to Storm still lives there.” She studied Galen’s face. “Think
we should ride over and check on him?”
“I’ll
call the sheriff. He can alert the proper authorities. I think it’s best
if we stay out of it for now.” He was troubled by the fire, and an
uneasy feeling was growing in the pit of his stomach. “I’m heading
back.”
“I’ll stay here a bit longer.”
“Got
your gun?” Galen asked, knowing full well that Ash could take care of
herself. He could order her back to the ranch—should order her—but she’d
just ignore him. Probably give him a blistering retort to send him on
his way as well.
“When do I not have my gun?” Ash didn’t even bother to glance at him. Her eyes were glued to the horizon.
“Don’t go over there.”
“I
won’t. Quit fussing. You’re like a mother hen.” Ash finally turned to
look him in the eye. “By the way, the new agents are at the house,
waiting for you to interview them.”
“New agents?”
“The ones to
replace Ana and River. Jace lined them up every hour on the hour for
interviews. Remember we agreed we needed new agents? Sawyer Cash can’t
handle everything on her own. And anyway,” Ash muttered under her
breath, though he could plainly hear every word of her complaint, “I’m
not exactly sure she’s capable of handling anything.”
He’d listened to all the negative things the
Callahan clan said about Sawyer, and he couldn’t say there wasn’t real
reason for concern. She was Storm Cash’s niece, after all, and they’d
never been certain if they could trust their wily neighbor. He always
seemed to be in the wrong place at the right time. “Maybe we’re just
being suspicious,” Galen said.
“There’s no such thing as too much caution.”
“I
know. I’m heading off. Be careful. Don’t invite trouble.” Even though
he knew Ash was more than capable of protecting not just herself, but
the ranch, Galen couldn’t help leaving his sister with that warning
before riding toward Rancho Diablo’s main house. After last month, when
their aunt Fiona blew up Uncle Wolf’s hideout in Montana, he and his
brothers had decided that the women in their family had earned their
stripes. They could more than take care of themselves. Ash, like the
rest of them, had been in the military, a trained operative. She was as
tough as any male Callahan. Tougher, maybe. And so he and his five
brothers had finally decided that their overprotective attitude toward
their baby sister was accomplishing nothing and was detrimental to their
family harmony.
Ash had never listened to anyone’s concerns, anyway.
Like Fiona, and the women who’d married into the Callahan family, she
did what she wanted—which was mostly chase Xav Phillips, a family
employee who rode the canyons and kept an eye out for trespassers.
Galen was pretty sure Ash caught him on occasion, too.
He
was so busy pondering the smoke in the canyons and his platinum-haired
baby sister that he almost missed the rider heading his way. A brunette
he didn’t recognize rode up on a gray horse.
“Hi,” she said, smiling, as if it was every day strange women appeared at Rancho Diablo.
“Hello?” He swallowed, peering into the dark green eyes smiling at him from under a white cowgirl hat.
Her smile turned sweeter, somehow sexy. Galen tried
to pull his brain back from the alluring abyss into which it was
threatening to fall. “My name’s Somer Stevens. I’m here to apply for the
agent position.”
“I believe the agents are supposed to be waiting for their interviews up at the house.”
“There
are ten candidates over there right now. It’s not every day that an
opening comes up for a position at Rancho Diablo.” Somer winked
conspiratorially. “I figured I’d better take a look around before I
decided whether I belong here or not.”
He frowned. “My brothers were going to show everyone around.”
“Yes, but if I’d waited for the canned tour, I wouldn’t have gotten to speak to you directly.”
Direct. Assertive. These were valuable traits in someone working
for the Callahans. Most likely he would’ve done the same thing, if he’d
been in her shoes. But he wasn’t, and he was going to let her know that
stroking his ego wasn’t going to get her anywhere.
This one wasn’t getting the job. Somer didn’t follow
directions, and she made him sweat. She wore dark blue pants and a blue
jacket, all very proper for an interview; she had a great horse and a
lot of attitude, yet something told him Somer was nothing but trouble.
And he never ignored his instincts.
*
Unusual
moment number two of Galen’s day was when he walked into the massive
den at Rancho Diablo, looking for Fiona and the others. He wanted to
corral his brothers into the upstairs library, where they always held
their meetings, so he could set a game plan before they began
interviewing. Galen wanted to apprise his brothers of Somer’s tactic,
and make certain she didn’t win her way into the job by pulling the same
thing on them that she had on him.
He gawked at the woman sitting demurely in the den,
recognizing her from one of Fiona’s many Christmas balls in Diablo. She
wore a gypsy costume and flashed a big smile he found irresistible. “I
believe I know you.”
“I’m Rose Carstairs.” She shook his hand, and it was
crazy how much he enjoyed feeling her small hand in his. “You were
there the night Dante was raffled off. Will it be your turn this year?”
He found himself transfixed by her costume, which
consisted of a flouncy black skirt that fell to her knees, a fluffy
white blouse, lots of dangling chains around her neck and huge hoop
earrings. She wore many thin bracelets, and her blond hair was swept up
in a bouncy ponytail, topped by a red rose. “That’s some outfit you’re
wearing.”
“I’m here to apply for the bodyguard position.”
Galen laughed. “You don’t look the type.”
“Isn’t that the point?”
He
watched her full lips curve into a smile. Appreciated the sparkle in
her blue eyes. “I don’t see how you’d blend into the background,
gorgeous.”
“Hello, Galen,” Aunt Fiona said, bustling into the
den. “Don’t stand there monopolizing the talent, please. You have
interviews waiting.”
“The talent?” He looked at Rose.
“I see you’ve met Rose,” Fiona said. “She’s applying for the nanny position.”
“Ah.
The nanny position.” Galen took a second look at her shapely calves,
her flat black, practical shoes, and the laughter in Rose’s eyes. “I
should have known.”
“Come on, dear,” Fiona said, “before Galen hires you
to be his personal bodyguard. Goodness, Galen, get a move on. You need
to change, look like a respectable employer.”
Rose grinned at him. “Good luck.”
“Good luck to you. Nice to meet you, Rose.” He went
off, forcing himself not to watch her curvy backside as she followed
Fiona out of the room. It was clear his aunt was interested in hiring
her. He didn’t think his brothers would get a thing done with Rose
around. The scenery would be just too tempting.
Then it occurred to him that he and Jace were the
only bachelors left at Rancho Diablo. Sawyer was doing her best to
monopolize Jace, though Galen wasn’t certain how effective her barrage
of attention was on his brother’s single status.
But that left him as the lone available Callahan. The Lone Ranger of Rancho Diablo.
Neither
Rose nor Somer might make the cut with his five brothers and headstrong
sister. His brothers were dumb as woolly mammoths, and his sister,
well, Ash was unpredictable at best. Her mind stayed on Xav Phillips.
She could go thumbs-up or thumbs-down on either woman. Plus there were a
number of other applicants.
He was thumbs-way-up-high on Rose.
He’d
just let the situation develop and hope that Rose and her playful,
kid-friendly gypsy costume were voted yes by the family council. There
was something so sexy and darling about a woman who came dressed to
play.
Jace followed Galen into the upstairs library for
the meeting.. “Did you see that woman from the Christmas ball year
before last showed up?”
“I did.” Galen ignored
his brother while he dug through some paperwork. “Let’s lay out our
battle plan. We need a new strategy, or have to improve on the old one.
Something has to change.”
“I might ask her out,” Jace said. “You know, she’s
from Tempest. Not that far down the road—and we’ve got family and
friends there. Our cousins have the Dark Diablo ranch in Tempest. It’s a
nice place. And Rose is probably a real nice gal. Looks like it,
anyway.” He grinned at his brother.
Galen hesitated, suddenly losing interest in the stack of papers. “Why?”
“She’s hot as an oven, dude.”
Galen swallowed. “Poetic.”
“I know, right?” Jace grinned, pleased with his announcement. “If Fiona hires her, I’m definitely going to think about it.”
“I
almost hate to ask, and we do have greater matters to discuss other
than your love life, but don’t you and Sawyer have kind of a secret
thing going on?”
Jace shrugged. “If it’s a secret, why are you
asking? And no, we don’t. Sawyer is a pretty girl. That’s all. I think
she flirts with all the guys. She’d probably flirt with you, if you’d
unbend.”
Galen decided he didn’t care about Jace’s love life. “Whatever.”
“Why? Do you want to ask Rose out?”
“No, I don’t.” Damn straight I do.
“Because if you want to,” Jace said, like a dog with a juicy bone,
“I wouldn’t stand in the way. I wouldn’t want to make you look bad.
You’re not getting any younger, old-timer.”
“As if you could make me look bad.” Galen glanced toward the door. “Where’s the rest of the team?”
“I think they saw the other candidates and stopped
to chat. I, on the other hand, stick to the assignment.” Jace poured
himself a whiskey with a huge grin. “What’s up with your face, bro? Look
like you have a stomachache. Need a soother?” He waved the bottle
Galen’s way.
“I do not need a soother.” He sat on a sofa,
dismissing his brother, and pondered what he should say about Somer.
She’d definitely gone after the job, and he felt vaguely uneasy about
her aggressiveness. He was the eldest Callahan, a doctor, a man who
believed that fate and hard work brought many gifts. Why should Somer
bother him so much?
“One of the candidates took off by herself to tour the ranch,” Galen said.
“Oh.”
Jace seated himself at the opposite end of the sofa. “The tall, hot
brunette? I think I heard Fiona tell her to go let her horse have some
exercise. She pointed her in your direction, knowing the two of you
would meet up. Fiona would never send a female onto the ranch without
protection, but she knew you were on your way back, and that Ash was out
there, too.”
Now that made more sense. Aunt Fiona’s fey mind at
work, probably culling the tempting beauties from the herd and dangling
them in front of the remaining single Callahans. “Why’d she bring her
own horse?”
“Probably because she’d be expected to ride here? This is a ranch, you know.”
It all sounded reasonable.
“Gorgeous
piece of flesh, if you ask me.” Jace’s grin was so irritating Galen
wished he could bean him one across the head as he had when they were
children. He’d given up beaning his siblings when they went off to boot
camp.
“Are you planning on asking her out or not?” Galen asked.
Jace
gave him an annoyed look. “The horse was a gorgeous piece of
horseflesh,” he said, emphasizing the word as if Galen were stupid. Then
he grinned again. “Galen, my brother, has a woman finally walked into
your path that stirs your quiet, hard-to-reach soul?”
“No,” he said, thinking, Yes, that petite blonde with big eyes, but I’m not about to give you anything to crow about.
The rest of their brothers filed in, as well as Ash, whose grin was big as the quarter moon.
“What’s going on with the fire?” Galen asked her.
“Sheriff says he’s got men over there checking it out. We’ll know soon enough.”
He
studied his brothers, grateful that he’d been able to keep them on the
right path, the path of men committed to the fight. Strong, brave, true.
Of course, Grandfather Running Bear had set the path for all of them.
When their parents had gone away from the tribe, Galen returned home
from his medical studies and raised his brothers and sister. They’d been
a headstrong bunch, fierce and courageous. All of them had opted to
join the military—and then retired to quiet lives. Then Running Bear had
reached out with his astonishing instructions that they come to Rancho
Diablo and protect cousins they’d never known they had. Protect a
heritage they’d never known was theirs.
That decision had been the turning point that marked them all, and changed their lives.
“Excuse
me,” Fiona said. Their aunt poked her head into the library. “I know
the family meetings are sacred, but Rose is about to head back to
Tempest. Are there any objections to her being hired on here?”
Jace looked at him. “Yes, Galen, are there any objections?”
Galen grimaced. “Why would I care who is hired as a nanny here? I don’t have children.”
“Well,
you always seem to have an opinion about everything, relevant or not,”
Fiona replied. “And you’ve met Rose before, so I just wanted to make
certain there’d be no awkwardness. Awkwardness is bad when we all live
as closely as we do.”
His frown deepened. “Why would I feel awkward around Rose? I barely know her.”
The rest of the family was quick to sense that something was in the air.
“Are we roasting Galen about something, Aunt Fiona?” Ash asked.
“No. Just making sure his highness is consulted about the new hires.” Fiona looked pleased with her jibe.
“Ah,”
Dante said, “you’re trying not to get on his bad side by hiring Rose.”
He nodded wisely, as if he understood the entire situation. Galen felt
pretty much in the dark. “So, Galen, what do you think about the new
girl?”
Galen cleared his throat, realizing his family had
him pinned against the wall. If he let on that he did have a weakness
for Rose, there would be incessant teasing and subtle ribbing. “I
couldn’t care less who is hired on at Rancho Diablo.” He pondered his
words for a moment. “Though I do admit I’m not certain about Somer
Stevens,” and everyone said, “Ah!”
He sighed. “I guess I couldn’t convince you that
there’s just something about her that puts me off. It’s not personal.”
He glared around the room at all the smiling faces. “Never mind. I don’t
care who gets hired. Can we get on to planning how to beef up
security?”
They moved on with the meeting, shooting him a few
knowing looks, sizing up his mood in a way that family does when they
know you’ve got something on your mind. His family did know him, very
well, but on the matter of his heart, Galen preferred to remain an
enigma.
Then he could romance Rose without his family
observing every single move he made, the way they had with his brothers
when they were courting. Of course, Galen did the same thing to them,
which was why he had no desire to have the matchmaking tongs applied to
him. Once his family had you in their sights, the well-meaning
interference never ended.
If Rose accepted the position, he’d begin to plan a different strategy, called Romancing the Nanny.
He didn’t want to be the Lone Ranger of Rancho Diablo for the rest of his life.
“What are you grinning about, bro?” Tighe asked, and
Galen shook himself from his daydream of Rose’s delightful curves and
big smile. “Look like you had something sweet on your mind.”
“Just wondering how you dolts ever ended up with women. Proceed.”
He waved a hand imperiously. “Let’s hear all your plans for securing
this ranch, especially if that fire over there was set by our renegade
uncle Wolf. Because if it can happen across the canyons, it most
certainly can happen at Rancho Diablo. And I refuse to allow the work of
our father and Uncle Jeremiah to go up in smoke.”
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