Cowboy Daddy

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Authors: Susan Mallery

BOOK: Cowboy Daddy
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COWBOY DADDY

Susan Mallery

 

 

 

SYNOPSIS

 

 

Rancher Jake Masters’ adopted daughter is deeply troubled by his wife’s death, so when she asks, Jake can’t deny the young girl’s anguished plea to meet her birth mother. But granting her wish is damn hard — Jake never asked for this new woman in his life –– or for the stunning attraction he feels toward her.

Anne Baker has come a long way from the dirt-poor Texas town where she made the toughest decision of her life, but she’s never forgotten her child. And nothing is going to keep them apart now, not even the suspicions of the most aggravating –– and compelling –– man she’s ever known

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table Of Contents

 

 

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

 

 

 

Chapter 1

 

 

“Y
our two o’clock is a hunk.”

Anne Baker stared blankly at her assistant. “A hunk?”

“Yeah!” Heather clutched her notepad to her chest and sagged against the door. “Tall, dark, with big brown eyes that could melt you faster than…” Her voice trailed off. “I assume by the way you’re looking at me that you’re not happy with the news.”

Anne fought the urge to bury her face in her hands. “It doesn’t matter what he looks like. The fact is he’s here. What am I supposed to do with him?”

“Talk?” Heather grinned. “You aren’t scared of him, are you?”

“Me?” Anne firmly shook her head. “Of course not. I’ve worked with company presidents, relocated Fortune 500 companies.”

“Leapt buildings in a single bound. You are scared.”

Anne sighed. “Terrified.”

“Should I send him away?”

Anne almost wished that was possible. No, that wasn’t true. She didn’t want to send him away; she desperately wanted to meet Jake Masters. With one phone call and a few carefully chosen words, the man had turned her world upside down. For the past two days she’d thought about nothing but his call. Now he was here, waiting to see her. She’d hoped for a connection—a way to undo the past—but she hadn’t thought it would happen like this. Or happen this soon.

Anne glanced down at the slim gold watch on her wrist. It had been a gift to herself last month, celebrating both the completion of the electronics firm’s contract and her birthday. Thirty-one. The day had made her think about many things, most of them revolving around her eighteenth birthday. Funny less than a month later Jake Masters called. Had her thoughts been a premonition? She shook her head. Of course not. She thought about the same thing every birthday. She tried not to of course, but it was inevitable.

Anne looked up and forced herself to smile. “Is he really a hunk?”

Heather smiled back. “We are talking heartthrob city. Long, lean and luscious.”

Anne’s forced smile became genuine. “You are a wicked woman.”

“It is one of my best qualities.” Heather winked. “He’s pacing back and forth like a caged lion. Do you want me to send him in?”

Anne’s stomach lurched as if she’d just taken the last heart-stopping drop on a roller coaster. “Waiting is only going to make it worse.” She drew in a deep breath. “All right. Here goes nothing. Tell Mr. Masters he can come in.”

Heather nodded. Her blond hair bounced with the movement. “One hunk, coming right up.” The oak door closed quietly behind her.

Just keep breathing, Anne told herself. She sat straighter in her chair and rested her hands on the desk. Her fingers shook. She thrust them onto her lap. She touched her hair to make sure it was still neatly smoothed in place, then wished she’d told Heather to give her a couple of minutes. She wanted to freshen her lipstick, to check the mirror for the hundredth time and make sure there was nothing in her teeth. She wanted to catch her breath and think about something other than Jake Masters and why he was coming to see her.

A knock on the door brought her out of her seat. She straightened, tugged at her suit jacket and called, “Come in.”

Heather pushed the door open. “Mr. Masters to see you, Ms. Baker.” She stepped back to let the man enter.

Anne’s heart was already pounding in her chest, but at the sight of the tall, dark-haired man standing in front of her, it leapt into high gear and tried to lodge in her throat. Her palms grew damp.

The panic threatening to swamp her had a little to do with the reason for his visit and a whole lot more to do with the way he was dressed. Boots, jeans, tailored white shirt rolled up to the elbows and a black Stetson he’d removed when he came to her office. It took all her strength to remain standing. Jake Masters was a cowboy. She avoided cowboys at all costs—not an easy thing to do in Houston, Texas.

It shouldn’t matter what he wore or did for a living, she reminded herself. But why did he have to be a cowboy?

“Would you like me to bring coffee, Mr. Masters?” Heather asked.

He turned to her assistant. “None for me, thanks.” His voice was low and controlled with only the hint of a Texas drawl. He was a native, but not local. Dallas, maybe.

When Heather glanced at her, Anne shook her head. The younger woman gave her a thumbs-up sign and retreated.

The door closed. Anne returned her attention to her guest. His shadowed eyes held hers. Brown, she thought, with odd flecks of gold, but no expression. He might have been a hunk, as Heather had promised, but Anne couldn’t judge from the impressions she gathered. Tall, brown hair, a firm mouth with no hint of a smile. Broad shouldered, slim hipped. Younger than she would have thought. Midthirties. Handsome? It didn’t matter. Her gaze drifted back to his face and she saw he returned her close inspection. Her hands tightened into fists. What was he seeing? She resisted the urge to smooth her hair.

“Mr. Masters?” she said, raising the pitch of her voice so it came out as a question.

He nodded. “Thank you for seeing me, Ms. Baker.” Those cool, oddly flecked eyes searched her face. “I still have the picture you gave us. You’ve changed.”

Anne flushed. She knew the hot color would flare brightly on her cheeks, giving away her embarrassment. She ducked her head and pointed to the leather chair in front of her desk. “It was a long time ago.”

“Thirteen years,” he said as he sat down and set his hat on the edge of her desk. His hair was short, barely brushing the collar of his white shirt.

Anne lowered herself into her seat. She looked at the bookcases against the right-hand wall, at the sofa on the opposite side of the room, at the closed door, and suddenly wished she’d asked for coffee. She could use the momentary rescue, if not the caffeine.

“I know how much time has passed,” she said. “It’s not the sort of thing I would forget.”

His eyes narrowed and his mouth drew even straighter. “I’ll have to take your word on that.”

She leaned forward. “You know nothing about me or my circumstances, Mr. Masters,” she said curtly. “You have no right to judge me. If that’s what this meeting is about—”

“It isn’t.” He cut her off, then rubbed the bridge of his nose with his thumb and forefinger. “Look, it’s been a hell of a summer. First the move, then this whole situation with Laurel.”

“Laurel?” Her voice quavered as she spoke the name.

He dropped his hand to the armrest. “Yes. My daughter.”

Laurel. Anne blinked several times. She had often wondered what they’d called her child. Now she knew. No matter what, she would always know. Laurel. She pictured a towheaded toddler in a frilly pink dress. No, that wasn’t right. Thirteen years had gone by; Laurel was a teenager now. A milestone in a child’s life. Maybe that’s why their shared birthday had struck a nerve this time. “It’s a beautiful name.”

“My wife picked it out.” He watched her carefully.

“Is she here with you?”

“My wife passed away two years ago.”

“I’m sorry. But I was asking about…your daughter.”

He caught the slight hesitation. “I thought we should speak alone first,” he said.

She hadn’t known how much she’d hoped to meet her—to meet Laurel—until this moment. To have come so far, to be so close. It was more than she’d ever dared to hope for, and yet she had hoped. The chance had been snatched away and she wanted to cry out her pain. She rose slowly and walked around her chair to the floor-to-ceiling window.

Downtown Houston stretched out before her. The double-glazed glass protected her from the weather and the noise, but she could see the August heat shimmering on the streets and sidewalks.

Heather had opened the vertical blinds that morning. Anne stared out at the city. “You have the advantage here, Mr. Masters.”

“How?”

“I don’t understand why you’re here or what you want from me. From your reaction a minute ago I would guess you might not want to believe me, but I’m having a difficult time with this. When you called, I agreed to meet with you because—” She paused. The ache in her chest deepened. She drew in a breath and told herself she was strong enough to get through this. She had no choice; she was in this alone. “Because I couldn’t say no. I’ve spent thirteen years wondering about her. The private adoption arranged by the attorneys meant you could have contacted me at any time. Why now?”

“She wants to meet you.”

The opposite of pain was joy. Happiness flooded her, chasing away the darkness and the fear. Tears she’d managed to ward off before filled her eyes. She covered her mouth with her hand to hold in her cry of relief. The window in front of her blurred as she remembered a day thirteen years ago.

It had been summer then, too, but July instead of August. Paradise was too small a town to have a hospital, so her mother had driven her the forty miles to the nearest community facility. On her eighteenth birthday, surrounded by strangers, with only her mother’s hand to hold, she’d given birth to a daughter. She remembered little of the pain, although the smells stayed with her, as did the cold stare of the nurse who had taken the baby from the doctor and carried her from the room. Later, the woman had returned, her arms empty. Anne had cried out to see her child. The woman had refused. “If you give ‘em up, you can’t see ‘em. Hospital policy.”

She had begged for hours. The stern-faced woman refused to budge. Later, the night nurse had taken pity on her and told her the baby—her child, her daughter—was already gone. The new parents had whisked her away.

Anne wiped at the tears on her cheeks. “She wants to meet me,” she whispered, barely able to believe her good fortune.

“I think it’s a mistake.”

She spun to face him. Sometime while she’d been lost in the past, he’d risen from the chair and approached her. He stood only a foot away. She had to tilt her head back to look into his eyes. Coldness radiated from him. And anger.

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