A Tall, Dark Cowboy Christmas. Maisey Yates

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A Tall, Dark Cowboy Christmas - Maisey Yates


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then she realized that she still didn’t know the name of the man who had found her in the cabin. The beautiful one. The one who looked like he might not remember what a joke was, much less have a whole store of them like Wyatt Dodge probably did.

      She looked at him, and he looked at her out of the corner of his eye, but didn’t offer a name.

      “Come on in,” Wyatt said, still eyeing his brother speculatively.

      She took him up on his invitation.

      The inside of the house was even more beautiful than the outside. Rustic, but incredibly comfortable. Cozy. She suddenly became aware of how cold her nose and cheeks had been when they began to warm up.

      She looked to the left of the entryway and saw that there was a fire in a rock fireplace. She wanted to go sit in front of it. She wanted to press her face against it.

      But then, she also smelled food. Bacon.

      She’d had many a disagreement with the man upstairs over quite a few of the circumstances in her life, but right about now she was feeling much friendlier to him. She sent up a prayer of thanks.

      If anything could surprise the divine, McKenna Tate being thankful might do it.

      “My wife, Lindy, is in the kitchen,” Wyatt said.

      “Not cooking,” a voice rang out from the next room. “Just waiting for the bacon to be done.”

      He gestured that direction and McKenna followed the directive, walking into the beautiful kitchen, to see an equally beautiful blonde woman sitting at a small breakfast table. Her blond hair pulled back in a ponytail, her manner elegant even though she was wearing sweats.

      “I’m cooking, technically,” Wyatt said. “It’s part of the agreement.”

      “Agreement?” McKenna asked.

      “Yes, I agreed to marry him and move from my winery to his ranch. But only if he cooked me breakfast at least four days a week. The other three days I get a pastry from the coffee place in town.”

      McKenna’s stomach tightened. Jealousy. She was as familiar with that as she was with hunger, and right now she felt nearly overtaken by both.

      Not because she wanted the man cooking the bacon, specifically. Just that it would be nice to have an arrangement like that in general. Someone who cared. Someone who would vow to cook bacon four days a week just so you would marry him.

      She couldn’t imagine someone caring like that.

      “What are you doing on my property, McKenna Tate?” Wyatt asked, turning toward the stove and getting bacon and some scrambled eggs out of a pan, putting them on a plate and setting them down on the table. She eyed them hungrily.

      “Have a seat,” he said.

      She hesitantly did as he said, sitting next to his lovely wife, and feeling every inch the bedraggled urchin that she was. “Eat.”

      Her man said that.

      Not that he was her man, just that he was the one that had woken her up, and she still didn’t know his name. And on principle, she wasn’t going to ask.

      Still, she obeyed.

      “Coffee?” Lindy asked.

      “Yes, please,” she said, trying her best to eat slow, and feeling like she was going to end up failing the moment the salty, savory bacon touched her tongue. She was ravenous. She hadn’t let herself realize just how much.

      “What were you doing?” Lindy asked, her voice soft.

      “I just needed a place to sleep. I’m new to Gold Valley... I decided to move here,” she said. She wasn’t going to get into the whole thing about looking for her family. Not that she believed they were going to have some tearful reunion. She wasn’t that stupid. Life didn’t work that way.

      Her mother, who had given birth to her, had walked away without a backward glance. A father who’d probably never even met her, maybe didn’t even know about her? Why would he want anything to do with her?

      The very thought of it, of putting herself in front of him and risking a rejection, made her feel...

      It didn’t matter. From what she had found out about the Daltons, they were well-off. Famous rodeo riders and owners of a massive plot of land just on the outskirts of town.

      Surely they would be able to spare a little seed money to keep her off the streets. And they’d probably be happy to fling some money at her to get rid of her, anyway.

      She didn’t need a family. She’d been just fine without one all this time.

      What she needed was something a lot more practical than that. A shovel to dig herself out of the hole she was in.

      Money would make for a decent shovel.

      She cleared her throat. “I decided to move here, but I had kind of a series of less than fortunate happenings and I ran out of money before I could get a job. So, I didn’t have anywhere to stay.” She wouldn’t have jumped into the Gold Valley situation had she not lost the apartment she’d been in before in Portland. But the landlord had decided she wanted it for her adult son, and McKenna had been unceremoniously booted. Also, she hadn’t gotten her security deposit back. Which wasn’t her fault. It wasn’t like she had created a mildew stain in the bathroom. That was because the roof leaked.

      “It was a desperate-times-desperate-measures kind of thing,” she said. “And... Thank you. For not calling the police. And for feeding me bacon. Which seems a little bit above and beyond, all things considered.”

      “You don’t have a job yet?” Lindy asked.

      “Not yet,” she said.

      “What kind of jobs do you normally do?” Lindy asked.

      “Aerospace engineering,” McKenna replied, taking another bite of crisp bacon. “But when I can’t find work in that field, waitressing is my fallback.”

      “Sadly, we’re fresh out of aerospace engineering jobs,” Lindy said.

      “Good,” McKenna said. “Because I was lying about that.”

      “I had a feeling,” Lindy responded. “Not because I don’t think you could be an aerospace engineer, just because we’re nowhere near NASA.”

      “I’ve done all kinds of things. I’ve been a waitress, hotel maid. You name the manual labor job that doesn’t require much lifting over fifty pounds and I’ve probably done it.”

      “Basic cooking?” Lindy asked.

      She shrugged. “Diner stuff.”

      “Cleaning.”

      “Like I said. Housekeeping.”

      “I think we could find a job for you right here,” Lindy said.

      McKenna frowned. “No offense. But... I’m a stranger who was caught sleeping illegally on your property. Why exactly would you want to give me a job?”

      “Because sometimes life is hard and it isn’t fair,” Lindy said, her determined blue eyes meeting McKenna’s. “I’m well aware of that. And sometimes circumstances spin out of your control. It has nothing to do with whether or not you’re a good person. So, you tell me, McKenna. Are you going to steal from us?”

      McKenna lifted a shoulder. “Probably not.”

      “Probably not,” Wyatt repeated.

      “I don’t know. Am I gravely injured? Did a family member of mine come down with a terrible illness and the only way I can get back to them is to steal money from you?” It was moot. She didn’t have any family that knew her. Or that she knew. Just family she was looking for.

      “I appreciate the honesty,” Lindy said dryly. “But barring extraordinary circumstances, are you going to steal


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