A Cold Creek Reunion. RaeAnne Thayne

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A Cold Creek Reunion - RaeAnne Thayne


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keep the gravy from spreading while he avoided the collective gaze of his beloved family. Why, again, had he once enjoyed these Sunday dinners?

      “Engaged? Taft?” He didn’t need to look at his future sister-in-law to hear the surprise in her voice.

      “I know,” his twin brother said. “Hard to believe, right?”

      He looked up just in time to see Becca quickly try to hide her shocked gaze. She was too kindhearted to let him see how stunning she found the news, which somehow bothered him even more.

      Okay, maybe he had a bit of a reputation in town—most of it greatly exaggerated—as a bit of a player. Becca knew him by now. She should know how silly it all was.

      “When was this?” she asked with interest. “Recently?”

      “Years ago,” Ridge said. “He and Laura dated just out of high school—”

      “College,” he muttered. “She was in college.” Okay, she had been a freshman in college. But she wasn’t in high school, damn it. That point seemed important somehow.

      “They were inseparable,” Trace interjected.

      Ridge picked up where he’d left off. “And Taft proposed right around the time Laura graduated from the Montana State.”

      “What happened?” Becca asked.

      He really didn’t want to talk about this. What he wouldn’t give for a good emergency call right now. Nothing big. No serious personal injury or major property damage. How about a shed fire or a kid stuck in a well or something?

      “We called things off.”

      “The week before the wedding,” Caidy added.

      Oh, yes. Don’t forget to add that little salacious detail.

      “It was a mutual decision,” he lied, repeating the blatant fiction that Laura had begged him to uphold. Mutual decision. Right. If by mutual he meant Laura and if by decision he meant crush-the-life-out-of-a-guy blow.

      Laura had dumped him. That was the cold, hard truth. A week before their wedding, after all the plans and deposits and dress fittings, she had given him back his ring and told him she couldn’t marry him.

      “Why are we talking about ancient history?” he asked.

      “Not so ancient anymore,” Trace said. “Not if Laura’s back in town.”

      He was very much afraid his brother was right. Whether he liked it or not, with her once more residing in Pine Gulch, their past together would be dredged up again—and not by just his family.

      Questions would swirl around them. Everybody had to remember that they had been just a few days away from walking down the aisle of the little church in town when things ended and Laura and her mother sent out those regrets and made phone calls announcing the big celebration wasn’t happening—while he had gone down to the Bandito and gotten drunk and stayed that way until about a month or two after the wedding day that didn’t happen.

      She was back now, which meant that, like it or not, he would have to deal with everything he had shoved down ten years ago, all the emotions he had pretended weren’t important in order to get through the deep, aching loss of her.

      He couldn’t blame his family for their curiosity—not even Trace, his twin and best friend, knew the full story about everything that had happened between him and Laura. He had always considered it his private business.

      His family had loved her. Who didn’t? Laura had a knack for drawing people toward her, finding commonalities. She and his mother used to love discussing the art world and painting techniques. His mother had been an artist, only becoming renowned around the time of her murder. While Laura hadn’t any particular skill in that direction, she had shared a genuine appreciation for his parents’ extensive art collection.

      His father had adored her, too, and had often told Taft that Laura was the best thing that would ever happen to him.

      He looked up from the memory to find Becca’s eyes filled with a compassion that made him squirm and lose whatever appetite he might have had left.

      “I’m sorry,” she murmured in that kind way she had. “Mutual decision or not, it still must have been painful. Is it hard for you to see her again?”

      He faked a nonchalant look. “Hard? Why would it be hard? It was all a decade ago. She’s moved on. I’ve moved on. No big deal.”

      Ridge gave what sounded like a fake cough and Trace had the same skeptical expression on his face he always wore when Taft was trying to talk him into living a little, doing something wild and adventurous for a change.

      How was it possible to love his siblings and at the same time want to throw a few punches around the table, just on general principles?

      Becca eyed him and then his brothers warily as if sensing his discomfort, then she quickly changed the subject. “How’s the house coming?” she asked.

      His brother wasn’t nearly good enough for her, he decided, seizing the diversion. “Good. I’ve got only a couple more rooms to drywall. Should be done soon. After six months, the place is starting to look like a real house inside now.”

      “I stopped by the other day and peeked in the windows,” Caidy confessed. “It’s looking great.”

      “Give me a call next time and I can swing by and give you the tour, even if I’m at the fire station. You haven’t been by in a month or so. You’ll be surprised at how far along it is these days.”

      After years of renting a convenient but small apartment near the fire station, he had finally decided it was time to build a real house. The two-story log house was set on five acres near the mouth of Cold Creek Canyon.

      “How about the barn and the pasture?” Ridge asked, rather predictably. Over the years, Taft had bred a couple mares to a stallion with excellent lines he had picked up for a steal from a rancher down on his luck up near Wood River. He had traded and sold the colts until he now had about six horses he’d been keeping at his family’s ranch.

      “The fence is in. I’d like to get the barn up before I move the horses over, if you don’t mind keeping them a little longer.”

      “That’s not what I meant. You know we’ve got plenty of room here. You can keep them here forever if you want.”

      Maybe if he had his horses closer he might actually ride them once in a while instead of only stopping by to visit when he came for these Sunday dinners.

      “When do you think all the work will be done?” Becca asked.

      “I’m hoping by mid-May. Depends on how much free time I can find to finish things up inside.”

      “If you need a hand, let me know,” Ridge offered quietly.

      “Same goes,” Trace added.

      Both of them had crazy-busy lives: Ridge running the ranch and raising Destry on his own and Trace as the overworked chief of police for an understaffed small-town force—in addition to planning his future together with Becca and Gabi. Their sincere offers to help touched him.

      “I should be okay,” he answered. “The hard work is done now and I only have the fun stuff to finish.”

      “I always thought there was something just a little crazy about you.” Caidy shook her head. “I must be right, especially if you think finish work and painting are fun.”

      “I like to paint stuff,” Destry said. “I can help you, Uncle Taft.”

      “Me, too!” Gabrielle exclaimed. “Oh, can we?”

      Trouble followed the two of these girls around like one of Caidy’s rescue dogs. He had visions of paint spread all over the woodwork he had been slaving over the past month. “Thanks, girls. That’s really sweet of you. I’m sure Ridge can find something for you to touch


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