The Rancher Wore Suits. Rita Herron

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The Rancher Wore Suits - Rita  Herron


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familiar.

      Then the man turned and looked straight at Ty. Shock rode through Ty’s system, as it obviously did the other man. Ty could have been looking in a mirror. What the…? The man looked exactly like him. Same thick dark hair, only cropped a little shorter than Ty’s. Same dark eyes…same square jaw…same…everything.

      The man suddenly pushed to his feet, his mouth gaping open momentarily before he snapped it closed. He strode toward Ty, his back ramrod straight. He stopped in front of Ty’s table, shifted his drink to his left hand and extended his right.

      “Dex Montgomery.”

      His voice even sounded like Ty’s, although he had a slight Southern intonation. Not much though. Judging from the man’s expensive clothes, he came from too much money and education to allow himself a true Southern accent.

      Ty closed his work-roughened hand over the man’s smooth one. “Ty Cooper.”

      The contact was brief, but something passed between them—energy that felt strange yet oddly familiar. As if they had some connection.

      Ridiculous.

      “Maybe you’d better sit down,” Ty said, grappling for an explanation.

      The stranger tugged at his tie as if it was choking him and sat. “This isn’t possible. I mean…” He shook his head again. “I’m a doctor and even I’m at a loss for an explanation.”

      Ty scrubbed his hand over his chin. He had no idea what to say, either. “You’re right, partner. It’s damned weird looking at your reflection in another man’s face. Maybe we’re related somehow?” A nervous laugh escaped Ty. “You know, distantly. Identical cousins or something.”

      Dex Montgomery lifted one shoulder, then let it fall. “That’s possible, I suppose.” He hesitated, his eyebrows drawing together in thought. “Did you say Cooper?”

      Ty nodded. “Of Rolling Bend, Montana. We have a cattle ranch called the—”

      “Rolling Bend, Montana?” The man’s face paled.

      “Yeah?” Ty’s stomach knotted. “You know the place?”

      Dex’s gaze settled fully onto Ty. “My mother’s name was Tara Cooper. She was born in Rolling Bend.”

      It couldn’t be. Ty signaled the passing waitress. “Ma’am, we’re gonna need another round here.”

      She glanced at Dex, then started visibly when her gaze landed back on Ty. “Doubles for doubles,” she said with a giggle. “Are you guys twins or something?”

      Dex glared at her and she scurried away. Ty almost told him to apologize, but he was too disturbed by this man’s statement. He leaned forward, unable to believe what he was about to say. “Tara Cooper was my mother.”

      A choked sound, not quite a laugh, burst from Dex. “But my mother died when I was three months old.”

      “My birthdate is May 21, 1970,” Ty countered. “My mother died in an accident with my father when I was three months old.”

      “Oh yeah? Well, so did mine. But I don’t have any siblings,” Dex argued.

      “Neither do I,” Ty retorted. “Well, except for two adopted brothers. Actually they’re my grandmother’s sister’s boys. She died when they were little and Gran took them in.”

      And Ty had had a twin who had died at birth. At least he’d been told he had. What if…what if they’d lied to him? An empty hollowness clawed at him. But why?

      Dex gestured vaguely. “Maybe there were two Tara Coopers in Rolling Bend.”

      Ty moved his head slowly from side to side. “We’re the only Cooper clan in that neck of the woods.”

      “I’m certain there’s some reasonable explanation,” Dex suggested.

      Ty’s heart thundered. He had a sinking feeling he knew what had happened. But he didn’t like it. And judging from the shock on Dex Montgomery’s face, he wasn’t going to be happy about it, either.

      “There is an explanation,” Ty said, his chest growing tight. “We’ve been had.”

      THREE HOURS LATER and too many drinks to remember, they’d each learned a lot about their respective families. Ty lived on a sprawling ranch with a big close-knit family while Dex was a doctor who managed a huge medical conglomerate with his grandfather.

      Finally, Ty convinced Dex of the only reasonable explanation. Dex Montgomery was not only his brother, but his identical twin. They’d both missed their flights home, but neither cared. Dex had phoned his financial advisor to brief her on his change of plans, and Ty had phoned his family, then his neighbor Leanne who’d planned to pick him up.

      The stories of their parents’ whirlwind courtship, marriage and tragic deaths matched down to the dates. Dex was told, as Ty had been, that he had no other family. Ty could just imagine his grandparents’ reaction when his mother had married a banker’s son. Dex had been told nothing about their mother, Ty had been told zilch about his father.

      “What I want to know,” Ty said, his tongue thick in his mouth, “is how the hell they decided who would take whom.”

      For one long moment they simply stared at each other. Ty couldn’t believe his loving family had lied to him. An image of his twin nephews surfaced. They seemed to have a special bond; he couldn’t imagine anyone separating them. Yet that was exactly what his family had done to him and Dex. His family had pounded into his head ever since he could remember the importance of family and togetherness. He’d always felt a part of himself was missing, yet they had torn him away from his identical twin and told him he’d died.

      Would he and Dex have had a special bond if they had been raised together?

      On the heels of that disappointment, he wondered what his life would have been like if the other grandparents had chosen him? Would he be a different man today? Would he wear suits and make his living crunching numbers, sitting in countless boring meetings like those he’d had to endure the past three days?

      He shuddered at the thought.

      Dex cleared his throat. “My grandfather—”

      “Our grandfather,” Ty corrected.

      Dex frowned. “Yes, our grandfather Montgomery will go ballistic when he finds out we met. He likes control.”

      “You think he was behind the separation?” Ty asked.

      Dex nodded. “One-for-me, one-for-you—that sounds like his kind of scheme.”

      “So what do we do now?”

      Dex drained his glass. “We should show up together and stage a confrontation.”

      Ty grinned. Both their families deserved to be shaken up. “You may have something there. I say we give ’em a taste of their own medicine.”

      A flash of concern darkened Dex’s Scotch-hazy eyes. “What do you have in mind?”

      Ty motioned to the waitress and then pointed to their empty glasses once more. “I’m talking about trading places, brother. For just a little while,” he added quickly. “Just long enough to teach our families a lesson. And we’d get to meet the other side of the family.” Ty had to admit he was curious about the Montgomerys. And his father. Maybe meeting them would help him feel closer to his dad.

      Dex hesitated at first, but finally a smile slid onto his face. “Yes, that’s good. All we have to do is bring each other up to speed on how to act and what to do.” He flared his hands and inclined his head in a gesture of nonchalance. “It’s simple on my end. You leave the business decisions to the old man. I have a secretary and a financial advisor who take care of things at the office. They’ll keep you straight on the day-to-day schedule.” Dex paused. “If a problem does come up and you need to make a financial decision


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