while growing up, he and his brothers and cousins would
visit this area every summer to spend time with their Uncle Corey. It was a guy thing, which meant Delaney was never included in those summer retreats. She usually came to
Montana during her school’s spring breaks. Stone also
shared with her the little escapades the eleven
Westmoreland boys and McKinnon and his three brothers had gotten into. He had made her smile, chuckle and even laugh a few times, and for a little while she had forgotten the reason she had come to Montana in the first place. At
dinner she had met Morning Star and Martin’s other three sons, who were younger than McKinnon, but who had also inherited their mother’s Blackfoot coloring, instead of the
light complexion of their Caucasian father.
“You okay?” Stone asked quietly, coming to stand beside her.
She tipped her head to look up at him. When he placed his arms around her shoulders as if to ward off the chill in the air, she became very aware of how male he was. And the nice thing about it was that he didn’t flaunt it. In fact he
seemed totally unaware of the sensuality oozing from him. “Yes, I’m fine. Dinner was wonderful, wasn’t it?”
“Yes. Mrs. Quinn always knew how to cook and her apple pie has always been my favorite,” he answered.
Madison grinned when she remembered the number of
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