What a Bride Wants

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Authors: Kelly Hunter

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BOOK: What a Bride Wants
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What A Bride Wants

a
montana born brides novel

 

 

Kelly Hunter

 

 

 

 

What A Bride Wants

© Copyright 2014
Kelly Hunter

 

The Tule Publishing Group, LLC

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

 

No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author
’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

 

ISBN 978-1-940296-31-9

Dedication

 

To Jane Porter and the wonderful gang at Tule Publishing. Thanks for your laughter, the endless encouragement, and for the opportunity to come play in Marietta.

Dear Reader

 

Writing into a pre-built fictional world is always a challenge and a pleasure. The small town of Marietta, Montana has been crafted with such love and care, and the people that inhabit it are so real to me now that I want to sit down to drinks and a meal with them at Grey’s Saloon. I want to eat Sage Carrigan’s salted toffee on a regular basis and stroll through Bramble Park in the summertime and in the snow. I just want to live there.

The Great Wedding Giveaway is a Marietta Chamber of Commerce initiative, aimed at bringing tourists to the town and encouraging a thriving destination wedding trade. In
What A Bride Wants,
we see the launch of the Great Wedding Giveaway during a Valentine’s Day Ball (see our Pinterest boards for more). My heroine enters my couple in the wedding giveaway as an act of support for her hero, and united they stand in the face of great turmoil and danger. Will they win the competition?

I don
’t think they can wait that long.

I hope you enjoy Ella and Sawyer
’s story, and then look forward to the rest of our Montana Born Brides.

Happy Reading,

 

Kelly Hunter

Chapter One

 

“Yes, I know he’s perfectly presentable and possibly a very nice person. Second-born son from a good ranching family. All good things. It’s just that when he looks at me he sees Emerson Holdings and award-winning bloodlines – money on the hoof. He doesn’t see
me
.”

Ella G
race Emerson leaned against the walnut desk and watched with fond exasperation as her father paced the length of his study. He stopped and stooped to add another block of wood to the fire that sat snug within the stonework of the study’s western wall. A huge picture window took up most of another wall and in the distance loomed the soaring, snow-clad Crazy Mountains of Montana.

The charit
y dinner they’d just returned from had dragged on late into the evening. They’d been seated at a table of eight that had included Joe Carter and his middle son Max, and the blatant matchmaking efforts of both fathers had been enough to set Ella’s teeth on edge.

Max
’s half-baked interest in her good-self had done the rest.


It was worth a try,” her father argued. “You and Max have similar social status, similar interests. It
could
have worked well.”


That’s what you always say. And it never does. Daddy, I am
not
a cow to be bred. You need to let me find my own man.”


But you
don’t
.” Samuel T. Emerson threw up his hands. They were good hands, big and scarred and strong. They’d picked her up over the years and held her tight when she’d come off a horse. When her mother had died. When her high school crush hadn’t invited her to the prom. “Where are you going to find this man, Ella Grace? Out here with the cattle? Roaming around Marietta? Livingston, maybe? At least Livingston has more variety than Marietta, but wait... you never go there. You’re buried here. You could travel anywhere. Canada. Australia. Europe. But you don’t. You haven’t had a holiday in three years.”


Has it really been that long?”


Ella Grace, you’re twenty-five—”


Hardly on the shelf.”


—And opinionated as all get out, for which I take complete responsibility.”


Surely I should take
some


And I would see you happily settled before I die.”


I am happy. And I don’t feel at all unsett—” She broke off as his words filtered through, and stood up hastily so that she could keep him in view as he headed for the sideboard and the crystal decanters of liquor that lived there. She eyed him worriedly, tried to look closer, but was hampered by flickering firelight and a face full of shadows. “Wait. Dad, are you sick? Is that what all this is about? You’re
dying
?”


No! No faster than the next man. Lord, Ella, but you’d test the patience of a saint.” Her father poured himself a hefty two fingers worth of bourbon and downed the liquid in one long swallow.


Where’s mine?”


You’re not the one second guessing everything you’re about to say.” He put down the cut-crystal glass and turned to face her, his blue eyes not nearly as bright as they’d once been. He seemed to stoop a little, his suit sat his shoulders more loosely than it once had, and it dawned on Ella that, sick or not, her father was getting old. “Ella Grace, I’ve spoiled you rotten. You’re used to giving orders and having them obeyed. You’d cut a man down as quick as look at him, especially if you know that he has ranching interests of his own. Why do you do that? I’ve taught you everything I know about cattle production and ranching, and I know you love this life and this land. Max would have been a good fit for you and the business both, but you made no effort with him tonight at all. None.”


You’re wrong. Max and I both made an effort to get to know each other at the start of the evening, but there was no spark.” Did she really have to spell it out for him? “Isn’t this my prettiest dress?” The gown was several years old, but still stylish enough to make her feel good about wearing it. It made the most of her breasts and showcased her toned and slender arms. It cut in at the waist and out again to fall softly over her hips. It was neither too sexy nor too old-fashioned. The color was a deep and luscious scarlet and suited her creamy skin and dark brown hair to perfection. Ella
had
made an effort to dress well tonight. She’d even worn jewelry and that practically
never
happened. “Don’t I look presentable?”


You look beautiful,” her father offered gruffly.


And,” Ella smelled her wrist and wafted it gently in her father’s direction, “I smell like gardenias. And Max smelled good too and looked very presentable, but there was no attraction between us. And if there’s no chemistry now, what with both of us looking our best and being on our best behavior, what hope is there for chemistry later on? Daddy, I want the spark. The lightning bolt.”
The lust.
“And then once that’s in place I’ll see what I can do when it comes to cultivating the love.”


I so wish your mother was here.”


Daddy, please—” Her mother had been gone for fifteen years now and sometimes Ella wished for her too, but not nearly as often as she once had. “You’re doing okay.” She crossed the room to stand in front of him, touched him gently on the forearm – a little reminder that she was still here, living and breathing. They both were. “We’re both doing okay. Aren’t we?”


Yes.” He cleared his throat and covered her hand with the warmth of his own, patting it once, twice, and then that was enough when it came to Samuel T. and rampant displays of affection. “I should send you to Dallas.
Make
you go and live amongst people your own age.”


But I
have
lived in Dallas. For a year. In a little concrete box of a dorm room.” Ella shuddered. “Dallas got old fast.”


Or I could put a personal ad in the paper for you,” he grumbled. “Lapdog wanted for headstrong cattlewoman of marriageable age.”


I do like lapdogs.” Ella nodded encouragingly. “Not that I’ve ever had one. And let’s face it, Max wouldn’t have made a very good lapdog at all. He’d have been opinionated and commanding, and eventually he’d have wanted to run this place.” And then all the other places they owned, given that Emerson Holdings consisted of not one ranch but three, along with a sizeable livestock transport business. “That’s
my
destiny.”

Her father groaned.
“I miss her so,
so
much.”


I know you do.” Ella reached up and put her arm around her father’s shoulder. He was a good, strong man and a fair boss, and she loved him to bits. He just had a thing about wanting to see her married.

E
lla had nothing against the notion, but she knew what she wanted in a partner and it was a hard combination to find. A man as strong and as capable as her father. A man who was driven. A man who had pride.
A man who had no interest whatsoever in running Emerson Holdings…
and therein lay the crux of the problem. If Ella was the one running the ranch, what else was there here for such a capable man to do? “I know you want me to find someone, and I want to, I do. And he’ll fit me and Emerson Holdings to perfection, you’ll see. Just let me do it my way.”


Your way’s not working.”

Stubborn old goat, but she hugged him again anyway.
“Neither’s yours.”

Ella
hadn’t taken her father’s words to heart but she didn’t dismiss them either. It wouldn’t hurt her to be a bit more sociable, catch up with friends. Marietta had a population of ten thousand fine souls and saw its fair share of tourists. It wasn’t exactly a thriving metropolis, nestled as it was beneath soaring mountains and surrounded by valleys and rich grazing land, but it wasn’t a two-bit town either. There were places to go if someone wanted to kick back and relax. Grey’s Saloon gave good food and music and whatever beverage a heart desired. Or there was the newly refurbished Graff Hotel with its fancy restaurant and bar. She’d mentioned both options to her father when she’d told him she was heading out for the evening with her old school friend Joanna Talbot. Her father had liked the idea of Ella strolling around the Graff Hotel – preferably in a ball gown.

Which was
undoubtedly why, come Friday night, Ella and Jo ended up dressed in jeans and thick winter coats as they headed for Grey’s Saloon instead.


Grey’s is good.” Jo was a bubbly brunette who’d left Marietta to study pre-med in California, and returned two years later with remedial massage and acupuncture diplomas in hand. Word of mouth and Jo’s capable touch had turned those qualifications into a thriving business. “There’s a new bartender filling in for Josh. He’s Australian – you should hear him speak.”


Accents are good.”


It’s not just the accent, it’s the voice as well. All smooth and low, with a big fat rumble of just-try-me running straight through it.”


You
are
smitten.”


Me and every other woman in Marietta, regardless of age, creed, or marital status.”


No one’s that hot.”


No, but he’s a really good start.”


Is he married?”


No.”


I want to walk in and be wildly attracted to him,” said Ella. “I want to be a believer.”

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