
The EndâŚor Just the Beginning?
Gabe Miller’s marriage ended so fast it had hardly begun. Which is why he couldn’t quite believe his luckâor his “ex”âwhen she returned a few months later with the news that legally they were still husband and wife. And that the child she was carrying was his son.
Gabe feared Marissa would bolt again, making a custody battle his only optionâunless he could turn back the clock and woo her the way he should have during their whirlwind romance. But even with his boy’s future at stake, mending fences with a womanâespecially the one he lovedâwasn’t something the strong, silent type found easy to doâŚ.

CHAPTER ONE
One day soon, heâd get rid of this wedding ring.
Gabe Miller tossed the gold circle into the air and snatched it back again, trying not to think of the woman whoâd slipped it onto his left hand, third finger. Trying not to think of what sheâd had inscribed inside.
Forever, M
Ha. What a crock. Forever hadnât lasted but three short weeks.
Scowling, he shoved the band into the velvet-lined jewelerâs box and slid it back beneath the stack of flannel shirts in the dresser drawer. Call him a dumb cowboy, but itâd taken his own wifeâs desertion to finally get the message rammed into his thick skull:
Never trust a woman.
âYo, boss.â
He turned. Warren stood in the bedroom doorway, his whiskered face scrunched into a frown.
âShake a leg. The boysâll be raring to eat any minute now.â
âRight.â He hustled along the hall in his elderly ranch handâs wake. Their two pairs of boots sounded loud on the bare wooden stairs. He glared at the older manâs back, then felt immediate guilt. Warren hadnât caused his ugly mood.
He followed him into the kitchen.
âWe gotta get us a cook, boss. Itâs been months since Joe and Mary went back east.â Warren flipped a switch, powering up the coffeemaker Gabe had gotten ready the night before. âLord knows, a rancherâs got enough to keep him moving, sunup to sundown. And youâre kept busier than most, considerinâ the size of your spread, and managing it yourself ân all.â
âWeâre doing just fine, Warren.â He kept his tone neutral, knowing how much the older man hated that he couldnât pull his weight with the younger hands any more.
âYeah, âlong as you donât try gettinâ too fancy.â
âOkay, so the pancakes didnât work out too well.â
That earned him a chuckle.
Gabe grabbed the egg carton and a pack of pork links from the refrigerator. Sure, thisâd been the last thing heâd neededâundertaking kitchen duties once his ranch cook and her husband had moved on. And Gabe did have more to handle than most of the local ranchers. Something Marissa hadnât understood.
He rubbed the back of his neck and tried to swallow a growl. Tried to stop thinking of Marissa.
Lost cause, that idea. He brooded on it, anyway. Why in heck did he wake up this morningâalone in his big bedâwith the feeling today would turn out worse than the usual? He couldnât manage to push the feeling of gloom from his mind, the way heâd shoved the wedding ring back under his flannel shirts. The ring he should have tossed out, just the way sheâd tossed him aside and walked out, months ago.
That, right there, was the problem.
Sheâd taken off three months ago today.
Jared and Hank and the rest of the cowhands trooped into the kitchen. Their usual whooping and hollering drowned out the sizzle of eggs and sausages.
âHey, boys, hold it down a bit,â Warren grumbled. âDonât know where you get your energy this early in the morning.â
Gabe grimaced, knowing his own bad mood had caused the complaints. He was used to rowdy cowboys before the sun was even upâheâd breakfasted with ranch hands all his life. But he remembered those daysâthose way too few daysâwhen heâd skipped the chow-downs out at the bunkhouse and spent every last early-morning moment he could bedded down with his wife.
Hank, best known as the ranchâs clown, looked over Gabeâs shoulder. âNo pancakes today, boss?â
The rest of the men guffawed.
âAll right, so Iâm not much of a cook.â Marissa was. He shook the thought away. âBetter knock it off, or yâall will be taking turns at the stove yourselves.â
Silence fell heavier than a bale dropped from the hayloft. His back still turned to his men, he reached for the egg carton again and grinned. Shut them up, all right.
In the calm, he heard the noise of a carâs engine outside. Awfully early for visitors.
Warren pushed up the blind over the kitchen sink and squinted through the window. âSeems like you got company, boss.â The old cowboyâs voice had gone rusty.
Gabe stepped to his side. âMust be Doc, right? Nobody elseâdââ
What he saw through the window shut him up, too. The light over the back porch stabbing through pre-dawn darkness. The white Mustang purring in the drive. And the woman sitting behind the wheel.
Marissa.
He must not have woken up yet after all, must have dreamed Warrenâs call and his trip to the kitchen. Because, Lord only knew, he was dreaming now. Blinking didnât help. The picture didnât go away. He closed his eyes for a long moment and opened them again. Nope, she was still there.
Looking right at the lighted kitchen window.
He stumbled back a pace.
âEasy, now.â Warren mightâve been talking to a skittish colt. He pulled the forgotten carton of eggs from Gabeâs hands. âGot it under control here, boss. I guess you got some business needs taking care of.â
âYeah, right.â He looked through the window again, gritted his teeth and set his jaw.
He had something to take care of, all right.
Throwing his ex-wife off his land.
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A husband for Christmas? Â
Mitch Weston’s back in Cowboy Creek, and self-proclaimed matchmaker Jed Garland has his single granddaughter Andi on his mind. Mitch is a lawman, good with the little ones and easy on the eyes. He and Andi were high school sweethearts, for heaven’s sake! Why can’t they see they’re perfect for each other? Â
Because Andi already lost one husband to a dangerous job, and now she’s all about playing it safe, for her sake and her children’s. Being a cop is everything to Mitch. After discovering Jed’s plan, Mitch and Andi come up with their own: they’ll pretend to get engaged and then break up due to irreconcilable differences. Jed’s got his work cut out for himâbecause this match needs a Christmas miracle!

As Mitch strode through the doorway, Andi crossed her arms, rested her hips against the table, and gave in to the pleasure of seeing him. In tight black T-shirt, jeans and black biker boots, he looked taller and tougher and sexier than ever before. That T-shirt and his black hair made his eyes startling blue.
âJed and Paz told me I would find you here.â
She frowned. âIs everything okay? Do they need me to take Missy off their hands?â
âNo, theyâre feeding her Pazâs Christmas cookies, and they said thatâs keeping her out of trouble. They also said your kids wonât ever want to go home.â
Just what Jed was hoping for, she knew.
âWhat can I do for you?â she asked. When he grinned, she crossed her arms more tightly. âIâm very busy.â
âThatâs why Iâm here. Jed figured heâd keep me out of trouble by giving me a job.â
She stood straighter. âI donât need a helper, thank you.â
âToo late. Iâm on board. What do you want me to do?â
She turned away and rummaged through a carton of ornaments. âNothing. Iâve got everything under control.â The words made her think again of her reaction to his kiss. Of her loss of control.
âAndi, walking away yesterday didnât make me go away. Pretending to be busy here doesnât mean Iâll disappear. Why donât you tell me whatâs bothering you?â
âAt the moment, you are.â
âWell, thatâs a start.â
She shot a look over her shoulder and found him smiling down at her. He was so close, she could have taken a step back and found herself in his arms.
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Iâm Barbara, and IÂ write small-town romance that usually includes quirky characters and a touch of humor.
Have fun looking around the site and my blog, âThe Daille-y News.â And consider signing up for my newsletter, where youâll get insider info on my writing life, sneak previews, and access to subscriber-only book giveaways.

















