She’s the prodigal daughter...
But can she truly go home?
Shannon McTavish returns to her father’s Wyoming ranch with her child, Rose, but it’s hardly the haven she expected. Her father and rancher Billy Mac are embroiled in a battle with a powerful wind company. Billy wants Shannon to stay. But is he asking because he needs her help to save the land—or because he wants to give Shannon and Rose a home?
NADIA NICHOLS went to the dogs at the age of twenty-nine and currently operates a kennel of twenty-eight Alaskan huskies. She has raced her sled dogs in northern New England and Canada, works at the family-owned Harraseeket Inn in Freeport, Maine, and is also a registered Master Maine Guide.
She began her writing career at the age of five, when she made her first sale, a short story called “The Bear” to her mother for twenty-five cents. This story was such a blockbuster that her mother bought every other story she wrote and kept her in ice-cream money throughout much of her childhood.
Now all her royalties go toward buying dog food. She lives on a remote solar-powered northern Maine homestead with her sled dogs, a Belgian draft horse named Dan, several cats, two goats and a flock of chickens. She can be reached at [email protected].
Across a Thousand Miles
Montana Dreaming
Buffalo Summer
A Full House
Montana Standoff
Sharing Spaces
Everything to Prove
From Out of the Blue
A Soldier’s Pledge
Montana Unbranded
Discover more at millsandboon.co.uk
A Family for Rose
Nadia Nichols
ISBN: 978-1-474-08587-8
A FAMILY FOR ROSE
© 2018 Penny R. Gray
Published in Great Britain 2018
by Mills & Boon, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers 1 London Bridge Street, London, SE1 9GF
All rights reserved including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. This edition is published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
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Version: 2018-08-31
“You think me and Rose would be happy here. I think you’re crazy, cowboy.”
“Crazy about you, Shannon, that’s for sure, even if you are way out of my league.”
“I wish you’d quit saying that.” Shannon rose to her feet. “I have to tuck Rose into bed.”
“You could come back afterward,” Billy said. “Watch the stars shine down.”
She smiled, a sweet curve of her lips in the gathering twilight. “You really need to get some rest.”
“What I really need to do is kiss you.”
For a moment he thought she was going to leave. Just turn and walk away and leave him sitting there, like a rejected fool. Just as she had ten years earlier. But she didn’t. She bent over him, her fingertips touching his shoulders, her lips barely touching his. The gentlest of kisses, and far too brief.
This was a tough story to write. I left my home in western Maine seven years ago when the mountain where my father’s ashes were scattered was leveled to make way for twelve industrial-scale wind turbines. Several years later I went back to visit my old mountain haunts, but nothing was the same, and I didn’t stay long. John Muir said, “Going to the mountains is going home,” but I’ve since learned that mountains are not renewable, and going home can be a painful thing.
The characters in this story share many of the same experiences I did, viewed from opposite sides of the fence. Shannon McTavish believes wind power is green and good for the planet. Billy Mac sees it as an environmental disaster. To complicate matters, Billy works for Shannon’s father, who’s the only holdout among the major landowners who stand to make big bucks leasing their land to the wind power company. Battle lines are drawn, but there’s a whole lot more at stake than the outcome of a wind project. Hearts are on the line, as well as the future of Shannon’s little girl. Shannon has to decide whether to walk away, or try harder to protect what turns out to be the two most important things to all of them: home and family.
I love to hear from my readers. Contact me at [email protected] and check out my author’s page on Amazon.com.
Nadia Nichols
For my father, who once told me that one of the hardest decisions we ever face in life is choosing whether to walk away or try harder.
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