Thunderbolt over Texas. Barbara Dunlop. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Barbara Dunlop
Издательство: HarperCollins
Серия: Mills & Boon Desire
Жанр произведения: Контркультура
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781472038265
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      “You Ready To Walk Down The Aisle In A White Dress, Promise To Love And Honor Me, Then Kiss Me And Throw A Bouquet?”

      As Cole outlined the scenario, an unexpected vision bloomed in his mind. Sydney in a white dress. Sydney in a veil. Sydney with a spray of delicate roses trembling in her hands. He could feel her skin, smell her perfume, taste the sweetness of her lush lips.

      “We’d both know it was fake,” she said.

      Cole startled out of the vision and gave a short nod. “Yeah. Right. We’d both know it was fake.”

      “And that’s what would matter. That’s what would count.” She squared her shoulders. “Knowing the benefits, I could do it.”

      “Then so can I,” said Cole, just as he’d known he would from the second his brother conceived the plan. His family needed him, and that was all that needed to be said.

      Thunderbolt over Texas

      Barbara Dunlop

       www.millsandboon.co.uk

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      BARBARA DUNLOP

      writes romantic stories while curled up in a log cabin in Canada’s far north, where bears outnumber people and it snows six months of the year. Fortunately, she has a brawny husband and two teenage children to haul firewood and clear the driveway while she sips cocoa and muses about her upcoming chapters. Barbara loves to hear from readers. You can contact her through her Web site at www.barbaradunlop.com.

      For Angela of the Vikings.

       Princess and Warrior.

      Contents

      Chapter One

      Chapter Two

      Chapter Three

      Chapter Four

      Chapter Five

      Chapter Six

      Chapter Seven

      Chapter Eight

      Chapter Nine

      Chapter Ten

      Chapter Eleven

      Chapter Twelve

      One

      Most people loved a good wedding.

      Cole Erickson hated them.

      It wasn’t that he had anything against joy and bliss, or anything in particular against happily-ever-after. It was the fact that white dresses, seven-tiered cakes and elegant bouquets of roses reminded him that he’d failed countless generations of Ericksons and had broken more than a few hearts along the way.

      So, as the recessional sounded in the Blue Earth Valley Church, and as his brother, Kyle, and Kyle’s new bride, Katie, glided back down the aisle, Cole’s smile was strained. He tucked the empty ring box into the breast pocket of his tux, took the arm of the maid of honor and followed the happy couple through the anteroom and onto the porch.

      Outside, they were greeted by an entire town of well-wishers raining confetti and taking up the newly coined tradition of blowing bubbles at the bride and groom.

      Somebody shoved a neon-orange bottle of bubble mix into Cole’s hand. Emily, the freckle-faced maid of honor, laughed and released his arm, unscrewing the cap on her bottle and joining in the bubble cascade.

      Grandma Erickson shifted to stand next to Cole. She waved away his offer of the bubble solution, but threw a handful of confetti across the wooden steps.

      “Extra two hundred for the cleanup,” she said.

      “Only happens once in a lifetime,” Cole returned, even though the soap and shredded paper looked more messy than festive.

      “I’ve been meaning to talk to you about that.”

      Cole could feel his grandmother’s lecture coming a mile away. “Grandma,” he cautioned.

      “Melanie was a nice girl.”

      “Melanie was a terrific girl,” he agreed.

      “You blew that one.”

      “I did.” Grandma would get no argument from Cole. He’d loved Melanie. Everyone had loved Melanie. There wasn’t a mean or selfish bone in her body, and any man on the planet would be lucky to have her as a wife.

      Problem was, Cole had plenty of mean and selfish bones in his body. He couldn’t be the husband Melanie or anyone else needed. He couldn’t do the doting bridegroom, couldn’t kowtow to a woman’s whims, change his habits, his hair or his underwear style to suit another person.

      In short, there was no way in the world he was getting married now or anytime in the foreseeable future. Which left him with one mother of a problem. A nine-hundred-year-old problem.

      “You’re not getting any younger,” said Grandma.

      “I’ve been thinking,” said Cole as Kyle and Katie climbed into a chauffeur-driven limousine for the ten-mile ride back to the ranch and the garden reception.

      “About time.” Grandma harrumphed.

      “I was thinking the Thunderbolt of the North would make a perfect wedding gift for Kyle and Katie.”

      Even amid the cacophony of goodbye calls and well wishes, Cole recognized the stunned silence beside him. Heresy to suggest the family’s antique brooch go to the second son, he knew. But Kyle was the logical choice.

      Cole had already moved out of the main house. He’d set up in the old cabin by the creek so Kyle and Katie would have some privacy. Soon their children would take over the second floor, making Kyle the patriarch of the next Erickson dynasty. And the Thunderbolt of the North was definitely a dynastic kind of possession.

      As the wedding guests moved en masse toward their vehicles, Grandma finally spoke. “You’re suggesting I throw away nine hundred years of tradition.”

      “I’m suggesting you respect nine hundred years of tradition. Kyle and Katie will have kids.”

      “So will you.”

      “Not if I don’t get married.”

      “Of course you’ll get married.”

      “Grandma. I’m thirty-three. Melanie was probably my best shot. Give the brooch to Katie.”

      “You are the eldest.”

      “Olav the Third came up with that rule in 1075. A few things have changed since then.”

      “The important things haven’t.”

      “Wake up and smell the bridal bouquets. We’re well into the twenty-first century. The British royal family is even talking about pushing girls up in the line of succession.”