Kathleen Creighton
The Cowboys Hidden Agenda
A book in the Into The Heartland series, 2000
Dear Reader,
Once again Intimate Moments is offering you six exciting and romantic reading choices, starting with Rogues Reform by perennial reader favorite Marilyn Pappano. This latest title in her popular HEARTBREAK CANYON miniseries features a hero whod spent his life courting trouble-until he found himself courting the lovely woman carrying his child after one night of unforgettable passion.
Award-winner Kathleen Creighton goes back INTO THE HEARTLAND with The Cowboys Hidden Agenda, a compelling tale of secret identity and kidnapping-and an irresistible hero by the name of Johnny Bronco. Carla Cassidys In a Heartbeat will have you smiling through tears. In other words, it provides a perfect emotional experience. In Anything for Her Marriage, Karen Templeton proves why readers look forward to her books, telling a tale of a pregnant bride, a marriage of convenience and love that knows no limits. With Every Little Thing Linda Winstead Jones makes a return to the line, offering a romantic and suspenseful pairing of opposites. Finally, welcome Linda Castillo, who debuts with Remember the Night. Youll certainly remember her and be looking forward to her return.
Enjoy-and come back next month for still more of the best and most exciting romantic reading around, available every month only in Silhouette Intimate Moments.
Yours,
Leslie J. Wainger
Executive Senior Editor
It was a coyotes wail that broke the fragile bonds of sleep. Lauren opened her eyes to find a thin silvery light streaming through the window bars above her cot-whether from the moon or approaching dawn she had no way of knowing. Theyd taken away her watch, along with her shoes.
But they hadnt bound or gagged her. Thank heaven for small favors. Shed actually enjoyed, if that was the word, a fairly comfortable night on the narrow metal-frame bed, soothed to sleep by the familiar lullabies of lowing cattle and whickering horses. In the old saddle house theyd chosen for her temporary prison, the comforting smells of leather and wool and horse sweat and liniment had taken her back to places of her childhood, to those rare and wonderful long-ago summers of freedom on the Tipsy Pee Ranch.
For that small kindness she supposed she had her jailer to thank-though her stomach clenched and her heart bumped in frustrated anger at the idea of being in the small est way beholden to him. Him. The Indian. The one they called Bronco.
If only The words hurled themselves like trapped sparrows against the barriers of her mind. If only
But what could she have done differently? How might she have steered her course away from this disaster?
You know the answer to that, her mind replied. You should have stayed home in Des Moines, taken the firms job offer, married Benjamin and never come to Texas at all.
No! Her heart rejected that with a silent cry that was also a plea for understanding. I had to do it. If Id stayed, part of me-maybe the best part-would surely have died.
So if she truly did believe that coming back to West Texas, to the Tipsy Pee Ranch, had been the right thing to do, where had things gone so wrong? How had she come to be locked up in a makeshift prison somewhere in Arizona with an Apache cowboy named Bronco for her jailer?
As if the very intensity of her thoughts had conjured him up, there was a loud creak and a whisper of cool air, fragrant with mesquite and juniper, and a mans shape was silhouetted against the window bars. A voice spoke softly, raising the fine hairs on her skin.
Rise and shine, Laurie Brown. You decent? If you are, Ill turn on some light.
Grudgingly she sat up, and even though she was fully clothed, pulled the rough woolen blanket around her. One hand went automatically to her hair, fingers raking through it to comb it away from her face. The aroma of coffee taunted her.
Im decent. She bit the words off like a miser handing out tips, resenting every one. How about you? His chuckle was barely a ripple in the darkness.
Light stabbed at her eyes, and she turned her head away from its source, away from him, not wanting to look at him, remember his face or the things shed thought and felt when shed first laid eyes on him. Embarrassing, foolish things
Next up, comin outta chute number three-Johnny Bronco, up on Ol Number Seven. This is a local boy, ladies and gentlemen-
As if too volatile to be contained a moment longer, horse and rider erupted from the gate, interrupting the announcers drone like a shout. All around the dusty arena the spectators seemed to draw and hold their collective breath.
Almost against her will, Lauren moved closer to the steel pole-and-bar fence; in spite of her lifelong love affair with horses-or perhaps because of it-shed never cared much for rodeos. But as she braced a hand on the crossbar and ducked her head to get a clearer view, her pulse began to pound in almost perfect sync with the thud of the broncs hooves on the baked earth. Shed never seen a man ride an exploding bomb before.
As always, it was the horse that drew her attention first-though he was no great beauty, a rusty black with the scruffy jug-headed look of a wild mustang; the mean eyes, laid-back ears and bared teeth of a born outlaw. He didnt just buck with the rhythmic crow-hopping motion of the average bronc, either. This one was a real high roller, employing the wickedly erratic corkscrew action of a Brahma bull.
No way a man could stay up on such a beast for eight seconds, she thought in the instant it took her to transfer her gaze from horse to rider. Then she, like the crowd around her, caught her breath and forgot to let it go again.
Johnny Bronco. Had she heard the announcer right? Could that really be his name? If so, Lauren thought, no man had ever been more aptly named. Like the horse, he was no great beauty-the same powerfully compact hard-muscled body, the same dark angry look, with hair as long and black and coarse, worn in a ponytail that snapped the air in time with the mustangs tail, like two flags whipped by the same wind. A man too wild and rough-hewn for beauty. And yettogether man and horse were somehow transformed. Together they were beautiful.
To Lauren time seemed to slow, as around horse and rider the dust rose and caught the sunlight, becoming a swirling golden cloud, a medium more dense, yet more forgiving than air. Within it the two appeared to twist and turn with the effortless grace of dancers, so that the gritty battle of wills between man and animal became more like a form of epic ballet.
A buzzer sounded, shattering the fantasy. Lauren jerked back from the fence as the bronc hurtled past, the rider gripping the bucking strap with both hands now that the required eight seconds had passed. She felt the spatter of coarse sand against her jeans, smelled the sweat of man and animal, tasted the grit of dust, heard the grunts of effort, the slap of leather against horsehide and the announcers voice on the loudspeaker:
Nice ride! Ladies and gentlemen, how bout a nice hand for the hometown boy!
Needing no encouragement, the spectators cheered and stomped the aluminum-and-wood bleachers, while out in the arena the two pickup riders moved in on either side of the still-agitated bronc. While one leaned over to release the bucking cinch from the black mustangs flanks and grab hold of his halter, the other moved into position to pluck the rider from his back. Once more Lauren stepped up to the fence, in time to watch Johnny Bronco slip deftly onto the back of the pickup horse, then to the ground. She found herself grinning in admiration as she watched him make his way back to the chutes, walking with the cowboys loose-legged stride, slapping away dust and tipping his hat to the crowd in a cursory self-conscious way. Not a man accus tomed to or comfortable with the limelight, Lauren surmised. It was something she understood.
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