The last cowboy standing, p.1

The Last Cowboy Standing, page 1

 

The Last Cowboy Standing
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The Last Cowboy Standing


  “He told me no matter where I went he would find me. I figured if what he said was true, then I might as well move back here.”

  Mac frowned. “Do you have any idea who it might be?”

  She shook her head. “Not a clue. I never saw him at all and I knew he was disguising his voice every time he talked to me.”

  “Do you really think he’ll come back for you?” His eyes were dark and troubled.

  There was no way she was willing to share with him that she hoped the madman would come back for her. She cared about Mac, but she didn’t want him to try to play her hero.

  She didn’t need a hero.

  “No, I really don’t think he’ll come for me again.” She hated to lie to Mac, but this was a lie to keep him safe. “I think he was just saying that to scare me. He’d be a fool to try it twice. And now I don’t want to talk about any of this anymore. This night was supposed to be a celebration.”

  * * *

  Don’t miss the other exciting romances in the Cowboys of Holiday Ranch miniseries!

  * * *

  If you’re on Twitter, tell us what you think of Harlequin Romantic Suspense! #harlequinromsuspense

  Dear Reader,

  Well, the time has finally come to say goodbye to the twelve boys who came to the Holiday ranch for a second chance at life. They’re now all grown up, and each have found that special woman to make their lives complete.

  I must confess, I’ll miss these guys. They have been a part of my life for some time now. I feel a bit like Big Cass. All I wanted was for these cowboys to find love and happiness, so my job now is done and my heart is full.

  Yes, it’s time to move on from the Holiday ranch...or is it?

  Carla Cassidy

  THE LAST COWBOY STANDING

  Carla Cassidy

  Carla Cassidy is an award-winning, New York Times bestselling author who has written over 170 books, including 150 for Harlequin. She has won the Centennial Award from Romance Writers of America. Most recently she won the 2019 Write Touch Readers Award for her Harlequin Intrigue title Desperate Strangers. Carla believes the only thing better than curling up with a good book is sitting down at the computer with a good story to write.

  Books by Carla Cassidy

  Harlequin Romantic Suspense

  Colton 911: Chicago

  Colton 911: Guardian in the Storm

  Cowboys of Holiday Ranch

  A Real Cowboy

  Cowboy of Interest

  Cowboy Under Fire

  Cowboy at Arms

  Operation Cowboy Daddy

  Killer Cowboy

  Sheltered by the Cowboy

  Guardian Cowboy

  Cowboy Defender

  Cowboy’s Vow to Protect

  The Cowboy’s Targeted Bride

  The Last Cowboy Standing

  Colton 911

  Colton 911: Target in Jeopardy

  Visit the Author Profile page at

  Harlequin.com for more titles.

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Epilogue

  Excerpt from Matched with Murder by Danielle M. Haas

  Chapter 1

  Mac McBride put his horse in the appropriate stall, washed up at the sink in the stables and then headed to the back of the cowboy motel for lunch. The mid-September air was crisp and smelled fresh with just a hint of apples and woodsmoke.

  Autumn was one of Mac’s favorite times of year and the small town of Bitterroot, Oklahoma, celebrated the season with a big fall festival, which had taken place the week before.

  It always seemed like everyone in town came out for the festival. There were tents set up with food for sale and with various craft items. There were all kinds of contests, from bobbing for apples to best-baked apple pies, and a Miss Bitterroot was always crowned.

  The theme of the weekend had been fun and family, and as far as Mac was concerned, there was no place in the entire world that did it better than the small town he loved.

  He’d come to the Holiday ranch when he’d been a fifteen-year-old off the streets of Oklahoma City. Now, at thirty-six, he figured he’d work there until he got too old to be an asset to the ranch and then buy a small house in town and retire.

  There were twelve young boys who had come to the ranch to work and live. Ten of those men were now happily married and one of them was dead. Of the married men, some still worked on the ranch, while others had their own places.

  He smelled the scent of barbecue before he walked into the dining area doorway. Cord Cully aka Cookie had been cooking for the cowboys for years. He provided breakfast, lunch and dinner, and he knew what they all liked.

  Mac walked inside the dining room and was greeted by several of the other cowboys who were in the buffet line Cookie set up for each meal. “Hey, man,” Dusty Crawford said as he fell in line behind Mac.

  “Hey, Dusty. I hadn’t really congratulated you and Tricia being pregnant again. I heard about it a couple of weeks ago but every time I see you I forget to say something.”

  Dusty’s dimples danced in his cheeks as he grinned at Mac. “Thanks, we’re both really happy about it.”

  “That’s great, Dusty.” Mac picked up a plate and silverware and moved closer to the food.

  “When are we going to get you married off?” Dusty asked teasingly. “You’re the last cowboy standing when it comes to love and marriage among us original guys.”

  “I’ve pretty much decided that’s not in the cards for me,” Mac said. “I’ve made peace with the fact that I’ll probably live my life alone. I’m satisfied just working here and playing my guitar when anyone wants to hear me, for as long as I’m able.”

  “You know the guys always like to hear you strum and sing after a long day,” Dusty replied.

  Usually during the evenings, some of the men would gather in the rec area on the other side of the dining room and Mac would entertain them with his music. That was what fed his soul.

  “I’m starving,” Dusty said.

  “You’re always starving at lunchtime,” Mac said with a laugh. “But it’s definitely a good food day.” This meant pulled pork sandwiches, french fries and coleslaw. There was also baked mac and cheese and fresh fruit.

  Mac filled his plate and then went to one of the picnic tables and slid into an empty seat. Dusty followed and sat across from him.

  “I think I’ve got a new horse to work with in the evenings,” Mac said.

  “That’s cool. Whose?” Dusty asked.

  Mac knew what he was about to say would shock Dusty. When Mac had gotten the call the night before, he had been utterly surprised. “Marisa Lindale.”

  Dusty froze with his sandwich halfway between his plate and his mouth. His blue eyes widened. “Marisa Lindale? Are you kidding me?” He put the sandwich down and stared at Mac in disbelief.

  “No, I’m not. She called me last night. I’m meeting with her tonight and looking at the horse she wants me to work with.”

  Dusty picked up his sandwich again. “I didn’t even know she was anywhere here in town. Is she staying out at her mother’s place?”

  “No, not in the big house itself. Apparently she’s been living in a foreman’s cabin at the back of her mother’s pasture,” Mac replied.

  Dusty frowned. “What’s it been... Two...three years since she was abducted?”

  “Almost two years ago. I checked after she called me.”

  Twenty months ago Marisa Lindale had been living in Oklahoma City and working for a large company in their tech department.

  On that particular night, according to the news stories, she’d made plans to meet some friends at a local bar, but she’d never made it there. She’d disappeared someplace between her apartment and her car in the parking lot, although her purse and her keys were found in the car.

  She was missing for sixty days, and had then appeared on the streets of her hometown, Bitterroot, Oklahoma, bound and gagged in front of the post office on Main Street.

  It was a huge story when she’d told police she’d been abducted by an unknown man and held captive for two months. Her beautiful face and the lurid tale had been splashed across news stations throughout the country for days. Then she had disappeared completely from the public eye.

  Like with most news stories, once she fell off the front pages, people eventually stopped talking about her and the crime, and soon after, everyone forgot about her.

  “Man, I wonder how she’s doing now,” Dusty said. “And I wonder how long she’s been living here right under our noses.”

  “I got the impression after our brief conversation last night that she’s been at that foreman’s cabin for quite some time,” Mac replied.

  “She sure has been a recluse,” Dusty said. “I’ve certainly never seen her in town.”

  “I don’t think anyone has,” Mac replied.

  The conversation then turned to the many things the cowboys needed to get done before winter moved in. Tony Nakni san k onto the bench next to Dusty.

  Tony was another one of the original twelve young boys who had arrived on the ranch to work for Big Cass Holiday. He’d married Mary Redwing, a talented local artist, several years ago, and they lived in a house in town with Mary’s colorful grandmother, Halena.

  “Did you hear that the fence was down in a section of the west side of the pasture this morning?” Tony asked.

  Dusty frowned. “I didn’t hear anything about it, but I’ve been mucking out stalls all morning.”

  “And I was in the stable with Dusty, polishing and oiling all the horse equipment. Did any of the cattle get out?” Mac asked.

  “From what Sawyer told me, we’re missing five,” Tony replied.

  Dusty frowned. “And they’re probably wearing the Humes brand by now.”

  Mac sighed. “Things have been so quiet between them and us. I was hoping it would stay that way.”

  The Humes ranch was next to theirs. It was owned by Raymond Humes, an old man who had hated Big Cass and now hated her niece Cassie, who had taken over the ranch after Cass’s death.

  Over the years there had been fires set, cattle stolen and fencing downed on Holiday Ranch, and they knew the Humes men were responsible, although there had been no arrests due to a lack of concrete evidence.

  It had to be particularly frustrating to Chief of Police Dillon Bowie, who was married to Cassie. He investigated the crimes taking place on his own property, but was never able to specifically identify the person or persons responsible.

  Mac hated to see the mischief and mayhem starting up all over again.

  “Those guys on the Humes ranch need to stay in their own lane instead of messing with us,” Dusty said with a frown.

  “I’d like to catch one of them red-handed when they’re cutting our fence so I could give them something to really think about,” Tony added gruffly.

  “Let’s hope this is just an isolated incident and doesn’t mean that things are going to get nasty with them again,” Mac replied.

  The men finished up their lunch and headed back outside for their afternoon chores. Mac returned to the small room in the barn to get back to work oiling and polishing saddles and all the other tack equipment.

  This was one of his favorite chores. His first choice would be riding the pasture on the back of his horse, Rachel, named for Mac’s mother who had died of breast cancer when Mac was twelve years old. But he enjoyed this work, as well. The smell of the horses and hay and of oil and polish fed his soul almost as much as his music did.

  He worked until it was time to knock off for supper. Dusty and Tony went home after work each day, so Mac didn’t have them to eat dinner with. However, there were nine others in the dining room and it was usually a raucous meal as they teased each other about the day’s work and talked about plans for the coming weekend.

  It was a few minutes before six when Mac went to his room and showered up so he could be at Marisa’s place by seven. His room was in a long building they all referred to as the cowboy motel. Each man who worked and lived on the property had his own room. The rooms were small but serviceable and each had its own bathroom, as well.

  He dressed in a pair of slightly worn, comfortable jeans and a black, long-sleeved turtleneck. He slapped on some cologne, added his cowboy hat and then left his room.

  He headed for the large garage in the distance, which housed not only ranch vehicles but also the personal vehicles of all the men who lived on the property. For the first time since that morning, he thought about the meeting he was about to have.

  As interested as he was in meeting Marisa Lindale, he was equally interested in the horse he’d be working with. All she’d told him about the mare was that she’d been bought at auction and she needed a lot of work. He would have liked to ask her more questions about the horse, but Marisa had kept the call brief.

  He’d just turned onto the main road that would take him to the outskirts of town when he saw flashing red and blue lights in the distance ahead and the light traffic come to a halt.

  As he pulled closer, he realized it was a wreck between two vehicles. He hoped nobody was hurt and that the road got cleared quickly.

  Right now he was stuck and aware of the clock ticking. He hated to be late, especially on his first meeting with a new client, but there was nothing he could do about it.

  It was seven fifteen when the road was finally free and Mac was able to continue on his way. Dusk had already begun to fall and the cloud cover overhead promised a darker-than-usual twilight.

  He stepped on the gas, hoping to get there as quickly as possible, while there was still a last gasp of daylight left for him to see the horse.

  He turned down the road that would lead him to the Lindale ranch. Rose Lindale was a widow who owned a big spread. She sat on the city council and was an influential leader in the small town. Currently she was running for mayor of Bitterroot, and local gossip indicated she was probably going to win.

  Marisa had told him to go down the driveway along the right side of the two-story Colonial and continue straight ahead. He did that and came to the pasture gate she’d told him about. He got out of his truck and opened the gate. He drove through it and then stopped to close the gate behind him.

  He continued on a dirt lane that cut through the pasture and finally saw the small cabin in the distance. No lights shone from the windows and he wondered if, since he was late, she’d left to go someplace else.

  As he drew closer he saw the good-sized corral and a shed-like structure connected to it. He parked in front of it and got out of his truck. The tall black mare immediately ran to the opposite side of the corral.

  Mac could smell the fear emanating from the undernourished horse as its ears flattened and it cowered away from him. Mac’s heart cried out for the pain he sensed the animal carried both physically and mentally.

  He leaned forward on the wooden railing. “Hey, girl,” he said softly. “Hey, pretty girl. I know you’re scared but maybe we can do some things to fix that.”

  He jerked upright, a small gasp escaping him as the unmistakable feel of a gun barrel jabbed him in the back. “Put your hands up over your head,” a low female voice commanded.

  * * *

  Marisa held the gun at the back of the tall man dressed in black. Even though she knew he was probably Mac McBride, she wasn’t taking any chances. She hadn’t taken a chance with her own safety for the past eighteen months.

  “Slowly turn around and keep your hands up,” she said.

  He did as she asked and she got her first look at the man who would hopefully work with the horse. His light brown hair was slightly shaggy beneath his black cowboy hat and his sculpted features were bronzed from the sun.

  But it was his eyes that momentarily gave her pause. Long and dark-lashed, they were chocolate brown, with a wealth of warmth emanating from them. The picture she’d found of him on the internet didn’t do him justice, but this was definitely the man she’d been expecting.

  “Do you usually shoot people who are late to meet with you?” he asked, his voice holding a touch of humor.

  “You can put your hands down now,” she replied as she holstered her gun.

  He lowered his arms to his sides. “I’m Mac and you must be Marisa,” he said.

  “I am, and that’s Spirit.” She pointed to the horse. “I named her that because right now she’s broken, but I’m hoping with the right care she’ll find her spirit again.”

  She’d been watching an online auction out of Tulsa and the minute she had seen Spirit, she knew she had to have her...to heal her. She’d known instantly that the horse was destined to be hers.

  “What’s her story?” Mac once again leaned on the railing and gazed at the horse, who remained on the far side of the corral.

  She stepped up next to him and immediately caught his scent, a mixture of sunshine, minty soap and a woodsy cologne that was instantly appealing. “All I know for sure is that she has obviously been underfed and she shows signs of being whipped and beaten.”

  A rich anger threatened to well up inside her as she thought of the torture the helpless animal had endured.

  “Whoever did that to her should be shot,” Mac said.

 

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