Hot for a Cowboy Read online




  Also by Kim Redford

  SMOKIN’ HOT COWBOYS

  A Cowboy Firefighter for Christmas

  Blazing Hot Cowboy

  A Very Cowboy Christmas

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  Books. Change. Lives.

  Copyright © 2019 by Kim Redford

  Cover and internal design © 2019 by Sourcebooks, Inc.

  Cover art by Kris Keller

  Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks, Inc.

  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

  All brand names and product names used in this book are trademarks, registered trademarks, or trade names of their respective holders. Sourcebooks, Inc., is not associated with any product or vendor in this book.

  Published by Sourcebooks Casablanca, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc.

  P.O. Box 4410, Naperville, Illinois 60567-4410

  (630) 961-3900

  Fax: (630) 961-2168

  sourcebooks.com

  Contents

  Front Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  A Look at Cowboy Firefighter Christmas Feast

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Back Cover

  Chapter 1

  “And that oldie but goodie from The Highwaymen, all you cowboys—and the cowgirls who love ’em for whatever wild and crazy reason—is how we celebrate springtime in Wildcat Bluff County. This is Wildcat Jack coming to you from KWCB, the Wildcat Den, serving North Texas and Southern Oklahoma since 1946. Our ranch radio is located on the beauteous Hogtrot Ranch for your listenin’ pleasure.”

  Eden Rafferty stopped mid-stride when she heard the legendary DJ boom loud and clear over the outdoor speakers of the Easy In & Out convenience store, bait shop, and gas station. She chuckled, feeling happiness bubble up. Hogtrot was a local joke. Jack knew good and well that the radio station was on the Rocky T Ranch. He was seventy-nine—and not budging from that number no matter how many years flew by, as he liked to say. Only a disc jockey with Jack’s kind of staying power could keep a joke going for more than half a century.

  Everybody knew Wildcat Jack was an institution in the county. He could say whatever he wanted, whenever he wanted, however he wanted in that big, deep voice that Texas men grew like muscles, along with their throw-down attitudes. He was also a shoot-from-the-hip kind of guy rooted in the same era as the down-at-the-heels radio station and her held-together-with-baling-wire-and-duct-tape Volkswagen Beetle.

  She was grateful for the whole kit and caboodle since they were all she had left in the world.

  She stepped off the curb onto the parking lot of the truck stop that was tucked out of sight, on a side street well away from Wildcat Bluff’s popular Old Town, so as not to detract from the Wild West 1800s ambience. She’d have almost preferred a horse and buggy to her current ride, but she couldn’t afford anything that pricey, and she sure couldn’t afford to be picky.

  Where had all the huge trucks come from? And why did pickups have to take up more than their fair share of parking spaces? She shook her head. She’d obviously been in the land of sedans and crossovers too long. Maybe living in Hollywood had twisted her view of Texas reality.

  She refused to let her past intrude on her beautiful morning, so she adjusted the paper bag on her hip and her purse strap on her shoulder and looked around for Betty. The bug had been named by Uncle Clem for Betty Grable, the number one pinup girl of World War II. At one time, Betty must have been a shiny beauty, but now she’d seen her share of life, sporting four crushed fenders and dull turquoise paint. Beggars couldn’t be choosers. Betty still ran, even if she did backfire at random moments like an old dog expelling gas.

  “Gotta get ’cause I’m gosh darn hungry. I know it’s early, but when your belly feels like it’s running on empty, it’s time to fill ’er up,” Wildcat Jack growled over the airways. “I’ve got a hankering for some finger-licking ribs at the Chuckwagon Café. What about you? You know it, you love it, so you best get right on down there before I scarf up Slade Steele’s latest lip-licking pie.”

  She exhaled in relief. At least the station still had local advertising to help keep it afloat. For safety and security reasons, Jack was also cautious never to announce on the air that he was leaving the station untended or to imply that he was the only person there. He’d leave Billy Bob or Rae Dell, his faked voices, on the recording he had running while he was gone, or he might pay a flat fee for a “canned special” of country music with another recorded host.

  “Now, guys and gals, I won’t leave you lonely whilst I step out for a bite of the best barbecue in North Texas at the Chuckwagon Café. Billy Bob is here to take over from me and bring you more of your favorites to keep you company while you ride herd on those ornery critters just waiting to give you what for.”

  She appreciated Jack’s gift of gab. The former cowboy could talk all day and into the next week about roping and riding or about little to nothing, while making it interesting to boot.

  A smile edged past Eden’s mountain of worries. At least something was going right. Jack knew how to name-drop local businesses without making it sound like he was filling an ad space. He was a pro, no doubt about it.

  She hoped, with spring in the air, shoppers were ready to come out of their winter dens, taste the air, and decide now was the time to make good on the offerings of advertisers. The spring equinox, usually about March 20, was coming up in a couple of weeks, and folks around here liked to celebrate longer days, birds and bees, and new life in all its forms. She hoped this year was a prosperous one for everyone, because a steady revenue stream meant life or death to local merchants, as well as to th
e Wildcat Den.

  She pulled a key ring with a silver horsehead fob out of the cranberry-tinted designer handbag bought when she had money to burn and people to impress. She crossed the black asphalt at a swift Los Angeles pace, noticing the clear blue Texas sky held not a single fluffy cloud in the still-dry air. A tricked-out ATV zipped past in a blur of blue jeans and cowboy hat. She hadn’t seen that colorful sight in a while, and the sheer novelty lifted her spirits. It was good to be back.

  When she reached Betty’s back bumper, her smile fell like a rock. Sunlight glinted off the dented chrome. She was sandwiched like a sardine between a six-wheeled dually and a jacked-up pickup. A cowboy had parked his pickup so close to the door that she couldn’t open it. She was up a creek without a paddle. Betty’s driver’s door locked from the outside but not the inside, while the passenger door locked from the inside but not the outside. She could get to the passenger door, but she couldn’t open it. She sighed, figuring that, umpteen years ago, some car designer had decided to add a little challenge to locking and unlocking VW doors.

  Normally, she’d laugh at the quirkiness, but today she was on a tight schedule. She needed to return to the radio station while Wildcat Jack was at an appointment on his late lunch break. She’d promised him that she’d just run into town, pick up a few things, and be right back.

  She paced a few steps to one side of Betty, then back again, wondering how long she’d have to wait for the pickup driver.

  “Got a problem?”

  She not only heard but felt the deep male voice roll up her spine like a wave coming to shore on the soft, warm sands of South Padre Island. A voice like that could melt honey on ice and she’d like to market it on the air with a show all its own. But that wasn’t her present concern. She didn’t need to add another iron to her already-raging fire.

  She impatiently tapped her toe as she pointed at the narrow space between her VW and the pickup, hoping the stranger would understand without words. She didn’t look at him, keeping her head down because she wanted to limit interaction.

  He took a step closer, the leather soles of his cowboy boots scuffing against asphalt.

  She had to admit he showed good taste in boots—black snake with crimson thread in a classic wing design. High-end and high style. She’d always liked a man who knew his cowboy boots.

  “Do you need to leave?”

  She nodded in relief that he understood her problem.

  “If you’ll step back, I’ll have you out of here in no time.”

  She felt his can-do words run up and down her spine again, causing tingles and chills and a sort of remembrance that went way beyond how she should be reacting to a stranger.

  “It won’t take me a moment.”

  She stepped back from Betty’s bumper to make room and got a good view of the south side of the cowboy. He was tall, with broad shoulders, narrow hips, and long legs. He wore a black felt hat with a rattlesnake band and a starched red shirt tucked under a black snakeskin belt threaded though the loops of faded blue Wranglers. Not only were his boots prime material, but he was right at the top of that category, too.

  She’d like to see him on the back of a horse. He’d sit tall and proud and ready for action. She felt her mouth go dry, imagining a different kind of action that might benefit a lonely cowgirl. Just the thought of what he could do with that strong, lithe body set loose a wildfire that warmed her all over.

  She was done with men, of course, but this cowboy was so yummy she might be tempted to make an exception. If so, she knew just how she’d like him to put those muscles and that stamina to good use.

  He leaned down, flexed his knees, and presented her with a taut butt that strained his jeans in a ridiculously enticing way. He reached under Betty’s bumper with both large hands, lifted the rear end with the heavy engine, and set the bug to one side as if he did it every day, allowing plenty of room for her to reach the driver’s side.

  Wildfire raced through her again. He was strong as a bull. Who in their right mind simply went about picking up cars and moving them? Really, who even thought about doing it? A tough cowboy, she supposed, with enough get-up-and-go to do whatever crossed his fertile mind. Now that she thought about it, a cowboy with a creative mind joined to a powerful body might come up with all sorts of ways to work out the kinks in a hard-riding cowgirl.

  “There you go.” He turned around to face her.

  Oh my, yes, he looked just as good from the front as he did from the back. She let her gaze wander up his long legs, narrow hips, broad shoulders, until finally coming to rest on his tanned face of strong planes and angles with sharp hazel eyes. Wait, hazel eyes? She looked closer, feeling a lurch in the pit of her stomach. She tried to make his eyes blue or brown or gray or anything but the familiar, distinctive brown and green and gold bands that at one time totally captivated her.

  Shane Taggart, no doubt about it. She stepped back in shock, cursing her bad luck. No wonder his voice had resonated with her. She was surprised she hadn’t recognized his body, although he’d filled out with even more muscle since she’d last seen him. He’d been Wildcat Bluff County’s bad boy, smart boy, hot boy, and her very first boy before she’d left town eleven years ago. She doubted he’d changed much in that time, but she was nowhere near the same needy girl who’d lusted after him. She was a whole lot stronger and wiser now.

  Still, she wasn’t ready for a discussion with the man who held all the aces in his hand. She hadn’t wanted to see him, or vice versa, before she had a chance to get the lay of the land and her feet under her again. Even more, she needed time to come up with a plan to save everything she held dear in life.

  “Well, as I live and breathe.” Shane tipped the front of his hat back as he gave her a big white grin that appeared more feral than tame. “Eden Rafferty.”

  She clamped her lips together as she tried to think of some way to back out of this encounter, but he was right up in her face.

  “I didn’t expect to see you here anytime soon,” he said in a deep, growly tone.

  She knew voices. Shane’s was rich with underlying meaning that didn’t bode well for her emotions. Still, she gave him a slight, mollifying smile as she stepped back. She hadn’t expected to see him here, either. And she sure hadn’t expected to feel the old sparks fly.

  He looked her over from head to toe while his hazel eyes spoke for him, so much so that she understood everything that simmered unsaid between them. Yes, he knew her in the most intimate sense of the word. Yes, he hadn’t forgotten their fire. Yes, he was stoking old flames.

  But it’d only been once. That midnight. She’d thought it had been enough for a lifetime, but right here, right now—no matter the big hole in her heart…or maybe because of it—she desperately wanted to make that once a blazing-hot twice.

  Chapter 2

  “Were you planning to contact me or let me find out you were back on my lonesome?” Shane Taggart asked, feeling his heart melt a bit at the sight of Eden. She’d always had the ability to turn him into a molten pool of lava, but he’d thought that was well and truly over and done with—apparently not, though, if his jeans suddenly shrinking a size was any indication.

  She shrugged, glancing at the VW then back at him as if she wanted nothing more than to escape.

  He wasn’t about to move out of her way, not when he finally had her face-to-face again. She was as beautiful as ever. He wanted to run his fingers through her dark-blond hair and stroke her heart-shaped face. She was wearing a gray sweatshirt promoting some country band, with designer jeans and scuffed cowgirl boots that had seen better days. A big diamond stud sparkled in each earlobe, but she wore no rings—wedding or otherwise. She was a mix of upscale and downscale overlaid with a wistfulness and sexiness that did bad things to him.

  When she didn’t answer, he decided to push it. “I remember that time when you came after me up on—”

 
“Please, no,” she whispered, holding up a hand as if to stop him from where he was headed down memory lane.

  For now, he let it go because he could see her luminous blue eyes darken with heat as she remembered that midnight up on Lovers Leap. She might not want him now, but she sure as hell had wanted him that night. “When did you get back to town?”

  “Late yesterday.” She swallowed, stroking her throat. “Jack picked me up. DFW.”

  “Jack! He never could drive worth a damn, and now—”

  “We’re fine.”

  “Why didn’t you call me? I’d have picked you up, or if you didn’t want me, most anybody around here would’ve done it.”

  “I drove back,” she whispered, continuing to stroke her throat.

  “Not in the bug?”

  “Truck.”

  “Jack’s pickup is about as old as the VW. And Dallas traffic is crazy.” Shane felt like busting something at the thought of those two putting themselves unnecessarily in harm’s way.

  “I’m used to LA.”

  “Good point.” He stuffed his hands in his pockets to do something with them other than grab her and hold her and smell her and kiss her. “You got a place to stay?”

  “KWCB.”

  He felt like she’d hit him upside the head again, so he took a deep breath not to growl out what he really thought about the idea of her staying there alone. It was as bad as Jack driving around the DFW airport and probably not even wearing his eyeglasses for sheer vanity’s sake. He didn’t even want to think about Jack trying to maneuver on and off that crazy double-decked LBJ freeway. “I’m sure Ruby would be glad to have you at Twin Oaks.”

  She rubbed her throat so much the skin turned red. “I’m fine.”

  “I’m not sure it’s safe.” What he really thought was that a high wind just might blow the old building over with her trapped inside. “The Wildcat Den needs some repair.” Even better, a bulldozer and trip to the trash dump would suit it to a T, but he had to admit he was prejudiced about the whole place.

  She coughed, then swallowed hard. “For now, it’ll do,” she said in a strained voice.