Husband for a Year. Rebecca Winters

Husband for a Year - Rebecca Winters


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parking lot. I’m assuming they’ll stay here for the night.”

      Gabe was in Erie? That meant he’d been driving nonstop since he’d picked up his passengers. It was one thing to fear that he might have been seeing another women throughout their marriage. But the knowledge that he was actually with her at a motel right now almost destroyed Stefanie.

      “Stan is going to relieve me so I can get some sleep in the back of the van. You’ve got his cell phone number. Call him whenever you want an update.”

      “Thank you. I—I will,” she murmured, her voice shaking with fear that Gabe had been in love with the woman all these years. Someone his family wouldn’t have liked?

      If that was the case, then it was no wonder he’d never broken the terms of that wretched contract he’d made with Stefanie. He’d had no desire to make love to her when the mother of his son was out there waiting for him to be free.

      Stefanie stifled her moan, not knowing what to think. “Please—don’t lose sight of him,” she begged. “Right now I’m in my car following you.”

      “We’ve never lost a target yet.”

      “Whatever you do, don’t let him see you! You have to understand he doesn’t want to be found.”

      “I’m aware of that. At this point you’re going to have to trust us to get the job done. We always do.”

      She bit her lip. “I pray you’re right. I’ll make it worth your while.”

      “You already have. I promise he won’t get away from us.”

      “Then I guess I can’t ask for more than that.” Stefanie clicked off, terrified something could still go wrong and she’d never see Gabe again.

      Another hour and her eyelids started to droop. At the next sign for lodgings she pulled off the freeway and drove to a Cozy Inn for the night. Once settled, she climbed into bed and made another phone call. Gabe was still at the same motel. With her…

      After thanking Stan for the information, she buried her face in the pillow. It was wet by the time she fell into oblivion.

      “This is going to be so cool, Gabe.”

      “You think?”

      Gabe smiled as he eyed the fifteen-year-old seated in the cab of his truck. Every time he’d visited with Clay Talbot in the past, the troubled boy Gabe had influenced the court to send to the tightly enforced military academy rather than a state correctional facility, he had grown on him a little more.

      “Yeah. I can’t believe we’re almost there.”

      “You realize this is only an experiment.”

      “I know.”

      “You’ve been released to my custody. If you don’t obey the rules, my hands will be tied and the court will send you back to the academy.”

      “I hated that place. It might as well have been a prison.”

      “Take my word for it, the academy doesn’t come close to the real thing.”

      After a long silence, “I swear I’m not going to get into trouble again.”

      “I hope not, Clay. It would disappoint me and break your mom’s heart. But more importantly, you would be letting yourself down.”

      The boy nodded his dark head.

      At least there’d been some side benefits to this trip. For one thing, Clay and his mom had been able to share some precious time together before he’d dropped her off at the airport in Chicago for the flight back to Providence.

      Being an alcoholic, it was as far as she could travel without wanting a drink. Gabe had made it clear there would be no alcohol during the trip. He’d challenged her to handle it long enough to connect with the son she hadn’t seen in months. Though she’d been unable to make it all the way to Montana, Clay seemed okay with it.

      As for Gabe, he’d had an opportunity to get inside Clay’s head. Enough time to establish a tentative rapport with the teen who’d been born of affluent parents who didn’t know the first thing about child rearing.

      Unfortunately the death of Clay’s father to cancer two years earlier had turned his world upside down. Unable to deal with his own pain, let alone that of his grieving alcoholic mother, he’d gotten into trouble with other kids from wealthy Providence homes who could afford drugs and were indiscriminately vandalizing their exclusive neighborhoods for the fun of it.

      In desperation, Clay’s mother had finally retained Gabe to defend her son in court. But sending the boy to military school had only been a stopgap. Now that Gabe was free to live his destiny, hopefully Clay would receive the emotional and psychological help he desperately needed.

      As they continued driving through old snow, a familiar road sign showed up on the right.

      Welcome To Marion, Montana. You’re In God’s Country Now.

      Gabe had passed it dozens of times over the last year. It meant their long drive across the U.S. was about to come to an end.

      Before this trip he’d always flown to Glacier Park International Airport where his foreman, Mack Whittaker, waited to take him back to the ranch in the station wagon.

      Not this time.

      It didn’t take a prophet to know that all hell had broken loose now that both families had received the letters Gabe had posted. Even though he’d told his parents he had gone abroad, there was still a chance his father would try and find him. Gabe had chosen to come by truck in order not to leave a trail.

      In a couple of months he would write another set of letters explaining that he and Stefanie had gone their separate ways.

      Thankfully she’d flown to Paris a few hours after he’d left the house and was enjoying herself with good friends as planned.

      Now that she’d been given her freedom, she was entitled to be with any man she chose. To Gabe’s chagrin, he found he loathed the idea. Her image, her husky voice, had refused to leave his mind or senses.

      He supposed she would haunt him for a long time to come. You didn’t live for a year in the same house with a wife like Stefanie and hope to walk away from her totally unaffected.

      On the other hand, he hadn’t realized how deeply she’d gotten beneath his skin. The drive through a lot of rain and some snow flurries would have been torture if he’d had to be alone with his thoughts.

      He figured it would probably take hearing that Stefanie was going to marry someone else’s favorite son headed for the White House to douse the sparks Gabe had determined not to acknowledge, let alone allow to catch fire.

      His face formed a grimace before he gunned the accelerator. Twenty minutes later he glimpsed something in the twilight that broke his torturous train of thought.

      Larch Tree Boys’ Ranch.

      When Gabe saw the newly erected sign at the gate, he let out a satisfied sigh and slowed down. Mack must have pulled some strings to make sure it had been put up in time to coincide with Gabe’s arrival.

      A special welcome home present.

      The best one he could have received to chase away feelings that were better left to die.

      When he and the Realtor from Kalispell had flown over this property eighteen months ago, everything about the ranch had felt right to him. Seventy-five thousand acres of lush green meadows dotted with cattle and statuesque pines.

      In the early-morning sunlight he’d glimpsed a ribbon of blue teeming with trout as it danced against a dense green forest backdrop. A couple of rustic log cabins nestled here and there in a fertile valley surrounded by snow-capped mountains completed a picture that spoke straight to Gabe’s restless soul.

      Always before, his needs, aspirations and desires had been fragmented, eluding him like some


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