The Gazebo. Kimberly Cates

The Gazebo - Kimberly Cates


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      She could actually hear the quiet sound of his breathing

      as they watched the mare nuzzle her baby.

      Jonah was obviously exhausted. Light from the lantern emphasized lines of weariness in his face, cast shadows into the hollows beneath his high cheekbones.

      What was it, Carrie wondered, that made this man, with his dark skin and his black hair, look more magnificent than the yellow-haired heroes in all the storybooks?

      Unconsciously she moved her hand closer to his. And then suddenly she leaned forward. “Oh, look—Jonah, it’s trying to get up!”

      “Watch.” Jonah didn’t move a muscle. His voice remained unemotional, as if he had not just participated in a miracle.

      Inside the stall, Carrie watched the long-legged creature stand shakily and begin nudging his mother’s belly. “Oh, my,” she whispered. Jonah’s hand closed over hers, and it seemed the most natural thing in the world….

      Praise for Bronwyn Williams’s previous books

      Beholden

      “…as welcome as a cool breeze on a scorching day.

      I can’t resist a fast-paced, well-written story.”

      —Rendezvous

      Entwined

      “Her intricately woven story is deftly done,

      and her depiction of her hero and heroine is masterful.”

      —Affaire de Coeur

      Seaspell

      “A terrific read. I loved it!”

      —Author Pamela Morsi

      Longshadow’s Woman

      Harlequin Historical #553

      #551 THE HIGHLAND WIFE

      Lyn Stone

      #552 ANNE’S PERFECT HUSBAND

      Gayle Wilson

      #554 LILY GETS HER MAN

      Charlene Sands

      Longshadow’s Woman

      Bronwyn Williams

       www.millsandboon.co.uk

      MILLS & BOON

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      Available from Harlequin Historicals and BRONWYN WILLIAMS

      White Witch #3

      Dandelion #23

      Stormwalker #47

      Gideon’s Fall #67

      The Mariner’s Bride #99

      The Paper Marriage #524

      Longshadow’s Woman #553

      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

       Chapter Thirteen

       Chapter Fourteen

       Chapter Fifteen

       Chapter Sixteen

       Chapter Seventeen

       Epilogue

      Chapter One

      With a graceful gesture, Carrie resettled her best straw hat, angling the brim against the sun. Sighing, she once more addressed the mule in the only language the beast understood. “Move along there, you lop-eared son of a bitch!”

      If there was one thing Sorry hated more than pulling a plow, it was pulling a cart. It had cost Carrie more in time and aggravation than she could afford just to get the wretched old bag of bones hitched up. At this stop-and-go speed they wouldn’t make it to the jailhouse until tomorrow, and she didn’t have a day to waste.

      Her husband was going to pitch a fit if he got home and saw the damage Sorry had done to Peck’s paddock gate before she had time to mend it. Nothing was too good for that ugly gelding of his. His own private paddock, a fancy new stall, the very best oats, not to mention fresh water that had to be hauled all the way up from the creek daily, and Darther wasn’t one to do the hauling himself. That’s what he had her for, as he delighted in reminding her.

      As for Carrie, the mule and the chickens, they could starve as long as that damned racehorse of his didn’t suffer the least discomfort.

      Blessed horse. She was going to have to shed the habit of swearing. Emma said it wasn’t ladylike, but it was hard not to fall into bad habits when every other word out of her husband’s mouth was foul. Nor had her uncle been any better. Carrie had a vague memory of a softer voice with a far different accent, but it was wedged so far back in her mind that sometimes she thought she must have dreamed it.

      “Step it up, Sorry, we’re never going to get there at this rate,” she pleaded.

      But pleading didn’t work. Reasoning didn’t work. The damn-blasted mule just stood


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