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Authors: Tina Leonard

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BOOK: The Cowboy's Triplets
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Fiona sniffed. “Marriage is full of surprises. Anyway, it wouldn't matter if you boys picked women who loved you.”

He hesitated. Jackie wouldn't care if the Callahans
still owned the biggest and best ranch around or not.
But I might.
The truth was, everything he had, everything he thought he was, was tied up in this land, a place where his sons would never run and play the way he and his brothers had. His heart felt like it was breaking. “I guess you considered selling off part of the ranch.”

She nodded. “For about half a second. No longer than that. Bode would just get injunctions. I couldn't bear to part with anything my brother and his wife had built, anyway. But I do despise Bode Jenkins, who is a thief if there ever was one.”

It was really hard not to get up and go kick Bode's ass. Pete couldn't stand to see the worry etched on Fiona's face. She'd carried this burden so long by herself. Pete got up. “Don't worry, Aunt Fiona,” he said. “Everything is going to be fine.”

“Except the basement door got kicked in,” she said, and he stopped.

“Do you think Bode did that?”

She shrugged. “Nothing was taken.”

“We don't keep cash in the house.” That was all kept in a locked safe, whose whereabouts only the eight of them knew. They'd been vigilant about people breaking in to their home, knowing it would be a temptation.

“I don't know for sure,” Fiona said, “but I think Bode has wanted this house for so long it's just about made him crazy.”

“This is simply solved. I'll just go ask Sabrina if Bode left the house last night.”

“Oh, no,” Fiona said faintly, “you can't ask Sabrina that.”

“Why?” Pete sat back down, realizing he was about to hear more.

“Because I hired Sabrina to be a fortune-teller and tell you boys that you had to get married.”

“I know.” He nodded. “I heard the whole scheme.”

She raised her brows. “I know that. I could see your shadow and your big ears practically pressed flat against the tent wall.”

He looked at her, finally grinning. “Not much gets by you.”

She nodded. “But what you didn't know is that I also hired Sabrina's sister, Seton, who is a private investigator, to dig up dirt on Bode.”

Pete's jaw dropped. “Aunt Fiona!”

She jutted out her chin. “I finally decided two could play dirty, and that all was going to be fair in love and war. And I love nothing like I love my boys.”

He was stunned. “We love you, too, redoubtable aunt…but is that why Sabrina McKinley is working as his caregiver? She's really a mole?”

“Sabrina is neither a fortune-teller nor your usual caregiver. She is an investigative reporter. She was doing a piece on animal cruelty, which is how she wound up at the circus. I met Sabrina and Seton through my friends. They are nieces of Corinne Abernathy.”

Pete closed his eyes. “Does the sun ever rise without your cagey little brain working on a new scheme?”

“Nope,” Fiona said happily. “I feel so much better now that I've told you all this, Pete. You have no idea how cleansing that was!”

His head felt as though it was about to explode. “So you want to ruin Bode?”

“I want,” Fiona said with deadly purpose, “to make sure he never gets my brother's property.”

“Maybe we could just talk to Julie?”

“Bah,” Fiona said. “Bode's her father. Who would you
believe in? Who would you want to make happy? Your father or your neighbor? The people who live on five thousand acres of prime land while you've grown up on a postage stamp of canyon in a tiny wooden foreman's house next door?” Fiona waved a hand at Pete. “He's got her convinced he's at death's door so she'll live there taking care of him, waiting on him hand and foot. She'll never marry because of that old fool. She's got her job, which makes him happy because of the political clout, and he's got her. Life is happy for Bode Jenkins, the miserable rat.”

Bode wasn't the only one capable of playing the feeble card. Pete remembered Fiona working that angle a bit with Jonas. Or maybe she hadn't been. Pete scrubbed at his morning stubble. “You still don't think that telling the others would—”

“No.” She shook her head. “You're the only one who's rational enough not to go do something stupid. You're the only one responsible enough to realize that there's more than one way to skin a cat without getting fur in your mouth. I can count on you, Pete.”

He sighed and reached over to pet his aunt's delicate hands. “Yes, you can, Aunt Fiona. Everything will be all right.”

He just wasn't sure how.

Chapter Fourteen

Pete did the lion's share of the chores he needed to do, realizing a thousand questions were still left unanswered. If anything, his aunt had given him more things to ponder. Fiona never told a whole tale—there was always one more curve just ahead of the brothers' slower brains. But one thing he did know for certain: He had to talk to Jackie.

At noon, he found her at the wedding shop. “Can I buy you lunch?”

“Oh, Pete,” Jackie said, her hair delightfully mussed as she moved dresses around the shop, “today is rearranging day. Darla and I have planned to organize the merchandise by classification.” She smiled at him. “But thanks for the invite.”

He looked at her, wanting nothing more than to carry her off on his white steed and make love to her for about a week. He was certain he'd feel much better after he did.

Unfortunately, he had no white steed—only black-as-night Bleu—and Jackie wasn't the kind of girl who'd put up with heroic nonsense like a man just riding off with her. She'd tell him he was a chauvinistic ass and probably lame him. “Jackie, I need to talk to you.”

She looked at him over the top of a wedding gown. “About?”

He brightened. “That one suits you.”

“What one? Oh.” Jackie hung the dress on the rack. “Don't get any ideas, Pete. I have no intention of walking down the aisle.”

That was the trouble. She had no intentions. He had a short deadline. Fiona was right—he'd love to get married at the ranch, while they still had it. “Could you rethink that? I was hoping we could stick to the I-do-next-week plan.”

“No. I have to get my appointment in Santa Fe taken care of. I can't think past that.” She hauled another dress over to a different stand.

“Those look heavy.” He frowned. “I thought wedding dresses would be airy and light. Maybe you shouldn't be carrying them.”

“Pete!” Jackie laughed. “You're going to get in trouble if you try to supervise my pregnancy.”

“Well.” He shifted, not exactly certain how to get Jackie to succumb to his wishes. “I'm coming with you to the appointment. Wild horses couldn't keep me away.”

“I might let you. Maybe.” She shot him a glance. “If you don't drive me nuts between now and Monday.”

“Monday?” He perked up. “So soon?”

“Dr. Graybill called their office. So they fit me in.” She slid some plastic off some dresses to examine them. Pete watched her morosely. How could she stand to look at wedding gowns every day and not want one for herself?

“Is there something wrong with me?”

She glanced at him. “Other than you can't get yourself
out of a basement that isn't locked, no. You seem all right to me.”

He decided not to tell her that the basement had been trashed sometime in the night. Fiona hadn't really wanted their personal family business broadcast. He frowned, realizing Fiona had never mentioned who she thought might have done it. Bode wouldn't stoop that low if he thought he was already getting their ranch. Fiona had no enemies to speak of. He and his brothers might have enemies, but none of them would stoop to being so wienie as to destroy preserves. Someone had gotten into the house and locked him in—he was sure of it. Then when he'd left, they'd gone through the basement.

Someone was looking for something. And someone was watching their comings and goings. He and his brothers weren't around much. It was just Fiona and Burke, two stalwart, older folks on a big ranch where no one would hear them if they needed help.

Maybe he was overthinking it. Yet it did occur to him that the only new people in town were Sabrina and her yet-to-be-seen sister, Seton. He didn't think he completely approved of his aunt's plan to hire spies, but Fiona had never asked for his approval.

“Pete?” Jackie said, and he snapped his gaze to her face. She was lovely. Pregnancy was making her blossom. He'd always thought the myth about a pregnant woman glowing was something women said to make themselves seem desirable, but Jackie was more beautiful than ever. He wanted her, right now.

He had to put those thoughts away for the moment or he was going to ravish her in the store. “Yes?”

“Are you all right? I was teasing about the basement.”

“Yeah, I know.” He moved his hat back on his head. “Jackie, let me ask you a theoretical.”

“Okay.”

She wasn't really paying attention to him. Her gaze had gone to the window. He glanced, too, seeing nothing unusual on the Diablo town streets. “Say I had been locked into the basement.”

She smiled. “All right, let's suppose you had been.”

“And then you let me out, which I should reward you for later.”

Jackie looked at him. “Is that part of the question?”

“No.” He shook his head. “If someone went into the basement not too long after I'd been locked in, and made a big mess—although I'm not saying that happened—would you suppose the two events were related?”

Jackie shrugged. “If things had happened in that way, and no one in your house was responsible for the mess, one might think that the house was searched while you were locked in. And then when you were let out of the basement, it was searched. That's what you're trying to tell me, isn't it? Someone's been in your house?”

He held up a hand. “It was just a theoretical.”

“Has someone been in your house?” Jackie's eyes were huge. “What would they be looking for?”

“No, no,” Pete said, wondering why he hadn't thought about someone being in the house while he was conveniently locked away. “Don't go jumping to any ideas.”

“I'm not. You are. You just wanted me to say it out loud to give your brain permission to think it. It was there all along.”

“No, I wasn't.”

“You set me up to give you the answer you wanted. You know, you're more like Fiona than you think you are.”

She went back to rearranging dresses, which he hated to see. He was pretty certain heavy lifting couldn't be healthy for his little wife in her condition. He wondered how Jackie would take to him mentioning that she should probably quit working until the stork arrived.

He frowned. “I'd feel better if you were staying with me.”

She stared at him. “Why would I want to be in a house where there's a random thief wandering around? Isn't that what you're trying to tell me?”

He shook his head. “I said nothing of the sort, and Fiona will kill me if you share that gossip with anyone. I just want you near me. My motives are pure, I swear.”

“I can't tell if you're being romantic or a pain in the ass.”

“Both?”

She smiled. “Tell you what. You go away now, and I'll make you a salad for dinner.”

“Salad?”

“I'm watching my weight. Too much weight gain isn't supposed to be good for the baby. And for some reason, the weight seems to be packing on pretty quickly now.”

“I can handle a salad,” he said, thinking she looked sexy as hell to him, “but I think my sons need more sustenance than rabbit food. How about if I bring them a steak?”

She waved him out of the store.

“Rare, medium or well done?” he called as she pushed him onto the sidewalk.

“Goodbye, Pete,” Jackie said, but he swiped a fast kiss and went whistling down the sidewalk.

Jackie went back into the store, trying to remember
what she'd been doing before Pete had come in, nearly undoing her resolve where he was concerned.

“I've said it before and I'll say it again. That man is crazy about you,” Darla said. “How can you keep such a sweetheart at arm's length?”

Jackie shook her head. “Pete just likes the chase. He'll get tired soon enough.”

Darla didn't look convinced. “Maybe you underestimate him. He seems like he's made up his mind. Once you told him he was going to be a dad, he's made a point to see you every day he can.”

Jackie thought about that, the surprise of it catching her off guard. “You're right.”

“Yes. And you're the happiest I've ever seen you.”

Darla was right about that, too. She sighed. “Life is tricky right now. Pete and I were always about the cozy, comfortable sex. I don't know what's going on, but I know sex would not be cozy and comfortable right now. My waistline is expanding at warp speed.” She shook her head. “I do not feel sexy at all.”

“Give him a chance. He may like caftan-wearing, big-bellied ladies.” Darla grinned. “You don't know until you strip, girlfriend.”

“Eek.” Jackie supposed she could keep the lights off, but she was pretty certain in the history of women trying to do the same, that plan had often backfired. “I miss the days of candlelight, don't you?”

Darla laughed. “Go for it. Buy a bunch of candles. And let that gorgeous hunk decide whether he can handle you big and babylicious or not. I'm thinking he's not going to be all that focused on anything but naked you.”

Chills ran all over Jackie at the thought of Pete being in bed with her again. She missed making love with him.
She missed his deep voice whispering husky naughty things to her. Missed his arms wrapped around her and going to sleep knowing he was beside her until the dawn. “I'm going out for a minute,” Jackie said.

“Go get him, Tiger!”

Jackie hurried after Pete. “Pete!”

He was walking down the sidewalk, big-shouldered, tall and lean, and it didn't escape Jackie that about ten women were casting their eyes at him, saying hello, trying their best to get his attention.
Mine,
she thought, and then stopped, horrified. Her pregnancy wasn't easily hidden now—in fact, it was pretty obvious despite the empire-style, long-sleeved, fashionable dress she wore—and she was running after Pete.

To hell with it.
“Pete!”

He turned, grinning at her, his brows raised as she made it to him slightly out of breath. “You shouldn't be running like that, angel cake. You might pull a hamstring.”

She wanted to punch him. He looked so smug, so proud of himself, and he was even more handsome, if that was possible.

“Did I forget something in the store?” he asked, clearly enjoying his big moment of being the pursued.

“No,” Jackie said, “and you're not making this easy on me.” Out of the corner of her eyes, she could feel the faces peering out of windows watching her and Pete.

“I'm enjoying your eagerness, my pet.”

“I simply wanted to tell you,” Jackie said, her teeth starting to grit, “that maybe I'd feel better if you were staying with me.”

“Oh, you're worried about me.” He swept her into his arms, leaving no one in any doubt about the status of their relationship. If he'd shouted
I'm the father
to
the rooftops, he couldn't have been more clear. Part of Jackie rebelled at his chauvinism, but a bigger part of her snuggled against his chest. She felt the smile stretch on her face.

“Yes. I'm worried about you, you ass. You shouldn't be in a house where there are creepies hanging around.”

“I can't leave Burke and Fiona.”

Clearly he wanted her to beg. “Leave them a shotgun.”

“Jackie!” He turned her face up so he could look down into her eyes. “Do I actually hear welcome and anticipation and—”

She pulled away. “Don't overdo it, Pete Callahan.”

He laughed, sweeping a finger down her nose. “I'll be there for dinner, pumpkin pie. Don't you miss me too much between now and then. And I'll take very good care of you.”

She couldn't miss his meaning. Nor could about twenty people milling around nearby, acting as though they weren't listening to every word. Jackie's face flamed. She was going to flee, until she caught sight of some of the town's more eligible females eyeing her with envy, so she rose on tiptoe and kissed him right on the mouth.

“If I'd only known how much you like an audience, my sweet, I would have insisted on our relationship being out in broad daylight a long time ago.” Pete laughed, saluted her with a devilish wink in his eyes, and walked off.

Jackie stared after him, her blood pounding in her ears. Okay, she looked like she was pursuing him. She was pregnant, she was running after Pete and she didn't care who saw.

She'd caught him. And she couldn't wait until tonight.

She went to buy some candles. And then, for good measure, she bought a lacy pink and white nightie, not caring at all that the whole town would know how crazy she was about Peter Dade Callahan.

 

J
ACKIE FELT PRETTY BRAVE
about her plan until Pete strolled into her house that night. He looked tall and long and lean, and raffish with his rumpled dark hair, a devil-may-care bachelor if there ever was one. And she felt frumpy.

“I brought steaks,” Pete said, laying a grocery sack on the table. “But I vote we have dessert first.”

“Wait, Pete.” Jackie tried to avoid his hands, but he was too fast for her. She didn't have on the sexy nightie, which she was hoping would deflect the eye and make him concentrate on anything but her big tummy and boobs that would no longer fit into her bra without spilling out the top. The candles weren't even lit yet, and she needed the cover of candlelight.

“I'm done waiting.” He carried her into her bedroom, kicking the door shut behind them. He laid Jackie on the bed, his mouth claiming hers, but Jackie gave him a halfhearted push. “Pete, let me get you dinner first. You must be starved.”

“You guess correctly.” He buried his face in her neck, nibbling kisses as he unbuttoned her dress. “There is far too much material here. You're wrapped up like a mummy. I know it's thirty-two degrees outside, but too much dress conceals the good stuff.” He slipped it off her shoulders. “Jackie,” he said, grinning at her, “you've been keeping things from me.”

She laughed as he undid her bra. “Pete,” she said,
trying to hold on to her bra. He was having none of that.

BOOK: The Cowboy's Triplets
13.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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