Tag Archives: alpha-male-romance

Need a little heat in your Valentines?

In a small town where everyone remembers your mistakes, Daniel Walker returns to face his biggest one: leaving Markie Oldham behind.

When he finds her engaged and her family ranch on the brink of auction, he steps in to rescue a woman who can’t see forever with him.

When his secret rescue of her ranch explodes into the fight of their lives, Daniel must finally prove he’s strong enough not just to love her—but to stay.

Because his ‘forever’ future depends on it.

Escape the snow and enjoy Chapter 1 of this holiday novella.

Chapter 1

Honks Oldham stared at his old friend, his bushy gray eyebrows standing as high as they could get to the barroom rafters. Any higher and they would be dusting the low-hanging bar lights. “You think Daniel has heard that Markie’s engaged?”

Pops Anderson stared back with an eyeroll and a shake of his grizzled gray head. “I didn’t ask him that; he just said he was coming over the mountain on Wheeler. His truck’s in the shop. But the boy has been in love with that girl since middle school, so I’m guessing he knows. Why else would he come over from the Carson ranch on horseback? I offered to come get him, but he said no.  Told him not to leave last year, too, but you know these younger generations—think they know everything.”

Honks grinned, his eyes dancing. “Well, I reckon they do, what with computers and all. Jeb’s done got everything about the ranch on the computer now. All the accounting and whatnot. I’m trying to learn it, but I’m better in the saddle than riding that office butt buster.”

Pops grunted and took a swig of his on-tap, low-fat, low-cholesterol, sugar-free, nothing-good-tasting-in-it beer that his grandson Daniel insisted he drink when he went to join his friend on Friday nights at the Rusty Spud.

Around him, the jukebox was belting out a Luke Ryan song called Country Girl. On the dance floor, several young girls were shaking it for their dates, just like the song lyrics asked. Back in his day, it was Willie Nelson, George Jones, and boot scootin’ boogies. But time changes everything, even the drink in his hand.

“I wonder if this stuff even has hops in it?” he grumbled, setting it back on the counter. “By the time they take everything out of it, they might as well run a tap from the toilet straight to the bar.” He wiped the suds off his mustache with a backward swipe of his work-roughened hand. “Gimme a refill, Mick.”

“Okay, mate. I take it Daniel is coming home?” Mick asked, taking the mug and holding it under the frothing tap.

Pops glared at the knowing, perpetually sun-tanned face across the bar. “What makes you think that, Mick?”

“Because you only drink this stuff when he’s around, I reckon.”

  “Don’t you worry about what I drink,” Pops replied testily. “Your job is to serve me, whatever I decide to do to myself, not judge me.”

Mick laughed, his blue eyes twinkling. “I get it—and I agree with you. A man’s got a right to commit suicide if he wants to.”

Pops rolled his eyes. “When you’ve lived as long as I have, you begin to understand a few things, son. Such as the fact that everything the younger generations think they know changes when they get some real years in.”

Mick leaned down and rested his arms against the bar. The lights caught some of the silver streaks in his black hair. “Oh? Name one thing that’s changed, Pops.”

Pops leaned forward, warming up to his subject. “Take eggs, for instance. Back in my day, the powers that be were declaring egg yolks to be full of that cholesterol crap, and you needed to limit them to three a week, and now they’ve changed their tune. Eggs are essential brain food, and you need to eat them every day for breakfast protein. Eggs have been maligned and now reassigned as a food hero. I wonder how many brain cells I’ve lost just because my wife bought into that one,” he complained.

“A lot,” Honks teased.

Pops shot him a sarcastic side eye. “Look who’s talking. I ain’t the one that decided to catch a goose for Christmas dinner forty-five years ago and almost drowned in the lake. You earned the name Honks that year.”

“That was one mean old goose,” Honks agreed, “but in the end, he cooked up real nice.”

Pops chuckled. “I’m just glad they weren’t able to get people off beef, though they tried. A good steak is a staple of American food.”

“And high in fat,” Mick cut in. “Chicken is better.”

Pops and Honks both glared at the younger man. “You’re lucky to be alive in cattle country with that attitude, Mick. We don’t live on kangaroo meat here. You’d best keep that one close to your vest, you might get hung,” Pops growled. Teasing Mick was one of his favorite pastimes on Friday night.

Mick threw his head back and laughed. “Hate to break it to you, mate, but Australians don’t live on Kangaroo meat either.”

“You think Daniel knows Markie’s engaged?” Honks cut in, dragging the subject back to the one he was interested in—his granddaughter.

“Well, of course, he knows she’s engaged by now. It’s a small world, Honks, smaller than when we didn’t have cell phones and all that electronic gadgetry. Someone will have told him as soon as word got around.”

“Just not you, right?”

“Well…did you?”

Honks shook his head. “Hell no, I wouldn’t call him. But Jeb probably has. Your grandson and mine have been friends since the cradle. I’m just surprised Daniel left after him, and Markie had that little spat over Sheila Dansing.”

Mick chuckled. “I’ll leave you two to solve your grandkids’ love problems. I’m sure they’ll be forever grateful.” He moved down the bar to a young lady who had walked in.

“Smart arse,” Pops grumbled. Then he called after him, “Do you deny the eggs?”

Mick glanced back over his shoulder with a grin. “Nope—cannot deny that one.”

Pops grunted, satisfied that he’d made his point, and turned back to his old friend. “Daniel has always been a wanderer. Every time I think he’s going to settle down and take ranching seriously, he decides to take off. Says he’s learning about life, but that excuse is getting old. I thought it was just women who had to go find themselves. Never understood that one either.”

“He should be staying put and helping you, Pops,” Honks agreed. “You aren’t getting any younger.”

“You’re a year older than I am.”

“I ain’t getting any younger either, but at least I have my Ebbs and Jeb taking the reins. All you have is Daniel.”

Pops nodded, knowing Daniel was nearby. He could feel it in his old bones. He was worried about the freak snowstorm that had blown up this afternoon, though. Daniel would get caught in it, no doubt about that, but he could take care of himself. He was just happy the boy was on his way. He also hoped he’d stay this time. Honks was right, he wasn’t getting any younger, and he didn’t want to leave Timber Mesa to anyone but his grandson. His own son didn’t want it, and he could sell it, but he didn’t want it to leave the Anderson family.

Daniel was a private boy, intense and driven—he didn’t share personal feelings very much. Whatever was going on between him and Markie Oldam, he hoped the boy would get it figured out before the little filly slipped away from him. Someone else had branded her with a ring, but he was sure Daniel and Markie were meant to be together. This might be his last chance. Markie wouldn’t wait forever for Daniel to shake the wanderlust off his feet.

Even now, it might be too late.

 The snow had moved in early in the day, and it was snowing much harder in the high country than here in town. He wouldn’t rest easy tonight until Daniel was home. But from the looks of the clouds over Mount Tipps, he probably wouldn’t be in until tomorrow. Hopefully, he was holed up in the line shack on the border of Timber Mesa and Willow Ranch. Daniel could take care of himself, but knowing that wouldn’t let him rest any easier.

“Honks, I believe I’ll turn in early tonight.” He stood up and drank the rest of his beer with a wry grimace. “That storm may turn this way, and I don’t want to get caught out in it.”

Honks grunted and slipped his cell phone into his pocket with a frown. “Jeb just called. He said Markie went out looking for cattle this afternoon after we both told her not to, and she hasn’t come back yet. There’s no cell service up there, so she wouldn’t be able to call. Stubborn girl, don’t listen to a word anyone says,” he fumed, his lips tight with worry. “I’m calling it a night, too. I need to get home.”

The two men walked towards the door. “Don’t get any ideas about going after her,” Pops warned.

“I’m too old for stupid.”

Pops held the door open for his friend and clapped him on the shoulder. “Markie knows where the line shack is, and Majestic does too; he’s one smart palomino. If she isn’t back to Willow by the time you get there, that’s where she’ll be.”

“From your lips to God’s ears,” Honks grumbled. 

***

Markie bent her head against the howling wind and tried to shield her eyes from the pelting snow that had come up suddenly along the mountain ridge.  It had been cold and sunny when she’d saddled Majestic and ridden out this morning, searching for the missing cattle, but now she was caught in a blinding, raging snowstorm. She was slowly working her way toward the old range shack along the ridge, but with the snow blowing in her face, she could barely make out Majestic’s head. The landmarks weren’t visible anymore in the swirling white whirlwind.

 A series of short winter storms had delayed the moving of the ranch’s cattle until yesterday, but, finally unable to put it off any longer, she’d bitten the proverbial bullet and moved them alone, causing the loss of at least thirty head as they’d wandered away. With her brother Jeb laid up with a broken leg, and her dad out of commission for now, she hadn’t had a choice; someone had to move them. So, against her grandfather and her brothers’ orders, she’d done it alone. The Willow Ranch couldn’t afford to lose even one steer…not this year.  They had to retrieve those cattle, even if it meant getting caught in one of the mountains’ capricious snowstorms.

Markie had taken a calculated risk that this would be just an average winter storm. She knew the chance of it turning into an Idaho blizzard was always a possibility, and she was probably foolish to come out knowing it was predicted, but against all odds, she’d hoped to beat it home.

 She’d lost.

The cold was seeping inside her body through her toes, fingers, mouth, and nose. She could feel it moving up her limbs and down her throat, pushed by the howling winds like a macabre venous predator determined to turn her into a solid block of ice. She’d dressed for the weather, but even still, the wind managed to find any opening it could to send its frigid air against her shrinking skin, stealing her body heat far too quickly.

She stopped and glared at the impenetrable white walls surrounding her, her heart sinking as she fought her mounting fear. Majestic whinnied loudly and shook his head, rattling the snow and ice particles clinging to his massive mane. Regret invaded every cell in her body, making her feel mentally numb. She was getting exhausted, and she knew she could freeze to death in just a few minutes if she didn’t hand her reins over to her mount, metaphorically speaking. Praying for the best, she gave in.

“Go, Majestic,” she yelled to the big palomino as she released the reins and gave him his head. “Find the line shack, boy.”

She clung to his powerful neck with numb, gloved fingers. Majestic would find them shelter; he was an intelligent animal. All she had to do was stay awake.

Easier said than done.

She closed her eyes and buried her face beneath his bushy mane, loving the smell of horseflesh in her nostrils. Her hot breath against his neck formed a small pool of warm air as she breathed slowly in and out. If she didn’t pass out, hopefully it would keep her face from getting frostbite, even though the heavy neck scarf wasn’t heavy enough against the frozen, probing fingers of the wind.

 Time passing had no meaning. Markie’s current world was nothing but bone-chilling cold, swirling white, and an air pocket on Majestic’s neck. Off somewhere in the white space, she heard him whinny, but she was too numb even to tell if he was still moving or not. She was so tired; her limbs were stiff and immobile. Sleep was pulling her into its warm clutches, and she tried to fight it—tried not to give in, but it was relentless. Her last regret would be never seeing Daniel again.

When a large gloved hand suddenly pulled her fingers from Majestic’s mane, Markie was barely aware of it. Her lips were unable to move, and she couldn’t open her eyes enough to see the owner.  Only half conscious, she felt herself pulled down from Majestic and into a pair of strong arms that carried her to a door and kicked it open. The warmth of the room rushed over her as the big man lay her on a cot beside the massive fireplace. Slowly, she squinted up from beneath weighted eyelids and into a pair of blazing blue eyes that were heartbreakingly familiar, but she had to be hallucinating. There was no way he could be here. She must be dying and following him into the hell she’d wished him to.

“I’ve got to get that horse out of the storm, then I’ll be right back,” his deep, scratchy voice told her.  Too tired to acknowledge the words, the warmth from the fireplace coddling her like a baby in a blanket, she drifted away into darkness. If she were dying, this was as nice a dream as she could get. A warm fire, Daniel’s deep, gruff voice washing over her, and those gorgeous blue eyes.

***

Once inside the lean-to and out of the worst of the wind, Daniel Anderson brushed the snow and ice from the poor horse that had caught his attention outside the line shack. It was a wonder he’d even heard it with the winds howling the way they were.

“Who are you, boy?” he asked softly as he slapped the crusted snow and ice away and took the saddle off the horse’s back. It was a palomino; he could see that now. Its hair was so white with icicles and snow that it had been hard to tell at first. His heart rate sped up. He only knew one person in these parts who owned a palomino, but surely Markie Oldham wouldn’t be fool enough to get caught in an Idaho blizzard; she was too savvy for that.

This line shack was used by more than one rancher in the area, but was probably closest to the Willow Ranch—Markie’s ranch. The figure he’d taken inside had been small, but was so bundled up that he couldn’t tell if it was a smaller man or a young boy. But either way, whoever it was, they were a fool to be out in this weather. A lucky fool, though.

Jeb Oldham wasn’t a big man, but he also wasn’t the sort to get caught out in this kind of weather either. But if he had to choose who was most likely to do it, Markie would be his first choice over Jeb. The girl was impulsive and didn’t hesitate to take risks. She was also quick to judge—at least she judged him. The last time he’d seen her, she was clinging to her stubborn, hard-headed belief that he’d cheated on her.

Quickly, Daniel threw a heavy blanket over the palomino and gave him a nose bag of oats, trying to brush aside the bitter thoughts of Markie. Her vociferous refusal to trust him had finally driven him away. That was nearly a year ago.  

Stepping out of the lean-to, Daniel shut the makeshift door to block as much of the wind as he could. He was thankful that he’d created a rope guide between the line shack and the front door of the shack. He held onto the rope and bent his head against the wind, a sense of urgency clawing at his gut. Once inside, he slipped off his boots and hung up his winter gear. His visitor was still on the cot where he’d left him, unmoving. He needed to get those frozen clothes off of him and check him for frostbite.

Gently peeling away the edge of the heavy woolen scarf from the front of the sheepskin coat, he carefully pulled it back until his face was finally free of the thawing material.

Except that it wasn’t a male.

His gut clenched, and pain shot through him like an arrow to the stomach. Just seeing the pale features brought back painful memories.

“Well, I’ll be damned,” he cursed softly, “it is you, Markie Oldham. What the hell are you doing out here in the middle of a blizzard?” 

He began to take off her boots as he kept scolding. He wasn’t sure she was hearing anything, but he still had to say it. “Lucky for you, I heard Majestic whinnying and looked out the window. You could have frozen to death right there on his back and never even known where you were. What in blue blazes were you thinking?”

He checked her face for frostbite, his fingers roaming every inch of cold skin, but didn’t see any evidence of it. She’d been buried in Majestic’s mane when he found her—at least she had that much savvy. Still, he was furious. The pale eyelids fluttered and slowly opened to squint up at him.

 “As I live and breathe—Daniel Anderson,” she murmured drowsily. “Still as bossy and belligerent as ever, aren’t you?” Her words were slurred, as if her lips were too numb to speak clearly—they probably were.

“You haven’t changed either,” he bit out, reaching for the front of her coat.  “Still taking risks and the devil take the consequences. You’ve always needed a good spanking, and this might be the day I give you the one I’ve always promised.”

The look Markie shot him was colder than the blizzard raging outside.  “Go to hell, Daniel Anderson.”

“I’m already there, darlin,” he drawled bitterly, “I’m already there.”

 Swiftly, he took off her thick woolen socks and rubbed her feet briskly, checking to see that there was still circulation in them and no frostbite. They were going to hurt like hell as they warmed up, but otherwise they seemed okay.  He tucked them under a thick blanket and put bricks wrapped in rags beneath the checkered quilt for warmth.

He studied her pale face. Dark lashes lay like half crescent moons against the alabaster cheeks. Even her lips were pale. She was shivering and her teeth chattering, so he moved the cot closer to the fire.  He took the heavy sheepskin hat off her hair, watching as the burnished black strands tumbled softly against the rough, creamy cotton of the white pillow case.

Lord, but she was gorgeous.

He took another direct hit to his solar plexus region as instant desire landed one of its most potent blows.  He gasped for air as longing hit him once again, hot and harrowing for this woman he’d left behind. What was she doing out here? He couldn’t help but bring one of the calloused fingertips to his warm lips when he took her glove off. She hadn’t had callouses when he’d left. Frowning, he felt the ridges in all her slim fingers. Then shock almost drove him to his knees when he discovered the ring on the third finger of her left hand. 

So, it was true!

Markie Oldham, the woman who belonged to him body and soul, was engaged to another man. He’d heard the rumor but hadn’t been able to believe it. Finally, he’d decided to come and see for himself what the stubborn witch had been up to. With his truck on the fritz and Timber Mesa just over the mountain from Carson’s Thoroughbreds ranch, where he worked, he’d decided to take Wheeler for a ride instead. He could have called Jeb to know for sure, but pride forbade it. Jeb was her big brother, and although they had been friends forever, he was still protective of his little sister. He hadn’t been in the mood to defend his actions last year.

Agony clawed at his guts like a great wild cat. With trembling fingers, he carefully placed the small, work-roughened hand beneath the warm covers, but not before he removed the symbol of another man’s possession from its slender digit. He could have stayed gone when he’d heard the rumors, but there was no way he’d give her up that easily. No man would take what was his, not while he still breathed clean Idaho air.

***

Markie stirred restlessly, the warmth of the fire and the hot bricks beneath the quilts working their medicinal effect on her cold extremities until it became increasingly uncomfortable. 

Wearily, she groaned and opened her eyes to look up at the ceiling, recognizing the line shack rafters from Jeb’s old plaid shirt hanging from a beam. She wondered if she had imagined the rawboned cowboy that haunted her dreams, or if she’d stumbled into the shack alone after Majestic had found it for them. She was exhausted, mentally and physically, but she’d refused to give in. Those missing steers had to be found, and she’d been determined to make it happen. Unfortunately, her stubbornness was now costing her as her body paid the exacting toll nature required. 

She hoped her fingers and toes weren’t frostbitten, but it was hard to tell at this point. The burning, stinging sensations that were pulsing through them as they slowly came back to life were excruciating. That was supposed to be a good thing, though. It meant the flesh hadn’t died—thank God for small favors. But it was a painful reminder of her near miss in the bone-chilling winds.

“I see you’re finally starting to wake up.”

Markie stiffened, instant recognition coursing through her as the low, gravelly voice of Daniel stabbed through her being. So, she hadn’t imagined it—he was here in person, in all his bossy glory. He must have undressed her to her long-johns. Painfully, she sat up and turned towards the fire. He was sitting in the old, dumpy recliner Jeb had hauled up to the shack a year ago. He’d said a man needed a comfortable place to sit in at the little cabin.

Daniel’s eyes caught hers in a stony stare, and from the look in those harsh blue eyes and the set of that square jaw, he wasn’t pleased with her. But then, she wasn’t too happy with him either.

Bitterly, she stared back at him, trying to stay focused, trying to laser her displeasure directly at him with blue beams of resentment. What was he doing here? She closed her eyes. “Too bad there isn’t a better view to wake up to.”

“You shouldn’t be here.”

Daniel was impossible to ignore, as much as she might want to. His rugged face wore a year-round suntan with a sensuous mouth that knew how to give pleasure and punish at the same time. His thick, dark hair was tousled, giving him a rakish look that he totally deserved. Somewhere between her thighs, something melted. Controlling her body was almost impossible with him.

“Neither should you, yet here we are,” she mocked. “Trust me, you’re the last person I’d choose to be stranded with.”

 He leaned forward, imprisoning her gaze, making her heart race. She cursed herself because she didn’t want him touching her, didn’t want the waves of pleasure that swam through her traitorous body like a tide seeking the beach when she was near him. And like the torturous ocean depths tuned into the moon’s control, her senses tuned into his every movement. Desire crashed like waves on the rocky shores of an undeniable passion.

Markie loved Daniel. She also hated him. 

Which feeling was deepest was hard to tell, and she didn’t want to explore those feelings anymore. He was out of her life now, a choice he had made. He’d left her alone when she needed him most. She shrank back when he stood up.

Nervously, her fingers sought the reassurance of David’s ring, hoping to summon strength from another man’s token of love. She didn’t love David Holms, but he was good to her and would take care of her.  He was solid, reliable, not a drifter…not like Daniel. David was her rock.

With a sudden tremulous gasp, she pulled her shaking hands from beneath the quilt to stare in shock at her left ring finger.

David’s ring was gone! 

She stared at the bare finger that was aching abominably and then back up to the vivid blue eyes that were gauging her reaction.

“Looking for this?”  he asked sardonically, his sensual mouth twisting cruelly as he studied her.  He held up the missing ring, and it sparkled in the firelight, twinkling mockingly at her just before he suddenly turned and threw it into the blazing fire.  His muscled forearms bunched in his long arms as he thrust his hands furiously into his jean pockets as if it were the only way he could keep from grabbing her and shaking her senseless.

“What’s the matter? Couldn’t you stay out of another man’s bed long enough for me to get back?  Is he as good a lover as I am?  Do you beg him to satisfy you as you did me?”  His voice was harsh with fury and pain.

“That’s none of your business,” Markie snarled. She felt at a distinct disadvantage with him towering over her, although he had kept his distance so far.  It was almost as if he didn’t want to touch her any more than she wanted him to. 

Dropping her feet on the wooden planks, she tried to stand and then fell to the floor in agony, curling into a moaning ball on her side. Her feet felt like a thousand needles were piercing her skin. Her hands weren’t much better, and she put them beneath her arms and groaned miserably, trying to ease the pressure of the blood that was pulsing into them.

“You little fool,” he snapped as he bent down to pick her up and put her back on the bed.  “Where do you think you’re going? Or were you coming to slap me like you did the last time we met?” 

Despite his scolding, he handled her gently, rubbing her feet first, then her hands, trying to ease the circulation.  “For two cents, I’d just turn you over my knee and spank your little butt good and hard. Maybe that would take your mind off the pain in your hands and feet for a while.  Lord knows you’ve had it coming for a long time.”

“Leave me alone, just leave me alone,” Markie moaned, hating his hands on her.  His touch was bringing back all the longing she kept pent up inside her, buried down deep where only the night hours allowed it to come out.  “Go away, Daniel, please,” she whispered finally, unable to restrain the deep emotion that was tearing her apart. “Just leave me alone.”

As usual, he ignored the tearful command and pulled her in close to his body. Then he groaned and slid his hand into her long, dark hair. He claimed her unwilling mouth, tasted her lips, and branded her once again with his passion. Then he laid his forehead against hers and whispered back, “I can’t. God help me…I can’t.”

Markie hated herself all over again.  Hated the fact that she responded to his touch, his kiss, and the words that seemed wrenched from his very soul to touch a chord deep within her. The burning sensations in her hands and feet faded into insignificance beside the raging inferno that was flaring up inside her. 

Hungry for him, she reached up and pulled his head down again, needing the raw pleasure that only he could provide. Despite herself, she thrilled to the touch of his hands as they made their way beneath her thick, long johns to find the rigid nipples that were playing hide and seek with his fingers. She groaned in defeat and pulled him down on top of her, her legs falling open to receive his body against the heaviness deep in the apex of her slender thighs.  She was lost to everything but the incredible heat and incessant hunger building inside her, the need to have him buried deep within the recesses of her feminine counterpart to his throbbing male hardness.

“Say it, witch…tell me you need me, want me,” he demanded huskily against her soft throat.  “Do you feel this way with him?  Does he make you want him like this?  Say it.

The words were like a bucket of cold water thrown onto a hot, sun-heated body, and Markie rolled sideways with a tortured sob, throwing him off her and onto the floor.  She stared down at him with huge, stricken eyes, and then, with a strangled cry, turned away from him on her side and curled into a ball once again. 

“I hate you, Daniel Anderson, I hate you,” she cried fiercely, the tears trickling down her ashen cheeks.  “Why did you have to come back?”

This title is just 2.99 and coming out just in time for Valentine’s Day. Click here for more information.

Stay warm, my friends! Enjoy the superbowl and Valentines all coming up very soon. And as always,

New Christmas Release

Read the first chapter of Returning for Trouble here.

She was desperate for solitude.
He barged in like a grumpy Grinch with a hero complex.
Now they’re snowed in together—with tension thick enough to toast marshmallows over.
A spicy-sweet, heart-tugging holiday romance where love might just take a miracle…
learn more


Chapter 1

Sierra Chapin held her breath as she heard the footsteps on the wooden deck outside and then a key turning in the lock of the front door. They were coming into the cabin—she had to stay hidden.

Her heart raced as she tried to shrink even smaller as if that were possible in the hiding space she was sharing with a spider as big as an Australian Huntsman.

Okay, maybe not that big, but it was a given that if she didn’t have an affinity for wildlife, she wouldn’t stay under this bed with her curious partner. His small, beady eyes contemplated her from between a set of legs that appeared half the size of her little finger. And since they were mere inches apart, she hoped the big fellow didn’t drop from the bedspring poking through the undercover and onto her nose for an even closer inspection of the woman who had invaded his privacy.

With a sideways glance from her spot under the bed, she watched as footsteps quickly paced through the small cabin’s living room—there wasn’t much to it—and started towards the bedroom she was hiding in. Sweat beaded on her upper lip. Would they look under the bed?

Every horror movie she’d ever seen told her they would, but she didn’t have a choice. It was the only place in the mountain cabin big enough to hide her from view. Unless you counted the closet, and there was no way a search of the closet wasn’t in order. It was the first place the killer always looked.

Sure enough, the booted male feet—they were too big and heavy treading to be female—headed immediately for the closet and opened the shuttered doors wide, then grunted as he closed them. He muttered something she couldn’t catch all of, but it sounded like he was deprecating himself as to the need for anyone to be in the closet, but she could have been wrong. Lots of people needed to hide in closets, right? And right now, she was defeating him by being under the bed.

Round one goes to Sierra.

She did a mental hurrah until those booted feet turned towards the bed. Sweat beaded on her upper lip, but she refused to show Legs—the name she’d mentally given to her partner in hiding—her tongue. It just didn’t seem right somehow. He was already rubbing his two mandibles together as if getting ready to start weaving his web around his prey. All that was stopping him was figuring out what part of her he wanted to store for future use—probably her nose, since that body part was most prominent.

Legs sure had a lot of hair, was the incongruous thought that waddled through her sleepy brain. She held her breath and prayed Legs wouldn’t stop rubbing his mandibles until the booted feet finally turned and left the room with a determined tread and a muttered disbelief as to why anyone would leave so much behind in the kitchen. When the door shut and the key clicked in the lock, she let out a huge breath of relief that had the hair on Legs’ rounded body blowing backward. Then she immediately slid sideways as her partner lifted his front legs in self-defense and got the heck out of there.

The cabin was actually spotless, but she dusted herself off anyway, hoping Legs wouldn’t be looking for revenge tonight after she was asleep. Maybe she could bribe him out of there with something tasty. He had a good thing going under there, though, if the cleaning crews hadn’t found him before now. And realistically, where would she rehome him?

He was a typical Montana house spider, brown, hairy, and with long, scary legs. It wasn’t as if she could put him outside in the freezing temperatures; he was accustomed to the indoors. The best course of action was to leave the enterprising bugger right where he was. Hopefully, he wouldn’t travel during the night, but spiders generally shied away from people. She had no fear of spiders, but that didn’t mean she wanted him exploring her nostrils or something while she was sleeping.

Back to the problem at hand. With her head throbbing, she pulled the leaflet out of her back pocket and studied it once again. The rage she’d felt this morning had lessened after taking her medication, but it left her feeling tired and brain foggy. She reread the missive as she headed into the living room, where all the windows were shuttered.

“All residents are to be evacuated by 3:00 p.m. today. An unexpected blizzard is predicted to bring three feet of snow to the area, and services may be unavailable for an undetermined period of time. Your rentals will be refunded to you for the days you are cut short. Thank you for coming to Montana Hideaways.”

With a snort of disgust, she wadded the notice into a ball and threw it into the trash can in the kitchen. It was three days before Christmas, and she had rented this cabin until January 3rd. Changing her plans now was inconceivable. How could they treat their guests in this manner?

 She’d just arrived yesterday, unpacked, and settled in, and now she’d spent the morning packing up again and following the instructions left with the missive that had been dropped off by some pretty young teenager who was far too bubbly for 7:00 a.m. She’d rebelled and hidden herself and her luggage under the bed with Legs, spotting the gutsy spider right away. There wasn’t much she could do about him because, like her, he refused to leave his refuge.

She could respect that.

The logical part of her brain told her that Mother Nature was the supreme ruler and that people were merely her subjects when she threw a tantrum, but that didn’t lessen her irritation at having her plans snookered.

When her old boss had asked her if she would be interested in checking into a wolf den reported to be in the area of the mountain resort near Kalispell, called Montana Hideaways, she’d jumped at the chance. She knew he was trying to lure her back to her job full-time, but she wasn’t ready for that. She’d agreed, though, wanting this time to get away from the caring people who loved her—and were stifling her.

And they didn’t understand.

Studying the wolves’ den patterns during the winter and learning more about them in their natural habitat was a plus. She loved animals and had an uncanny knack for winning their affection. She wasn’t too sure about Legs, though. Spiders weren’t her specialty, but they were fascinating creatures.

As she went to the fridge and pulled out a bottle of water, she could hear the flurry of activity as folks stuffed their belongings into their vehicles and got into line to head out of the popular resort. A bit of guilt flashed through her when she thought of her roommate and friend, Bobbie—she would be worried. But it wasn’t as if she were being reckless; she was methodical when it came to making preparations to do anything.

In fact, Vander had continuously teased her about her anal attitude towards details, but that was the way her brain worked—or used to. The familiar pang of grief that was never far away zinged her with another arrow.

Vander was gone.

Quickly, she led her mind back to the inventory of her stay at Montana Hideaways. Keeping her mind busy kept the specter of sorrow at bay—until she slept, anyway. As she paced the floor, she ticked things off on her fingers once again. She’d already checked everything this morning, but she went over her mental list again.

The electricity was sure to go out in the blizzard, so a wood supply was important. She had a pretty good supply of firewood in the bin outside the cabin, and the bin by the fireplace was overflowing. The kitchen pantry contained candles, matches, two oil-filled lanterns, and a flashlight. There were also extra batteries for the flashlight, lamp oil refills, and a small camp stove for emergencies.

If necessary, she could boil water from the snow outside, but she didn’t think she’d have to. Several cases of water she brought with her were stored in the laundry area, along with plenty of coffee and soft drinks.

And of course, food—a ton of food.

Bobbie had insisted on loading her up with stuff she would never eat, like spam, Vienna sausages, canned chicken, and plenty of soups. And of course, the fridge was filled with food she had purchased at the store for a make-shift Christmas dinner of a baked turkey breast with some sides. Even if the heat went out, she could place most of the perishable food in the laundry room and close the door to keep it cold. She hadn’t planned on cooking much, though, just snacking mostly. And baking some hot rolls—she dearly loved the smell of baking bread. Her appetite had been missing for a long time, so whether she even cooked anything or not was still undetermined.

If worst came to worst, she could raid the other cabins for supplies, and the little store down near the middle of the complex. Even if it wasn’t open for business, it still had canned food and other supplies on its shelves.

Breaking and entering wasn’t something she usually did, but these weren’t normal circumstances—she could do it if she had to.

Bobbie had dropped her off, so she didn’t have a vehicle to account for, so no one would know she hadn’t left the resort by the required time, and by the time they did, it would be too late to do anything about it.

Perfect.

There was no way the blizzard would lock the roads down for very long anyway. The snowplows would come out, and the owners would return to check on their property, even if it meant riding snowmobiles to take inventory once the snow stopped falling.

All things considered, Sierra welcomed the blizzard. It would cut her off from civilization and finally give her some much-needed peace—sweet, blissful peace.

There would be no one to bother her, no one to make useless small talk, and no well-meaning platitudes to listen to. There was no need to make excuses for why she didn’t want to leave her house. No one was calling her to coax her back into living as if nothing had ever happened. And no one was in her space—or in her face.

Hallelujah.

Now that the inspection was over, all she had to do was get her suitcase and other gear out from under the bed—if Legs wasn’t holding it hostage after her invasion. Then she would be all set to enjoy her much-needed isolation.

Satisfied that all her bases were covered, Sierra peeked out from the side of a window blind to see how the evacuation was coming. The sky overhead was a leaden gray, and the wind had picked up. The loose snow on the ground was dancing here and there in twirling puffs as wind gusts caught it and threw it up with devilish glee.

As she watched, she kept her thoughts averted from the black hole where Vander and Lexi lived. Every time she ventured too close and allowed herself to remember, that black hole sucked her in. Time would have no meaning as she tried to cope with the fury and pain of her loss. Even though it had been over a year since the accident, her therapist said she was still in denial.

And maybe she was.

All Sierra knew was that she was furious with the world for robbing her of her husband and unborn child in a vicious quirk of fate. The nightmares still hadn’t stopped. The scars she bore on her abdomen and her temple were reminders of that awful night when Vander had swerved to miss the car full of teenagers high on life and weed.

While swerving to avoid the kids, their jeep had plunged over an embankment on a steep Montana road. The kids had been oblivious, she learned later, but when she had finally awakened in the hospital, she instantly knew she’d been robbed. Her husband and child had been cruelly ripped from her, and the pain of that memory was a black hole of utter misery.

Nuts! She’d done it again.

Pain washed over her in a tidal wave. With shaking hands, she raced to the bedroom and grabbed her purse from beneath the bed, flipping Legs off it without remorse. Fumbling with the zipper, she finally got her fingers working and took out a bottle of pills, snapped off the lid, and swallowed two of them. Her head was throbbing so badly that her vision was blurring. The images flooded her tired brain.

They were in the jeep, and Vander’s strong arms were fighting the wheel. Their car was rushing down a rock-studded hillside blanketed in fresh snow, and the twisted trees that, without their green cover, appeared to be reaching for them with gnarly, grasping limbs. Then everything went black, and she woke up in the hospital. That’s where the real pain began—and the rage.

The uncontrollable rage that consumed her.

Practicing the coping techniques her therapist had taught her, Sierra tried to focus on her friend Bobbie, who had stood by her side through it all. Taking slow breaths in and out, she steadied her racing heart and began to feel herself relax. Sometimes, she wished she could cry, but all the tears had been in the beginning. Now, the tears were gone, leaving her hollow, but the rage had remained.

Hot, messy, and uncontrollable.

And when it reached up through that black hole and caught her, her refuge was in the medication that took her away for a while. It wasn’t the best refuge, but it was all she had at the moment.

                                                            ***

Spenser Walker stared at the list on the clipboard, his mouth thinning to a disapproving line. Where the devil was the resident from cabin number five? All the other residents were accounted for and had left an hour ago, except for Sierra Chapin. Her name had not been crossed off the list. He turned to his partner. “Hey, Bill, you sure you didn’t see this Chapin woman? She’s not crossed off the list yet.”

Bill Ralston, Spenser’s partner in Montana Hideaways, came over and checked the clipboard and then pulled on his well-cropped whiskers. “No, I can’t recall seeing her come through, and I do remember her. She was a pretty girl, but too thin. And she had a head of reddish-colored hair that stuck out from under her stocking cap like it had wings,” he joked.

Spenser stared with a wry grin. “You have such a way with words, it’s a wonder you’re married,” he mocked.

Bill’s blue eyes twinkled. “That’s the secret to getting married, my man—something you need to perfect. Besides, there isn’t a woman present, and Miss Chapin did look like a wrung-out Raggedy Ann doll minus the creepy smile. That’s why I remember her.” Then he shook his head. “No, I didn’t check her out, but maybe Winston did. Who checked cabin five?”

Spenser frowned and looked at his watch. The cabins were two miles back up the road, and this was the final checkpoint before leaving Montana Hideaways. Snow was already coming down, and helping campers put their chains on before leaving had eaten up their time. But the last of the taillights were disappearing into the foggy air, and he wanted to be right behind them. But according to his record, they were missing a camper.

“I checked the cabin myself. Other than all the food in the refrigerator and in the pantry left behind, nothing seemed unusual. Some people panic, though, and just run. There wasn’t any luggage in the closet or anywhere else. The fire was out, and the thermostat was set to the required temperature. It looked like she was gone.”

Bill grinned, his teeth flashing through his brown beard. “Did you check under the bed?”

Spenser’s eyebrow lifted. “The bed?”

“Yeah, you know. In the horror shows, that’s where all the females hide, thinking they are safe from monsters. Why Hollywood does that, I’ll never know. Anyone with half a brain knows all the monsters are under the bed.” His laughter rang out in the cold air, chased by white puffs of his breath.

“Why the devil would she hide under the bed?” Spenser growled, shaking his head.

“I’ve been married for ten years, Spense, and I’ve yet to figure out why women do most of what they do. Their brains are wired differently from ours, that’s all I can tell you. Maybe this woman is a criminal trying to hide from a gangster, or an abusive husband, or any other number of reasons women want solitude. My wife informs me that she doesn’t have to have a reason for what she does, so I go with that.”

Spenser grunted. “Mandy is a saint, that I can understand. Putting up with you is enough to make any woman run screaming for the hills.”

“You’re just jealous that you don’t have your own woman,” Bill teased without mercy. “Seriously, dude, you need to get hitched. You’ll never have time to be bored.”

“I’m not bored now, and your nonsense isn’t getting me any answers,” Spenser fired back. “I’ve already talked to Winston on the phone; he said she didn’t come through on his shift. It’s going on four o’clock, and we’ve already had three inches of snow. I’m going to run back up and make sure she got out.”

Bill shook his head at his partner, his blue eyes suddenly concerned. “Spense, if you go back up there, you may get snowed in. It’s coming down fast, and it won’t be long before you lose visibility. We both need to be heading down the mountain, not back up it.”

“Yeah, but if I get snowed in, I know how to take care of myself. A woman alone would be helpless. And you know as well as I do that since she’s our guest, we could be sued if anything happens to her.”

Bill nodded reluctantly and opened his reservations booklet. “There aren’t any snowmobiles checked out,” he mused thoughtfully, “so she didn’t go out for the day. “No skis or snowshoe rentals either.” He scratched his head beneath his cap with the eraser on the head of his pencil. “Unless she went out for a walk, she should be gone. Did she have a car?”

Spenser’s blood ran cold at the thought of the woman out for a walk. Then he shook it off. All her luggage was gone; she couldn’t have carried it out for a walk with her.

“No, I didn’t check that,” he grumbled, looking through his notebook at the registrations. “It looks like someone must have dropped her off. She doesn’t have a vehicle registered to the cabin.”

Bill’s eyebrows dropped into a frown. “Is there an emergency number listed for her? Maybe we should call before we lose phone service and see if she’s at home already?”

“Good idea.”

Spenser took out his cell phone and called the number listed on the application for Bobbie Stevenson. It rang twice, and a voice came over the line.

“Hello?”

Spenser cleared his throat. “Bobbie Stevenson?”

“Yes, this is her.”

“I don’t want to alarm you,” he cautioned, “but we’re checking to see if Sierra Chapin might have already left Montana Hideaways due to the blizzard coming in. We’ve checked the cabin she was registered to, and no one was in it. All the other guests are accounted for and have gone. Has she made contact with you by any chance?”

“What?”

The voice screeched in his ear, and Spenser held his phone out slightly with a grim huff.

“You’ve lost her? How can you lose a guest?” asked the shocked and angry woman.

“We haven’t lost her, Ms. Stevenson, we are trying to account for her so she doesn’t get left behind and snowed in. Please calm down so we can figure this out. Has she checked in with you or her family? Or arrived back at her residence?”

“N-No, she hasn’t called me,” the panicky woman stuttered. “We are roommates, and her family lives in another state. I dropped her off and planned to pick her up after the New Year. She doesn’t have a car to leave in and didn’t know anyone there, so she has to be there still.”

Bill signaled Spenser with a finger and mouthed in a low tone. “I just called her phone; it went straight to voicemail.”

“Will you please call her now? We have tried, and her cell goes straight to voicemail.”

“I’m going to put you on hold,” Bobbie replied hastily.

Spenser waited patiently until the distraught woman returned to the line.

“She isn’t answering her phone,” she seethed into Spenser’s ear. “If she’s pulling another disappearing act, I’m going to be so furious with her. For all I know, she may have decided to stay when everyone left because that’s all she ever wants to do is get away from everyone and be alone.” Her voice rose in a crescendo, filled with worry, fear, and anger.

A frisson of fear shot through Spenser. “Are you saying she might go off hiking or something in the snow alone?”  If so, what had she done with her luggage?

“Oh no, she wouldn’t do that, she’s not stupid. But I wouldn’t put it past her to stay up there on her own. She has to be in that cabin. Oh my god…you have to find her!”

“Don’t worry, I’ll find her,” Spenser replied grimly. “I’m going to head back to the resort, but I may lose cell service, and I will most likely be snowed in with her.”

“Snowed in?” Bobbie screeched in his ear. “That’s dangerous.”

“Don’t worry, Ms. Stevenson. The Hideways has plenty of resources to keep the situation from becoming too dangerous. She has food, water, and firewood in her cabin, and plenty more at the local grocery store. She’ll be fine,” he promised, thinking Raggedy Ann’s bottom wouldn’t be nearly as fine as her stomach if she’d deliberately hidden from him in that cabin.

“Call me as soon as you know anything,” Bobbie pleaded.

“I’ll be losing phone service soon,” he replied, “but when the storm is over, and service is restored, I’ll have her call you immediately.”

Spenser hung up and headed for the truck. “If I’m not back in thirty minutes, Bill, leave without me. I’ve got keys to the cabins, and I’ll be fine. If she’s there, I’ll find her. That’s a lawsuit waiting to happen if I don’t.” He rammed his cowboy hat on his head, his frustration simmering.

“We’re going to miss Christmas over this,” Bill warned in disgust, but I’ll come with you. You shouldn’t be going alone.”

“No, you get on down the mountain. You have a family with three little kids who need you there at Christmas, Bill. For me, it’s just another day.”

Bill hesitated. “Are you sure?” He eyed the falling snow with a practiced eye. “It’s getting heavier by the minute. We both need to hurry.”

Spenser waved him away as he opened the cab of his truck. “Go on. I’ll be fine, I have time to get two miles back up without losing visibility. Cabin five has a nice reserve of food, so I’ll start there.”

Bill looked visibly relieved. “Okay, man.” He slapped Spenser on the shoulder. “If you run into any trouble, you know where the radios are in the lodge. Or even if you don’t, try to get over there and let me know you found her.”

“I’ll let you know something as soon as I can.”

Bill turned around as he stepped up into his big blue truck. “And watch for the wolves. They have a den nearby.  With all the guests checking out so fast, they may come around looking for scraps.”

Spenser nodded and waved Bill off, then turned and got into his maroon 4×4 pickup. The roads were already covered again in new fallen snow. Even with the dwindling visibility of the storm in all its fury, he could still make out the snowbanks, but it was slow going.

Briefly, his thoughts flew to Christmas. At this point, Christmas didn’t matter much to him. His fiancée, Clarissa, had decided she couldn’t handle the idea of having kids and had broken up with him last month, right after Thanksgiving. He’d suspected she might have been cheating on him for a while now, but he hadn’t been sure until she broke it off. She’d dumped him for a city slicker with a business suit and a load of promises for the rich life – and no children necessary.

He’d returned her Christmas gift and sworn off women for the next millennium. He’d found out from his sister that Clarissa hadn’t even gotten him a gift, so she’d been planning the breakup at her convenience.

As a result, Spenser was an embittered man at the moment.

A real Christmas grinch.

Returning for Trouble is Available at all your favorite retailers

Merry Christmas, my friends! Check out my newsletter for other deals and steals for the holidays. Newletter