Wyoming True Read online




  More books from Diana Palmer

  Wyoming Men

  Wyoming Tough

  Wyoming Fierce

  Wyoming Bold

  Wyoming Strong

  Wyoming Rugged

  Wyoming Brave

  Wyoming Winter

  Wyoming Legend

  Wyoming Heart

  Long, Tall Texans

  Fearless

  Heartless

  Dangerous

  Merciless

  Courageous

  Protector

  Invincible

  Untamed

  Defender

  Undaunted

  Unbridled

  Unleashed

  The Morcai Battalion

  The Morcai Battalion

  The Morcai Battalion: The Recruit

  The Morcai Battalion: Invictus

  The Morcai Battalion: The Rescue

  The Morcai Battalion: The Pursuit

  For a complete list of titles available by Diana Palmer,

  please visit www.dianapalmer.com.

  Diana Palmer

  Wyoming True

  Dear Reader,

  Ida turned up in Wyoming Heart, Cort Grier’s book, and I had this idea of who she was. She didn’t share it. I was more or less drawn into her tragic background, and she changed my mind about her true self. (I am not out of my mind. Most writers go through some weird interactions with their characters. They become quite real during the writing of a novel.)

  I loved Jake McGuire from the time he turned up in Diamond in the Rough. I was just waiting for a story that would suit him. He and Ida were instant enemies. But a flat tire changed all that. Two damaged people found each other, and this was one story I truly enjoyed telling.

  I hope you like the book. As I get older (seventy-four this year, you know), and after writing over two hundred novels, I sometimes repeat myself. And I am certainly not a mainstream person. I live in a very small, wonderful mountain town in North Georgia and I’m mostly confined to my home due to disabilities. Jim, who has far more health issues than I do, and I stay home and play video games for fun and social interaction. We’re sort of out of step with society. So I write about what I know—small communities, where all of us know each other and talk over the fence and wave at anybody who walks past the front porch. And walk the dog and brush the cats and weed the herb patch. That’s my world.

  Thank you for your kindness and your prayers and the love you all give to me so freely. I wish I could do more for you than just give you a couple of new books a year. Take care, love one another, be safe. I am still your biggest fan.

  Love and hugs,

  Diana Palmer

  As much as we love our doctors who take care of us, we also love our veterinarians, vet techs, groomers and staff who look after our precious fur babies. I’ve been very fortunate to have a great crew take care of my own at Northeast Veterinary Hospital in Cornelia. This book is dedicated to them: Dr. Doug and Dr. Cecily Nieh, Hollis, Debbie, Wynn, Amber, Zach, Rene, Taylor, Emma, Shannon, Jenna, Madi, Diane, Marissa, Mariah and Chris. You guys are just wonderful.

  I also must mention with deep gratitude our friends at Cornelia Veterinary Hospital, who have saved so many of our pets in years past.

  I love all of you. Thanks for all you do for animal lovers everywhere!

  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

  EXCERPT FROM NOTORIOUS BY DIANA PALMER

  EXCERPT FROM CLAIMING THE RANCHER’S HEIR BY MAISEY YATES

  CHAPTER ONE

  JAKE MCGUIRE WAS happy for Mina. She’d married a Texan, Cort Grier, who turned out to be a wealthy cattle baron; quite a surprise when she’d known him only as a working cowboy who was helping out on his cousin Bart Riddle’s ranch outside Catelow, Wyoming.

  It had been an odd love story. Mina was a famous author of romance novels, who actually went on commando missions with a bunch of mercenaries who’d taken her under their wing for research. Cort Grier hadn’t known that. But he was wearing a mask, too, pretending to be a poor cowboy. It was only after she’d married him that she knew who he really was. And he found out about her profession in a totally unexpected way, when she went to live on his ranch and her mercenary group helped round up a gang of drug smugglers on the border of his property. Many adjustments had been made, but the two seemed destined for happiness. They had a brand-new son named Jeremiah, and while Mina kept the family ranch in Catelow, which her father was now managing, she lived with Cort and Jeremiah at Cort’s enormous family ranch, Latigo, in West Texas.

  Jake was glad for her. But he was miserable. He’d had a real case on her, and it had hurt to realize that even his own wealth and status wasn’t enough to attract her. It was the first time in his life that he’d ever been truly smitten with a woman, and she turned out to be in love with someone else.

  Well, he could go back to the cattle station he shared with Mina’s cousin Rogan in Australia, but fires in the outback were seriously impacting their vast herds of cattle. Along with hundreds of wildfires, many set deliberately, there was drought and lack of feed. Rogan had already mentioned that they’d have to sell off a lot of their purebred stock to break even. Jake had come back to the States to help get their finances on target and send assistance to get the fires out on the large property and the surviving livestock shipped to a safer location.

  The wildfires had hit Rogan even harder than Jake. Mina’s cousin loved the Australian property. He owned a big ranch outside Catelow, as well, but he hated snow, so he only came home in warm months, leaving his manager in charge. Well, unless Jake was there to hold the reins.

  Less and less did Jake like being out of the country. He missed Catelow. While he was squiring Mina Michaels around town and to various far-flung five-star restaurants in other states, he’d become accustomed to being back in the States. He was reluctant to leave the country.

  Stupid, really, because he’d lost Mina and he had no other female interests here. He sipped coffee in the café and glared into the cup. He felt more alone than he had since the deaths of his parents long ago. He was an only child. There had been an older brother, who’d died tragically, but no other siblings. He missed his mother, although he never spoke of his father. He had no family left.

  He’d have loved a child. The thought of it had sustained him while he was courting Mina, hoping against hope that he could win out over the Texas rancher. But that hadn’t happened. He was nursing a broken heart and trying not to let it show. Meanwhile, the social lions of Catelow, especially Pam Simpson, had been pouncing, trying to set him up with widows and divorcées. He had no interest in any of the local women now. He’d had his share of brief affairs, but he felt jaded, used. Women wanted what he had. He could, and did, bestow his favors generously on the women he dated. Diamonds, five-star hotels and restaurants, travels abroad on his own private jet. But more and more, he felt he was buying them. Or, he thought facetiously, renting them.

  He made a sound deep in his throat as the thought processed, drawing an interested glance from people at the counter waiting for orders to take out.

  One of them was glaring. That local divorcée, Ida Merridan. She was drop-dead gorgeous. Short, thick black hair, blue eyes, impossibly long eyelashes and a killer figure. Th
e problem with her was that she was promiscuous, he thought irritably. Everybody knew she collected men like dolls and tossed them aside when she’d had her fill. She was twice married, gossip said. Her first husband had died, but nobody knew about the second husband, except that she’d divorced him. Cort Grier had dated her before he became entangled with Mina. He’d seen them on a dance floor, glued to each other at a party, and they left together. They’d dated often while he was in town. So presumably the cattle baron had a brief liaison with her. From what people said about her, she wasn’t picky about men. Anybody would do.

  He didn’t like women like that. That was probably hypocritical, he considered, because he’d sown his own wild oats years ago. He averted his eyes from the divorcée’s blistering glare with magnificent indifference and sipped coffee.

  People talked about the double standard, about men sleeping around while women were chastised for it. But there had been a legitimate reason for it a hundred and fifty years ago, when there was no real method of birth control. A husband wandered and spread his favors around so that he wouldn’t have an eternally pregnant wife who would die before reaching the age of forty. He wondered how many modern women even knew that or considered that social mores sometimes had justifiable foundations. Well, he amended, somewhat justifiable.

  He glanced at the woman, who was smiling at the clerk and paying for her takeout. He didn’t like her. She knew it. He’d made his opinion of her quite clear at a party they’d both attended a week back. Their hostess had been matchmaking and nudged them together onto the dance floor. He could do Latin dances. So could she. But this was a slow two-step and he hated the contact.

  “I don’t have a fatal contagious disease,” Ida had said bitingly when he held her as if he had a stick of dynamite in his reluctant arms. She was hating the contact, too, and hiding it in bad temper.

  He lifted an eyebrow, his pale, glittery silver eyes lancing down into her china-blue ones. “Really? Have you had lab work to make sure?” he added, just to irritate her.

  The glare grew hotter. “I don’t want to dance with you,” she said curtly. She was stiff even in the light embrace. Amazing, with her reputation, that she seemed to dislike him.

  “They say any man will do, where you’re concerned,” he drawled. “I don’t appeal to you?”

  She swallowed, hard, and glanced around as if hoping the music would stop.

  “And here I thought you’d come up with something trite, along the lines that you only dated men in your own species,” he taunted.

  Another couple, spinning around, came a little too close, and Jake pulled Ida abruptly closer and turned her to avoid a collision.

  Her reaction was sudden and stark. She jerked away from him, almost shivering, her eyes lowered. “I can’t...” she began in a choked tone.

  He’d glared at her. “Any man but me, is that how it goes?” he asked in a deep, biting whisper, viciously offended and not even sure why he was offended.

  She hadn’t even looked at him. She’d turned and walked off the dance floor. Minutes later she’d thanked her hostess for the invitation and driven her car away. Jake, standing by the punch bowl, was confounded by her behavior. She’d actually seemed afraid of him. And that was fanciful thinking when the whole town knew what she was.

  He glanced toward the counter, where she was picking up her order and smiling at the female clerk.

  Maybe it was an act, he mused. Maybe she pretended to be nervous toward a man when she was stalking him. The problem with that theory was that she hadn’t come near Jake since the party. In fact, when she left the café, she went the long way around to the front door, so that she wouldn’t have to pass the table where he was sitting.

  He finished his coffee and took the cup back to the counter. “You make good coffee, Cindy,” he told the employee, who was a married grandmother.

  She grinned at him. “Thanks, Mr. McGuire. My husband runs on black coffee. He’s a trucker. If I couldn’t make it to suit him, I’d be in divorce court in no time,” she joked.

  “Fat chance. Mack’s crazy about you,” he chuckled. He glanced toward the door. “The happy divorcée doesn’t eat with the common folk?” he added.

  “Oh, you mean Ida,” she said. She grimaced. “She doesn’t go out much. She lives near us, you know. One night I heard her screaming and I called the sheriff’s department. I was afraid somebody might have broken in on her. Cody Banks, our sheriff, was working that shift, and he went by to see what had happened.”

  He frowned, just waiting.

  She sighed. “He said she was white as a sheet and looked as if she’d seen a ghost. She told him it was an old nightmare that she had from time to time and she apologized for disturbing the neighbors.”

  “Nightmares.” He shook his head. “Who’d have thought it?”

  “I went over to see her the next day, it was Sunday, on my way to church, to apologize for calling the law. She just smiled and said she didn’t blame me. She apologized, too, for making a fuss.”

  “Did she say why she had the nightmare?” he asked.

  She shook her head. “She mentioned something about her second husband making a threat. He’s involved in some illegal stuff, I gathered, and she’s rich.”

  “Did she get rich by divorcing him?” he asked with a grin.

  She shook her head. “Her first husband had the money. The second... Apparently he married her for what she had. Nobody knows much about it.”

  “Did she move here recently?” Jake asked. “I don’t mix much with local people, even though I have my ranch and I still own the feed supply store here. I’m away on business a lot.”

  “Her grandparents were from here. So was her mother. In fact, she was born here. But when her father got a good-paying job in Denver, they moved away. She was in fifth grade.” She drew in a breath. “It was just after Bess Grady killed herself.”

  “My best friend’s brother had a crush on the Grady girl. He took it hard,” he commented, not going into details. Like Cindy, he’d gone through school here. He hadn’t always been rich. “What about Ida’s parents?”

  She shook her head. “Her father had a massive heart attack when he was just thirty-five,” she said with a sigh. “Her mother lived on, but not happily. She lived only for Ida. When Ida was eighteen, her mother went on a cruise and fell overboard. They never found the body.”

  “That would have been hard,” he conceded.

  “So Ida was working for a graphics firm in Denver, right out of high school, and her boss felt sorry for her, I guess, because he married her shortly afterward. There was gossip, they said, because of the age difference. He was very wealthy and had never been married at all.”

  “Was it a happy marriage?” He hated asking. He didn’t know why he even cared.

  “Well...”

  “Come on,” he teased. “You know I don’t gossip.”

  “Well, my second cousin, who knew the owner of the graphics store, said he was gay.”

  His eyebrows arched.

  “I know, why would he want to marry Ida? But he was kind to her.”

  “I heard he committed suicide.”

  She nodded, looking around to make sure nobody was within earshot. “His boyfriend had left him. He’d had other problems, but this had sent him over the edge. He was so distraught that he went to the top floor of his building and jumped off. The boyfriend tried to sue Ida afterward. He thought he deserved something for his time with the older man. Ida took him to court and countersued. He had to pay court costs. She had a really mean attorney.” She grinned. “Her husband left her everything, and there was a lot. He left her a note, thanking her for being so kind to him.”

  He was touched, despite his distaste for Ida.

  “Maybe she’s not all bad.”

  “Nobody is all bad, Mr. McGuire,” she replied. “Some people have worse lives
than others, is all.”

  He shrugged. “Seems so.”

  She smiled gently. “You still missing Mina?”

  He smiled back. “A little. But she and Cort and the baby are happy in Texas. I’m glad for them. I keep in touch with them through her dad, who’s managing their family ranch outside town.”

  “You’re a good loser.”

  “Not much choice about that,” he replied. His pale silver eyes were sad. “You can’t make people love you.”

  “Isn’t it the truth?” she agreed.

  * * *

  HE WENT OUT to get into his car and spotted Ida standing by her Jaguar with her cell phone to her ear. The Jag had a flat tire.

  “Yes,” she said wearily. “Yes, I know, but it’s going to take two hours to get somebody out here, and I have to be at the doctor’s by two!”

  Jake paused beside the car.

  She stared at him, surprised.

  “I can run you to the doctor. Leave the key with Cindy Bates, inside, and tell whoever you’re talking to where they’ll be. Have him lock the car and give the key back to Cindy when he’s done.”

  She was just standing there, surprised at how easily he organized things. A voice was coming over the smartphone.

  “Oh, sorry,” she said into the receiver. “Listen, I’ve had the offer of a ride. I’ll leave the key inside the café with Cindy. She can give it to you and you can hand it back to her when you finish. That work? Great. Thanks so much. I’m really sorry... Of course. Thanks.”

  She hung up. She glanced at Jake warily. “You’re sure it’s not out of your way?”

  He shook his head. “Give me the key.”

  She handed it to him. He gestured to a red Mercedes and used his own smart key to unlock it. “Go ahead and get in. I won’t be a minute.”

  He didn’t wait to see if she complied; he turned and strode back into the café. Ida stared after him with mingled discomfort and appreciation. He was very handsome. Tall, fit, muscular without it being overly obvious. He had beautiful manners and eyes that seemed to pierce all the way to the soul. If she’d been able to find a man attractive, he’d have been at the top of her list. As it was, that was impossible.

 

    A Cattleman's Honor Read onlineA Cattleman's HonorFor Now and Forever Read onlineFor Now and ForeverTexas Proud and Circle of Gold Read onlineTexas Proud and Circle of GoldMarrying My Cowboy Read onlineMarrying My CowboyWyoming Heart Read onlineWyoming HeartChristmas Kisses with My Cowboy Read onlineChristmas Kisses with My CowboyWyoming True Read onlineWyoming TrueThe Rancher's Wedding Read onlineThe Rancher's WeddingMercenary's Woman ; Outlawed! Read onlineMercenary's Woman ; Outlawed!Long, Tall Texans: Stanton ; Long, Tall Texans: Garon Read onlineLong, Tall Texans: Stanton ; Long, Tall Texans: GaronLawless Read onlineLawlessBlake Read onlineBlakeEscapade Read onlineEscapadeFire Brand Read onlineFire BrandCattleman's Choice Read onlineCattleman's ChoiceMountain Man Read onlineMountain ManLong, Tall and Tempted Read onlineLong, Tall and TemptedA Love Like This Read onlineA Love Like ThisMiss Greenhorn Read onlineMiss GreenhornMagnolia Read onlineMagnoliaLord of the Desert Read onlineLord of the DesertWyoming Fierce Read onlineWyoming FierceTrue Colors Read onlineTrue ColorsCalamity Mom Read onlineCalamity MomThe Pursuit Read onlineThe PursuitRogue Stallion Read onlineRogue StallionDate with a Cowboy Read onlineDate with a CowboyHeart of Winter Read onlineHeart of WinterFriends and Lovers Read onlineFriends and LoversLove on Trial Read onlineLove on TrialBoss Man Read onlineBoss ManCallaghan's Bride Read onlineCallaghan's BrideBefore Sunrise Read onlineBefore SunriseThe Men of Medicine Ridge Read onlineThe Men of Medicine RidgeTexas Proud Read onlineTexas ProudWyoming Tough Read onlineWyoming ToughPassion Flower Read onlinePassion FlowerMaggie's Dad Read onlineMaggie's DadDonavan Read onlineDonavanThe Rancher & Heart of Stone Read onlineThe Rancher & Heart of StoneLong, Tall Texans: Tom Read onlineLong, Tall Texans: TomThe Case of the Mesmerizing Boss Read onlineThe Case of the Mesmerizing BossMontana Mavericks Weddings Read onlineMontana Mavericks WeddingsRedbird Read onlineRedbirdWyoming Strong Read onlineWyoming StrongDarling Enemy Read onlineDarling EnemyLove by Proxy Read onlineLove by ProxyColtrain's Proposal Read onlineColtrain's ProposalThe Best Is Yet to Come & Maternity Bride Read onlineThe Best Is Yet to Come & Maternity BrideRawhide and Lace Read onlineRawhide and LaceWyoming Rugged Read onlineWyoming RuggedPatient Nurse Read onlinePatient NurseUndaunted Read onlineUndauntedLong Tall Texans Series Book 13 - Redbird Read onlineLong Tall Texans Series Book 13 - RedbirdOutsider Read onlineOutsiderLong, Tall Texans: Drew Read onlineLong, Tall Texans: DrewLong, Tall Texans--Christopher Read onlineLong, Tall Texans--ChristopherMerciless Read onlineMercilessA Match Made Under the Mistletoe Read onlineA Match Made Under the MistletoeEvan Read onlineEvanHunter Read onlineHunterNow and Forever Read onlineNow and ForeverHard to Handle Read onlineHard to HandleAmelia Read onlineAmeliaMan of the Hour Read onlineMan of the HourInvincible Read onlineInvincibleThe Maverick Read onlineThe MaverickLong, Tall Texans--Guy Read onlineLong, Tall Texans--GuyNoelle Read onlineNoelleEnamored Read onlineEnamoredThe Best Is Yet to Come Read onlineThe Best Is Yet to ComeThe Humbug Man Read onlineThe Humbug ManWyoming Brave Read onlineWyoming BraveCalhoun Read onlineCalhounLong, Tall Texans--Harden Read onlineLong, Tall Texans--HardenThe Reluctant Father Read onlineThe Reluctant FatherLawman Read onlineLawmanLong, Tall Texans: Hank & Ultimate Cowboy ; Long, Tall Texans: Hank Read onlineLong, Tall Texans: Hank & Ultimate Cowboy ; Long, Tall Texans: HankGrant Read onlineGrantNelson's Brand Read onlineNelson's BrandWyoming Legend Read onlineWyoming LegendDiamond Spur Read onlineDiamond SpurThat Burke Man Read onlineThat Burke ManWyoming Bold (Mills & Boon M&B) Read onlineWyoming Bold (Mills & Boon M&B)Heartless Read onlineHeartlessLong, Tall Texans--Luke Read onlineLong, Tall Texans--LukeTo Have and to Hold Read onlineTo Have and to HoldOnce in Paris Read onlineOnce in ParisA Husband for Christmas: Snow KissesLionhearted Read onlineA Husband for Christmas: Snow KissesLionheartedNight Fever Read onlineNight FeverBeloved Read onlineBelovedThe Australian Read onlineThe AustralianEthan Read onlineEthanLong, Tall Texans: Jobe Read onlineLong, Tall Texans: JobeBound by Honor: Mercenary's WomanThe Winter Soldier Read onlineBound by Honor: Mercenary's WomanThe Winter SoldierTender Stranger Read onlineTender StrangerAfter Midnight Read onlineAfter MidnightSeptember Morning Read onlineSeptember MorningTo Wear His Ring Read onlineTo Wear His RingHeartbreaker Read onlineHeartbreakerWill of Steel Read onlineWill of SteelDangerous Read onlineDangerousFit for a King Read onlineFit for a KingDiamond in the Rough Read onlineDiamond in the RoughMatt Caldwell: Texas Tycoon Read onlineMatt Caldwell: Texas TycoonIron Cowboy Read onlineIron CowboyFire And Ice Read onlineFire And IceLong, Tall Texans--Quinn--A Single Dad Western Romance Read onlineLong, Tall Texans--Quinn--A Single Dad Western RomanceMontana Mavericks, Books 1-4 Read onlineMontana Mavericks, Books 1-4Denim and Lace Read onlineDenim and LaceEye of the Tiger Read onlineEye of the TigerThe Princess Bride Read onlineThe Princess BrideLong, Tall Texans: Rey ; Long, Tall Texans: Curtis ; A Man of Means ; Garden Cop Read onlineLong, Tall Texans: Rey ; Long, Tall Texans: Curtis ; A Man of Means ; Garden CopJustin Read onlineJustinNora Read onlineNoraThe Morcai Battalion Read onlineThe Morcai BattalionHeart of Stone Read onlineHeart of StoneThe Morcai Battalion: The Recruit Read onlineThe Morcai Battalion: The RecruitTo Love and Cherish Read onlineTo Love and CherishInvictus Read onlineInvictusRegan's Pride Read onlineRegan's PrideA Man for All Seasons Read onlineA Man for All SeasonsSweet Enemy Read onlineSweet EnemyDesperado Read onlineDesperadoLacy Read onlineLacyThe Winter Man Read onlineThe Winter ManDiamond Girl Read onlineDiamond GirlMan of Ice Read onlineMan of IceReluctant Father Read onlineReluctant FatherChristmas with My Cowboy Read onlineChristmas with My CowboyLove with a Long, Tall Texan Read onlineLove with a Long, Tall TexanWyoming Bold wm-3 Read onlineWyoming Bold wm-3King's Ransom Read onlineKing's RansomChristmas Cowboy Read onlineChristmas CowboyHeart of Ice Read onlineHeart of IceFearless Read onlineFearlessLong, Tall Texans_Hank Read onlineLong, Tall Texans_HankUnbridled Read onlineUnbridledChampagne Girl Read onlineChampagne GirlThe Greatest Gift Read onlineThe Greatest GiftStorm Over the Lake Read onlineStorm Over the LakeSutton's Way Read onlineSutton's WayLionhearted Read onlineLionheartedRenegade Read onlineRenegadeBetrayed by Love Read onlineBetrayed by LoveDream's End Read onlineDream's EndAll That Glitters Read onlineAll That GlittersHoodwinked Read onlineHoodwinkedSoldier of Fortune Read onlineSoldier of FortuneRage of Passion Read onlineRage of PassionWinter Roses Read onlineWinter RosesRough Diamonds: Wyoming ToughDiamond in the Rough Read onlineRough Diamonds: Wyoming ToughDiamond in the RoughProtector Read onlineProtectorEmmett Read onlineEmmettTrue Blue Read onlineTrue BlueThe Tender Stranger Read onlineThe Tender StrangerLone Star Winter Read onlineLone Star WinterMan in Control Read onlineMan in ControlThe Rawhide Man Read onlineThe Rawhide ManUntamed Read onlineUntamedMidnight Rider Read onlineMidnight RiderTrilby Read onlineTrilbyA Long Tall Texan Summer Read onlineA Long Tall Texan SummerTangled Destinies Read onlineTangled DestiniesLovePlay Read onlineLovePlayBlind Promises Read onlineBlind PromisesCarrera's Bride Read onlineCarrera's BrideCalamity Mum Read onlineCalamity MumLong, Tall Texan Legacy Read onlineLong, Tall Texan LegacyBound by Honor Read onlineBound by HonorWyoming Winter--A Small-Town Christmas Romance Read onlineWyoming Winter--A Small-Town Christmas RomanceMystery Man Read onlineMystery ManRoomful of Roses Read onlineRoomful of RosesDefender Read onlineDefenderBound by a Promise Read onlineBound by a PromisePaper Rose Read onlinePaper RoseIf Winter Comes Read onlineIf Winter ComesCircle of Gold Read onlineCircle of GoldCattleman's Pride Read onlineCattleman's PrideThe Texas Ranger Read onlineThe Texas RangerLady Love Read onlineLady LoveUnlikely Lover Read onlineUnlikely LoverA Man of Means Read onlineA Man of MeansThe Snow Man Read onlineThe Snow ManThe Case of the Missing Secretary Read onlineThe Case of the Missing SecretaryHarden Read onlineHardenTough to Tame Read onlineTough to TameThe Savage Heart Read onlineThe Savage Heart