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Tag Archives: Delores Fossen

Spotlight – Heart Like a Cowboy

28 Tuesday Nov 2023

Posted by romanticreadsandsuch in Blog Tour, Sneak Peek

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Cowboy Brothers in Arms series, Delores Fossen, Heart Like a Cowboy

Heart Like a Cowboy

Cowboy Brothers in Arms

by Delores Fossen

ISBN: 9781335009487

Publication Date: November 28, 2023

Publisher: Canary Street Press

Blurb:

Heโ€™s Emerald Creekโ€™s hottest cowboyโ€”and the one man she shouldnโ€™t want

On the surface, Egan Donnelly is hometown hero materialโ€”top gun, commanding an elite fighter training squadron and ranching royalty. Inside, he feels like a fraud, convinced heโ€™s responsible for his best friendโ€™s death. At least he won’t let himself succumb to the heat between him and Jackโ€™s widow, Alana. Yet. Now that sheโ€™s making regular trips to his ranch to care for his dad, that vow is getting harder to keep.

Alana Davidson isnโ€™t just grieving her husbandโ€™s loss, sheโ€™s feeling betrayed over his secret infidelity. Wanting Egan makes things even more complicated. As a nutritionist, she can help Eganโ€™s dad recover from his health scare, but itโ€™s not so easy to get her own heart back on track. Because despite shared guilt and family pressure, sheโ€™s falling fast, and Egan is right there with herโ€ฆ

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*****

Excerpt:

CHAPTER ONE

That whole deal about bad news coming in threes? Well, it was a crock. Lieutenant Colonel Egan Don- nelly now had proof of it.

First, thereโ€™d been the unexpected visitor, AKA the messenger, whoโ€™d started the whole bad-news ball rolling. Thatโ€™d teach him to open his frickinโ€™ door before heโ€™d even finished his frickinโ€™ coffee.

Then, there was the so-called celebration that would stir up the worst of his past and serve it up to him on a silver platter. Or rather on a disposable paper plate, anyway.

Then, a letter from his ex, which he figured was never a good sign. Who the heck actually wanted to hear from their cheating ex? Not him, that was for sure.

Those were the three thingsโ€”count them: one, two, threeโ€”that was supposed to have been the final tally of bad crap even if for only a day, but apparently the creator of that old saying had no credibility what- soever. Then again, Egan had known firsthand that bad news didnโ€™t have limited quantities.

Or expiration dates.

Now he was faced with ironclad confirmation that 

those other three things were piddly-ass drops in the proverbial bucket compared to bad-news number four.

And now, everything in his world was crashing and burning.

Again.

Thirty Minutes Earlier

In the dream, Lieutenant Colonel Egan Donnelly saved his best friendโ€™s life. In the dream, the explosion didnโ€™t happen. It didnโ€™t blast through the scorched, airless night. Didnโ€™t tear apart the transport vehicle.

Didnโ€™t leave blood on the bleached sand.

Didnโ€™t kill.

In the dream, Egan was the hero that so many people proclaimed he was. He made just the right decisions to save everyone, including Jack. Especially Jack.

Egan didnโ€™t fight tooth and nail to come out of this dreamโ€”unlike the ones that were basically a blow-by-blow account of what had actually happened that god-awful night nearly three years ago. Those dreams were pits of the darkest level of hell where everything spun and bashed, stomping him down deeper and deeper into the real nightmare. Those dreams he fought.

Had to.

Because Egan had learned the hard way if he let those dreams play out, then it was a damn hard struggle to come back from them. Heck, he was still trying to come back from them.

Despite wanting to linger in this particular dream 

where he got to play hero, it didnโ€™t happen, thanks to his phone dinging with a text. He frowned, noticing that it was barely six in the morning. Texts at this hour usually were not good. Considering that all three of his siblings were on active duty, not good could be really bad.

He saw his fatherโ€™s name on the screen, and the worry instantly tightened Eganโ€™s gut. His dad had just turned sixty so while he wasnโ€™t in the โ€œone foot in the graveโ€ stage, he wasnโ€™t the proverbial spring chicken, either. Added to that, his dad still ran the day-to-day operation of Saddlebrook, the familyโ€™s ranch in Emerald Creek, Texas. The ranch thatโ€™d been in the Donnelly family for over a hundred years and had grown and grown and grown with each succeeding generation. All that growth required hours of upkeep and work.

Found this when I was going through some old photo albums, his dad had texted.

What the heck? That gut tightness eased up, some, when Egan saw it was a slightly off-center image taken in front of the main barn on the ranch. His dad had obviously used his phone to take a picture of the old photo. Emphasis on old.

It was a shot that his grandmother, Effie, had snapped thirty years ago on Eganโ€™s eighth birthday. His brother, Cal, would have been six. His sister, Remi, a two-year-old toddler, and his other brother, Blue, was just four. Stairsteps, people called them, since theyโ€™d all been born just two years apart.

In the photo, his dad, looking lean, fit and young, 

was in the center, flanked by Egan and Remi on the right, and Cal and Blue on the left. Remi and Blue were both grinning big toothy grins. Cal and Egan werenโ€™t. Probably because theyโ€™d been old enough to understand that life as theyโ€™d known it was over.

Their lives hadnโ€™t exactly gone to hell in a handbasket, but this particular shot had been taken only a couple of weeks after their mother had died from cancer. A long agonizing death that had left their dad the widower of four young kids. Still, his dad was eking out a smile in the picture, and heโ€™d managed to gather all four of them in his outstretched arms.

Bittersweet times.

Thatโ€™s when their momโ€™s mom, Grammy Effie, had come to Saddlebrook for what was supposed to have been a couple of months, until his dad got his footing. Effie was still living on the ranch thirty years later and had obviously put down roots as deep as his fatherโ€™s.

Egan was wondering what had prompted his dad to go digging through old family albums when his phone dinged again. It was another text from his dad, another photo. It was an image that Egan also knew well, and he mentally referred to it as the start of phase two of his life.

The first phase had been with a loving mother that sadly he now couldnโ€™t even remember. That had ended with her death. Phase two had begun when his dad had gotten remarried four years later to a young fresh-faced Captain Audrey Granger, whoโ€™d then been stationed at the very base in San Antonio 

where Egan was now. It was an hourโ€™s commute to the ranch that Audrey had diligently made.

For a while, anyway.

In this shot, his dad and new bride dressed in blue were in the center, and both were flashing giddy smiles. Ditto for Remi and Blue. Again, no smiles for Cal and Egan since theyโ€™d been ten and twelve respectively and were no doubt holding back on the glee to see how life with their stepmom would all play out.

It hadnโ€™t played out especially well.

But then, it also hadnโ€™t hit anywhere near the โ€œhell in a handbasketโ€ mark, either.

If thereโ€™d been a family photo taken just two years later, though, Audrey probably wouldnโ€™t have been in it. By then, sheโ€™d been in Germany. Or maybe England. Instead of an hour commute, sheโ€™d come โ€œhomeโ€ to the ranch a couple of times a year. Then, as her career had blossomed, the visits had gotten further and further apart. These days, Brigadier General Audrey Donnelly only came home on Christmas. If that.

Egan sent his dad a thumbs-up emoji to let him know heโ€™d seen the pictures, and he was considering an actual reply to ask if all was well, but his alarm went off. He got up, mentally going through his schedule for the day. As the commander of the Fighter Training Squadron at Randolph AFB, Texas, thereโ€™d be the usual paperwork, going over some stats for the pilots in training, and then in the afternoon, heโ€™d get to do one of the things he loved most.

Fly.

Of course, it would be under the guise of a training mission in the T-38C Talon jet, not the F-16 that Egan used to pilot, but it would still give him that hit of adrenaline. Still give him the reminder of why heโ€™d first joined the Navy and then had transferred to the Air Force so he could continue to stay in the cockpit.

Egan showered, put on his flight suit, read through his emails on his phone and was about halfway through his first cup of coffee when his doorbell rang. He had the same reaction to it as he had the earlier text. A punch of dread that something was wrong. It wasnโ€™t even seven oโ€™clock yet and hardly the time for visitors. Especially since he lived in base housing and therefore wasnโ€™t on the traditional beaten path for friends or family to just drop by.

Frowning, he went to the door. And Egan frowned some more when he looked through the peephole at the visitor on his porch. A woman with pulled back dark blond hair and vivid green eyes. At first glance, he thought it was his ex-wife, Colleen, someone he definitely didnโ€™t want to see, but this was a slightly younger, taller version of the woman whoโ€™d left him for another man.

Alana Davidson, Colleenโ€™s sister.

โ€œYes, I know itโ€™s early,โ€ Alana sighed and said loud enough for him to hear while she looked directly at the peephole. โ€œSorry about that.โ€

Wondering what the heck this was all about, he opened the door and got an immediate blast of heat. Texas in June started out hot as hell and got even hotter. Today was apparently no exception. He also 

got another immediate blast of concern because there was nothing about Alanaโ€™s expression that indicated this was a social visit.

Then again, Alana and he never had social visits.

Never.

Just too much old baggage, old wounds and old everything else between them. Ironic, since sheโ€™d been married to his best friend. Now, she was his dead best friendโ€™s widow and bore that strong resemblance to his cheating ex-wife whoโ€™d left him just days before Jackโ€™s death.

Egan was no doubt an unwelcome sight for her, too. He was the man whoโ€™d not only failed to keep her husband alive, but he was also the reason Jack had been in that transport vehicle in the first place.

So, yeah, old baggage galore.

โ€œSorry,โ€ Alana repeated, looking up at him. Not looking at him for long, though. Like their avoidance of social visits, they didnโ€™t do a lot of eye contact, either. โ€œBut I have an appointment at the base hospital in an hour, and I wanted to catch you before you went into work.โ€

โ€œThe hospital?โ€ he automatically questioned.

She waved it off, clearly picking up on his concern that something might be medically wrong with her. โ€œIโ€™m consulting with a colleague on a chief master sergeant whoโ€™s being medically retired and moving to Emerald Creek. Iโ€™ll be working with the chief to come up with some lifestyle changes.โ€

Alana made that seem like her norm, and maybe it was. She was a dietitian, and because as Jackโ€™s widow 

she still had a military ID card so she wouldnโ€™t have had any trouble getting onto the base. Added to that, Emerald Creek was a haven for retirees and veterans since it was so close to three large military installations. There were almost as many combat boots as cowboy boots in Emerald Creek.

โ€œHowโ€™d you know where I live?โ€ he asked.

โ€œI got your address from your grandmother.โ€ She glanced over her shoulder at the street of houses. โ€œI occasionally have consults here, but itโ€™s the first time Iโ€™ve been to this part of the base.โ€

Yeah, his particular house wasnโ€™t near the hospital, commissary or base exchange store where Alana would be more apt to go. Added to that, Jack had never been stationed here, which meant Alana had never lived here, either.

โ€œFull disclosure,โ€ she said the moment he shut the door. โ€œYou arenโ€™t going to like any of what I have to say.โ€

Now it was Egan who sighed and braced himself for Alana to finally do something heโ€™d expected her to do for three years. Scream and yell at him for allowing Jack to die. But there was no raised voice or obvious surge of anger. Instead, she took out a piece of paper from her sizeable handbag and thrust it at him.

โ€œItโ€™s a mock-up of a flyer that Jackโ€™s mom intends to have printed up and sent to everyone in her known universe,โ€ Alana explained.

At first glance, he saw that the edges of the flyer had little pictures of barbecue grills, fireworks, the 

American flag and military insignia. Egan intended to just scan it to get the gist of what it was about, but the scanning came to a stumbling slow crawl as he tried to take in what he was reading.

โ€œJoin us for a Life Celebration for Major Jack Connor Davidson, July Fourth, at the Emerald Creek City Park. Itโ€™ll be an afternoon of food, festivities and remembrance as a celebratory memorial painting for Jack will be unveiled by our own Top Gun hometown hero, Lieutenant Colonel Egan Donnelly.โ€

Well, hell. Both sentences were full-on gut punches and thick gobs of emotional baggage. Memorial. Life celebration. Remembrances. The icing on that gob was the last part.

Top Gun hometown hero.

Egan was, indeed, a former Top Gun. Heโ€™d won the competition a dozen years ago when heโ€™d been a navy lieutenant flying F-16s. The hometown part was accurate, too, since heโ€™d been born and raised in Emerald Creek, but that hero was the biggest of big-assed lies.

โ€œI canโ€™t go,โ€ Egan heard himself say once heโ€™d managed to clear the lump in his throat.

She nodded as if that were the exact answer sheโ€™d expected. โ€œIโ€™m guessing youโ€™ll be on duty?โ€

Heโ€™d make damn sure he was, but wasnโ€™t it ironic that the memorial celebration would fall on the one weekend of the month he usually went home to help his dad on the family ranch? Maybe Jackโ€™s mom knew that, or maybe the woman just believed that such an event would be a good fit for the Fourth of July.

It wasnโ€™t.

Barbecue, hot dogs, beer and such didnโ€™t go well with the crapload of memories something like that would stir. He didnโ€™t need a memorial or a life celebration to remember Jack. Egan remembered him daily, hourly even, and after three years, the grief and guilt hadnโ€™t lost any steam.

โ€œIโ€™ll let Tilly know you canโ€™t be there,โ€ Alana said, referring to Jackโ€™s mother. โ€œSheโ€™s mentioned contacting your stepmom to see if she could be there for the unveiling.โ€

โ€œGood luck with that,โ€ he muttered, and Alanaโ€™s sound of agreement confirmed that she understood it was a long shot.

What would likely end up happening was that his brother Cal would get roped into doing the โ€œhonors.โ€ Heโ€™d known Jack, and Calโ€™s need to do the right thing would have him stepping in.

โ€œThe last time I ran into Tilly, she didnโ€™t want to discuss anything involving Jackโ€™s death,โ€ Egan recalled.

Alana nodded. โ€œThatโ€™s still true. Nothing about how he died, et cetera. She only wants to chat about the things he did when he was alive.โ€

โ€œSo, why do a memorial painting?โ€ Egan wanted to know.

โ€œIโ€™m not sure, but itโ€™s possible the painting will be another life celebration deal that sheโ€™ll want hung in some prominent part of town like city hall or the library. In other words, maybe the painting will have nothing to do with Jack even being in the military.

Tilly was proud of him,โ€ she quickly added. โ€œBut sheโ€™s never fully wrapped her mind around losing him.โ€

That made sense. The one time heโ€™d tried to talk to her about Jackโ€™s death, sheโ€™d shut him down. As if not talking about his death would somehow breathe some life back into him.

โ€œThereโ€™s one more thing,โ€ Alana went on, and this time she took a pale yellow envelope from her purse and handed it to him. โ€œItโ€™s a letter from Colleen.โ€

Egan had already reached for it but yanked back his hand as if the envelope were a coiled rattler ready to sink its fangs into his flesh. The mention of his ex-wife tended to do that. Memories of Colleen didnโ€™t fall into the โ€œhell on steroidsโ€ category like Jackโ€™s. More like the โ€œdonโ€™t let the door hit your cheating assโ€ category. Colleen had obviously liked that direction just fine since she hadnโ€™t spoken a word to him since the divorce.

He glanced at the envelope, scowled. โ€œA letter? Is it some kind of twelve-step deal about making amends or something?โ€ he asked.

Alana shook her head. โ€œNo, I think itโ€™s a living will of sorts.โ€

That erased his scowl. โ€œIs Colleen dying?โ€

โ€œNot that I know of, but she apparently decided she wanted to make her last wishes known. She sent letters for me, our aunt and your dad. I have his if you want to give it to him.โ€

Egan reached out again to stop her from retrieving it, and Alana used the opportunity to put the letter for him in his hand. โ€œI donโ€™t want this,โ€ he insisted.

โ€œTotally understand. I read mine,โ€ she admitted. โ€œAlong with spelling out her end-of-life wishesโ€”cremation, no funeral, no headstoneโ€”she wants us to have some sister time, like a vacation or something.โ€

Egan had no idea how much contact Alana and Colleen had with each other these days, but it was possible when Colleen had walked out on him, sheโ€™d also walked out on Alana. He thought he detected some animosity in Alanaโ€™s tone and expression.

He went straight to the trash can in the adjoining kitchen and tossed the envelope on top of the oozing heap of the sticky chicken rice bowl that had been at least a week past its prime when heโ€™d dumped it the night before.

โ€œIโ€™m not interested in wife time with her,โ€ he muttered, knowing he sounded bitter and hating that he still was.

Unlike what he was still going through with Jack, though, his grief and anger with Colleen had trickled down to almost nothing. Almost. He now just considered her a mistake and was glad she was out of his life. Some days, he could even hope that she was happy with the Mr. Wonderful artist that sheโ€™d left him for.

When he turned back to Alana, he saw she had watched the letter trashing, and she was now combing those jeweled green eyes over his face as if trying to suss out what was going on in his head. Egan decided to diffuse that with a question that fell into 

the polite small talk that would have happened had this been a normal visit.

โ€œUh, how are you doing?โ€ he asked. On the surface, that didnโ€™t seem to be a safe area of conversation since it could lead to that screaming rant over his huge part in her husbandโ€™s death. But Egan realized he would welcome the rant.

Because he deserved it.

Alana took a deep breath. โ€œWell, despite nearly everyone in town deciding I should live out the rest of my life as a widow, Iโ€™ve started dating again.โ€

That got his attention. Not because he hadnโ€™t known about the townโ€™s feelings. And not because he believed she shouldnโ€™t have a second chance at romance. But Egan had thought she didnโ€™t want such a chance, that she was still as buried in the past as he was. Apparently not.

โ€œIโ€™m only doing virtual dating for now,โ€ she went on, not sounding especially thrilled with that. โ€œLast week, I had a virtual date with a guy who has six goats and eleven chickens in his one-bedroom apartment in Houston.โ€

Egan didnโ€™t especially want to smile, but he did, anyway. โ€œSounds like a prize catch. Youโ€™d never have to buy eggs again. Or fertilizer.โ€

She shrugged. โ€œHe was a prize compared to the one I had the week before. Within the first minute of conversation, he wanted to know the circumference of my nipples.โ€ Alana stopped, her eyes widening as if she hadnโ€™t expected to share that.

Egan smiled again, but this one was forced. He 

hadnโ€™t wanted Alana to think he was shocked or offended, though he was indeed shocked. Heโ€™d never considered nipple size one way or another.

Heโ€™d especially never considered anything about Alanaโ€™s nipples.

And he hated that was now in his head. That kind of stuff could mess with things that already had a shaky status quo.

โ€œDating at thirty-five isnโ€™t as much a โ€˜fish in the seaโ€™ situation as it is more of a, uh, well, swamp,โ€ Alana explained. โ€œThink scaly critters, slithery, that sort of thing, with the potential and hope that some actual fish lingering about will eventually come out of hiding.โ€

That didnโ€™t sound appealing at all, but then he hadnโ€™t had to hit any of the dating sites. He could thank the eternal string of matchmakers for that. Unlike the widowed Alana, apparently everyone thought a divorced guy in his thirties shouldnโ€™t be solo. Especially a guy whoโ€™d had his โ€œheart brokenโ€ when his wife had walked out on him right before his best friend had been killed.

โ€œHow about you?โ€ she asked, clearly aiming for a change of subject and her own shot at small talk. โ€œHave you jumped into dating waters?โ€

He shook his head. โ€œToo busy.โ€

She broke their unwritten rule by locking her gaze with his for a second or two. โ€œYeah. Busy,โ€ she repeated. And it sounded as if that were code for a whole bunch of things. For instance, wounded. Damaged. Guarded. Guilty.

All of the above applied to him.

It was hard for Egan to think about his happiness when heโ€™d robbed Jack of his. Busy, though, was a much safer term for it.

โ€œWell, I gotta go,โ€ Alana said when the silence turned awkward, as it always did between them. โ€œIโ€™ll let Tilly know you wonโ€™t be at the life celebration so she can find someone else to do the unveiling.โ€

Egan frowned when a thought occurred to him. โ€œShe wonโ€™t ask you to do it, will she?โ€ Because he couldnโ€™t imagine that itโ€™d be any easier for Alana than it would be for him.

โ€œNo.โ€ Another sigh went with that. โ€œTilly still has me firmly in the โ€˜grieving widowโ€™ category, which apparently will preclude me from lifting a veil on a painting and doing other things such as dating or appearing too happy when Iโ€™m in public.โ€

He wanted to ask, Arenโ€™t you still a grieving widow? But that would go well beyond small talk. It could lead to an actual conversation that would drag feelings and emotions to the surface. No way did he want to deal with that.

Obviously, Alana wasnโ€™t on board for such a chat, either, because she headed for the door, giving him a forced smile and a quick glance before she left and went to her car. Egan watched her, doling out his own forced smile and what had to be a stupid-looking wave.

Since he didnโ€™t want to stand around and think about this visit, Colleenโ€™s trashed letterโ€”or Alanaโ€™s nipplesโ€”he grabbed his flight cap and keys so he could go to his truck. He barely made it a step, though, before his phone dinged with another text.

Great. Another photo trip down memory lane.

But it wasnโ€™t.

It was his fatherโ€™s name on the screen, but there was no picture. Only six words that sent Eganโ€™s heart to his knees.

Get to Emerald Creek Hospital now.

Excerpted from Heart Like a Cowboy by Delores Fossen.
Copyright ยฉ 2023 by Delores Fossen.
Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

*****

Author Info:

USA Today bestselling author, Delores Fossen, has sold over 125 novels with millions of copies of her books in print worldwide. She’s received the Booksellers’ Best Award, the Romantic Times Reviewers’ Choice Award and was a finalist for the prestigious Rita ยฎ. In addition, she’s had nearly a hundred short stories and articles published in national magazines. You can contact the author through her webpage at http://www.deloresfossen.comย ย ย ย ย 

Author Website

Facebook: @Delores Fossen

Twitter: @dfossen

Instagram: @deloresfossen

*****

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Spotlight – Christmas at Colts Creek

04 Saturday Dec 2021

Posted by romanticreadsandsuch in Blog Tour, Sneak Peek

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Christmas at Colts Creek, Delores Fossen, Last Ride Texas series

Christmas at Colts Creek

Last Ride, Texas series

by Delores Fossen

ISBN: 9781335454577

Publication Date: October 26, 2021

Publisher: HQN Books

Blurb:

An unexpected inheritance rekindles a red-hot romance just in time for Christmasโ€ฆ

Janessa Parkman spent one long-ago summer in Last Ride, Texas, trying to bond with her estranged father, Abe. Turns out that was plenty of time to fall hardโ€”and crash badlyโ€”for Brody Harrell, who managed Abeโ€™s ranch. Everyone believed Brody would inherit Colts Creek one day, but now, fifteen years on, Abeโ€™s will reveals the shocking truthโ€”Janessa gets everything, and she must agree to stay in town for three monthsโ€ฆthrough Christmas.

Brodyโ€™s attraction to Janessa burns hotter than ever. Though he refuses Janessaโ€™s offer to give him the ranch, refusing her is impossible. Misunderstanding drove them apart once before, and secrets and betrayals run through both families. But what starts as a temporary Christmas fling might turn into a love strong enough to last every holiday season yet to come.

BookShop.org

Harlequin 

Barnes & Noble

Amazon

Books-A-MillionPowellโ€™s

*****

Excerpt:

1

THIS IS LIKE one of those stupid posts that people put on social media,โ€ the woman snarled. โ€œYou know the ones Iโ€™m talking about. For a million dollars, would you stay in this really amazing house for a year with no internet, no phone and some panty-sniffing poltergeists?โ€

Frowning at that, Janessa Parkman blinked away the raindrops thatโ€™d blown onto her eyelashes and glanced at the grumbler, Margo Tolley, who was standing on her right. Margo had hurled some profanity and that weird comment at the black granite headstone that stretched five feet across and five feet high. A huge etched image of Margoโ€™s ex, Abraham Lincoln Parkman IV, was in the center, and it was flanked by a pair of gold-leaf etchings of the ornate Parkman family crest.

โ€œAbe was a miserable coot, and this proves it,โ€ Margo added, spitting out the words the way the chilly late October rain was spitting at them. She kicked the side of the headstone.

Janessa really wanted to disagree with that insult, and the kick, especially since Margo had aimed both of them at Janessaโ€™s father. Or rather her father because he had that particular title in name only. However, it was hard to disagree or be insulted after what sheโ€™d just heard from Abeโ€™s lawyer. Hard not to feel the bubbling anger over what her father had done, either.

Good grief. Talk about a goat rope the man had set up.

โ€œDo you understand the conditions of Abeโ€™s will?โ€ Asher Parkman, the lawyer, asked, directing the question at Janessa.

โ€œYeah, do you understand that the miserable coot is trying to ruin our lives?โ€ Margo blurted out before she could answer.

Yes, Janessa got that, and unlike the stupid social media posts, there was nothing amusing about this. The miserable coot had just screwed them all six ways to Sunday.

Twenty Minutes Earlier

โ€œSOMEBODY OUGHT TO put a Texas-sized warning label on Abe Parkmanโ€™s tombstone,โ€ Margo Tolley grumbled. โ€œA warning label,โ€ she repeated. โ€œBecause Abeโ€™s meanness will surely make everything within thirty feet toxic for years to come. He could beat out Ebenezer Scrooge for meanness. The man was a flaminโ€™ bunghole.โ€

Janessa figured the woman had a right to voice an opinion, even if the voicing was happening at Abe Parkmanโ€™s graveside funeral service. Janessaโ€™s father clearly hadnโ€™t left behind a legacy of affection and kindness.

Margo, whoโ€™d been Abeโ€™s second wife, probably had a right to be bitter. So did plenty of others, and Janessa suspected most people in Abeโ€™s hometown of Last Ride, Texas, had come to this funeral just so they could make sure he was truly dead.

Or to glean any tidbits about Abeโ€™s will.

Rich people usually left lots of money and property when they died. Mean rich people could do mean, unexpected things with that money and property. It was the juiciest kind of gossip fodder for a small town.

Janessa didnโ€™t care one wet eyelash what Abe did with whatever heโ€™d accumulated during his misery-causing life. Her reason for coming had nothing to do with wills or assets. No. She needed the answer to two very big questions.

Why had Abe wanted her here?

And what had he wanted her to help him fix?

Janessa gave that plenty of thought while she listened to the minister, Vernon Kerr, giving the eulogy. He chirped on about Abeโ€™s achievements, peppering in things like pillar of the community, astute businessman and a legacy that will live on for generations. But there were also phrases like his sometimes rigid approach to life and an often firm hand in dealing with others.

Perhaps those were the polite ways of saying flaminโ€™ bunghole.

The sound of the ministerโ€™s voice blended with the drizzle that pinged on the sea of mournersโ€™ umbrellas. Gripes and mutters rippled through the group of about a hundred people whoโ€™d braved the unpredictable October 30th weather to come to Parkmansโ€™ Cemetery.

Or Snooty Hill as Janessa had heard some call it.

The Parkmans might be the most prominent and richest family in Last Ride, and their ancestor might have founded the town, but obviously some in her gene pool werenโ€™t revered.

Margo continued to gripe and mutter as well, but her comments were harsher than the rest of the onlookers because sheโ€™d likely gotten plenty of fallout from Abeโ€™s firm hand. It was possibly true of anyone whose life Abe had touched. Janessa certainly hadnโ€™t been spared from it.

Still, Abe had managed to attract and convince two women to marry him, including Janessaโ€™s own motherโ€”whoโ€™d been his first wife. Janessa figured the convincing was in large part because heโ€™d been remarkably good-looking along with having mountains of money. But it puzzled her as to why the women would tie themselves, even temporarily, to a man with a mile-wide mean streak.

A jagged vein of lightning streaked out from a fast approaching cloud that was the color of a nasty bruise. It sent some of the mourners gasping, squealing and scurrying toward their vehicles. They parted like the proverbial sea, giving Janessa a clear line of sight of someone else.

Brody Harrell.

Oh, for so many reasons, it was impossible for Janessa not to notice him. For an equal number of reasons, it was impossible not to remember him.

Long and lean, Brody stood out in plenty of ways. No umbrella, for one. The rain was splatting onto his gray Stetson and shoulders. No funeral clothes for him, either. He was wearing boots, jeans and a long-sleeved blue shirt that was already clinging to his body because of the drizzle.

Once, years ago on a hot July night, sheโ€™d run her tongue over some of the very places where that shirt was now clinging.

Yes, impossible not to remember that.

Brody was standing back from the grave. Far back. Ironic since according to the snippets Janessa had heard over the years about her father, Brody was the person whoโ€™d been closest to Abe, along with also running Abeโ€™s sprawling ranch, Colts Creek.

If those updatesโ€”aka gossip through social media and the occasional letter from Abeโ€™s head housekeeperโ€”were right, then Brody was the son that Abe had always wanted but never had. It was highly likely that he was the only one here who was truly mourning Abeโ€™s death.

Though he wasnโ€™t especially showing any signs of grief.

It probably wasnโ€™t the best time for her to notice that Brodyโ€™s looks had only gotten a whole boatload better since her days of tongue-kissing his chest. Theyโ€™d been seventeen, and while heโ€™d been go-ahead-drown-in-me hot even back then, he was a ten-ton avalanche of hotness now with his black hair and dreamy brown eyes.

His body had filled out in all the right places, and his face, that face, had a nice edge to it. A mix of reckless rock star and a really naughty fallen angel who knew how to do many, many naughty things.

A loud burst of thunder sent even more people hurrying off. โ€œSorry for your loss,โ€ one of them shouted to Brody. Several more added pats on his back. Two women hugged him, and one of the men tried to give Brody his umbrella, which Brody refused. You didnโ€™t have to be a lip-reader to know that one of those women, an attractive busty brunette, whispered, โ€œCall me,โ€ in his ear.

Brody didnโ€™t acknowledge that obvious and poorly timed booty-call offer. He just stood there, his gaze sliding from Abeโ€™s tombstone to Janessa. Unlike her, he definitely didnโ€™t appear to be admiring anything about her or remembering that heโ€™d been the one to rid her of her virginity.

Just the opposite.

His expression seemed to be questioning why she was there. That was understandable. Itโ€™d been fifteen years since Janessa had been to Last Ride. Fifteen years since her de-virgining. Thatโ€™d happened at the tail end of her one and only visit to Colts Creek when sheโ€™d spent that summer trying, and failing, to figure Abe out. She was still trying, still failing.

Brody was likely thinking that since she hadnโ€™t recently come to see the man whoโ€™d fathered her when he was alive, then there was no good reason to see him now that he was dead.

Heck, Brody might be right.

So what if Abe had sent her that letter? So what if heโ€™d said please? That didnโ€™t undo the past. Sheโ€™d spent plenty of time and tears trying to work out what place in her mind and heart to put Abe. As for her mindโ€”she reserved Abe a space in a tiny mental back corner that only surfaced when she saw Fatherโ€™s Day cards in the store. And as for her heartโ€”sheโ€™d given him no space whatsoever.

Well, not until that blasted letter anyway.

She silently cursed herself, mentally repeating some of Margoโ€™s mutters. Sheโ€™d thought she had buried her daddy issues years ago. It turned out, though, that some things just didnโ€™t stay buried. They just lurked and lingered, waiting for a chance to resurface and bite you in the butt. Which wasnโ€™t a comforting thought, considering she was standing next to a grave.

Reverend Kerr nervously eyed the next zagging bolt of lightning, and he gave what had to be the fastest closing prayer in the history of prayers. The moment he said โ€œAmen,โ€ he clutched his tattered Bible to his chest and hurried toward his vehicle, all the while calling out condolences to no one in particular.

Most of the others fled with the minister, leaving Janessa with Brody, Margo and Abeโ€™s attorney, Asher Parkman, who was also Abeโ€™s cousin. Itโ€™d been Asher whoโ€™d called her four days ago to tell her of Abeโ€™s death, and to inform her that Abe had insisted that she and her mother, Sophia, come to todayโ€™s graveside funeral. Both had refused. Janessa had politely done that. Her mother had declined with an โ€œif and when hell freezes over.โ€ That was it, the end of the discussion.

But then the letter from Abe had arrived.

Excerpted from Christmas at Colts Creek by Delores Fossen.
Copyright ยฉ 2021 by Delores Fossen.
Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

*****

Author Info:

USA Today bestselling author, Delores Fossen, has sold over 70 novels with millions of copies of her books in print worldwide. She’s received the Booksellers’ Best Award, the Romantic Times Reviewers’ Choice Award and was a finalist for the prestigious Rita ยฎ. In addition, she’s had nearly a hundred short stories and articles published in national magazines.

Author Website

Facebook: @AuthorDeloresFossen

Twitter: @dfossen

Instagram: @deloresfossen

Goodreads

*****

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Spotlight – Safeguarding the Surrogate

15 Tuesday Jun 2021

Posted by romanticreadsandsuch in Blog Tour, Sneak Peek

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Delores Fossen, Safeguarding the Surrogate

Delores Fossen is another known for delivering great books packed full of suspense!

*****

Safeguarding the Surrogate

by Delores Fossen

Available on June 29

Blurb:

Sheโ€™d brought him his greatest joy.

Now he must save her lifeโ€ฆ

Rancher Kara Hollandโ€™s hot on the trail of a murderer whoโ€™s been killing surrogatesโ€”like she was for her ill sister. But when Karaโ€™s trap goes terribly wrong, sheโ€™s thrust headlong into the killerโ€™s crosshairsโ€ฆalong with her sisterโ€™s widower, Deputy Daniel Logan. And as she and Daniel stay one frantic step ahead of a deadly foe, the sparks igniting between them rival the danger they face.

Add Safeguarding the Surrogate to your Goodreads!

Harlequin.com: https://www.harlequin.com/shop/books/9781335555151_safeguarding-the-surrogate.html

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Safeguarding-Surrogate-Mercy-Ridge-Lawmen-ebook/dp/B08SHYFJQ5

Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/safeguarding-the-surrogate-delores-fossen/1138585926

Apple Books: https://books.apple.com/ca/book/safeguarding-the-surrogate/id1547974748

Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/books/details/Delores_Fossen_Safeguarding_the_Surrogate?id=4OwSEAAAQBAJ

Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/ca/en/ebook/safeguarding-the-surrogate

*****

Excerpt:

Kara Holland stood in the darkness and waited for the killer.

With her heartbeat throbbing in her ears and her back pressed to the barn wall, she tried to listen for any sound to alert her that he was coming. Nothing. Not yet. But sheโ€™d done everything she could to lure him out and make him come after her.

And she was ready.

She had the Glock gripped in her hand, and thanks to the hours of firearms training, she knew how to use it. If that failed, if he somehow got the jump on her, sheโ€™d fall back on the hand-to-hand moves sheโ€™d also learned. Of course, those things didnโ€™t guarantee that she would stop him, but she had to try. She was tired of living with this smothering weight of fear.

Finally, she heard something. The sound of a car engine. Then a door closing. He had finally come for her.ย 

The next thing she heard were the footsteps, slow and cautious. They were coming straight toward her barn.

Sheโ€™d purposely turned off all but the single light in the tack room, and Kara had left the door cracked just enough for a thin beam to pierce the darkness. She stayed in the shadows by a stack of hay bales, but when the killer came in the barn, sheโ€™d be able to see him.

Kara could certainly hear him.

Along with the footsteps, the hinges creaked on the barn door, and she pinpointed every bit of her focus while she lifted the Glock. And she took aim.

โ€œKara?โ€ the man called out.

She groaned, mixing it with some muttered profanity, because she instantly recognized that voice. Not a killer. But Deputy Daniel Logan.

โ€œWhat are you doing here?โ€ she snapped once she could manage to speak.

โ€œChecking on you,โ€ Daniel snapped right back.

When he stepped into that beam of light from the tack room, she had no trouble seeing the riled expression on his face. Or the rest of him for that matter. He was wearing his usual jeans and work shirt on his tall rangy body. His Mercy Ridge deputyโ€™s badge was clipped to his belt.

โ€œIโ€™m fine,โ€ Kara assured him. Of course, that wasnโ€™t true, and he could clearly see that. After all, she was waiting in her dark barn while holding a gun. โ€œYou can go.โ€

โ€œNo, I wonโ€™t.โ€ Daniel sounded โ€œall copโ€ with that one-word response. And he didnโ€™t budge, either. In fact, he came closer, meeting her eye to eye.

โ€œYou shouldnโ€™t have come,โ€ Kara insisted.

โ€œI wanted to have a look around and see for myself if the rumors were true. They are,โ€ he added in a snarl. โ€œWhat the hell are you thinking?โ€

โ€œYou know what Iโ€™m thinking,โ€ she fired back.

That only caused him to release a long hard breath. No doubt one of frustration. Well, she was frustrated, too. And scared. Especially scared. Something that sheโ€™d hoped to end tonight.

โ€œTwo surrogates are dead,โ€ Kara reminded him. Not that a reminder was necessary. Daniel knew because sheโ€™d already told him. Sheโ€™d taken the news articles to him right away when she had learned about the dead women. โ€œBoth used the Willingham Fertility Clinic in San Antonio.โ€

Just as Kara had done. Again, no reminder was necessary for Daniel since the reason she had used the clinic and become a surrogate was to carry a baby for Daniel and his wife, Maryanne. Maryanne had also been Karaโ€™s sister.

As it always did, just remembering Maryanne made her feel as if someone had clamped a vise around her heart. It was almost certainly even worse for Daniel. Itโ€™d been nearly two years since Maryanne had lost her battle with breast cancer, but sometimes it felt as fresh as if itโ€™d just happened.

*****

Author Info:

USA Today bestselling author, Delores Fossen, has sold over 70 novels with millions of copies of her books in print worldwide. She’s received the Booksellers’ Best Award, the Romantic Times Reviewers’ Choice Award and was a finalist for the prestigious Rita ยฎ. In addition, she’s had nearly a hundred short stories and articles published in national magazines. You can contact the author through her webpage at www.deloresfossen.com.

Website: https://www.deloresfossen.com/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorDeloresFossen/timeline/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/dfossen

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/deloresfossen/?hl=en

Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/delores-fossen

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/240672.Delores_Fossen

*****

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Spotlight – Her Child to Protect

29 Thursday Apr 2021

Posted by romanticreadsandsuch in Blog Tour, Sneak Peek

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Delores Fossen, Her Child to Protect, Mercy Ridge Lawmen series

Delores Fossen is one of those that you just know will deliver a good book!

*****

Her Child to Protect

Mercy Ridge Lawmen series

by Delores Fossen

Price: Ebook $4.99 USD / MMP $5.75

On sale date: April 27, 2021

ISBN: 9781335284624

Blurb:

Nothing can stop her

โ€ฆfrom saving two lives.

When she arrives at a murder scene, Deputy Della Howell is not pleased to find her recent ex already on the job. Sheโ€™ll work the case with Sheriff Barrett Logan but will keep the secret sheโ€™s certain Barrett isnโ€™t ready forโ€”sheโ€™s pregnant with his child. But as the dueling cops investigate, familiar sparks reignite between themโ€ฆjust as they fall prey to a very tenacious killer.

From Harlequin Intrigue: Seek thrills. Solve crimes. Justice served.

Harlequin: https://www.harlequin.com/shop/books/9781335401700_her-child-to-protect.html

IndieBound: https://www.indiebound.org/book/9781335401700

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Child-Protect-Mercy-Ridge-Lawmen-ebook/dp/B08NP7DT6L/

Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/her-child-to-protect-delores-fossen/1138281181?ean=9781335401700

Walmart: https://www.walmart.com/ip/Mercy-Ridge-Lawmen-Her-Child-to-Protect-1-Original-Ed-Paperback-9781335401700/932187139

Apple Books: https://books.apple.com/ca/book/her-child-to-protect/id1540752443

Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/books/details/Delores_Fossen_Her_Child_to_Protect?id=moUJEAAAQBAJ

Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/her-child-to-protect

*****

Excerpt:

Sheriff Barrett Logan aimed his flashlight in the ditch and looked for a dead man.ย 

There were no signs of him, but then Barrett hadnโ€™t believed there would be. That was the problem with getting an anonymous tip. It could be a hoax. However, since he was the sheriff of Mercy Ridge, Texas, checking out hoaxes was part of his job description.ย 

Especially this one, which had come in the text heโ€™d gotten from an unknown number.ย 

Thereโ€™s blood near the county marker. She finally did it. She murdered him.ย 

Barrett didnโ€™t know who this she was, but that wasnโ€™t the only word that had stood out for him. Blood, finally and murdered had also grabbed his attention. If this was indeed some kind of prank, then the person whoโ€™d sent the text had clearly wanted to embellish the details in such a way to make him jump right in and investigate.ย 

Keeping watch around him, Barrett moved away from his truck that heโ€™d left parked on the road. Heโ€™d put on his emergency flashers and kept on his high beams in case someone was out this time of night. Not likely, though. This was a rural road with a mile or more separating the sprawling ranches that dot- ted the area. Plus, it was nearly one in the morning, and most folks had long gone to bed. Mercy Ridge wasnโ€™t exactly a hotbed of partying and such.ย 

Barrett fanned the flashlight over the sign that the texter had mentioned. The sign wasnโ€™t just to let drivers know they were entering another county but also to mark the lines of jurisdiction. Barrett and his deputies policed this side, but if the supposed body was beyond the sign, then that would fall under the jurisdiction of the Culver Crossing PD.ย 

The cool spring rain spat at him, soaking the back of his shirt and his jeans. Thankfully, though, his Stetson was keeping the water out of his eyes, making it easier for him to see a long stretch of the ditch. Definitely no body and no blood in there, but he did see something else.ย 

Footprints, maybe.ย 

Someone or something had trampled down the weeds on the other side of the ditch. Weeds that practically arrowed toward a thick cluster of trees and underbrush.ย 

Avoiding the trampled down parts, Barrett jumped across the ditch, his boots sinking into the wet ground, and he adjusted his flashlight again. However, before he could follow the trail, he heard the sound of an approaching vehicle. One that braked to a screeching stop right behind his truck. It was a Culver Crossing cruiser, and Barrett started muttering some profanity before the deputy stepped out.ย 

She was definitely someone he hadnโ€™t wanted to see tonight. Or any other night for that matter. The last time theyโ€™d spoken nearly two months ago, she had made it crystal clear that she hadnโ€™t wanted to see him, either. Yet, here she was.ย 

Barrett hadnโ€™t expected her to have changed much in these two months, and she hadnโ€™t. Well, except for that troubled look she was giving him. Then again, Della often looked troubled, and there was often plenty of wariness in her crystal blue eyes.ย 

The rain had already gotten to her, he noticed. There were strands of her shoulder-length dark brown hair clinging to the sides of her face and neck. Her shirt was doing some clinging, too. Definitely something he hadnโ€™t wanted to notice.ย 

Della pulled in her breath and released it slowly, the kind of thing someone would do when steeling themselves up. It didnโ€™t seem to help, though, be- cause at the end of it, there wasnโ€™t much change in her expression.ย 

โ€œDid you get a text telling you that a body was out here?โ€ she asked.ย 

Her voice and expression were as cool as the night rain, and it reminded Barrett that it hadnโ€™t always been that way. Of course, the noncool times had happened when sheโ€™d been in his bed. Since that was another reminder he didnโ€™t want or need, he pushed the thought aside.ย 

โ€œYeah,โ€ he verified, and purposely turned back to his search.ย 

He tried to look unruffled by all of this, but his thoughts were going a mile a minute. Why had someone texted both of them? Was this some kind of sick ploy to get them back together? If so, heads were going to roll.

Heartfelt or thrilling, passionate or upliftingโ€”our romances have it all. Visit TryHarlequin.com to sample FREE books from among 12 different series. Itโ€™s just a taste of the new books published each monthโ€”every story a journey guaranteed to leave you with That Harlequin Feeling.

*****

Author Info:

USA Today bestselling author, Delores Fossen, has sold over 70 novels with millions of copies of her books in print worldwide. She’s received the Booksellers’ Best Award, the Romantic Times Reviewers’ Choice Award and was a finalist for the prestigious Rita ยฎ. In addition, she’s had nearly a hundred short stories and articles published in national magazines. You can contact the author through her webpage at http://www.deloresfossen.com

Website: https://www.deloresfossen.com

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/240672.Delores_Fossen

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorDeloresFossen/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/dfossen

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/deloresfossen/?hl=en

BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/delores-fossen

*****

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Spotlight – His Brand of Justice

24 Monday Aug 2020

Posted by romanticreadsandsuch in Blog Tour, Sneak Peek

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Delores Fossen, His Brand of Justice

USA TODAY bestselling author Delores Fossen does it again, with a romantic suspense book that forces a US Marshal to confront his pastโ€”and the woman who might hold all the answersโ€ฆ

*****

His Brand of Justice

by Delores Fossen

Blurb :

Can he help her recover her memory before they are both killed?

The only person who knows who killed Marshal Jack Slaterโ€™s father is Caroline Moser. But the Texas profiler has no memory of the murder, her abductionโ€ฆor Jack. And her witness-protection safe house has just been compromised. Now in Jackโ€™s protective custody, Caroline must trust her ex to help her recall her past before a murderer steals their future.

B&N: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/his-brand-of-justice-delores-fossen/1136629388?ean=9781335136701

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Brand-Justice-Longview-Ridge-Ranch/dp/1335136703

Google: https://books.google.ca/books/about/His_Brand_of_Justice.html?id=u8htzQEACAAJ&redir_esc=y

Indie Bound: https://www.indiebound.org/book/9781335136701

Harlequin: https://www.harlequin.com/shop/books/9781488067587_his-brand-of-justice.html

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/52515561-his-brand-of-justice

*****

Excerpt:

โ€œI nearly got Lucille and you killed,โ€ she said, and Caroline cursed her own voice. It was shaking, too.

Jack lifted an eyebrow. โ€œFunny, I thought it was the shooter who nearly killed us.โ€

โ€œThe shooter wouldnโ€™t have been firing those bullets if it hadnโ€™t been for me.โ€ She expected him to give her some sugarcoated answer, but sheโ€™d obviously forgotten this was Jack.

โ€œThatโ€™s true.โ€ With that hanging in the air, he waited a heartbeat. โ€œAnd since Iโ€™d rather not have any more attempted murders, that means youโ€™re going to have to let me help you.โ€

โ€œYou mean Iโ€™m going to have to trust Kellan,โ€ Caroline blurted out. She was feeling a lot less shaky now.

Jack shrugged, took his hand from his pocket so he could tap the badge on his belt. โ€œEvery lawman in Texas isnโ€™t tainted, and if you dig beneath all the anger, fear and whatever else it is youโ€™re feeling, youโ€™ll remember that Iโ€™m the best shot youโ€™ve got at keeping us both alive.โ€

He followed that too logical minilecture with a long stare. Jack was obviously waiting for her to come to the only conclusion that she had right now.

โ€œIโ€™m not going to trust your brother,โ€ she insisted, but left the rest of it unspokenโ€”that she would trust Jack. Again, it was the only choice she had.

He nodded as if theyโ€™d just hashed that out with a heated argument. โ€œIโ€™ll do whatever it takes to keep you safe.โ€ He paused. โ€œWant me to take a bullet for you to prove it?โ€

Jack didnโ€™t wink, but he might as well have, because he was obviously trying to lighten things up. Trying to bring her back down and ease some of the still raw adrenaline. It was working, sort of, since it was something heโ€™d said to her in jest when theyโ€™d been lovers. A way of letting her know that he cared that much for her.

โ€œNo,โ€ she said, drawing out the one-word answer to emphasize it. There was a lot more emotion in her voice than she wanted as she stared at him.

Thinking.

Remembering.

Yes, definitely remembering.

That helped more than his lame attempt at cop humor. His being there helped, too, and despite everything sheโ€™d been throughโ€”or maybe because of itโ€”Caroline wanted to step right into his arms. Those strong arms with their toned muscles. She wanted to feel the heat, and the comfort that sheโ€™d gotten there before. Jack had tugged and pulled at her in a way that no man ever had before.

Or ever would again, she was forced to admit to herself.

*****

Author Info:

USA Today bestselling author, Delores Fossen, has sold over 70 novels with millions of copies of her books in print worldwide. She’s received the Booksellers’ Best Award, the Romantic Times Reviewers’ Choice Award and was a finalist for the prestigious Rita ยฎ. In addition, she’s had nearly a hundred short stories and articles published in national magazines. You can contact the author through her webpage at www.deloresfossen.com

Author website: https://www.deloresfossen.com

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/deloresfossen

Twitter: https://twitter.com/dfossen

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorDeloresFossen/

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/240672.Delores_Fossen

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Book Review – The Last Rodeo

10 Tuesday Jul 2018

Posted by romanticreadsandsuch in Blog Tour, Book Review

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Book Review, Delores Fossen, The Last Rodeo, Wrangler's Creek series

Sexy, stubborn, looks good in a hat & boots …

*****

The Last Rodeo

A Wranglerโ€™s Creek Novel (Book 9)

by Delores Fossen

Mass Market Paperback:ย 400 pages

Publisher:ย HQN (June 26, 2018)

Blurb:

The most important two words for this Wranglerโ€™s Creek rodeo cowboy?ย I doโ€ฆ

Lucian Granger isnโ€™t winning any Mr. Cowboy Congeniality awards. Known in his small Texas town as โ€œLuciferโ€ thanks to his surly nature and knack for scaring people away from getting too close, the handsome rancher has no trouble ignoring the gossip. But when heโ€™s in danger of losing the land heโ€™s put his blood, sweat and tears into maintaining, Lucian sets out to prove heโ€™s a changed manโ€”by claiming heโ€™s about to settle down with his invaluable assistant, Karlee Oโ€™Malley.

Their pending nuptials may be just for show, but from the moment they kiss, the proverbial fireworks start going off in his headโ€”and in his heart. Before long, the man whoโ€™s usually as emotional as a brick wall is tired of pretending and wants to share a real future with Karlee. With his world suddenly turned upside down, Lucian will risk losing the business and the ranch if it means holding on to the one woman worth becoming a better man for…

Amazonย |ย Books-A-Millionย |ย Barnes & Nobleย | Goodreads

*****

Review:

As a new Fossen reader, I have no idea what her particular style is but I feel like I should give a few warnings for other newbies.ย  There isn’t a TON of romance here, so if that’s your main focus you may be disappointed (I’ve seen a few of those on Goodreads).ย  Instead, Fossen delivers an interesting mix of a couple coming to terms with their feelings, a oh-so-dysfunctional family, and some business shenanigans.ย  It melded together really well for me, but may not work for others.

Lucian is the one that stepped in when his dad stepped out and he’s done amazing things to make the family business a success.ย  Unfortunately, his dad is now back in the picture and threatening everything that Lucian has worked so hard for.ย  The big question is why and that plays out through a decent part of the book.ย  It also leads Lucian to making a few realizations – about himself, his life, and his heart.

Karlee has been there by Lucian’s side for years, loving him silently, but she’s finally reached the point where her heart can’t take any more.ย  She’s starting to move on when the bad dad drama hits and her feelings means that she can’t abandon Lucian or his family.ย  But being in a fake relationship with him means that some things come to light that she hadn’t planned on.

Fossen has a fun, quirky style – filling her story with humor, hijinxs, and hilarious secondary characters.ย  And because she writes with dual POV, we are there with Lucian while his blinders are taken away and he has to face not only Karlee’s feelings but his own.ย  We also get to see the toll that everything has on her.ย  And my heart went out to her all the way to the end.

While I found the love story to be satisfying, it also doesn’t play center stage.ย  Those looking for a pure romance may be a little thrown by the family and business drama.ย  It’s important for the characters and does help lead to the HEA, leading to growth and helping to put some old ghosts to bed, but it does make up a decent part of the plot causing the relationship portion to be downplayed a little.ย  Not a bad thing, in my opinion as I enjoyed seeing how everything worked out, but also not everyone’s cup of tea ๐Ÿ™‚

*****

Author Info:

USA Today bestselling author, Delores Fossen, has sold over 70 novels with millions of copies of her books in print worldwide. Sheโ€™s received the Booksellersโ€™ Best Award, the Romantic Times Reviewersโ€™ Choice Award and was a finalist for the prestigious Rita ยฎ. In addition, sheโ€™s had nearly a hundred short stories and articles published in national magazines.

Websiteย |ย Facebookย |ย Twitter

*****

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