
Wyoming Proud
A Wyoming Men Novel
by Diana Palmer
ISBN: 9781335513090
Publication Date: October 24, 2023
Publisher: Canary Street Press
Blurb:
Businesswoman Erianne Mitchell falls hard for entrepreneur Ty Mosby and they quickly get engaged. But their whirlwind romance ends quickly when he gets faulty information that she betrayed him in business. They part ways, leaving both heart-broken, confused, and Erianne secretly pregnant, not to mention blacklisted for every company in town.
Erianne has to start over and she goes to Wyoming to care for her growing child. Even though furious that Ty didn’t believe in her, she can’t help missing the man she loves. She builds a life with her child and by cleaning houses.
By accident, as she’s rushing to the doctor with her baby, she and Ty see each other. He knows she never deceived him, but can ever get Erianne to trust him again?
*****
Excerpt:
CHAPTER ONE
Ty Mosby was bored out of his mind. He could have been home with his sister, Annie, watching that dragon drama on cable. Even that would be better than this stupid office party with two women drooling over him. One was recently divorced. The other was married. Women!
He turned around and almost fell over Erianne Mitchell. Well, her name was Erianne. Nobody called her that. She was just Erin to Ty and his sister, Annie. He glowered at her.
βItβs not my fault that youβre gorgeous,β she teased. βMary over there has forgotten her ex-husband in her fever to get you into a dark room. And Henriettaββ she nodded toward a gan- gly woman with wild dark hair who was sighing into her drink as she studied him over it ββhasnβt given her husband a thought all night. Just as well,β she added under her breath, βbecause heβs running around with the Tarver woman.β
βWhat are you, the town crier?β he chided.
βItβs a nasty job, but somebody has to do it,β she replied with sparkling gray eyes. She laughed and half turned away, her dark hair in an elegant chignon at the back of her neck. βAnd thereβs
Grace. Didnβt you date her last year?β
βOh, God,β he groaned.
βThere, there, she hasnβt noticed you. Sheβs too busy trying to get Danny Barnes to notice her. He just inherited his grandfatherβs ranch over in Comanche Wells.β
βIβve had my fill of social climbers,β he muttered. He was giving her the once-over with black eyes. βOn the other hand, thereβs you.β
βOh, donβt be absurd, Iβm not your type,β she murmured, her mind on something else altogether. It was a lie. Sheβd loved him forever, but Ty couldnβt see her for dust. And why should he? She was plain compared to the women who chased him. He was absolutely gorgeous. He had jet-black hair and black eyes, and light olive skin that made him look even more gorgeous in that spotless white shirt he was wearing with his dinner jacket and slacks. No wonder women drooled over him. Erin had drooled over him for years and hid it so carefully that not even his sister realized it.
βWhy not?β he asked, really curious.
βI donβt run around with men.β
He blinked. βYou run around with women?β
βI donβt run around period.β
βYouβre what, now, twenty-five? Youβd better run around with somebody or youβre going to get left behind.β
βYouβre thirty-one and youβre already left behind. Besides, I work for you,β she added. βI donβt get involved with people that I work for.β
βWe could make an exception,β he pointed out.
She glared at him. βTyson Regan Mosby,β she said, exasperated. βIf you keep this up, Iβm calling Annie.β
βGod forbid!β he groaned.
βShe loves you. Sheβll protect you from predatory females.β
βIβll give you a great job recommendation if youβll find my sister a husband,β he coaxed.
βAnnie doesnβt want to get married yet,β she said. βAny more than you do. And I donβt need a job recommendation unless you have in mind firing me tonight.β
He made a face. βI donβt have enough people as it is. Other San Antonio businesses keep luring our best people away. Even the ones I fire.β He didnβt like firing people, but he sometimes had to. Even though his company was headquartered in San Antonio, people from Jacobsville worked for it. Mosby Construction Company had grown under Tyβs management. Heβd taken a little construction company owned by his father and built it into a major contender. He had a degree in architecture. He loved to build things.
He had inherited wealth, he and Annie, and he didnβt really need to work. But he loved his job. And San Antonio was the best place for his company headquarters, although he and Annie still lived in Jacobsville. Ty and Annie were direct descendants of the townβs founder, Big John Jacobs, whoβd talked his father-in-law into putting a a railroad through Jacobsville and built it into a cattle shipping center in south Texas back in the nineteenth century.
βWell, isnβt that just like you,β she said, exasperated. βI brought you a brand new human resources manager just last week!β
βHe drinks vodka,β he said irritably. βI donβt trust men who drink vodka.β
βHow do you know what he drinks?β she asked.
βI asked him.β
βOh.β
βWhat are you looking for?β he probed.
βClarence.β
βExcuse me?β
βClarence Hodges,β she muttered, peering over a nearby womanβs shoulder. βHeβs like my personal devil. I canβt turn around at a party without running into him.β
He didnβt like that, but he hid it. βWhat does he want?β
She looked up at him with raised eyebrows. βHe wants me!β
βWhy?β
She really rolled her eyes. βAnnie needs to get you a book or something about human relationships.β
He grinned. βI think I can figure those out without self-help diagrams.β
βCan you, now?β she murmured absently, still looking for Clarence.
Heβd known her for years. She was as familiar to him as her best friend, his only sibling, Annie. Sheβd spent weekends with them all through high school and through community college, where Erin got an associateβs degree in business education. She was great at cost estimates, which was her position in the company. She had a brilliant mind for math. She could do most anything on a computer, even rework spreadsheet programs that he used in his construction company. She was his right arm at work, perfectly capable of standing in for him at meetings because she knew the business inside out. Of course, why wouldnβt she, when sheβd worked there part-time through high school and full-time during and after college. He trusted her. Well, on a professional basis. He wasnβt keen on thinking about anything more personal. Erin was standoffish. Once, just once, heβd teased her about going dancing with him and sheβd mumbled something noncommital and shot out of the room.
Heβd never admit it, of course, but it had bruised his ego. Erin wasnβt beautiful. She had pleasant features. Nice mouth, pretty complexion, gorgeous figure, sparkling eyes. But she dressed like an old woman most of the time, and she never seemed to date anyone. Heβd wondered why. Heβd even asked Annie, but all he got was a blank look and a smile.
He studied Erin while she looked around for the man she dreaded seeing. It wasnβt so much how she looked that made her attractive, he decided finally; it was her personality. She was warm and friendly to most people, outrageously funny around friends, and she loved animals. That last thing was important to him, because he bred and trained purebred German shepherds.
His dogs were like part of the family. They lived inside with him and Annie in their huge inherited mansion in Jacobsville, Texas. The puppies, when he bred them, had their own room and a caretaker who watched over them and kept their living quarters spic and span and odorless. He rarely had more than one litter a year and by a different female each year, from an outside stud male. No interbreeding at all, because it invited birth defects. He loved the pups when they came and had to be persuaded to give them up for adoption. Even so, he actually ran background checks on potential adopters, right down to requiring photographs of their yards and the pupβs living quarters. He was protective.
A recent adopter had taken a leather strap to his puppy when it made a mess on the carpet, and a neighbor had seen and heard what was going on. Sheβd promptly phoned Annie, who told Ty. Heβd gone to the ownerβs house that very day, accompanied by police chief Cash Grier and the local vet, Dr. Bentley Rydel, along with a search warrant that would give them access to the dog in question.
To say that the man was shocked was an understatement. He hemmed and hawed and tried to weasel them out of looking at the dog. Cash Grier glared at him. That was all it took.
Most everybody was scared of the townβs police chief, who was nice enough at public gatherings, but hell on lawbreakers of any kind. Cash loved animals as much as the vet and Ty.
The owner was forced to give them access to the puppy, which had been locked in a closet with bloody marks on its back.
Ty had slugged the man before his companions could react. He picked the pup up, gently, and after Cash took photos to document the abuse, walked out the door with Bently Rydel, to end up at his office where the poor little morsel was treated and sent home after an antibiotic shot and stitches. Cash had promptly arrested the owner. The pupβs owner went on trial, was convicted and sentenced to jail. Nobody in Jacobsville liked a dog beater. The jury had only deliberated for ten minutes, despite the harried public defenderβs best efforts. All the District Attorney, Blake Kemp, had to do was put up a poster-sized photo of the abused puppy for the jury and the audience to see. It had drawn gasps and the pupβs owner had looked around at glares that felt like burns on his skin.
βWhatβs the matter with you?β Erin asked, glancing at his taut face.
βPuppy beaters,β he muttered.
Her expression softened. βThe man got what he deserved. How is Beauregard, by the way?β she added.
He smiled. βHe still whimpers in his sleep. I keep him with me at night. Rhodes isnβt enthusiastic about it, but I think he senses that the puppy needs to be spoiled for a few weeks.
Actually,β he added on a chuckle, βitβs Rhodesβs bed that they sleep in, curled up together. For an old dog, Rhodes is amazingly sweet.β
βYouβve had him a long time,β she remarked.
He nodded. βThirteen years. I worry about him. Big dogs donβt have the life span that smaller ones do.β
βRhodes is practically immortal,β she replied with a smile. βHeβs pampered.β
βI guess so. Dad gave him to me as a Christmas present the year I graduated high school.β
βI remember your parents. They were so sweet,β she added. βYour mother and mine were best friends.β
βHell of a shame, what happened,β he said stiffly.
She nodded. βItβs a rare thing, to have a tour bus go off the road and crash down a ravine. But those mountain roads in South America can be treacherous. Your parents were so much in love,β she added quietly. βItβs hard to imagine one going on without the other.β
βThatβs what Annie and I thought,β he replied. βBut itβs damned tough, losing them both at once.β
βI remember. At least you were both grown at the time,β she added softly.
He drew in a breath. βDidnβt help much,β he muttered.
βFor what itβs worth, I know how it is. It was hard for Dad and me to go on, after we lost Mom.β
βYour mother had a hard life,β he said.
She sighed. βYes. Dadβs hard to live with. Heβs not mean or anything, he just makes stupid decisions and runs his mouth when he shouldnβt. Jack Dempsey wonβt even speak to him.β
βThat must hurt. Theyβre best friends.β
βThey were,β she said sadly. βDad was repeating some gossip that heβd heard about Jackβs wife running around on him. It got exaggerated, by Dad,β she muttered, βand Jackβs wife divorced him. It wasnβt even true. My father has a gift for saying things without thinking first.β
βA lot of people are like that.β
She grimaced. βI wish theyβd had more kids than just me,β she confessed, looking up at him. βIt would be easier to manage Dad if I had brothers and sisters to share the misery.β
He chuckled. βYou do pretty good.β
She shrugged. βI could do better. Iβd have to take away his phone though.β
His eyebrows arched.
βThis guy called dad and said he could save ten dollars a month if he switched our long distance to their company. Dad said great, letβs do it. So I tried to phone one of our colleagues at home in Dallas last weekend and got told that we didnβt have long distance anymore. It was a scam. Dad had no idea what heβd done. I tried not to yell,β she added on a laugh. βHonestly, heβs like a little kid sometimes. Ten dollars a month.β She shook her head.
βMy mother was like that,β he reminded her. βShe got a call telling her the sheriff was coming over to arrest her for a bill she hadnβt paid. The man asked for pre-paid gift cards to save her from jail. She was halfway out the door on her way to town when I stopped her to ask what was wrong. Sadly for him, the scammer was still on her phone talking her through the process.β
She grinned. βIβll bet his ears are still burning, wherever he is.β
βI imagine so. I was really mad.β
βDo you still have that jar your mother made for you? The one you had to put money in for every bad word you used?β
He laughed. βYes. It doesnβt get fed, but Iβve still got it.β His eyes were sad with the memory. βShe wanted to be a missionary, but Dad came along. Sheβd lived on a budget for so long that she almost ran away when she saw how much he was worth.β That was true. Her father had inherited a lot of money from his late mother, but he squandered it all on get rich quick schemes. He was still doing that, albeit on a very small shoestring. Erin wore herself out trying to save him from himself.
βA unique woman,β Ty continued. βShe really didnβt care about money at all.β He studied her quietly. βSort of like you.β
She sighed. βI like being able to buy food and gas and pay bills. Thatβs what moneyβs good for. There are lots of things it wonβt buy.β
He nodded.
βBesides that, I work for this terrific manager who gives me raises,β she added with twinkling gray eyes.
βI donβt have to think too hard to do that,β he said. βI know how hard you work.β
βIβm just grateful to have a job. The economy is pretty bad right now.β
βIt is,β he agreed. βEven this company has to be careful. Youβre working on that bid now, the one we hope will get us the job just outside San Antonio in Bexar County; a whole retirement complex. Itβs worth millions.β
βYouβll get it,β she said with supreme confidence. βYou really do know how to undercut the other bidders. And I know how to price out almost everything,β she said, not bragging, just making a statement. She was a good cost estimator.
βWe can undercut most of the major bidders,β he corrected. βBut Iβve heard that one of them is Jason Whitehall. He and his son Josh have one of the best construction companies around south Texas.β
βHis sonβs a dish,β she mused.
βAnd how would you know?β he asked.
βI ran into him at that conference you sent me to, in Dallas, month before last. He looks just like his dad. All three of them were there, Jason and Amanda and Josh.β She sighed. βTheyβre just beginning to get over losing Jasonβs mother, Marguerite. She was a lovely lady. So kind.β
βYou know a lot about them,β he said.
βWell, one of our clients was trying to retool his public image and Amanda still owns that PR firm, so she was there getting information from him. Sheβs very nice. We keep in touch on Facebook.β
βDonβt keep in touch too closely,β he cautioned with snapping black eyes. βTheyβre competitors.β
βAs if Iβd ever sell you out,β she said, exasperated, as she stared up at him. βGet real! Annie would have me for breakfast, smothered in jelly!β
He relaxed. βOkay. Just testing the waters.β
She ground her teeth together. βOh, no.β
He followed her irritated glance and saw a short, rotund man with thinning hair and a big smile headed toward them.
βI told you so,β she moaned. βIβll go hide in the rest roomβ¦ Ty!β
His arm was around her waist and he smiled down at her shocked expression. βDonβt give the game away. Smile.β
She did, trying hard to disguise the sudden acceleration of her heartbeat as she felt the strength and heat of his powerful body, smelled the spicy, clean scent of him. Sheβd danced with him at parties, rarely, and it had been just as problematic, to keep her headlong feelings for him from showing.
He felt a shiver go through her and his brows drew together just for an instant. Surely she wasnβt afraid of him?
Then he felt her heart race where her small, firm breasts were pressed close against him, and odd feelings stirred. Her breath was coming too fast. She was trying to disguise it, but he knew more about women than he ever let on in public.
She stiffened and started to pull back, but his arm tightened.
βWhat are you afraid of?β he asked in a slow, deep tone.
βNothβ¦nothing,β she faltered.
βLies,β he mused. βHere.β He handed her his drink. βLiquid courage. Take a sip and weβll ward off your would-be suitor.β
She took the glass, sniffed it, and made a face. βItβs whiskey. I hate whiskey!β
βTake a sip. It works better than it smells. Trust me.β
She took a deep breath, held it, and forced about a teaspoon of the vile-smelling liquid into her mouth. She choked it down, catching her breath.
βYou could fuel trucks with this,β she muttered as she handed it back.
βThis is the very finest aged Scotch whiskey,β he defended. βAnd now Iβll know not to share my most precious substance with those same people you donβt cast pearls before!β
She glared at him. βI am not a swine!β
βNo, you arenβt,β he agreed. He cocked his head and his black eyes twinkled. βBut Iβll bet you taste almost as good as a barbequed one,β he added in a slow, soft tone as his eyes fell to her pretty, soft mouth.
She actually gasped and her heart ran wild.
βMy, my, is that the whiskey or me?β he asked, his eyes dropping to the fluttering of her heart, very visible under the thin bodice of her pale blue cocktail dress.
βDonβt you stare at me like that,β she said indignantly.
βLike what?β he asked, amused.
βOh, hi, Erin,β Clarence Hodges said as he joined them. He looked crestfallen when he noticed Tyβs arm around her. βI was hoping you might like to talk to me about having your company do a remodeling job on my new houseβ¦?β
She forced a smile. βIβm truly sorry, Clarence, but that isnβt the sort of project we do,β she said in a gentle but professional tone. βWe do big projects. Shopping centers. Apartments. Housing complexes. That sort of thing.β
βItβs a big house,β he persisted.
βErinβs right, we donβt do small projects,β Ty told him, and the irritation he was feeling was visible in the tautness of his unsmiling face. βEven if we did, weβre already overbooked. Sorry,β he added. But he didnβt look sorry. He looked oddly threatening.
Clarence swallowed. Hard. His face flushed. βI see. Wellβ¦β He smiled hopefully at Erin. βMaybe you might like to come over and have coffee with me one morning?β
Tyβs chin lifted. His black eyes narrowed. He glared at the smaller man.
Erin just smiled.
βOh, thereβs Billy Olstead,β he said, looking past Erinβs shoulder. βI need to talk to him about my motherβs new car. Iβll see you later,β he added to Erin and smiled again, nervously, as he made a beeline toward the newcomer.
βThanks,β Erin said with a heavy release of breath. βHeβs not a bad man, but he can be annoying.β
βAnnie says heβs started calling you two or three times a week.β
βHe does,β she agreed sadly. βI canβt make him understand that I just donβt feel that way about him. Iβve never done a single thing that he could construe as encouraging.β
βIt wouldnβt help,β he replied. βMen like that donβt take hints. They think theyβre irresistible and it only needs persistence to wear you down.β
βHeβd need more persistence than heβs got,β she said flatly.
He pursed his lips. βYou could go out with me.β
Her eyes widened. βWhat?β
He shrugged. βYou could go out with me. Jacobsville is small. It would get all around town in no time that we were dating. Clarence would hear it from everybody.β He chuckled. βEven Clarence wouldnβt be able to convince himself that heβd be any competition for me.β
βWell, yes, butβ¦β
βBut, what?β he asked quietly, and he looked down into her eyes until she flushed. Her heart was trying to get out of her chest now.
She couldnβt even find words. It was like having every dream of her life come true unexpectedly, and all at once. She was breathless, giddy. But it was insane to even think of doing it, of going out with him. The gossip would be terrible. It wouldnβt matter that the company where they worked was in San Antonio; too many employees lived in Jacobsville, where Ty and Erin lived. It would be all over town in no time. When he didnβt go out with her a second time, it would be even worse. People would start wondering what was wrong with her.
βI donβt think,β she began.
βGood. Donβt. Thinking is responsible for most of the misery on the planet. We can go dancing. Thereβs a Latin club up in San Antonio.β
He knew she could do Latin dances. Heβd taught her how, for a high school date. How many years ago that seemed now!
βWellβ¦β
Amazing. She was reluctant. Heβd never had any woman try to refuse a date with him. It was intriguing, especially considering how fast her heart was going right now. She was attracted to him. Was it new? Or had she always been attracted, but kept it hidden? He wanted to find out.
βLive dangerously. A little gossip never hurt anybody,β he teased.
It did, but he wouldnβt know, not with his spotless reputation. Well, hers was spotless, too. So spotless that she didnβt want to risk staining it, however lightly.
βPeople will talk. A lot.β
He just smiled. βYour friends wonβt care. What your enemies think wonβt matter.β
βYes, but I hate gossip.β
He cocked his head and smiled at her with those black eyes making sensual promises. βThereβs a sushi place just down the block from the Latin club,β he said. βThey have ebi.β
Ebi was her favorite sushi dish. It was so expensive that she couldnβt work it into her budget. Her father did contribute a little to the family kitty, but never enough. They lived frugally because he was a spendthrift. Ty didnβt know and it would kill her pride to confess it.
She loved sushi, especially ebi. She couldnβt afford it.
βYouβre weakening. Think about it. Chilled shrimp with rice. Wasabe and soy sauce and pickled ginger to go on itβ¦β
βStop! Youβre torturing me!β
He chuckled. βI love it, too. Come on. Say yes.β
She drew in a long breath. βOkay,β she blurted out, against her own best interests.
He grinned. βOkay.β
When she got home that night, she could have kicked herself for agreeing.
Her father was watching television. A movie on DVD. They couldnβt afford cable or satellite. The only reason she had a high-end cell phone was that the company provided it for her, along with a company car. These would have been luxuries, even on her good salary.
βIβm home,β she said.
βHi.β He grinned at her while the commercial was on. βHad fun?β
βIt was a business party,β she reminded him.
βEasy enough to have fun and do business. Speaking of business, I saw this commercial on TV about how to invest in the stock market by doing day-tradingβ¦β
βNo.β
βNow, Erinβ¦β
βNo,β she repeated. βWeβre still paying off that course you took learning how to sell real estate,β she added pointedly.
He grimaced. βI didnβt know I was a bad salesman until I tried it.β
βWell, trying things is what got us into this financial mess, Dad,β she said, sitting down across from him. βIβm making a good salary. If we live on a budget, we can make it, just. But thereβs no extra money. None at all. I canβt work two jobs.β
He studied her with the face of a child. βBut itβs only two hundred dollars, this course, I mean.β
βI donβt have two hundred dollars. Not even in savings. That went to the online gambling website you found,β she added, trying not to sound as accusing as she felt.
He grimaced. βI guess Iβm not as good a gambler as I thought, either. But, listen, this course,β he began again.
βI can get an apartment of my own and move out,β she said flatly.
He gasped. βErin, no!β
βI canβt live with the way you spend money, Dad. Either you stop trying to spend it on things we donβt need, or Iβm bailing out.β She felt a hundred years old. βI canβt keep bailing you out. We already owe more than I make in a year. Iβm just one person.β
βI do help out,β he said stiffly.
βYou do odd jobs and you spend what you make as soon as you get it,β she replied.
He flushed. He couldnβt deny that.
βIβll try to restrain myself. I will.β He smiled. βBut the man said that this course is foolproof.β
She ground her teeth together as she got up. βIβm going to bed.β
βIf youβd just listen,β he said sadly.
She turned. βIβve listened since Mom died,β she said. βAnd every single thing youβve spent money on has cost us money without returning any. Iβm so tired of debt, canβt you understand that? Iβm being crushed by the weight of it, worried to death about it, and you just canβt seem to see what itβs doing to me.β
He blinked. He shifted uneasily in his chair. βIβll do better next time. Youβll see.β
βNext time it had better be your own money that youβre betting,β she replied and toughened her stance. βOr Iβm moving out.β
βYouβre being unreasonable, Erin,β he retorted. βYou donβt love me.β
βI do love you. And youβre the one being unreasonable. Good night.β
She went into her bedroom and closed the door, sick at heart. It was like trying to explain to a child. Her father had always lived in the clouds, but her mother had been able to manage him with supreme ease. Erin couldnβt.
βIβll spend the rest of my life paying off his bills and then Iβll die,β she thought miserably. βIβll never get away.β
Which was the one reason she could never let Ty Mosby see how she felt about him. Everybody knew her father kept them poor, but not how catastrophically. Ty would never be sure of her. Was she dating him because she cared for him or because he could pay off their debts.
It was an unrealistic thought, but she was almost panicked at the thought of dating Ty. Sheβd have to find some way to back out of it, a way that wouldnβt hurt his pride. All her life, her father had been a stone around her neck. Since her motherβs death, it had been much worse.
It would have helped if she had someone to talk to about it, but her only real friend was Annie, and sheβd never be able to tell Annie the truth. It would just get back to Ty. Her pride wouldnβt take that.
She wanted that date with all her heart. It was just too risky. She was crazy about him. It might show. There were so many reasons that she didnβt dare let him see what she felt. Her father was the biggest one.
But there was another. Ty wasnβt a marrying man. He kept his liaisons very private, but heβd had relationships in the past. In a small town like this, they wouldnβt be able to hide one.
Erin had a spotless reputation. She wasnβt having it damaged to keep steady company with a man who only wanted one thing from a woman, and it wasnβt love.
So, better not to complicate her life any more than it was already complicated. Which left the problem of her father to solve, if it could be solved. She would never be free of him and his get-rich schemes that never paid off. Sheβd be in debt until she died.
She put on her gown and crawled gratefully under the covers. Sheβd think about it tomorrow, she told herself. Tonight, she was going to savor her memory of Tyβs arm around her, his deep voice sensuous as he teased her about going on a date.
It could never happen. But dreaming about it hurt nobody. Especially not Erin.
Excerpted from Wyoming Proud by Diana Palmer.
Copyright Β© 2023 by Diana Palmer.
Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.
*****
Author Info:
The prolific author of more than one hundred books, Diana Palmer got her start as a newspaper reporter. A New York Times bestselling author and voted one of the top ten romance writers in America, she has a gift for telling the most sensual tales with charm and humor. Diana lives with her family in Cornelia, Georgia.
Social Links:
Facebook: Diana Palmer
*****



