Cowboy Wants Her Heart (The Heartland Series Book 3)
Cowboy Wants Her Heart
(Heartlands Book 3)
Kris Pearson
Exiled from his family for half his life, hard-living cowboy Rory Morrissey finally quits Texas and embarks on a desperate and delicate mission: to return to New Zealand, convince shy Kiwi heiress Alfrieda Hamlin to marry him, and earn a fresh start, respectability, and one hell of a farm.
ISBN 978-0-473-28485-5
For more information about this author, visit http://www.krispearson.com/
As always, love and thanks to Philip for the covers, and the unfailing encouragement and computer un-snarling. And to my author friend Bronwen Evans, who is showing the rest of our group exactly how much can be achieved with a vivid imagination and lashings of determination.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is co-incidental.
Copyright © 2014 by Kris Pearson
Cover design © by Philip Pearson
Cover photograph dreamstimes.com
All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the US Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without prior permission of the author.
Table of Contents
Chapter One — A Dinner Guest
Chapter Two — Trip to the Kitchen
Chapter Three — Peaches for Breakfast
Chapter Four — Rumours
Chapter Five — Jumping Wetas
Chapter Six — Cave Drawings
Chapter Seven — A Drive to Town
Chapter Eight — Santa Barbara of the South
Chapter Nine — Highway Hold-up
Chapter Ten — After Hours Shopping
Chapter Eleven — Rory’s Room
Chapter Twelve — Dressed for Dinner
Chapter Thirteen — Eating Italian
Chapter Fourteen — Murderous Intent
Chapter Fifteen — Another Glassful
Chapter Sixteen — Close, and Closer
Chapter Seventeen — All Kinds of Aches
Chapter Eighteen — Nearly Naked
Chapter Nineteen — The Full Treatment
Chapter Twenty — On the Road
Chapter Twenty-one — Cat out of the Bag
Chapter Twenty-two — Good Intentions, but...
Chapter Twenty-three — Absolute Fury
Epilogue
Kris’s Books
Chapter One — A Dinner Guest
Rory Morrissey soared above the property like a hawk, inspecting Glenleighton with eyes as keen as lasers. He leaned further forward in the cockpit and his heart rate kicked up another notch with pure exhilaration. The noise of the Cessna’s engine faded to nothing.
Old Alfred Hamlin’s photographs hadn’t done it justice. In the early evening light the estate seemed wrapped in magic—magic and money. Emerald lawns and undulating gardens surrounded the huge old timber house. Prime grazing land stretched as far as he could see on either side, the grass bleached gold in the height of summer. Plantations and native forest climbed the higher hills. And the Pacific Ocean tossed and twinkled, dead ahead.
He’d been away from New Zealand for sixteen long years. Finally he’d come home.
A fierce hunger to be master of Glenleighton settled deep in his gut, gnawing and churning, eating like acid.
He had to have it. It would go a long way toward recompensing him for his banishment and the subsequent loss of his rightful inheritance.
But one tiny prickle of unease danced down his spine. There’d been no photo of the granddaughter. How intolerable would she be?
Alfie Hamlin rubbed her temples as she heard the small plane approach, then veer away, then turn again. It wasn’t Tony Robinson’s helicopter. And wouldn’t be an aerial top-dressing contractor at this time of day.
Could it be their dinner guest checking the place over? Her unease grew stronger. Something was up. Something bad. She could feel it as clearly as she could see her own reflection in the mirror.
She’d known about Rory Morrissey for several years. Her grandfather had made sure of that with occasional gruff references to his abilities. Now Rory had returned from Texas, and been invited to dinner. Mrs Addison, the housekeeper, had spent the day on a short fuse. Why? It made sense if they were having a dinner party, but he was the only guest. The edgy feeling tickling along Alfie’s nerves grew ever stronger.
Earlier, when she’d collected her grandfather’s afternoon tea cup and saucer from his study, Alfie had been on the very point of daring to ask what was behind the invitation. But at that instant he’d stopped searching through the big bookcase full of farming magazines and skewered her with one of his disparaging glares.
“Get out of those bloody jeans for once and make yourself look like a woman tonight,” he’d demanded before he hustled her away and closed the door in her astounded face.
What had she done to deserve that? He’d never objected to her wearing jeans while she slogged around the farm for him.
Now she regarded herself doubtfully in the long mirror of her childhood bedroom and pulled a ferocious face.
Would Grandpa consider a blue denim skirt and a new black polo shirt womanly enough for the unknown Rory? Probably not.
Sighing, she stepped out of the skirt, yanked the shirt off over her head, tossed them both on the bed, and stood there defeated.
The plane’s engine noise increased as it made another pass, much nearer this time. Alfie flinched, and gathered her cascade of newly washed hair into a high ponytail, snapping a rubber band on with the ease of long practice. Then she unhooked her bra and slid into the thin-strapped turquoise bridesmaid’s dress from cousin Kate’s wedding in Queenstown. She returned to the mirror and stood twisting from side to side. The skirt swirled around her thighs, and she enjoyed the sensation of the soft fabric whispering over her skin. But the bodice was wrong. The summer V of tanned skin at her neckline looked odd against the paler skin of her breasts and shoulders.
No doubt Grandpa would be displeased. He mostly was. After dabbing on her usual sun-block lip gloss and pulling on flat white sandals, she muttered a soft curse and ran full tilt along the oak panelled top gallery and down the very grand main staircase of Glenleighton homestead.
The plane had touched down on the airstrip. Alfie slunk through the open kitchen doorway and out into the garden to watch in edgy astonishment as their dinner guest prowled away from it. And prowled was the only word that seemed right.
Long legs strode across the pasture. His head turned this way and that, inspecting everything around him as though he was a big dark cat on a hunt. She imagined he was lifting his nose, sniffing the air.
He was in no hurry.
Wraparound sunglasses shielded his eyes against the brilliance of the lowering sun, and his partly shadowed face added to his mystery. But Alfie could clearly see his inky hair—brutally short at the sides, but longer on top where it gleamed like jet.
He was wearing exactly what she’d been forbidden to; jeans and a black shirt. How unfair was that?
They were very close fitting black jeans, riding low on his narrow hips. The western-style shirt stretched snugly around his chest and shoulders, and the angle of the light made him look as though his upper body had been carved from black granite. Hard. Unyielding.
As he passed the rhododendron thicket where she’d scrambled to conceal herself, all the tiny hairs on her bare arms rose up, then those on her nape and scalp. The tight rubber band on her ponytail screamed to be looser.
Suddenly the plane’s engine revved again and it wheeled about to face into the breeze, gathered speed along the airstrip, and soared away. So he hadn’t flown himself to Glenleighton? How would he get home?
She stayed hidden, her hand clamped over her mouth until he’d gone by. When she dared to draw breath again, she found she could smell him. A new expensive earthy scent hung in the evening air. She sampled him slowly. Dark spices and exotic green freshness, like she imagined the jungle would smell. Deep and dangerous and full of secrets.
She turned to track his silent purposeful progress along the sloping walkway that led to the homestead lawns, and once he was well clear she followed him, watching and wondering.
His lazy paces ate up the distance. She sensed the play of strong streamlined muscles and taut sinews beneath the dark denim of his jeans. Well used to evaluating animal flesh, Alfie instinctively judged him a thoroughbred of prime quality. Ideal breeding stock.
And as that unnerving thought hit her, she saw her big silver-bearded grandfather stumping down the front steps and across the lawn, one arm outstretched as if offering to take their visitor’s overnight bag. She bobbed down out of sight behind the rose border.
“Rory, my boy—welcome, welcome,” she heard him boom.
His boy?
So this is the girl?
Rory fought to keep his curiosity from showing as she slid, eyes downcast, into the gracious old sitting room. The dry-pine smell of the recent Christmas tree was overpowering, and he was trying not to sneeze.
The grandfather immediately abandoned his small talk, heaved himself to his feet, and began introductions. “Rory, may I present my granddaughter Alfreida. And this is Rory Morris
sey, who you’ve heard me talk about from time to time, Alfie.”
She looked up then, and nodded politely enough to him. Offered a slim hand to be shaken. Somehow made it perfectly plain that a cousinly kiss on the cheek would not be acceptable. And bent to pet the big grey cat which had stalked into the room with her.
Rory burned at her cool rebuff. She hadn’t even spoken to him.
“You have a lot to do with the animals here, I guess?” he drawled, just to get a reaction.
“She’s called Dorothy,” the girl replied without looking at him again.
So—a soft husky voice that strummed over his nerve endings like a flick from a chiffon scarf. But her aloof attitude just begged to be tamed. “I meant the bigger animals.”
That brought her eyes up to his. Clear blue-green eyes, fringed with dark lashes, each tipped with gold. She straightened with noticeable reluctance.
“We run mixed beef-and-sheep mostly. Angus cattle—the black ones. We’re not a dairy farm.”
“No, I know that.”
She gave a ‘why-did-you-ask’ kind of shrug and looked down at the cat again.
Rory decided she was a bad mannered little bitch, undoubtedly spoiled from the day she’d been born.
He studied her, knowing old Alfred Hamlin was studying him in turn.
She was tall. Slender. Badly dressed in a shiny frock that seemed strangely formal, and sandals with leaf mould clinging to them. He amused himself by imagining her long chocolate ponytail freed and falling down her back in a soft wavy mass. Definitely an improvement. The dress had narrow straps; her arms were bare and lithely muscled. He wanted to take her by the elbows and shake her so he had her full attention. This was too important to mess up.
Still ignoring him, she bent again to stroke the cat as it wound around her legs, and he was granted an unexpected view of gorgeous breasts—a total surprise after her standoffish greeting.
His groin prickled and he ruthlessly squashed the sensation. But it was good to know she turned him on. It could only help later.
Frosty. Gauche. Spoiled. Not ideal qualities for a wife, but by God he’d take her to get Glenleighton Estate.
“Champagne!” old Alfred barked, heading for the gleaming mahogany sideboard where there was an opened bottle gussied up with a white napkin around its neck. He took it from its resting place in a silver bucket of rattling ice cubes and began to pour with a less than steady hand into three waiting flutes.
Rory drew a deep breath, grateful to have a distraction from those enticing breasts, and nearly sneezed as the Christmas tree scent hit him again. “Thought you’d be a whisky man, Alfred?”
“Any other day, yes. But we always celebrate with champagne at Glenleighton.”
“Celebrate?” the girl asked, still stroking the cat.
“It’s not every day we have a visitor from the other side of the world. Drink up, drink up. You too Alfie—leave that disgusting beast alone. Make an effort to be sociable, for heaven’s sake.”
She ignored the insult with a slow closing of her deep-lagoon eyes. “Dorothy’s almost due to have kittens.”
This time she looked up at Rory. The smoky voice, unfettered breasts and candid eyes made him wonder if she was in on the plan. Did she know she was part of a hellish bargain? Was this her way of showing him she might be worth having?
He watched as she straightened and walked across to take her champagne. It was an easy graceful walk, but she kept her eyes cast down as though trying not to annoy her grandfather further.
He sensed very little affection evident between them. Although she seemed a spoiled princess, plainly Alfred hadn’t done the spoiling. So who?
“Have you always lived here?” he asked.
Another reserved nod.
“Speak up, girl.”
“Sorry Grandpa.” She flicked a glance toward the old man and then turned back to Rory. “Yes, always.”
“But you went away to school?”
“No, I was home-schooled.”
Old Alfred cleared his throat.
“To university then?”
She looked horrified at that. “No, I’ve always worked on the estate. With the animals.”
“Alfreida may have lived a sheltered life here but her education was not neglected,” the grandfather insisted, wagging his huge grizzled head. “Her world is as big as anyone else’s.”
Rory nodded at that somewhat defensive comment. The old boy was quite a salesman, and seemed keen that his plotting bore fruit.
“You’re very lucky to live in such a wonderful place,” Rory said, moving a little closer to her and raising his drink a fraction in a semi salute.
“Yes, I know.” She backed away a half step.
He hid a grimace against the rim of his glass as he sipped. What a little bore she was. No return enquiry about his own background. He could have livened up the conversation with stories about the Springcreek Ranch in Maverick County, Texas, or his family’s old farm down in Southland—but without a flicker of interest on her part, why should he bother?
He sipped. The champagne was excellent, but he’d rather have been offered Scotch. He supposed it was another clue to the grandfather’s personality. You did things his way or not at all.
Well his way was just fine with Rory. The estate was magnificent; the granddaughter manageable. He’d take both on and bend the girl to his will sooner or later. Surely chilly Alfreida didn’t have much option?
He could almost taste success. At last he’d regain everything his brother had cheated him out of. Everything and more, because Glenleighton was ten times the property his parents’ old farm had been; Clivedale had been knee-deep in muck and mud and mortgages. There’d been little pleasure there for anyone. Not his mother who couldn’t wait to escape, or his hopeless father, or his less than dedicated brother. Only Rory had truly loved it, and it had been wrenched from his grasp before he’d been old enough to fight for it. Old scores might just be settled after all.
They sat again in the conservative linen-covered armchairs. Rory pushed the fringed cushion into a more comfortable position behind his back and glanced sideways at the girl. She’d crossed her long coltish legs. The cat jumped onto her lap and started hitching the skirt of her dress up with restless kneading she did nothing to stop.
How long before those legs are wrapped around my hips?
“To partnerships,” Alfred suddenly proposed, raising his glass.
“To partnerships,” Rory echoed, eyes still on her legs.
“Partnerships?” the girl asked, eyes wide with enquiry.
Alfie sipped her champagne in silence, watching as the two men traded pleasantries. The air now smelled positively rank with treachery. What had they cooked up together?
The set of her grandfather’s mouth said ‘I’m taking no nonsense about this’. His bushy silver beard bristled with determination.
By contrast, Rory’s dark eyes remained half closed, and his faint sardonic smile was relaxed. Full of confident expectation.
She saw him settle deeper into his armchair and stretch his very long legs out in front of him. He lifted an ankle over a knee. The black jeans rode up far enough to reveal an ornate tooled and stitched cowboy boot.
How ridiculous. He’s not in Texas now.
But she simply had to look. Each time he swallowed, she noticed his Adam’s apple sliding up and down his throat. And the hand holding his glass had long flexible fingers—so different from Grandpa’s fat stubby ones. She dragged her eyes away again and again, hoping he hadn’t caught her watching. And smoothed her hand across Dorothy’s soft fur for comfort.
Fifteen excruciating minutes later Mrs Addison appeared at the doorway and asked, “Are you ready to have dinner served, sir?”
They trooped into the formal dining room with its red damasked walls. Rory pulled out a chair and stood behind it, obviously waiting for her to seat herself.
“Thank you.” She cleared her throat and stared at the shiny oil painting on the opposite wall. When had anyone ever treated her with such extravagant courtesy? Why had he done that? What was he after?
“You’re very welcome.”
He didn’t sound the least bit Kiwi. His deep voice with its Texan twang grated on her nerves and increased the uneasy sensation in her tummy.
Her grandfather started to carve the huge seeping piece of beef, and then stopped and turned his lizard-like eyes toward her for a second or two.