The mountain mans bride, p.1

The Mountain Man's Bride, page 1

 

The Mountain Man's Bride
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The Mountain Man's Bride


  The Mountain Man’s Bride

  The Mountain Man Mysteries: Book Two

  Gary Corbin

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each reader. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to the Kindle store and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, incidents, and dialogue are either drawn from the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2017 Gary Corbin

  Double Diamond Publishing, Camas, WA

  All rights reserved.

  To Renée

  CONTENTS

  Part 1: Fallen Hero

  Part 2: Surprise Suspect

  Part 3: Romantic Twist

  Part 4: Trapped

  A Note From the Author

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  Also by Gary Corbin

  Excerpt from The Mountain Man’s Badge

  Part 1

  Fallen Hero

  Chapter

  Lehigh squinted into the headlights of the oncoming car through the muddy mist on the windshield of his old pickup and navigated the tight curve of the old mountain road. Some part of his brain became aware of the fact that his beautiful fiancée, Stacy Lynn McBride, had just said something important, which he had missed, for the two hundredth time too many. And that was only this week.

  “Sorry, hon.” He adjusted his baseball cap, which didn’t really need adjusting, but it gave him something to do while he thought of something smart to say. Which, unfortunately, didn’t happen. As usual. “Say again?”

  She crossed her arms and put on her I’m-being-patient-with-you voice. “I said, because of those stupid stores and their Byzantine sale policies, we’re going to have to go back to some of those same shops tomorrow. I can’t believe they wouldn’t extend their sale prices one day early. Why, if someone came into the clinic with a sick cat or dog, and we had a special—”

  “All the way back to Portland? Tomorrow?” Lehigh nearly drove off the road. Damned switchbacks. “Stacy, I can’t. Not on a Monday. I have too much to do, and—well, I just can’t.”

  “I see.” She found something fascinating to stare at out the passenger side window. “I understand. I mean, there must be dozens of things more important than our wedding. How does one compare the health of a sapling against the mere union of our lives? Thinning a stand of fir, versus expressing the foreverness of our love? The—”

  “Okay, okay, I’ll go.” He sighed. “I was hoping to get some work done. You know, to actually pay for all this wedding stuff? March is the busy season in the forestry world, and I—”

  “Watch out for the deer!”

  Lehigh slammed on his brakes and swerved in time to allow the doe to leap across the twin lanes of the highway to wooded safety.

  “Maybe we should take this road a bit slower,” Stacy said. “Unless you hate shopping so much that you can’t wait to get away from it.”

  Lehigh bit back a snotty reply when a playful grin split her pretty face, framed by long black hair tumbling down around her shoulders. She sure knew how to push his buttons—good and bad.

  “You know, I don’t really mind the shopping,” he said, “other than the driving, parking, expense, long lines, rude city people, the wandering around aisle after aisle of stuff I don’t want to buy and can’t afford, fakey-fake sales people pretending to be my friend, elevator music…”

  “Other than that, it’s your favorite contact sport.” Her grin widened. She rested her hand on his knee, then slid it along his inner thigh, northbound.

  “Second favorite.” He clamped his hand over hers to arrest its progress. “But the first I can’t do while driving, or that will become a contact sport.”

  “Prude.” Her lips pressed together into a mischievous smile, her dark eyes sparkling. She leaned over and kissed his stubbly cheek. “You need a shave.” She rested her head on his shoulder and took a breath. “Whew! And a shower, mountain man.”

  “Hey, I took a bath last week.” He grinned and pulled her close, his fingers nestling in between her ribs. Still thin at thirty-seven, Stacy could pass for ten years younger, and still got ID’d in bars outside of Clarkesville. He could wrap one arm all the way around her if she stood in front of him, and her tiny waist had added to her frustration over the futile search for a wedding dress that fit right. The diet she’d started the day after he proposed had succeeded—too well, actually.

  But he knew where to find soft flesh. He slid his hand further inside—

  “Now look who’s risking full contact driving!” She laughed and pushed his hand up to her shoulder. “And watch your speed. You’re going ten miles over—oh, crap.”

  Flashing red and blue lights reflected in the pickup’s rearview mirror. Lucky, their three year old yellow hound, sat up in the jump seat behind Stacy, growling. Diamond, a four month old Lab-Border Collie mix, sat up in the seat behind Lehigh and joined the chorus moments later.

  “Down, dogs,” Lehigh said. Lucky quieted first, followed by Diamond, as always.

  Lehigh braked and steered the truck to the side of the highway. “Damn. Another ten minutes and we’d have been home.” He fished in his wallet for his license.

  “Just be polite, and maybe they’ll let you off with a warning,” Stacy said. Lehigh looked away. Being nice to cops wasn’t his strong suit. Then again, they weren’t often nice to him, either. He tucked his long brown ponytail inside of his hat. At least he’d shaved that morning.

  The sheriff’s cruiser, a blue Crown Victoria, pulled in behind his truck. A moment later a tall, athletic figure in a beige uniform emerged from the driver’s side.

  “Omigod,” Stacy said. “It’s Jared.” She slunk down in the seat.

  “Barkley?” Lehigh squinted in the rearview mirror. “What’s he doing out on patrol?” He lowered the window, and a moment later, Barkley stepped into view.

  “Evening, Sheriff. Dogs, be quiet.” They stopped growling again in the back seat.

  “Still Deputy, Mr. Carter. Do you know why I pulled you over tonight?”

  Lehigh shrugged. “Because you recognized my car?”

  Barkley scowled and shone his flashlight in Lehigh’s face. “Speed limit’s thirty-five here, Mr. Carter. You were going fifteen over the limit. That’s a three hundred dollar ticket.”

  “Hey, Jared.” Stacy sat up in the seat and flashed her trademark wide, toothy smile, the one that always melted Lehigh’s heart. Flashed it, though, at Jared frigging Barkley.

  Barkley shone the light on Stacy and his expression softened. He even smiled, for a change. “Evening, Ms. McBride. Is that Lucky and Diamond back there?” A puff of fog followed the words from his mouth.

  “Sure is. Good memory!” She broadened her smile. Lehigh fought his impulse to block their view of each other. Stacy leaned closer. “Now, why is the Acting Sheriff of all of Mt. Hood County working traffic on a Saturday night?”

  “Duty calls, Sta—uh, ma’am.” Barkley cleared his throat, all official again. “Might I see your license, insurance, and registration, Mr. Carter?”

  Lehigh groaned and handed his driver’s license through the window. “Registration’s in the glove box. Mind getting it for me, please, Stace?”

  Stacy smiled past him and handed the registration card to the deputy. “Make sure to thank your mom for that strawberry cake recipe, Jared,” she said. “You should swing by and try some on your day off. If you ever take one.”

  Barkley emitted a small cough. “Mighty kind of you to offer, but with Sheriff Summers’ situation…well, don’t let it go bad waiting on me.” He smiled at Stacy, thought a moment, nodded once to Lehigh, then handed him back his license and paperwork. “Careful with your speed coming ’round these turns at night, Mr. Carter. That black ice’ll get you this time of year.” He tipped his hat and stepped back toward his car.

  “Thank you!” Stacy waved out the back window, then turned to face Lehigh. “Well, that was mighty nice of him.” She squeezed Lehigh’s arm.

  He wiggled away and rolled up the window. “Awfully nice. Next time you ought to make him dinner. Maybe then he’d let us rob a damned wedding store, and we’d be done with all this blasted shopping.” He started the engine.

  Her jaw dropped. “Lehigh, I’m surprised at you. Here you go acting all jealous when all I did was save you a three hundred dollar ticket.”

  Lehigh hesitated before putting the truck in gear. He couldn’t put a finger on it, but something felt wrong about the way she’d interacted with Barkley. It seemed a little too…familiar. And Jared had seemed almost embarrassed once Stacy had made her presence known. Almost as if…

  He gunned the engine and sped the truck back onto the highway. Gravel spewed from his rear wheels onto the front grill of the deputy’s still-parked car.

  “Slow down!” she said. “Are you trying to convince him to change his mind and write you a ticket anyway?”

  They drove the rest of the way home in heated silence.

  ***

  Stacy stayed put in the passenger seat long after Lehigh parked his truck beside her car at

the end of her hundred-foot gravel drive. Her modest two-bedroom bungalow needed painting and probably a new roof, projects she’d asked him to finish this year—and the source of too many arguments. “I have an entire house to rebuild,” he’d pointed out the last time. “Or don’t you remember how your last fiancé and his friends felt about me coming back into your life last fall?”

  That cheap shot had earned him a night on the couch. Since then, he’d kept his thoughts about the relative priority of his and her house repairs to himself. And a lot of other thoughts, she reckoned. That had to change.

  They sat in silence for several minutes, seat belts still buckled, his hands on the wheel, her arms crossed, both staring straight ahead into the misty darkness of the evergreens that bordered her two-acre property. A few times, she drew in a breath to speak, but no words came.

  Finally Lehigh dropped his arms from the steering wheel to his lap and turned to face her. “Look, I’m sorry. This whole wedding thing…I don’t know.”

  She faced him too. Took a deep breath. “Are you…having buyer’s remorse?”

  “What do you mean?”

  She took a moment, choosing her words with care. “I mean, are you sorry you came up with this whole marriage idea?”

  “I came up with the idea?” He sat flat against the seat and blew noisy air between his teeth. “I seem to recall a certain someone once cutting me out of her life for not asking.”

  “Oh, for heaven’s sake. That was twelve years ago. What’s next? Complaints about how I ignored you in high school?” Her dark hair whipped around her face as she turned away from him. Dammit. She’d gone and snapped at him—exactly what she’d tried not to do.

  He sighed. “So much for trying to apologize.”

  “It just seems that ever since we started making plans to actually get married, you’ve been a total grump.” She drooped her head and recrossed her arms, trying to keep the fear out of her voice. “It’s as if you’re…I don’t know. Changing your mind.”

  “I’m not.” He rubbed the stubble on his cheeks. “But I’ll admit, this is becoming a much bigger deal than I ever wanted it to be.”

  “Getting married is a big deal.”

  “Yeah, but does the wedding have to be? Why can’t we just get a couple of friends together, go to a justice of the peace…”

  She bolted upright in her seat. “My father would kill you, that’s why. And my mother would roast you alive first.”

  “Ain’t that the truth.” The first etchings of a smile crossed his lips. “I just thought that your dad might want a lower key event, now that he’s dropped out of the governor’s race.”

  She frowned. “Was forced out. By us.”

  “By his own bad choices.” Lehigh looked away from her. “One of the many ways you don’t take after him, thank God.”

  Stacy sighed. Her dad’s role in ruining Lehigh’s life six months before remained a serious bone of contention between them. One of many. Only, in the twisted way Senator George McBride told the story, it was Lehigh who’d ruined the other man’s life. Taking ownership of mistakes was not in her father’s toolbag.

  “Still,” she said, “it means a lot to him, and that means a lot to me.” She took his hand. “I kind of hoped it meant something to you, too.”

  “Course it does. I just like things simple, is all.” He squeezed her hand.

  She leaned against him, rubbing his thumb with her much smaller, delicate fingers. “Maybe it can be, a little bit. Do you think, if we did something small, we could get your Pappy and Maw to come?”

  Lehigh winced and dropped his chin to his chest. “Not even if we held the ceremony in their backyard, I reckon.”

  “Sorry, sweetie. Sore subject, I know.” Stacy held him tighter, kissed his cheek. They sat in silence for several moments.

  In the back seat, one of the dogs stretched and whimpered, followed by the other. Lehigh reached back with an expert hand and popped open the rear driver’s side door. The dogs bounded out into the darkness, Diamond always two awkward puppy hops behind Lucky’s lazy loping gait. Lehigh shut the door behind them. He reached around Stacy and pulled her close again. “What say we sit here a bit?”

  She giggled. “It’d be warmer inside.”

  He hugged her tighter. “Yeah, but it’s cozier in here. Besides, we’ll be warm enough in a minute.”

  She slid her hand inside his shirt, onto the bare skin of his muscular chest. “You got a point there, cowboy.” She leaned forward for a kiss. His hand slipped inside her suddenly unbuttoned blouse, and she wondered if they’d ever make it inside the house.

  ***

  Stacy stayed put in the passenger seat long after Lehigh parked his truck behind her car at the end of her hundred-foot gravel drive. Her modest two-bedroom bungalow needed painting and probably a new roof, projects she’d asked him to finish this year—and the source of too many arguments. “I have an entire house to rebuild,” he’d pointed out the last time. “Or don’t you remember how your last fiancé and his friends felt about me coming back into your life last fall?”

  That cheap shot had earned him a night on the couch. Since then, he’d kept his thoughts about the relative priority of his and her house repairs to himself. And a lot of other thoughts, she reckoned. That had to change.

  They sat in silence for several minutes, seat belts still buckled, his hands on the wheel, her arms crossed, both staring straight ahead into the misty darkness of the evergreens that bordered her two-acre property. A few times, she drew in a breath to speak, but no words came.

  Finally Lehigh dropped his arms from the steering wheel to his lap and turned to face her. “Look, I’m sorry. This whole wedding thing…I don’t know.”

  She faced him too. Took a deep breath. “Are you…having buyer’s remorse?”

  “What do you mean?”

  She took a moment, choosing her words with care. “I mean, are you sorry you came up with this whole marriage idea?”

  “I came up with the idea?” He sat flat against the seat and blew noisy air between his teeth. “I seem to recall a certain someone once cutting me out of her life for not asking.”

  “Oh, for heaven’s sake. That was twelve years ago. What’s next? Complaints about how I ignored you in high school?” Her dark hair whipped around her face as she turned away from him. Dammit. She’d gone and snapped at him—exactly what she’d tried not to do.

  He sighed. “So much for trying to apologize.”

  “It just seems that ever since we started making plans to actually get married, you’ve been a total grump.” She drooped her head and recrossed her arms, trying to keep the fear out of her voice. “It’s as if you’re…I don’t know. Changing your mind.”

  “I’m not.” He rubbed the stubble on his cheeks. “But I’ll admit, this is becoming a much bigger deal than I ever wanted it to be.”

  “Getting married is a big deal.”

  “Yeah, but does the wedding have to be? Why can’t we just get a couple of friends together, go to a Justice of the Peace…”

  She bolted upright in her seat. “My father would kill you, that’s why. And my mother would roast you alive first.”

  “Ain’t that the truth.” The first etchings of a smile crossed his lips. “I just thought that your dad might want a lower-key event, now that he’s dropped out of the governor’s race.”

  She frowned. “Was forced out. By us.”

  “By his own bad choices.” Lehigh’s jaw clenched and he looked away from her.

  Stacy sighed. Her dad’s role in ruining Lehigh’s life six months before remained a serious bone of contention between them. One of many. Only, in the twisted way Senator George McBride told the story, it was Lehigh who ruined the other man’s life. Taking ownership of mistakes was not in her father’s toolbag.

  “Still,” she said, “it means a lot to him, and that means a lot to me.” She took his hand. “I kind of hoped it meant something to you, too.”

  “Course it does. I just like things simple, is all.” He squeezed her hand.

  She leaned against him, rubbing his thumb with her much-smaller, delicate fingers. “Maybe it can be, a little bit. Do you think, if we did, we could get your Pappy and Maw to come?”

  Lehigh winced. “Not even if we held the ceremony in their backyard, I reckon.” He dropped his chin to his chest. Stacy held him tighter, kissed his cheek. They sat in silence for several moments.

 

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