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Weddings Under a Western Sky: The Hand-Me-Down BrideThe Bride Wore BritchesSomething Borrowed, Something True Read online




  THREE BRIDES FOR THREE COWBOYS

  Something Borrowed, Something True by Lisa Plumley

  When Everett Bannon’s ranch hands order him a mail-order bride, he plans to send her on the first train back home. Until he sees his beautiful bride-to-be and his wits go walkin’! But Nellie Trent isn’t in Morrow Creek for veils and vows—she’s an undercover journalist with an exposé to write!

  The Hand-Me-Down Bride by Elizabeth Lane

  Arabella Spencer’s trip west was supposed to end in marriage to her longtime sweetheart—not with the discovery that he’d made someone else his wife! Can rancher Stewart McIntyre convince Arabella that Montana can still be her dream come true, with a new groom for this hand-me-down bride?

  The Bride Wore Britches by Kate Welsh

  Just for one night rancher Rhiannon Oliver longs to feel like a lady, so she ditches her britches for a ball gown! Cowboy Dylan Varga hardly recognizes the girl he used to tease—but then a tragedy throws them together in a way neither could have imagined....

  Acclaim for the authors of Weddings Under a Western Sky

  ELIZABETH LANE

  “This tender and loving story, spinning off from Lane’s previous Western, showcases her talent for drawing three-dimensional characters and placing them in an exciting time and place.”

  —RT Book Reviews on His Substitute Bride

  “Lane uses her turn-of-the-century backdrop and her knowledge of aviation to her advantage in a lively story featuring strong-willed characters.”

  —RT Book Reviews on On the Wings of Love

  KATE WELSH

  “Welsh writes of a time in history that’s rarely featured in romance novels —the beginnings of unionization in the coal mines of the United States. The plot is compelling, with several subplots that add complexity to the story.”

  —RT Book Reviews on Questions of Honor

  “A mistaken identity and a deathbed promise throw two strangers into marriage and mayhem. Welsh’s latest is a heartwarming novel about greed, revenge, love and desire.”

  —RT Book Reviews on His Californian Countess

  LISA PLUMLEY

  “There’s plenty of gunslinging, bloodshed and lovemaking going on from start to finish, which will keep readers turning pages until the very end.”

  —RT Book Reviews on Mail-Order Groom

  “How does one spell romance? P-L-U-M-L-E-Y. Readers are in for a treat with her latest tale, a funny, lively and often outrageous battle of wills that will keep readers riveted until the last page.”

  —RT Book Reviews on The Scoundrel

  Elizabeth Lane has lived and traveled in many parts of the world, including Europe, Latin America and the Far East, but her heart remains in the American West, where she was born and raised. Her idea of heaven is hiking a mountain trail on a clear fall day. She also enjoys music, animals and dancing. You can learn more about Elizabeth by visiting her website at www.elizabethlaneauthor.com.

  As a child, Kate Welsh often lost herself in creating make-believe worlds and happily-ever-after tales. Many years later she turned back to creating happy endings when her husband challenged her to write down the stories in her head. A lover of all things romantic, Kate has been writing romance for more than twenty years now. Kate loves hearing from readers, who can reach her on the internet at [email protected].

  When she’s not writing, Lisa Plumley loves to spend time with her husband and two children, traveling, hiking, watching classic movies, reading and defending her trivia-game championship. She enjoys hearing from readers, and invites you to contact her via email at [email protected], or visit her website at www.lisaplumley.com.

  The Hand-Me-Down Bride

  Elizabeth Lane

  To the Fillies

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Epilogue

  Chapter One

  Buffalo Bend, Montana

  April 29, 1876

  Arabella Spencer huddled under the dripping eave of Brophy’s Feed and Mercantile where the stage had let her off with her trunk. Rain had churned the deserted street into a quagmire of mud and manure. The muck had ruined her new kidskin shoes and wasn’t doing much for her disposition. After more than twenty minutes of waiting, she was wet, worried and getting madder by the second.

  Charles, her fiancé, had certainly known she was coming. He’d mailed her the tickets three months ago, with a promise to meet the stage and drive her to his new ranch. Only the thought of their wedding, and the fine home he’d refurbished especially for her, had sustained her on the grueling journey by train and stagecoach, all the way from Boston to Buffalo Bend. Now she was here at last, bruised, chilled and bone-weary, with Grandma Peabody’s wedding dress packed into her trunk.

  The bride had arrived. So where was her groom?

  True, the stage had been delayed two hours by a broken wheel. But that was no excuse for Charles not to be here—especially given that she had no place to get out of the rain. Brophy’s Feed and Mercantile, which appeared to be the only store in this ramshackle excuse for a town, had long since closed for the night. There wasn’t a hotel in sight, or even a restaurant; and the church at the street’s far end looked as dark as a tomb.

  Only the saloon across the street showed any sign of life. Lamplight filtered through gray sheets of rain. Occasional bursts of laughter and the wheeze of a concertina drifted over the drone of the storm.

  Arabella shivered beneath her damp woolen traveling cloak. The thought of shelter was tempting. But she’d have to leave her precious trunk behind and wade through ankle-deep mud to cross the street. In any case, well-bred young ladies simply did not venture into saloons—not even in a deluge fit to float Noah’s ark.

  A flicker of movement across the street caught her eye. Someone had just come out of the saloon. Was it Charles? Had he been waiting for her in that disreputable place?

  But the man who stepped into the street was too tall and too broad-shouldered to be her fiancé. Charles was of average stature. The figure striding toward her, wearing a bulky sheepskin coat, loomed like a giant against the roiling sky.

  Arabella shrank into the doorway. If the man meant her harm, she’d have no place to run. But she could kick and bite and scream for all she was worth. If it came to that, she vowed, she wouldn’t go down without a fight.

  He stopped a pace away from her. Close up, he wasn’t as huge as she’d first thought. But he was big enough—six foot four, by her reckoning. His face was obscured by rain streaming off the broad brim of his hat.

  “Miss Arabella Spencer?” His voice was like the rumble of an iron wheel over a graveled road. “I was told to look for a redhead, so I’m guessing you’re the one.”

  Staring up at him, she nodded.

  “McIntyre’s the name. I’ve come to fetch you to the ranch. Wait here, and I’ll bring the buckboard around.”

  He thrust something toward her. Realizing it was
an oilskin, Arabella seized it eagerly and wrapped it over her damp cloak. Before she could utter a proper thank-you, the man had melted into the rain.

  Moments later he reappeared from behind the store, driving an open rig behind a team of sturdy bays. The back was filled with some kind of bulky cargo covered by a canvas tarpaulin. There was one bench seat in front, with nothing to shelter its occupants from the rain.

  For heaven’s sake, if Charles couldn’t come himself, why couldn’t he at least have sent a covered buggy?

  McIntyre halted the horses, climbed to the ground and came around the rig—a buckboard, he’d called it, though it was more like a wagon, drawn by two horses instead of one. Hefting Arabella’s trunk as if it weighed nothing, he slid it under the canvas in back.

  “Where’s my fiancé, Charles Middleton?” Arabella demanded. “Is he all right?”

  “Far as I know, he’s fine.” McIntyre’s big hands caught her waist and boosted her onto the bench as if she were no bigger than a child.

  “Then why didn’t he come to meet me?”

  “Spring’s a busy time for ranchers. I had to drive to town for feed and salt, so he asked me to pick you up.” He climbed onto the bench beside her. “It’s a long ride. Too bad I hadn’t counted on the rain, or on the stage being late.”

  As if that had been her fault! “Well, at least you got to spend a couple of hours in the saloon,” she sniffed.

  “Uh-huh. Had a drink and won fifty dollars in a game of five-card stud.” His hands flicked the reins. The wagon plowed forward through the sticky mud.

  Struck by a sudden realization, she stared at him. “Wait—you were in the saloon when the stage arrived. You must’ve heard it stop, and you knew I’d be getting off. Why on earth did you leave me standing outside in the rain?”

  He shrugged. “I was holding a royal flush.”

  “Of all the oafish, inconsiderate—” Arabella squelched the rest of her tirade. McIntyre didn’t strike her as any kind of gentleman. If a woman got on his nerves, there was no telling what he might do. She could find herself standing alone in the mud.

  She resolved to hold her tongue for now. But she planned to have a word with Charles about McIntyre’s behavior. Such insolence! The man should be dismissed from service at once.

  They left the town behind. There appeared to be a road of sorts, but it was even rougher than the stage route from Laramie which, after five days of constant jouncing, had left her black-and-blue. The wagon swayed and groaned, its wheels lurching over rocks and sagging through puddles of mud. Rain poured down in a steady deluge. Peering out from under the oilskin, Arabella could see clumps of sagebrush on either side, but whatever lay beyond that was obscured by darkness.

  At least the horses seemed to know where they were going. They plodded along at a calm pace, ignoring the rain that sheeted down their sides. McIntyre sat hunched over the reins, water drizzling off his hat and streaming down his sheepskin coat. His very silence was an affront, as if he didn’t consider her worth the bother of polite conversation. Clearly, for whatever reason, the man didn’t like her.

  At least she could try to discover why.

  “How long have you been working for Charles?” she asked.

  “I don’t.” He didn’t bother to look at her.

  “You don’t work for him?”

  “No.”

  So much for asking Charles to fire the man. “You’re a friend of his, then?”

  McIntyre didn’t reply.

  “A neighbor?”

  “You could say that.”

  “Then you’ll be my neighbor, too! I suppose Charles told you we were going to be married.”

  Did McIntyre flinch beneath his coat? Maybe she’d just imagined it, Arabella thought as she waited for the response that never came. Where were his manners?

  “Did you hear me?” she demanded. “I said Charles and I were going to be—”

  “I heard you.” His voice was a growl. What was eating at the man? Arabella was tempted to give him a lecture in courtesy. But that, she sensed, would be a waste of breath.

  She’d done her best to make pleasant conversation. But if her driver wanted to be rude, she wouldn’t trouble him further. Instead she would pass the time as she had on the train and inside the dusty, rattling stagecoach—thinking about Charles, their wedding and their future.

  She had known Charles Middleton all her life. They’d grown up next door to each other in Boston. Everyone who knew them had assumed they’d marry one day. When Charles’s aging father had died last year, his older brother, Frank, had inherited the family estate and ship-building business. Charles had used his own generous inheritance to buy a Montana cattle ranch complete with a two-story house, corrals and outbuildings, and a herd of five thousand cattle.

  “I’ll send for you next spring, dearest,” he’d promised her at the railway station. “While we’re apart I’ll have a crew remodeling the house into a home to make you proud—a home where we can raise our children and live happily for the rest of our days.”

  Charles wasn’t the most reliable of men—his enthusiasm often overran his better instincts. But in this case, he had kept his word. After the tickets arrived, Arabella had passed the long winter days sewing her trousseau and planning her wedding. She wasn’t sure what life would be like on a Montana ranch. But as long as Charles was there, she knew she’d be happy.

  She imagined standing before the preacher, wearing Grandma Peabody’s wedding dress and gazing up into Charles’s tender blue eyes as she spoke her vows. I,

  Arabella, take thee, Charles—

  “Damnation!” McIntyre’s curse shattered her reverie. The wagon had halted, the way broken by a four-foot drop-off above a flowing torrent of muddy water.

  McIntyre purpled the air with half-mouthed curses. “Damn, blasted bridge is washed out. If we can’t ford the creek we’ll be stuck here waiting.” Turning, he thrust the reins into Arabella’s hands. “Can you handle a team?”

  “I’ve driven a chaise.”

  “That’ll have to do. Hold the horses steady till I get back.” He vaulted to the ground and strode off into the storm.

  Arabella peered through the murk. Fear uncoiled in her stomach and crawled up into her throat. McIntyre was probably looking for a shallow place to cross. But the water looked fast and deep, and so wide she couldn’t see the far side of it. What if he lost his footing and was swept away? What would she do out here alone if he didn’t come back?

  Minutes crawled past. The horses danced and snorted. She gripped the reins hard, praying the skittish beasts wouldn’t bolt. She didn’t want to die out here in the cold, dark rain. She wanted to make it to the ranch, marry Charles and spend happy years raising his children.

  The sound of the water was a dull roar. Was it deep enough to drown a man? Panic ran an icy finger up her spine. “McIntyre!”

  Her shout was lost in the storm. “Where are you?”

  “Right here.” He appeared on the far side of the wagon, tossed the branch he was holding into the back and climbed onto the seat. His trousers and boots were coated with mud.

  “Did you find a way across?” she asked.

  “Nothing sure. The smart thing would be to wait here till morning. We’ll have daylight then, and the water should be down.”

  “Oh, no!” Arabella responded with a horrified gasp. “We can’t possibly do that! Think of my reputation! Think how Charles will worry! We simply must go on!”

  McIntyre exhaled raggedly, shaking his head. “I had a feeling you’d say that. There’s a place upstream that might do for a ford. But if you get a soaking, don’t say I didn’t warn you.”

  “I’m soaked now!” she huffed.

  Without another word he took the reins, backed up and swung the team to the left. The wagon lurched over rocks and crashed
through clumps of sagebrush, stopping fifty yards upstream at the crest of a sandy incline that sloped down to the swollen creek.

  McIntyre studied the roiling current. “We’d still be better off waiting for daylight. I know what you’re thinking, but this is Montana, not Boston. Nobody here’s going to give a damn about your precious reputation. As for your virtue…” His eyes flickered toward her, and when he spoke again his voice was dry and cold. “Lady, you’ve got nothing to worry about there.”

  Arabella’s chin went up. “Believe me, if you did give me any cause for concern, my fiancé would have you shot.”

  Something between a snarl and a curse rumbled in his throat. “What the hell,” he snapped, “let’s go.”

  His big hands urged the horses down the bank. Stopping them at the water’s edge, he handed her the reins. “I’ll be going ahead to test the bottom and lead the team,” he said. “All you’ll need to do is hold on and keep them from moving too fast. All right?”

  Arabella nodded, feeling a vague chill of fear. The water looked swift and deep. Maybe she should tell McIntyre she’d changed her mind. But the idea of admitting he was right stuck in her craw. And the thought of Charles, waiting with open arms, sealed her resolve. She held her tongue as he stripped off his coat, lifted the branch from the bed of the wagon and swung to the ground.

  Without a backward glance, he walked to the head of the team and placed himself between the two husky bays. Even next to his horses, McIntyre looked powerful. He glanced from one animal to the other, as if reassuring them. Then with a voiced command Arabella could barely hear, he urged them into the flooded creek.

  Knee-deep, then hip-deep, he eased forward. One hand held the branch, which he used to probe the depth of the creek bed in front of him. The other hand controlled the horses, moving from one to the other. Arabella gripped the reins as the wagon swayed into the current. McIntyre was trusting her with his life, she realized. If she let the horses bolt they could drag him under and trample or drown him.