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Contemporary Cowboy Romance 3 Book Box Set
Contemporary Cowboy Romance 3 Book Box Set
Contemporary Cowboy Romance 3 Book Box Set
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Contemporary Cowboy Romance 3 Book Box Set

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Each one of these three contemporary cowboy romance stories is the first book in a series but they can all be read as a standalone story.

This box set includes:-

Learning To Love (Carson Hill Ranch: Book 1)

For Miranda, Newark has nothing to offer except a dead-end job, a crummy apartment, and an abusive boyfriend. But when her younger sister signs her up for an online dating website to prove to her the kinds of guys who would be interested in her, she starts an online connection with the perfect guy. He's handsome, he's a real-life cowboy, and...he's in his seventies!

Miranda steps off the bus to find the man of her dreams waiting for her, only he doesn't know it. His elderly father, concerned that his six sons are isolated on their highly prosperous 800,000-acre ranch signed up one of his oldest boys and did a little matchmaking behind their backs.

Now Miranda and Casey have a choice to make, but will they be willing to put aside their mistrust and give this a shot, or go their separate ways?

Mending Fences (Texas Heat Series: Book 1)

Marlene is one of the Red O’Connor’s kids and she’s got her dad’s fiery temper. Itching for something bigger, she left the family ranch in Texas and hasn’t been back for a while. Now, for the first time in months, she’s back on vacation where she meets Curtis Copeland who is working as a ranch hand on Circle O. The last thing Marlene wants is any form of relationship, she has a full life already and it’s not on the farm. Curtis has different ideas though; he’s waited ten years to finally have Marlene and fate or destiny delivered her to him. Yet everything seems to be working against them. Marlene’s family is dead set against the relationship and Curtis harbors a ten year old secret that can tear them apart. Whether they will be able to overcome the obstacles to be together is a question neither Marlene nor Curtis can answer.

Stranded, Stalked and Finally Sated (License To Love: Book 1)

Clara Roberts has found herself forced to flee across country, pursued by a madman who seems to have access to every aspect of her life. Consequently, she is off the grid and under the radar when her truck breaks down in a small corner of Southwestern, Oklahoma, and she finds herself at the mercy of a local cowboy. While she knows that she will eventually have to keep running to stay one step ahead of her stalker, she begins to find herself drawn to this man. With his support she decides that her life is something worth fighting for.

Shad Brandt wasn’t sure what to expect when he pulled over to help out the girl on the side of the road, but it isn’t long before he realizes that she was a lot more than he bargained for. He knows that she is running from something, but he can’t quite place his finger on what it is. However, he cannot turn his back on this woman in need and when he opens his home and his heart to her he finds something else entirely. So when danger comes to lay claim to Clara, he finds that he is willing to sacrifice everything to make sure she stays safe.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherGold Crown
Release dateOct 12, 2014
ISBN9781310665776
Contemporary Cowboy Romance 3 Book Box Set
Author

Amelia Rose

Amelia Rose holds a PhD in Literature and Language; she specializes in teaching positive, self-reliant principles to children and adults of all ages.  Dr. Rose lives with her husband and three children in the Hudson Valley, New York area, where she enjoys the outdoors and spending time with her family and friends.   Matthew Maley is an artist with nearly twenty-five years in the fields of Illustration and Design. His work has appeared in publications such as Archie Comics, Marvel, Disney, Nickelodeon, and Children’s Television Workshop. He lives in the Hudson Valley with his wife, daughter, and a variety of animals.

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    Contemporary Cowboy Romance 3 Book Box Set - Amelia Rose

    Learning To Love (Carson Hill Ranch: Book 1)

    Chapter One

    Get the rope! Get it cinched on there tight now! Bernard Carson called from his usual post, elbows propped on the split rail fence, overseeing the process of his two youngest sons helping with the calving. At almost seventy years old, the head of the Carson family no longer helped with the day-to-day process of running the ranch due to the years of hard physical work of being a drover, however his mind was still as sharp as ever.

    Got it, Dad, his youngest son called back, using his father’s ancestral term of endearment. Jacob pulled the rope tight on the emerging calf’s hind legs, pulling gently to help the heifer along with the birth of another head of prized cattle.

    Bernard twitched his hands against the wooden rail, wanting desperately to leap the fence and get in on the day-to-day work of ranching. It was one small part of what had drawn him to this open land in the first place, the opportunity to stake out a claim of land under an immense sky that stretched on forever, filling that land with thousands of head of cattle, and making the trek north with them year after year. It was what the cowboys of the Old West had done, and the connection he felt to them and their old ways was never more powerful than when he went about his work under the immense sky.

    Sure, some things had changed since then. The telegraph was gone and his ranch hands now carried satellite phones on their hips where cowpokes once carried revolvers. The plows pulled by oxen had been replaced by industrial tractors with enclosed, air conditioned cabs. The wagon train that moved a herd across thousands of miles of open, untouched land had been replaced with vehicles driven in shifts.

    But just as much as things changed, sometimes, things stayed the same, like the amazement of a calf being brought into the world, made even more amazing by watching his youngest sons go to work.

    Seamus tied off the rope with a slip knot against the post in the middle of the fence, ensuring that it would hold throughout the birthing but would cut loose in a moment if the mother was in distress. It was surprising his father was letting the two of them take this on considering how much was invested in this tiny, slippery calf. If it was a female, it would mean up to two dozen other calves in its lifetime. If it was a bull, that number would be tenfold. Every second counted to make sure that whatever price it would fetch, it happened intact.

    Finally, the tiny creature—well, tiny for a cow—popped out into the open, its eyes opening and closing in shock at the bright sunlight and stark change in temperature. Jacob reached for it with the burlap outstretched, but Bernard intervened.

    Leave her to it, son, she knows what she’s doing. This is her first time, but it’s an instinct, he called, amused at the way his two nearly grown sons, young men who could take on just about anything the frontier threw at them, were as giddy as new fathers themselves over the new member of the ranch and the miracle they had just taken part in. And he was right. The mother, unfazed by the difficult process she’d just endured, turned her massive head to her newborn calf and began to lick, warming it and comforting it. Jacob and Seamus joined their father at the fence rail and leapt the shoulder-height fence with a quick climb.

    I see it a hundred times a year and it amazes me every time, Bernard said, gazing at the animals with admiration. You did good, boys. It’s a proud thing to watch your own sons take on at the ranch. The three cowboys, two fresh-faced and excited, one seasoned and respected, watched the animals in silence for a moment before turning toward the house, dusting their hands in the sawdust then brushing the grime from their leather coveralls as they went.

    Bernard left Jacob and Seamus to clean up in the tack room adjacent to the barn and went into the main house. Walking into the foyer of the grand house never failed to leave him a little cold, feeling for the hundredth time the pang of loss of his wife, Margaret. She had been a true lady, even out here on the farm, and had always kept their home as a lady would. It had been only ten years since he’d lost her, dying shortly after the difficult birth of the last child to follow Seamus and Jacob, but it still hurt as though she had passed only yesterday.

    These days, her home was nowhere near as grand. It was far from in shambles, but it lacked the womanly touch she’d always brought to it. The silver bowls she’d brought from the city when she came to this ranch as a new wife once held flower blooms she cut herself every morning from her garden, a task she wouldn’t even leave to the hired help. Instead, it was normal to find a random collection of items in her silver, things men would leave lying around a ranch; a bowie knife, a wad of twine, a spur that needed repair, or some rusted nails.

    We need a woman around the place to make this a home again, Bernard thought wistfully, his mind immediately going to any of the six very eligible sons he had living on the ranch. Apart from the younger twins, there were a set of older twins as well, with two single brothers born in between. All of them were eligible to start looking, what with the older twins, Carey and Casey, being twenty-two for most of a year now. The trouble was the same problem they had with the cattle; eligible mates had to be found elsewhere.

    Part of why Carson Hill Ranch was known for producing the best herd was because Bernard had learned from his own family’s farming traditions that dated all the way back to his ancestors from Belgium. But whether it was sheep in the foothills of the Alps or steer in the Texas plains, one thing about these animals was universal, and that was the need to bring in outside mates from time to time to ensure a strong stock.

    Look at me, calling the future mothers of my grandchildren stock, the old man thought with some measure of disbelief. Maybe I’ve been at this too long.

    So, Dad, how’d the boys do? Joseph asked, coming up behind his father and patting him on the shoulder. That last calf came out okay?

    Sure did, the boys made proud work of it. But where are your older brothers? Shouldn’t they have been around for this? Bernard asked, his impatience showing on that last word. Unlike his sons, who’d grown up among the hired hands from the area and gone to school with some of the local kids, Bernard had spent his entire life on this ranch, even being schooled at home alongside the children of the ranch hands. By the time Bernard had inherited the ranch and began thinking of having a family, he had been some twenty years older than his somewhat younger wife. The two of them had been happy to stay isolated on the ranch, so much so that some days, Bernard felt as out of place on his own land because of the generation gap he felt all around him.

    They should still be working on that fence, if I’m not mistaken. We finally found the hole yesterday, and they were out before breakfast this morning to get to it before we have any more cows wander off.

    And you didn’t help your brothers? the old man asked, a teasing tone in his voice even as he prodded one of his two middle sons.

    Joseph laughed. I knew you were gonna say something about it! No, I’ve been out with one of the foremen all day, baiting for coyote. His father’s face darkened. I know, I know, you don’t have to say anything. But I’m sorry, Dad, it has to be done.

    Bernard had never understood the need to kill a weaker animal by luring it to its death. Taking out an aggressive scavenger that came onto your property was one thing, but actively bringing them to the land so they can die in pain, just to save a few cattle? That was more than he liked to think about.

    You know how I feel about it. I suppose this is why I have foremen, to make these decisions for me. But I don’t have to like it and you don’t have to brag about it, Bernard admonished.

    Yes, Dad, Joseph said, dropping his head a little. He hated to disappoint his father, but the coyotes had been coming to the ranch more and more frequently because of the lack of rain this past season, following the smaller prairie animals that came for the storehouses. But instead of catching the smaller animals, they ran the cattle to death instinctively. But it would be different if they came and took out an old or sick cow once in a while because they needed the food. They don’t even eat it. They just chase one until she dies, choking on her own tongue from exhaustion and fear. If you feel this sorry for a lousy coyote, try feeling sorry for the herd. That has to be a horrible way to die, especially when it’s for nothing.

    Of course, you’re right, my son, Bernard sighed. But when you get to be my age, you don’t like to think of anything dying. It’s too close to home! Joseph shook his head.

    Now we’re not having that talk, Dad. You’re not going anywhere, and neither are the rest of us. When I see the others, I’ll tell ‘em you’re looking for ‘em. He clapped his father on the back in farewell and headed back out to the stable to see to his horse.

    Chapter Two

    Ah! There you are, boys! Bernard called from his office as Carey and Casey passed by. Come in here, I want to speak with you!

    Casey dropped his shoulders in defeat, but Carey nudged him sharply with his elbow, reminding him to straighten up. It had been a long, hot day and the heat hadn’t let up in the slightest, even though the sun was nearly below the horizon. This is the time of day that even showering off in one of the dozen shower stalls in the washroom didn’t cool a man off any, no matter how cold the temperature of the natural spring-fed water. Casey straightened and put on a smile for his dad.

    What is it, Dad? Carey asked, always the polite one, the one who remembered to think of a lonely old man, even after a day of labor.

    Come, come. Sit in here. I was thinking today about the ranch and we need to have a meeting. Bernard stepped over to one of the wing-back chairs near the fireplace, a fireplace that hadn’t needed to be warmed since last winter but that still served as an unofficial forum for conducting ranch business. Casey shot his brother a look, imploring him to get them out of this quickly. Instead, Carey took the seat directly across from his father and leaned close, ready to hear what the old man had to say. Casey sighed quietly in defeat but not quietly enough for Carey, who shot him a warning glance. Casey lowered himself onto a thread-worn flowered sofa and stretched out.

    So, my sons, I was thinking today…about your mother. Casey sat up straighter and Carey bit his lower lip.

    What about her, Dad?

    I was thinking that we need to have a feminine influence here. Bernard interlaced his fingers in his lap and waited. Carey and Casey exchanged worried looks before Carey jumped up from his chair and reached for his father’s arm.

    That’s fantastic news, Dad! I didn’t even know you’d been looking for a wife! When will she get here? She won’t expect us to call her Mom, will she? Carey asked, a little too eagerly. Bernard looked at him in wide eyed shock before breaking out in a robust laugh, its sound echoing from the high exposed rafters above them.

    No! No, son, not me. I’m too old for that kind of thing! Who would have a man my age? He laughed some more before taking a deep breath and continuing. It’s you who need to find a wife, you and your brother here.

    Casey got up from the sofa and peered at his father. A wife? What? And just how do you propose we do that, sign up for an online dating service? he demanded. Carey punched him in the shoulder, reminding him to be respectful. Casey cleared his throat and remembered himself. In case you haven’t noticed, we’re not exactly swimming in eligible, hot girls around here. Seriously, Dad, are we supposed to put an ad in a newspaper somewhere? That’s how you find stud cattle for the herd, not a human being.

    Go ahead and laugh, smart guy, but it was a perfectly sufficient way for your ancestors to meet their wives, if I do say so myself. Girls came from the east by train back then, sight unseen, and showed up on the frontier to get married! Bernard sat up taller and bristled somewhat angrily at the insinuation that going looking for a wife was not good enough for his sons. And as a matter of fact, online dating is all the rage. I do watch the news, you know. Carey and Casey looked first at their father and then at each other before racing to their father’s desk and peeking at his computer screen to make sure he hadn’t posted their info and made profiles for them somewhere. Their faces fell when they saw he’d been on the lesser known Internet dating site, CowboyLove.com, and had created profiles for each of them.

    Wanted… Carey began reading.

    That’s wonderful, Casey interrupted. Right away, they’re going to think we’re trying to find a criminal, not a bride.

    Hush, you, Carey hissed before turning back to their father’s handiwork. Wanted, brides for the Carson Hill Ranch. Good stock, willing to breed-- Casey made an exasperated sound low in his chest, his face flushing from embarrassment, —able to endure the winters with the drive. Must be willing to accompany the herd…

    I added that part in especially for you, Bernard added, very pleased with his foresight. I remember being so lonely on the drives after leaving your mother back here at the ranch. A good wife would go with her husband as he drives the cattle. She could cook for everyone, right? But your mother was always taking care of you boys, and she wouldn’t leave you at the ranch, no matter how many local women I offered to hire to care for you. Casey shook his head slowly, still shocked and dumbfounded that his dad was doing this. It had to be a joke. There was no way this was real.

    Dad, this is so… Carey began, his voice trailing off as he realized he couldn’t find the words to finish his own thought.

    Stupid? Casey muttered under his breath, in a voice he was sure could not be heard by his elderly father.

    Thoughtful! Carey said too loudly, sending a message to Casey that he hoped his brother got, once and for all. But I’m not sure this is the best way to find a wife. Maybe next year, when we drive the herd to Wyoming, we can talk to some people, maybe ask around and see if any of the families we know can recommend someone to us. But you can’t just order a wife from the Internet the way we order plow blades from a catalog. And you certainly can’t expect her to come all the way out here just to…make babies.

    But of course you can! Look! I see it right here! Bernard got up and came over to the desk, clicking the mouse a few times to open some bookmarks he’d saved. See? These women want to make a new start, a fresh start out in the wide open!

    That’s because they’ve been to prison, Dad. That’s what they mean by a ‘fresh start.’ They want to move where no one knows about their past! Carey argued.

    Carey, Casey warned in a low voice, do something about this. I am not going to be bred like one of Dad’s old cows!

    My sons, sit back down and listen to me, Bernard began. Casey fought to maintain his composure, both from wanting to wash off the dirt from a long, hot day and finally eat a good meal, and from the prospect that his father had been posting information about him on the Internet like a pimp and wanted to talk about it. The last thing on his mind was listening to his father’s grand plans for matchmaking. When my ancestors first came to Texas, it took many, many weeks of travel. First, there was a whole ocean to cross, then there was almost an entire continent to cross, too. They arrived to find it was an empty place that filled men with empty feelings. It’s still a wonder to me to look out and see forever, to see so many stars, where all my relatives used to see was the little bit of sky that wasn’t hidden by the mountains around their village.

    But after such a long time to make it to their new home, the first Carson to try to stake a homestead claim had only been here for a short time before he knew this land fulfilled him in a way that the mountains never could. Here, he was a man who owned the very ground we walk on today. The Carson family ranching empire started with a small herd of only three cows and over the years, each generation built that herd into everything you see today. Now, I have a ranch that goes on for sixty miles in all directions, and a home with room enough for fifty men. What I don’t have is someone to share it with me, to stand on the edge of my land and let me say to her, ‘This is what my people built, and I share it with you’. You might think working the ranch is all there is and for right now, maybe you’re right. But there will come a day when you want to look back and know you built something more than just a ranch. You’ll want to know that you built a life.

    The boys stood quietly, absorbing their father’s heartfelt words. Losing their mother had been hard on them when they were young, but they barely remembered her. It was their father who had known her for much longer, who had finally found someone to share his life with after so long.

    When I found your mama, there was no Internet dating that you sneered at, Bernard said, flipping his hand in the direction of the computer to reflect their disgust with it. She came here because, like me, she wanted to be a part of something that could be all hers. Your mama wasn’t from the country, she moved here from a city, a loud and dirty place where no man, woman, or child could really breathe. Coming to this ranch for her was like being alive for the first time in her life. And yes, she and I took a long time to meet each other and get to know one another, but affection grows with time. You find a woman with the qualities that are important to you, and you treat her with the respect that is due to the person who gives you your children, and everything else will take care of itself. That is the way to happiness, my sons.

    Carey coughed awkwardly, humbled by hearing his father say more words at once than he often spoke all day, words that were filled with an undercurrent of longing for something he had lost. Well, Dad, you know best. Go ahead and submit those profiles, and we’ll just see what kind of response we get, right? He cringed at the thought of a woman showing up at the ranch, the kind of sturdy, grizzled woman who would be willing to even consider signing on for the life of a ranch wife, especially one who would come all this way with marriage on her mind. He couldn’t bring himself to envision it but he couldn’t argue with his father either, especially when Dad was apparently only thinking of them.

    Bernard dismissed his oldest sons with a nod, patting them on their work-hardened shoulders as they turned to go. They didn’t make it far before muffled laughter rolled down the staircase.

    You two look like you’ve seen a ghost! one of their foremen, Jack, called out as he came down the last few steps. Lemme guess, the old man had ‘that talk’ with you two? So you two are finally men now? He leered at his own joke, enjoying the look of absolute embarrassment on Carey’s face and utter humiliation on Casey’s.

    Real smooth, Jack. And try to remember that the ‘old man’ is my father and your employer. Do you make it a habit to eavesdrop outside my father’s office when he’s conducting business? Casey demanded, stepping up to stand face-to-face with Jack so quickly, Carey barely had time to put a hand out and pull him back. Jack only laughed harder.

    I sure do, ‘specially when that business is about somebody getting to dip his wick in a pretty young girl. If we get any good offers from that Internet site of your dad’s, maybe they’ll be plenty to go around. I won’t have to go visiting those strung-out, puny local girls if I had a wife of my own. He laughed as Casey lunged at him again, only to be held back by his brother. He turned to head back to the shacks that dotted the western edge of the property, his sickening laugh still sounding around them as he went.

    I can’t tell you how much I hate that man. Good people get thrown off their horses or run over by tractors every damn day. Why can’t he hurry up and do us all a favor, and get his brains kicked in? Casey seethed.

    You don’t mean that. Sure, he’s a horse’s ass, but he can get ten thousand cattle from here to Wyoming without losing more than a handful. That says something about the man. Besides, he’s been with Dad for longer than we’ve been alive. That must say something for him.

    Yeah, it says it’s time for him to go. He’ll be one of the first ones to be sent walking out on the prairie without so much as a dried up biscuit in his pail when we finally run this ranch.

    Well, hopefully, that day is a long time from now. Speaking of biscuits, I’m so hungry my stomach thinks my throat’s been cut. C’mon, let’s wash up and see what the kitchen staff has for us. Carey put one arm around his twin’s shoulders and led him to the back porch to the water stalls.

    Chapter Three

    So, I hear we’ve got some love birds out on the ranch, Emma said under her breath to Dee as they leaned against the corner of the brick bar, supposedly to entice men to come in. The sad handful of men who’d already been lured inside were either too broke or too drunk on whatever Crazy Mack passed off as whiskey to pay any attention to a couple of skinny working girls waiting outside.

    What are you talking about? Dee whispered back, a pathetic smile that was supposed to make her look alluring plastered across her face.

    Jack was in here two weeks ago for his usual, she said, rolling her eyes and making a face. and he said the old man at Carson Hill Ranch was advertising for wives for his sons.

    Really? Which sons are getting married? Dee asked, forgetting to pretend they weren’t having a conversation. Crazy Mack banged on the large front window of the bar with the thick plank of wood he kept handy for breaking up late night brawls, pointing a black-nailed finger at the girls and gesturing for them to knock it off.

    Does it matter? Emma answered after Crazy Mack went back to wiping shot glasses with the hem of his shirt. Have you ever seen all of ‘em up close? When they stand together, the six of them make you think you’re seeing paradise. I’m just saying, they don’t make ‘em ugly at Carson Hill, if you know what I mean.

    I ain’t never seen any of ‘em up close, just when they come through town to do some shopping. By damn, I’d marry one of the little boys if it would get me the hell outta here, Dee promised with a surly glance in Mack’s direction.

    "Well, I don’t know about ‘little.’ The youngest ones have to be getting big by now. The preacher told me last week that Old

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