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A Montana Christmas




  A Montana Christmas

  Coupled by Christmas, Volume 2

  Roxanne Rustand

  Published by Roxanne Rustand, 2020.

  This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.

  A MONTANA CHRISTMAS

  First edition. October 15, 2020.

  Copyright © 2020 Roxanne Rustand.

  ISBN: 978-1393061953

  Written by Roxanne Rustand.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

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  CHAPTER ONE

  Kristen Jones parked her pickup and horse trailer in front of her late grandmother’s house and slipped off her sunglasses. A sense of loss settled in her stomach as she zipped up her jacket against the Montana November chill and stepped out onto the sidewalk to survey the solid 1920’s Craftsman home.

  From out here, it was as beautiful as ever, with its full-width covered front porch and the towering pines shading the expansive lawn. As a child, she’d imagined the heavy stone pillars supporting the porch roof at each corner formed the spires of her castle.

  Those pillars would probably last another hundred years.

  The rest of the house, not likely.

  She sighed as she fingered the set of house keys Mom had mailed to her. Peeling paint hung in tatters from the wood siding, curling shingles on the roof promised a pricey replacement in the near future. One of the sway-backed wooden steps was broken. If the inside was just as bad...

  A gleaming black Ford 350 pickup pulled up in front of her car at an angle, its back bumper jutting well out into the street. The man behind the wheel glanced at himself in the rearview mirror, ran a hand over his pale blond hair, then opened the door and sauntered toward Kristen with a plastic smile on his lean, Nordic face. He’d sounded like a stereotypical used car salesman on the phone last week, and now she realized she hadn’t been far wrong.

  He extended his hand. “Kristen?”

  She instinctively recoiled at his self-satisfied demeanor and imagined her own smile was just as forced as his. She briefly returned his overly firm handshake. “You’re from Salt Creek Realty?”

  “Yes, ma’am. Eric Wright, at your service.” He gave her late grandmother’s house a long, disparaging perusal. “Shame about this old house. Renters rarely do a place any favors.”

  “Though I understand your Realty has handled the rentals?”

  He nodded.

  “And the maintenance as well?”

  “We hired a local guy, as needed. But now it’s been empty for a good year, and your mother wasn’t interested in the expense of any major repairs.”

  “Such as...”

  “New roof. Outdated 1970’s kitchen. The flooring all needs to be redone. New furnace. Air. Good thing you’ve decided to let it go.”

  “Mom says you have someone who wants to buy it.” She bit her lower lip, studying the leaded glass windows, the double front doors made of heavy oak.

  He lifted a shoulder in casual dismissal. “I’m willing to take it off your hands—mostly just as a favor to your family.”

  “Hmmm.” She suspected he was the type who never offered favors that didn’t include significant benefits for himself. Sparing him a narrowed glance, she turned back to the house. “As a B&B, Airbnb rental or quaint little restaurant, it does hold possibilities.”

  He gave a snort of derision.

  “What would you do with it?”

  “Bulldozer. It drags down property values on the entire street.”

  “And then what?”

  His gaze skated toward the old house, then hardened. “I’m not sure,” he hedged. “Someone might be interested in the lot someday...who knows.”

  From the calculating glitter in his eyes, she was pretty sure he already had plans—and why not? With the existing house—or not—the property was on the edge of town, with an acre of mature trees and beautiful views of the mountains.

  “Then I’m glad I came, because I had no idea that anyone would want to tear down this beautiful old home. I figured on staying a while, to see if I could spruce it up a bit before listing. And, I hope my horse and I can get in some trail riding before winter settles in.”

  “Have you been inside to see the water damage? The roof? The outdated plumbing?” Clearly incredulous, he lifted an eyebrow. “Do you have any idea how much money that would take? How much time? You can’t possibly think that a month could make any difference.”

  “Well, I—”

  He snorted. “Wait much longer and it will crumble away until there’s nothing left. A reno on a place in this condition could run a hundred grand or more.”

  “Back in Chicago maybe, in an upscale suburb where high-end finishes are the norm,” she fired back, feeling oddly protective of the old house.

  Grandma Tilly had been in a memory care unit for over four years before she died last summer. Except for a few of her things left in the locked attic, none of her possessions remained inside. Yet warm childhood memories had flooded Kristen’s thoughts from the moment she’d stepped out of her pickup, beckoning her to step back into Grandma’s world of fragrant, home-made bread and fresh baked pies.

  “The property is in your mother’s name,” Eric said, a testy edge creeping into his voice. “She told me that she wants it sold.”

  “It is, and she did. But...”

  A muscle jerked along the side of his jaw. “But?”

  Kristen tipped her head as she studied the old story-and-a-half house and considered her own uncertain future. She’d agreed to stay for a month—just one month and then be back home before Christmas. Mom had pushed her to consider staying long-term though, saying it might finally give her a chance to start her life over and bring her a sense of peace.

  But was that even possible? How could she ever put the past behind her, when it still preyed on her thoughts every single day? When nothing—no prayers, no counseling, no passage of time, could ever change what happened two years ago?

  “If I decide I want to stay permanently, she has offered me quite a deal.”

  “A town of seven thousand doesn’t offer many career options, you know. If you’re looking for a great job here, good luck with that.” His face reddening with obvious irritation, Eric waved an arm, encompassing the rest of Salt Creek. “And finding someone to rehab this house? Good luck with that, too. I’m just encouraging you to be practical.”

  It was a small town, that was true—surrounded on the east and south by vast stretches of grassland and thousand-acre ranches. But quickly rising foothills to the north and west led up into the Rockies, and heavy tourist traffic crossing the Midwest funneled through this area and up into the towering mountains. From the Internet searches she’d done, it was evolving from a ranching town into a pretty little jewel of a tourist town with shops replacing empty storefronts and B&Bs revitalizing some of the grand old homes that had once belonged to timber barons and wealthy retired ranchers.

  After a quick, silent prayer, she took a deep breath. “I appreciate your time, Eric. I know Mom asked you to meet me here and give me a tour of the house, but I think I can take it from here. Unless I find the place is beyond hope, I’ll be staying for a month—maybe more. I think I’ve just found myself a new home.”

  A new home? Where had that come from? Until this moment, it hadn’t even been a thought. Before leavin
g Minnesota, she’d even signed the lease for a commercial storefront building in a quaint suburb west of the Twin Cities, for the new start in life that she’d needed for a long time.

  “Whatever.” Eric gave a curt nod and handed her a business card. “When you change your mind, just give me a call.”

  SHE’D BARELY UNLOCKED the front door of the house when she heard the familiar clang of a horseshoe slamming against the steel tailgate of her horse trailer, followed by the sound of Tucker impatiently pawing the floor. She’d broken up the eleven-hour trip from Minnesota into two days, with stops every three hours to unload the old gelding and give him a break. But now he’d clearly had enough of the confined space and wanted out.

  After a whirlwind trip through both floors of the house, she hurried back out to her truck and tapped in the address for Six Pines Ranch on the dashboard navigation screen.

  She weighed her options during the five mile drive out into the country.

  Eric hadn’t been fabricating about the condition of the old house. There was water damage on some of the walls and ceilings upstairs, the outdated kitchen and bathrooms hadn’t changed a bit since Kristen was a little girl. The bubble gum pink fixtures in one bathroom and mint green in the other were decades out of style, and neither offered a shower. The old, musty carpeting—even in the kitchen and bathrooms, heaven forbid—had to go, but what was underneath? Hopefully hardwood, given the vintage of the house, but was it even salvageable?

  Ahead, a sign for Six Pines Ranch Quarter Horses appeared on the left, with a shiny new Creighton Vet Clinic sign hanging beneath it. She turned off the highway and followed a half-mile lane leading to a parking area in front of two horse barns, a smaller building, an outdoor arena, and farther up the hill, a sprawling log home with tall stone chimneys at each end.

  She turned off the engine and draped her wrists over the top of the steering wheel, still lost in thought over the enormity of work that Grandma’s house represented. At a knock on her driver’s side window, she startled, and turned to find a tall cowboy-type standing outside her door.

  Resting a hand on the roof of the truck cab, he leaned down and grinned. “Lost?”

  His sunglasses and the brim of his dove gray Resistol hid his eyes, but from that strong square jaw and those deep, slashing dimples, she guessed that he was one handsome guy and probably knew it.

  Just the type she’d always tried to avoid. Hadn’t she already made a mistake just like him?

  She touched the button to roll down her window. “I’m not lost if this is Six Pines. I’m Kristen Jones, and I believe Becca Creighton is expecting my horse today—for boarding.”

  He stepped back as she climbed out of the truck, and offered his hand and a warm smile. “Lane Creighton. Becca’s in town right now, but I can show you where to go.”

  So he was obviously married, then. Good.

  Still, she felt the strength and warmth of that brief handshake long after unloading Tucker and following Lane into one of the long horse barns, and she found herself studying him as he walked ahead. Some of the horses hung their heads over the Dutch doors of their stalls, watching the procession coming down the aisle. Lane spoke quietly to them as he passed, calling each by name. Giving several a gentle stroke on the side of their heads or on their gleaming necks.

  Tall and lean, with broad shoulders and an easy, athletic grace punctuated by the jingle of his spurs, he reminded her of a handsome hero in an old western movie. Becca was one very lucky girl.

  The wide, well swept cement aisle was flanked by roomy box stalls on both sides, the varnished oak stall fronts topped by vertical bars. The bright fluorescent lighting and clean scents of pine shaving bedding, leather, and alfalfa hay reassured her that her long-distance decision to board here had been wise.

  Lane pocketed his sunglasses and stopped at an empty stall halfway down the aisle with a hot pink note taped on the brass nameplate that said “Tucker,” and slid the stall door open. “Here you go. Automatic waterers are in every stall, and Becca already put some hay in the manger. We grain the horses at six am and six pm.” He looked at her over his shoulder and raised an eyebrow. “You already filled out the boarding questionnaire, right?”

  Life just wasn’t fair, giving a man such long, thick lashes and those whiskey-brown eyes. If he hadn’t yet appeared in magazine ads wearing designer jeans, it was only because he hadn’t been discovered.

  Swallowing hard, all too aware of her foolish—and inappropriate—reaction to him, Kristen nodded as she led Tucker into the stall and slipped off his halter. “I filled it out online. It was one of the reasons I chose Six Pines, because it sounds like you’re very thorough and careful. Are all of the horses here boarders?”

  He chuckled at that. “It would be easier if they were, but there’s just a dozen or so, in this barn. The rest are our own or were brought here for training. Becca loves this life so much that she would work night and day if we let her. C’mon, let me show you around.”

  After pointing out the tack room, shower stall, feed room, and attached indoor arena at the far end of the barn, he led her outside to the outdoor arena and gestured toward the riding trails leading up into the foothills—another reason this ranch had been appealing during her Internet search.

  Curious, she surveyed the various buildings. “I noticed a vet clinic sign out on the highway but didn’t see anything about it on the ranch website. Is it still here?”

  He tipped his head toward a sage green building on the other side of the second barn. “Just opened two months ago. I had an equine practice near Los Angeles, but the traffic and population finally got to me. It’s good to be back...though even here I’m getting too busy to ride as much as I’d like. Now I mostly just help Becca work the two-year-olds under saddle, when I can.”

  “Oh,” Kristen said faintly. So he was a vet, to boot—exactly what she’d wanted to be since she was a little girl, though few of her own dreams had come true. Not when Jeff...

  A cloud of dust boiled up behind a pickup traveling up the road leading to the highway. A moment later it pulled to a halt in front of the barn and a tall, slender woman with long black hair stepped out. Kristen blinked, glanced between them. Even though only twins of the same sex could be identical, the similarity between them was uncanny. “Um...are you Becca?”

  The woman exchanged glances with Lane, then laughed. “You must be Kristen Jones. I guess you’ve already met my big brother-by-three-minutes.”

  She certainly had. And now—unfortunately—the simmering attraction she already felt toward him would really need to be contained. She’d paid for just such a mistake with two years of marriage to a handsome charmer who hadn’t really loved her, and then she’d been left with crushing grief and guilt when the marriage met a tragic end.

  She would not make the same mistake twice.

  CHAPTER TWO

  Lane helped Kristen haul her two saddles and other equipment from the horse trailer into the tack room, then showed her where the trailer parking area was. When they headed back to Tucker’s stall, he grabbed a couple of Diet Cokes from the refrigerator in the tack room and handed her one.

  She gave him a tentative smile—still as skittish as she’d been since first meeting Becca—and accepted it. “Thanks. Well, um...it was nice meeting you. I’d better go.”

  Most of the women in his life—a grandma, two aunts, his sister—were talkers. Start a topic, and they could sometimes pursue it until he began to long for a tactful escape, but during the hour since he’d met Kristen, he’d gotten nowhere beyond cursory replies.

  Yes, she was from Minnesota.

  No, she wasn’t sure if she was staying in Salt Creek long term. A month, maybe two, then she had to get back to work.

  No, she wasn’t looking for a job in town...and so it went.

  Yet there something about her—an air of mystery, of deep sadness, and uneasiness that drew him, and made him feel he needed to help her somehow.

  He tried another tack
. “So, how long have you owned Tucker?”

  At that, she looked up at him from behind that long, glossy sweep of russet hair that kept dipping down over her forehead, and finally gave him a more genuine smile that lit a sparkle in her green eyes. “Is this an inquisition?”

  “We just don’t get many new folks around here,” he drawled. “So you are fascinating.”

  She snorted. “I’m sure that isn’t true, with all of the outside clients who bring training horses here. You just gave me a tour of the other barn, remember? Horses from Montana and three other states?”

  He dredged up the teasing smile that always seemed to make Myra, the elderly waitress at the coffee shop, grin back at him, wink, and proclaim that he was pure trouble. “Well...those clients aren’t as fascinating, then.”

  She considered that for a long moment. The shadow of something—was it grief?—dimmed the sparkle in her eyes. “Okay. I’ve had Tucker since I graduated from high school, so now he’s seventeen and still the best guy in my life, bar none. I brought him along since I’m still not sure how long I‘ll be in Salt Creek, and I also want to do some trail riding in the mountains.”

  Now, there was an interesting dismissal of the males in the human race. “Do you have a place to stay yet? My aunt Lucy is a Realtor, if you need one.”

  She stiffened. “Does she work with Eric Wright?”

  “Nope. He’s an agency of one, and so is she. They actually don’t get along at all.”

  At that, a faint smile touched her lips once more. “Then I might like your aunt very much, though I’m not in the market for property. I’ll be staying at my late grandma’s house in town—the Craftsman on the corner of Birch and Main, five blocks from downtown.”

  He thought for a moment. “Nice place—lots of pines, right? Though if I remember correctly, some of the windows have been boarded up for quite a while.”