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The Cowboy's Pride and Joy (Harlequin Desire\Billionaires and Babies), by Maureen Child

A cowboy gets a baby surprise from USA TODAY bestselling author Maureen Child 

All former marine Jake Hunter wants is peace and quiet. But when his business-minded mother sends her assistant Cassidy Moore from Boston to see him about a long-standing family dispute, chaos ensues. Their attraction rages out of control as a snowstorm strands them on his Montana ranch. 

Flash-forward fourteen months: Cassie can't bring herself to tell Jake she's had his child. But when his mother interferes again, Cassie rushes back to Jake…just in time for another blizzard—and for the Christmas spirit to open one reclusive cowboy's heart.

  • Sales Rank: #1349504 in Books
  • Published on: 2014-11-04
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.60" h x .50" w x 4.17" l, .21 pounds
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 192 pages

About the Author
Maureen Child is the author of more than 130 romance novels and novellas that routinely appear on bestseller lists and have won numerous awards, including the National Reader's Choice Award. A seven-time nominee for the prestigous RITA award from Romance Writers of America, one of her books was made into a CBS-TV movie called THE SOUL COLLECTER.  Maureen recently moved from California to the mountains of Utah and is trying to get used to snow.   

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
"Wh en Boston comes to Montana, it's never a good thing." Jake Hunter frowned into the distance.

"You always were too hard on your mother."

Jake turned his head to look at the older man standing beside him. At seventy-five years old, Ben Hawkins didn't stand as straight and tall as he once had. But he still had a full head of snow-white hair, piercing blue eyes, and a face weathered and tanned from years of working in the sun.

"And you were always too soft on her."

Ben shrugged that away with a half smile. "She's my daughter."

"There is that." Jake nodded. "Anyway, if it all goes as promised, this will be the last time Boston comes calling for anything but a family visit."

"I've got to ask. Are you sure about this?" Ben pulled the collar of his coat up higher around his neck against the cold autumn wind. "I mean, what you're planning can't be changed. You're signing away your rights to the business your family built."

"Oh," Jake assured him, "I'm sure. This has been a long time coming, Pop." Jake shook his head. "Hunter Media has nothing I want. Never has."

And he knew how much that fact irritated his mother. She had always planned on Jake taking over the day-to-day running of the company built by her husband's family. The fact that Jake had never been interested really hadn't bothered her any. Elise Hawkins Hunter was nothing if not determined.

Ben snorted a laugh. "You always were more stubborn than anything else."

"Not stubborn." Jake took a deep breath, relishing the sharp, cold sting that hit his lungs. "I just know what I want. Always have."

Now he glanced around at the ranch he loved. The place that had been his solace and comfort when he'd come here during the summer as a kid—and when he'd returned here after leaving the military.

October in the mountains of Montana was spectacular. As though God was putting on a show just before the winter cold settled in. The trees were turning brilliant shades of gold, orange and red. Dark clouds scudded across a sky so wide and blue it almost hurt your eyes to look at it. From the corral and barn came the sounds of horses and the men working with them. And spilling out in front of and below the huge ranch house he'd built was Whitefish Lake, sapphire water surrounded by tall pines that dipped and swayed with the wind.

The view soothed the dark places inside him, just as it had from the first time he'd seen it as a kid. Jake had known even then that this was his place. Not Boston, where he was born and where his family created and ruled a dynasty. But here on the mountain where his grandfather had carved out a way of life that spoke to Jake's soul in a way that nothing else ever had.

"No," he murmured, gaze still locked on the lake below. "Boston has nothing to offer me that can compete with this place."

"Have to say I agree," Ben mused. "Though your mother never did feel the bone-deep connection to the land that you and I do."

That simple statement made Jake smile. Maybe a love of the land skipped generations, he thought. This ranch had been in Ben's family for more than a hundred years, always falling to the oldest child to maintain the legacy the Hawkinses had built since the first settler stumbled into Montana and staked a claim to the land. Until, Jake thought, his mother.

Elise Hawkins Hunter hadn't felt the pull of the ranch. His mother had been born and raised here, and she had escaped as soon as she was able. Going to college in Boston, she'd met and married Jake's father there and settled into the kind of life she'd dreamed of. No early mornings to take care of animals. No quiet stillness. No solitude when the ranch was snowed in.

She'd made plenty of trips to the ranch to visit her parents and sent Jake and his sister out here for a few weeks every summer, but Boston was her home as the ranch had never been.

Elise was still puzzled by her son's decision to walk away from moneyed sophistication in favor of hard work and empty spaces. But Jake had his own money—a fortune he'd built through good investments and well-chosen risks. He didn't need to enslave himself to a desk to get his share of Hunter Media.

His mother might not ever understand his decision, but she had at least, finally, accepted it.

"So when's your mother's assistant due to arrive?"

Jake glanced at his grandfather. "Sometime today, and with any luck, by tomorrow she'll be on her way back to Boston."

"Shame she had to fly all the way here to have you sign papers you could have faxed in."

"You know Mom. A stickler for details." Jake shook his head and hopped off the fence, his battered brown boots sinking into the soft dirt of the corral. "She wants the papers notarized and the assistant's a notary."

"Handy," Ben said. "But then, your mom's always been a thorough one."

Thorough. And stubborn. There was a part of Jake that still didn't believe his mother had given up on luring him back to Boston. But whether she had or not didn't really matter, did it? He wasn't going anywhere. Montana was his home. His sanctuary. Damned if he'd give it up.

Cassidy Moore's hands hurt after an hour of gripping the steering wheel tightly enough to make her knuckles white. Driving up a mountain was more harrowing than she would have thought. Maybe if the narrow road had been straight rather than curved with the occasional sharp right-angle turn, it wouldn't have been so bad. But those curves were there and so was the steep drop off the left side.

If she had known the kind of drive she was letting herself in for, she would have tried to rent a tank at the airport in Kalispell rather than the four-wheel-drive sedan she was currently driving.

"But then," she told herself, "a tank never would have fit on this road."

Seriously. The people who built the darn road couldn't have made it a little wider? Every time another car came toward her, she winced in anticipation of a horrific crash. The only good thing about this drive was that it wasn't the dead of winter. "Imagine dealing with this road in snow!"

Just the thought of that gave her cold chills. Ordinarily, she probably would have enjoyed this drive through the mountains, with the bright splashes of fall color on either side of her. But the threat of imminent death sort of took the fun out of it.

Cassidy was out of her element and she knew it. Born and raised in Boston, she had never been west of the Massachusetts border. She was used to busy highways, crowded streets and stoplights every block. In her world, tall buildings created shadowy canyons in the city and the sound of honking horns ensured there was never any quiet to be found. Still, she'd be fine. She was only here for the night, and tomorrow she'd be flying back to Boston with the signed paperwork her boss needed.

She pulled off the narrow road and followed a graveled drive up a sharp incline. When she came out from beneath the arch of trees, she simply stopped the car, turned off the engine and stared.

My son refuses to leave his little ranch, her boss had said. So you'll have to go to him and get these papers signed.

Little ranch.

Shaking her head, Cassidy got out of the car, her heels shifting precariously on the gravel beneath her feet. She did a slow turn in place, letting her gaze sweep across her surroundings before finally coming back to land on the "little ranch." There was nothing little about it. Granted, the only experience Cassidy had with ranches was what she'd seen on late-night movies. But this was no ordinary place. Jake Hunter's home was a mountain palace.

Two stories tall, the main house was wood and glass, with floor-to-ceiling windows on each story that would provide a wide view of the lake below. Pine trees huddled close to the house, so that it looked as though it was actually a part of the landscape rather than an intrusion. There were other, smaller houses scattered across the property, no doubt for the employees who worked here. Lucky them, Cassidy thought, since she couldn't imagine driving up and down that mountain every day for her commute. "Hello, young lady."

Surprised at the deep voice coming from directly behind her, Cassidy spun around so quickly, one of her heels caught on the gravel and her balance went wobbly. The older man snapped one hand out to take her arm to steady her.

"Didn't mean to startle you," he said, giving her a slow smile.

He was in his seventies, but his eyes were sharp and clear and his skin was like old leather from years spent in the sun. His smile was warm and the chuckle beneath his words was kind.

"Sorry," she said, holding one hand out. "I didn't hear you come up. I'm Cassidy Moore."

He took her hand in his and gave it a firm shake. "You're Elise's new assistant." Nodding, he added, "I'm her father, Ben Hawkins."

"She has your eyes."

His smile got wider. "My eyes, but thankfully she got everything else from her mother, God rest her." He took a step back and said, "You're here to see my grandson."

"Yes," she said, grateful for the quick change of subject. "I've got some papers for him to look over and sign…"

"My daughter's a fiend for paperwork," he said, then waved one hand. "Come along with me, I'll take you to Jake."

She glanced at her car, thinking about her purse lying on the front seat, but then she realized that this wasn't Boston and a purse snatcher wasn't going to reach in and grab anything. So she followed Ben Hawkins, taking careful steps that didn't come close to matching his long, even strides.

Cassidy had dressed to impress and now that it was too late, she was rethinking that. She wore black slacks, a white dress shirt and a cardinal-red waist-length jacket. Her black heels added an extra three inches to her measly five-foot-four frame, and in the city that gave her extra confidence. Here, walking on gravel, she could only wish for the sneakers tucked into the bottom of her bag.

But first impressions counted, and she'd wanted to come across as sleek and professional to her boss's son. So she'd find a way to maneuver over tricky ground and make it look good while she was doing it.

"It's a beautiful place," she said.

"It is that," the older man agreed, slowing his steps a bit. "I lived my whole life here, but in the few years Jake's been in charge he's made so many changes sometimes I look around and can't believe what he's done in so short a time."

She looked at him. "You sound pleased by that."

"Oh, I am." He winked at her. "I know most old men don't care much for change. But far as I'm concerned, if you're not changing, you're dead. So when Jake came to Montana for good, I turned over the ranch to him and said, 'Do what you want.'" Chuckling again, he added, "He took me up on it."

Smiling, she decided she liked Ben Hawkins.

"He started right out building the new ranch house," Ben said, waving one hand at the spectacular building on their left. "Designed it himself and even did a lot of the construction on his own, too."

"It's beautiful," she said, throwing another glance at the gorgeous house.

"It is," he agreed. "Too much house for a man on his own, though."

"On his own?" She frowned a little. "Don't you live there, too?"

Ben laughed. "No, I live there."

He pointed at one of the smaller buildings, and she noted that it did look older, somehow more settled, than the newer structures around it.

"It's the original ranch house and for me, it's home."

They approached a corral and Ben took her elbow to steady her as she stepped off the gravel onto soft dirt. Her heels sank and she grimaced, but her gaze was caught on the cowboy riding a big black horse around the interior of the corral.

The cowboy looked as comfortable in the saddle as she was in a desk chair. Animal and man moved as one and Cassidy stepped closer to the rail fence, mesmerized as she watched their progress. There was a cold wind blowing, yet she hardly noticed the chill as she kept her gaze fixed on the man on the horse.

"That's my grandson, Jake," Ben told her. "I'll let him know you're here."

Ben walked off but Cassidy didn't see him go. Instead, she studied the cowboy even more closely. And she realized why it was that her boss hadn't been able to convince her son to move to the city. A man that at home on a horse would never be happy in a city of concrete and cars. Even from a distance there was a wildness to him that intrigued her even as her mind whispered for caution. After all, she wasn't here to admire her boss's son. This visit was not only going to be brief, but strictly business as well. Which didn't mean, she assured herself silently, that she couldn't admire the view.

Ben whistled, sharp and short. Jake looked up, then looked to Cassidy when his grandfather pointed her out. She saw his features tighten and she told herself it didn't matter. But as he rode closer to her, she took a single step back from the corral fence.

Were all horses that big?

Jake Hunter swung down and leaned his forearm on the top rail of the fence even as he rested the toe of one battered boot on the bottom rung. Cassidy swallowed hard. Close up, he was even more intriguing.

Black hair, mostly hidden beneath his hat, curled over the collar of his brown leather jacket. His eyes were so blue and so hard, they looked like chips of ice. Black beard stubble covered his jaws and his mouth was thinned into a straight line. His jeans were faded and worn, and over them, he wore a pair of soft, light brown chaps that seemed to hug what looked like very long, muscular legs.

A swirl of something warm and intimate rushed through her and Cassidy took a deep, deliberate breath of the cold mountain air, hoping it would help. It really didn't.

"You're not what I was expecting," he said and his voice was a low rumble.

She could have said, yeah, same to you. But she didn't. This was ridiculous. She was here to do a job. This was her boss's son for heaven's sake, and standing there ogling him like an idiot was so not the kind of impression she had planned to make.

"Well, I'm pleased to meet you anyway," she finally said and held out one hand.

He glanced at her outstretched palm for a long second or two, then reached through the fence and took her hand in his. An instant zing of electricity shot up her arm to settle in her chest and send her heartbeat into a wild, hard gallop. Oh my. Only here for ten minutes and I am using horse metaphors.

Releasing her, Jake took off his hat and speared his fingers through his hair. Which only made things a little worse for Cassidy because really, did he have to have such beautiful, thick, shiny hair?

Most helpful customer reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Two stubborn people, one cute baby
By S. Frank
Very good book. Jake came back to the family ranch after his time in the Marines. After his experiences all he wants is peace, quiet and wide open spaces. His mother isn't happy that he has no interest in the family media empire back in Boston, but after several years of trying she has accepted his decision. All that remains is to sign off on the paperwork, so she sends her assistant Cassie to Montana with the paperwork. While she's there a blizzard strands her on the ranch and their attraction blazes hot. Fourteen months later a threat to her son sends Cassie to Jake for help. They have to find a way to deal with each other and do what's best for Luke. To top it all off, another blizzard has them trapped together again.

I really liked both Jake and Cassie. Both of them had things from their pasts that kept them from opening their hearts to the risks of love. Jake had come back from the war with memories that kept him from being able to celebrate the joys of the holidays. He also had locked away his heart from risking it on another woman. He had been married to a woman who hated his life on the ranch and had taken his love and destroyed it. He no longer trusted both his judgment about women, or that they are honest about their feelings. When Cassie shows up at the ranch the first time, he's attracted to her but wants her gone as soon as possible. From the beginning he senses that she's different, but can't bring himself to take a chance. When she comes back, this time with the son he didn't know about, he knows he's in trouble. He hadn't been able to forget her. Now it just takes one look at Luke for him to lose his heart to the boy. He's angry that he's missed out on so much and is determined to keep Cassie and Luke in Montana. He's still refusing to admit that he has feelings for Cassie because he expects her to be like his ex-wife. But as the blizzard hits and he sees Cassie doing things his ex never would have done, he wants to believe that she's different. And as the days go on, Cassie's actions start to tear down the walls that have kept him from believing he has a chance at happiness. I understood his anger at not knowing about Luke, and loved seeing him get all gooey over the boy. He may not have been expecting to be a father, but he was determined to be a real one, even if that meant marrying Cassie. His reasons for not celebrating Christmas were heartbreaking, but I really enjoyed seeing him get eased back into it by Cassie. When he finally realized what his feelings were and what he had to do, I loved what he did to show Cassie the truth.

Cassie has also been protecting her heart. As the oldest of three in her family, she remembers when her father abandoned the family and how hard her mom had to work to support them. Her mom died when Cassie was nineteen, leaving her to raise her younger brother and sister. Even though her brother is grown, with a family of his own and her sister is studying to be a doctor, she still avoids anything she considers irresponsible. Her attraction to Jake goes against everything she believes in, but she also decides that maybe she deserves a bit of fun. By the time she leaves after the blizzard, she realizes she's in love with him, but also that he has no interest in being loved by anyone. When she discovers she's pregnant, she doesn't tell Jake, convincing herself that she's protecting Luke from being abandoned by a man who can't or won't care about him. When her sister and brother conspire with Jake's mom to send Cassie running back to Jake, Cassie is left with no choice but to ask for his help. I liked the fact that Cassie admitted that she was wrong about keeping Luke a secret. She was surprised by Jake's determination to keep them on the ranch and stunned by his insistence that they marry. She refuses because she's in love with him but can't marry a man who refuses to allow himself to love her in return. While prevented from leaving by another blizzard, Cassie starts a campaign to change his mind about Christmas. I loved seeing all the little things she did to bring the holiday back into his life. I also loved seeing her throw herself into life on the ranch. Unlike Jake's ex, Cassie seemed to love everything to so with dealing with the blizzard. She also showed a great deal of interest in hearing about what Jake does with his days, which is more than his ex had ever done. In spite of her happiness on the ranch, and seeing how great Jake is with Luke, she is still planning to leave. It takes a stern talking to from her sister for her to realize that she's expecting Jake to do what her father did, and is planning to leave him before he can leave her, and that she's giving up without fighting for what she wants.

The epilogue was great. I loved seeing everyone a year later, after all their issues have been overcome. The Christmas setting was terrific with the focus on how important their families were to them.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
A father for all the wrong reasons!
By chb-book addict
This was a great story, with a wonderful plot and likeable characters. Jake Hunter came back to Montana from the military to run his grand-fathers ranch and live life in his own way. Although he's the heir to a major corporation he only wants to run the ranch. When his mother finally agrees to let his sister run the family business he agrees to sign away all right to that branch of the Hunter business. His mother sends her assistant Cassidy Moore from Boston to Montana to have him sign the papers, although they could have been completed electronically, she insists that she wants his signature, so Cassidy flies from Boston to Montana and then drives to the ranch in front of a coming storm. When she's ready to leave the next day, they are snowed in and she has to wait until the roads clear.

With the attraction between Cassidy and Jake, the time can't pass fast enough. Cassidy joins in to help on the ranch and quickly becomes a welcome guest to Jake's housekeeper, grandfather and the ranch hands. But Jake knows that he doesn't want any part of a city woman, he's tried that before and won't make the same mistake again. The doesn't stop him from wanting Cassidy though and they both lose that battle. When Cassidy returns more than a year later with his son, Jake is astounded and falls instantly in love with the child. Cassidy needs help because Jake's mother is planning to file for custody. Cassidy will not lose her son and she wants Jake to stop his mother. Jake can stop Mom but who can stop Jake?

Engaging read, fast and enjoyable this is one of the best books in this series. You will enjoy it.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
A Good Read That I Recommend!
By The eBook Investigator
I read 'The Cowboy's Pride and Joy' last night and enjoyed it. No way I could go to sleep until I finished this read.

The Hero: Jake Hunter, all six-foot four-inches of gorgeous male with black hair, blue eyes, and a body made for a woman's consumption. After two tours of duty and a two-year disastrous marriage to a retched woman who hated his ranch, he wants nothing more than peace and quiet on his grandfather's Montana Ranch that is now his to run. Although he was born and raised in Boston, every summer he and his sister visited their grandparents for several weeks and this beautiful ranch was in Jake's blood. It was his heart and soul, his future. He wanted absolutely nothing to do with the family empire, Hunter Media, but his mother was not about to give up easily on luring her son to the family business. Jake has sworn to never open up to a woman again, no male-female relationships...ever (except random sex occasionally), never marry or have children, no sharing his life with anyone but the ranch workers. He lives as a hermit to some degree and that's the way he's determined to keep it.

The Heroine: Cassidy Moore, a beautiful, blonde curvaceous woman who is outspoken and works as his mother's assistant at Hunter Media. Her life consists of work, work and more work. She is leery of relationships because she watched her father walk out on her mother, herself and her two younger siblings. Her mother went from man to man...to man! Cassie was left to raise her brother and sister and this great job she has at Hunter Media is allowing her to put her sister through college and eventually medical school. Her personal life has been on hold since the day her father walked out on his family and her mother decided men were more important than raising her three children. Unfortunately Cassie doesn't trust any man to stick around, so certain he will leave like her father did.

Sparks fly when she arrives at Jake's ranch in Montana. She has been sent there by his mother to have Jake sign the irrevocable papers giving up his chance to run Hunter Media. He does not like what being around her does to him and wants her gone posthaste. Then there's the blizzard that has them snowed in for almost a week.

Flash forward fourteen-months: Cassie has had Jake's son that he knows nothing about. She shouldn't have kept it secret but her reasons for doing so were somewhat valid. Jake had stated his case letting her know he wanted no relationship, no wife, no family or children. She deeply feared her son, Luke, would suffer heartache at his father's hand because she was sure he would reject him sooner or later since a child was not what he wanted. She also knew Jake didn't want her either. She couldn't allow Jake to reject her precious son like her father rejected his wife and children. When his mother interferes once again Cassie goes running back to Jake, the only one who can help her, with baby Luke in tow. Imagine his shock when he opens the door and there stands Cassie, the woman he has not been able to get off his mine for the past fourteen- months, with a baby on her hip that looks just like him.

My thoughts: I really liked this story, thought it was good but it could have been great with a few tweaks. I was bothered by the wounds that these two grown, educated adults clung to like a life raft. Wallowing in the pain and misery of their past, terrified to love and trust, to take a risk, take a chance, move forward, realize the knowledge that not everyone in the world is out to hurt them or leave them. For me that was just a bit too unrealistic and drastic and I found it to be quite immature for these two. Yes bad experiences can leave you wounded but it should not be that difficult to work through these issues and move forward making your life the best it can be. To open your heart again to joy, happiness and family.

I do recommend this book and will be watching for more of Ms Child's books.

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