Chapter One
"Annie, you can't keep putting
this off," Travis McCabe's deep voice rumbled over the phone lines.
Want to bet? Annie Pierce thought, giving
her soon-to-be-famous Texas-style barbecue sauce another stir. "I know,
Travis," Annie replied dutifully, reminding herself that Travis was not
only her neighbor again, and the closest thing her late father had ever had
to a son, but a person who had done her countless favors over the past two years.
Favors she had, as yet, done nothing to repay.
"It's just I'm very busy today."
Annie frowned at the four-year-old boys roughhousing in the middle of the kitchen
floor. Identical triplets, they all had her red hair and freckles, fair skin
and hazel-green eyes. They also had her fun-loving, feisty nature. Without,
unfortunately, the wisdom and judgment her thirty-three years of experience
brought.
Annie winced as her three sons rose in a tangle
of arms, nearly knocking a half-dozen just-sterilized mason jars onto the kitchen
floor. Annie dropped her spoon with a clatter and sprang into action to avert
disaster, putting her slender body smack in the middle of them. Phone cradled
between shoulder and ear, she used both hands to separate the wrestling trio.
"Tyler, Trevor, Teddy! You-all stop that
right now! "Figuring this was no time to be talking to her know-it-all
neighbor, Annie shouted into the phone, "I'll call you later, Travis!"
Then she reached over their heads, jammed the phone back into the wall-base
and, with a scolding look, put an end to the roughhousing once and for all.
"Honestly," she said in her enough-is-enough tone. "Can't you
boys behave for five minutes?" Completely exasperated, Annie stepped back
to the stove and turned the heat from low to simmer.
"He started it!" Trevor elbowed Teddy.
"Did not!" Teddy pushed Tyler.
"Hey, watch it!" Tyler tried to shove Teddy
and hit Trevor instead.
Immediately, they picked up the frey-for-all where
they'd left off. Once again, Annie vaulted forward and stepped in the middle
of them. "Boys! I'm warning you!"
"It's not our fault, Momma. We just got too
much energy," Trevor said.
Teddy, knowing a good excuse when he heard one, nodded vigorously. "Yeah,
I 'spect that's just it, Momma. We probably need to be playing outside or something."
"Yeah, running around would make us tired.
Then we would probably even take a nap!" Tyler enthused.
That'll be the day, Annie thought. In the foreground,
the clothes dryer buzzed, signaling the clothes were dry. Annie looked longingly
toward the laundry room. She really needed to get that. And it was a beautiful
day. Only ninety degrees so far that morning. By afternoon, it'd be over a hundred.
It would be too hot for the boys to be outside playing then. She'd have to keep
them inside, in the air-conditioning. In that sense, summers in Texas were as
bad as winters up north.
"You promise me you'll behave, and stay close
to the house?" Annie said sternly. All three boys nodded. "No more
wrestling. And no playing with the hose again. That was a big mess last night."
The trio took heed to her warning. "We'll
be good," they promised in unison.
"Okay," Annie said, unable to completely curtail a sigh of relief.
Her three precocious boys were a handful and always had been. "I'm going
to hold you to that. Find your sneakers now."
"Awww, Mom."
"Do we hafta?"
"Yes." Annie regarded them sternly. "No
shoes. No outside play. You know the rules."
While the boys scampered for their sneakers with the
Velcro clasps, she headed for the laundry room, where a mountain of laundry
awaited.
TRAVIS MCCABE DROVE slowly up the shady, tree-lined lane winding through the
Triple Diamond cattle ranch Annie Pierce had inherited from her father. Rolling
green pastures were interspersed with streams and enclosed with top-quality
brown creosote fence. Thanks to the hard work of Travis's ranch hands, the property
was still in top-notch shape and he wanted to keep it that way. Not an easy
proposition now that Annie had moved back to the ranch with her three boys.
Travis frowned as he neared the house. It looked
as if the second-story doors of the brand-new barn were standing open. Even
more unbelievably, he caught sight of two of Annie's triplets-impossible to
tell which ones since they were all identical-leaning over the edge of the loft.
The third was standing on the ground beneath them. Hands cupped around his mouth,
he appeared to be shouting something to his brothers above. They grinned, waved,
disappeared from view then popped back out again seconds later, hanging even
more precariously over the edge.
He wasn't sure what they were up to, but it was
obviously no good. Travis swore and cut the engine on his truck. Heart racing,
he vaulted out and hurried toward them. He only hoped he could get there in
time.
"LOSE SOMETHING?" Travis McCabe drawled.
"Travis!" Annie's breath caught at the
sight of him standing in her back door. Some five years older than her, he was
as handsome and commanding as ever in that uniquely Texas, cowboy way. Clad
in jeans, chambray shirt, boots and Stetson, he had one triplet braced on each
hip and another riding on his shoulders. All three of her boys looked chagrined,
as well they should, Annie decided, considering the runny white and yellow goop
smeared all over them and Travis's imposing, broad-shouldered six-plus frame,
too.
Annie neared the four of them as Travis gently
set down the boys, one at a time. Shaking her head at the sight of them, she
wondered what in the world had happened. The boys had only been outside for
about ten minutes. Travis wasn't supposed to be here at all. Though maybe it
was good he'd happened along, considering what the triplets had been up to this
time, she thought wearily. She peered at Travis's handsome face, taking in the
nicely suntanned skin, blunt nose and sexy mouth-all of which seemed to be hopelessly
smeared with something really yucky.
"Is that egg on your face?" Annie asked,
lifting her eyebrows in astonishment and looking into his twinkling golden-brown
eyes. "And...the boys?"
Travis swept off his hat, revealing cocoa-brown hair worn in a side part and
cut in short tidy layers.
He frowned at the messy goop staining the brim
of his creased bone Stetson. "It's not marshmallow cream."
"How did you-" she started, confused.
Then lightning hit. "Oh, no." Annie turned to the refrigerator, ducked
her head inside, came back out again. Hands on her hips, she regarded the boys.
"Not all two dozen!"
In unison, they shrugged their small shoulders
aimlessly, and tucked their hands in the pockets of their shorts. "Well,
we know eggs are baby chickens, 'cause we saw it on Mr. Rogers," Tyler
stated reasonably enough.
Trevor nodded enthusiastically. "The
baby chickens popped out of the eggs. And we know birds fly."
"And so we had to see if the ones in the refrigerator
could, too," Tyler explained.
Annie shut her eyes and took a deep, tranquilizing breath. Most of the time
she was proud of how brilliantly inventive, creative and precocious her children
were. But there were times when precocious times three twenty-four hours a day
was too too much. Annie opened her eyes. "How exactly were you doing this?"
Annie demanded, almost afraid to hear the answer.
Suddenly, all three boys got busy looking at their
toes.
Annie looked at Travis. He was so much taller than her boys. She couldn't believe
he didn't know how to duck. The only explanation had to be a surprise attack.
"Were they in the trees?"
Holding her eyes deliberately, Travis drawled,
"Try the loft."
The loft. "The hayloft?"
Travis spread his hands on either side of him.
"Is there any other?"
Annie's heart stopped at the thought of what could
have happened had Travis not come along when he had. Feeling all the blood drain
from her face, she pressed a hand to her chest and whispered a silent prayer
of thanks. Thank heavens the boys were all right. Although not exactly unscathed,
she decided as she dropped her hand and looked down at them once again.
"Uh-oh, guys, we're in trouble," Teddy
said, correctly reading the expression on her face.
"You bet you are," Annie fumed as the barbecue
sauce began to bubble over on the stove. She rushed to remove the heavy pot
from the burner then swung back around to her boys. "Time-out!"
"Awwwwwww, Mom!" they said in unison.
"One more word-one more sigh-and it'll be
the longest time-out you've ever had in your life," Annie said, even more
sternly.
Immediately, the boys fell silent. One by one
they climbed onto their chairs at the kitchen table and sat there glumly, their
arms folded truculently in front of them.
Satisfied everything was under control, for the moment
anyway, Annie turned to Travis, who was most in need of immediate attention.
"I am sooooo sorry Travis," she said, gesturing at his eggy state.
She swept a hand from his head to his toes. "Your hat...your shirt...your
face..."
Travis's eyes twinkled with amusement as, hat
in hand, he said, "Got it all, didn't they?"
"Thank you for riding to my rescue yet again,"
she said, noticing his frank perusal of her. Feeling self-conscious in her skimpy
white shorts, snug-fitting scoop-necked yellow T -shirt, and bare feet, Annie
backed up until she touched the kitchen sink.
Travis gave her that slow, sexy smile, the one that had always turned her legs
to jelly. He focused on her unmade-up face and loosely pinned-up hair. "You're
welcome."
Looking away, Travis stared at all the jars on
the table. "What's happening here?"
Aware her heart was pounding, Annie pulled a clean
dishcloth from the drawer and dampened it beneath the water faucet. "I'm
making the last of the barbecue sauce to take to the food exposition tomorrow."
Travis moved around beside her and leaned against
the counter. "I didn't know you were involved in that."
Annie turned toward Travis, inhaling the brisk
masculine fragrance of his cologne and the soapy-fresh scent of his hair and
skin. She handed him the cloth so he could wipe the egg off his face. "I'm
going to market my own sauce," Annie said, unable to completely keep the
pride and ambition out of her voice.
To Annie's irritation, Travis looked surprised. "That sounds like a tough
thing to do," he said, after a moment. He rubbed his face, getting about
half the smeared egg in a single swipe.
Annie's slender shoulders stiffened. Travis's
wasn't the first skepticism she had encountered, but for some reason she couldn't
quite fathom, it rankled the most. "It's a long and complicated process,
but I'm sure I'll get there eventually," she told him with determination.
He looked less sure. But to her relief said nothing
further to discourage her.
Seeing a spot he had missed, she pointed to his cheek. He dabbed just below
the spot. She pointed again. He scrubbed above it. Behind her, all three of
her boys began to giggle quietly.
"You do it, Momma. He'll never get it!" Teddy
said.
Figuring this probably could go on all day, Annie
took the cloth from Travis and got the spot he'd missed, just above his cheekbone,
being very careful not to actually touch him with anything but the cloth. Nevertheless,
her breathing was as erratic as if she'd just run a race as she completed the
task and stepped away from him. To her dismay, Travis looked equally distracted
in a decidedly sensual way, too.
Which was impossible, Annie told herself sternly.
Travis had always been handsome. Rugged. Appealing.
In that no-nonsense, take-charge, always-coming-to-the-aid-of-some-woman way
of his. But she'd never been personally attracted to him. Never thought about
him as anything but the cowboy next door.
If she was going all weak-kneed and silly on him
now, it had to be...her nerves... The... Well, the something. Anything. But
him.
"They got your car, too," Travis announced.
Annie dropped the dishtowel in the sink. "What?"
Travis inclined his head in the direction of the
mess. "Not to mention the sidewalk leading up to the house."
Annie shot another very disgruntled, disapproving
look at the boys.
Not surprisingly, they remained impervious to
all but the remaining dilemma of the "experiment" they had been conducting.
"We wanted to see if they would fly on the ground first, and when that
didn't work we took them to the loft," Teddy said, scrunching up his forehead
contemplatively.
"Hitting the car was an ax-cident,"
Tyler explained while Trevor nodded vigorously in his brothers' defense.
"We're sorry, Momma," Trevor continued
sincerely. "We didn't mean to make a mess."
Annie never had been able to stay irritated with
them for long. Especially once they recognized the error of their actions. "All
right," she said wearily. "Go in and wash up and put on some clean
clothes and then watch television, while Travis and I see to the mess outside,
"Annie said. "And no more trouble, boys," Annie scolded sincerely.
"I mean it. Or you'll all be in time-outs for the rest of the morning.
In separate rooms."
Nodding their agreement, the triplets leaped off
their chairs and rushed to obey Annie's instructions. Annie located and slipped
on her sandals, while Travis waited-somewhat impatiently this time. Why, Annie
couldn't begin to fathom.
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From the book: A Cowboy Kind of Daddy By: Cathy Gillen Thacker Imprint and Series: Harlequin American Romance Publication Date: December 1999 ISBN: 0373168012 Copyright© 1999 By: Cathy Gillen Thacker ® and are trademarks of the
publisher |