Cooking For Cowboy (Stampede Sizzlers) (23 page)

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Authors: Brenda Sinclair

Tags: #Brenda Sinclair, #cowboy, #series, #Calgary Stampede, #Romance, #steamy romance, #contemporary western, #Contemporary Romance

BOOK: Cooking For Cowboy (Stampede Sizzlers)
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“Thank goodness you weren’t at home when the guy did this. You could have been hurt or worse.” Leslie squeezed Amy’s hand.

Amy felt herself pale as she recalled the hate-filled expression in the suspect’s eyes.

“It’ll be okay,” encouraged Leslie.

“It looks like a tornado touched down. My beautiful home...” Amy fought back tears as she met Constable Wilson’s eyes. “My late husband used an inheritance from his grandparents for the down payment on this house, the year he set up his oilfield consulting firm. Allan loved the house and the yard so much. I’m just thankful he’s not here to see this.” She brushed a tear off her cheek.

Upon Allan’s death, the insurance paid the mortgage and the home had become hers. Coupled with his life insurance and other assets he’d willed to her, she would never want for anything. Except him. But she’d almost resigned herself to the idea of moving on with her life, although such thoughts frightened the daylights out of her.

“I’m sorry for your loss, Ms. MacArthur. Did your husband pass recently?” asked Wilson.

Amy heard the compassion in the other woman’s voice. “Killed by a drunk driver, two years ago this September. Thank you for asking.”

“Do you notice anything missing?” asked Constable Robertson.

“Everything is tossed around or turned over, but I haven’t noticed anything gone.” A strand of blonde hair had escaped from her ponytail, and Amy brushed it off her face and tucked it behind her ear. More tears threatened to fall as she gazed around the room, surveying the disaster.

“Let’s check the dining room and kitchen,” suggested Leslie, patting Amy’s hand.

“Okay.”

The second they entered the formal dining room, Amy gasped. An ornamental gray stone from the backyard’s raised flowerbed lay in the middle of the dark-stained hardwood floor. Scattered piles of broken glass from the gaping hole that had been one of the glass deck doors crunched beneath their shoes. Amy cringed, spotting the damage the razor-edged shards were doing to the floor.

“That explains how the little punk got in here,” she spat through clenched teeth. “How dare he invade my home like this?”

Her eyes riveted to her great grandmother’s mahogany table. Thankfully, it appeared unharmed. “When I paid my Avon lady last night, I left my change—about thirty dollars—sitting on the table there.”

“Okay. The suspect must have snuck into the backyard, peeked in the window, spotted the money, and decided to break in,” deduced Constable Robertson. “He probably figured if the security alarm sounded, he’d have plenty of time to grab the cash and disappear before we arrived. Anything else?”

Amy trailed her hand along the cherished antique table on her way toward the kitchen. The second set of sliding glass deck doors off the kitchen remained intact, but almost every oak cupboard door stood ajar. Drawers hung open or lay on the cork floor. She glanced around the room. “From what I can see, everything has been rummaged through, the same as the living room and family room, as if he was searching for something.”

Amy poked her head into the small room off the kitchen that served as an office. “I’m a writer, and I carry my computer with me everywhere along with my ereader.” She held up the oversized leather purse, just realizing now that the wide strap was still hooked over her shoulder. “He searched my filing cabinet, rifled through the papers on my desk, and tossed things every which way. Even the Murphy bed I’ve seldom used has been pulled down.”

Amy noticed the female officer exchange a look with Constable Robertson.

Sally Wilson met Amy’s eyes. “We should check upstairs, too.”

“Ms. Gibson, please stay here and answer a few questions.” Constable Robertson’s tone indicated it was an order and not a suggestion.

Amy glanced over her shoulder at Leslie and shrugged before heading down the hallway toward the curved staircase leading to the upstairs bedrooms. “What was that about?” she asked, meeting the female officer’s eyes.

“Sometimes a single woman’s home is targeted by…”

“A pervert,” whispered Amy, finally catching on. Fearful that she might discover lingerie missing from her dresser, she climbed the stairs to the second floor with lead-weighted feet. At least there’d be a female officer looking over her shoulder when she examined her underwear drawers.

Amy walked directly to her bedroom and approached her dresser. She took a deep breath. She grabbed an ornamental metal handle in each hand, eased open the top drawer, and peeked inside. Her bras and panties lay in neat piles, folded just like she’d left them on laundry day.

“Is anything missing?” Officer Wilson stepped closer.

Amy shook her head and checked the other drawers that contained nightgowns, camisoles, slips, pantyhose. “Nothing has been touched,” she confirmed aloud, breathless with relief.

“Good. I didn’t expect so, but you never know. We should check out the entire top floor.”

The officer stood by and observed while Amy checked the master bedroom walk-in closet and peeked inside the rest of her bureau drawers. Thankfully, she’d made the bed this morning and tidied the bathroom after her shower. Habits ingrained by her mother, a meticulous housekeeper for most of her life. Until the tragedy struck. Amy shook off the bad memories; she wouldn’t go there now.

“Nothing appears to be disturbed or missing.” Amy met Officer Wilson’s eyes. “Perhaps the intruder heard me pull into the driveway and fled before making it upstairs,” she speculated.

“Certainly could be the case.” Sally Wilson nodded in agreement. “Check the medicine cabinets. Do you have any prescription drugs he may have helped himself to?”

“There’s nothing he’d want, unless he can get high on multi-vitamins and birth control pills.” Amy remembered she’d shared the fact she was a widow. “Debilitating cramps,” she added.

“Been there.” Sally smiled, understanding. “It’s highly unlikely anything is missing then.”

After they inspected the other three bedrooms and the bathrooms including both medicine cabinets and discovered nothing amiss, Amy and Sally returned to the kitchen where Constable Robertson was talking with Leslie.

“Maybe the kid targeted the wrong house?” suggested Constable Robertson, exchanging glances with Wilson.

“What do you mean?” asked Leslie, wrapping a supportive arm around Amy’s waist.

“There was a known drug house on the next street over, same house number.”

“A drug house in
this
neighborhood. You’ve got to be joking,” blurted Amy.

“No joke. We shut the drug house down a week ago, but maybe all the riffraff on the street haven’t gotten the word yet. The punk we just arrested certainly hadn’t.” Constable Robertson shrugged. “Or he just broke in when he spotted the cash on the dining room table and turned your place upside down looking for more money or drugs.”

“Does that mean this won’t happen again?” Amy felt herself pale.

The intruder’s menacing words rang in her ears:
You tell the cops you can identify me, I’ll be back some night when you’re home alone.
Amy’s heartbeat quickened. She was home alone
every
night. Obviously, the kid hadn’t been observing her house for any length of time, or he would know she lived alone. He just assumed more than one person would inhabit such a large house.

Should she confide in the officers? Tell them about the kid’s threats? Or was the little thief just trying to frighten her with empty words? The police arrested him and hauled him away. Surely, he’d remain incarcerated. Unless the judge released him on bail or into parental custody? Oh God, if he was released, what was stopping him from delivering on his threat?

Not. One. Damn. Thing.

#

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Brenda Sinclair is an author of historical western and contemporary romance, a member of her local chapter of Romance Writers of America, a healthy lifestyle advocate and past leader of her TOPS weight-loss group, a gardening enthusiast and dog lover. She is young at heart, regardless of what her driver’s license says.

Brenda was raised on a farm in southern Manitoba and taught school on a semi-remote reservation in northern Manitoba where, during frequent visits to a nearby town, she met her husband, a Treaty Cree member of the local First Nations band. She worked in the accounting field for over twenty-five years. A few years ago, she retired and traded in numbers for words when she decided to be a full-time writer.

Brenda and her husband have been married for over forty years, and during that time they raised two sons. She is extremely proud of her three wonderful grandchildren.

She is currently completing Never A Bride, Book Three of the ‘Escape to Alaska Trilogy’. During writing breaks, Brenda enjoys walking the beautiful Fish Creek Park trails near her home in Calgary, Canada with her little dog, Kelly, checking out what Jack Abbott is up to on today’s installment of The Young and The Restless, or snuggling with Kelly on the sofa and enjoying a good book.

Brenda believes life is good, and for days that life isn’t so good, just get over it. There’s always tomorrow.

 

 

You can find Brenda at
:

 

Website:
http://www.brendasinclairauthor.com

 

Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/brendasinclairauthor

 

Twitter:
https://twitter.com/bsinclairauthor

 

Email: mailto:
mailto:[email protected]

 

 

 

To learn more about professional chuckwagon racing, check out
http://www.halfmileofhell.com/
to find information on its history, current rules and regulations, current drivers’ and outriders’ profiles, past stars (two- and four-legged) and the circuit schedule.

 

For information on the Calgary Stampede, check out
http://www.calgarystampede.com
.

 

 

Other Stampede Sizzler Titles Available

 

Hot For Cowboy by Wynne Holmes
http://amzn.to/10uYtAd

Reckless for Cowboy by Daire St. Denis
http://amzn.to/Zy5oX9

Gay for Cowboy by Jade Buchanan
http://amzn.to/10uYGDA

Burn for Cowboy by Jenna Howard
http://amzn.to/14CpJm7

Wild for Cowboy by Kymber Morgan
http://amzn.to/14L3xqf

Domme for Cowboy by Jenna Howard
http://amzn.to/Yx0Rtn

 

 

 

Check out other titles by Brenda Sinclair

 

 

A BANDIT CREEK MIRACLE

ebook and print available through Amazon
http://amzn.to/KgZu6U

 

WHEN DREAMS COLLIDE

Sequel to A BANDIT CREEK MIRACLE

ebook available on Amazon
http://amzn.to/Rm4no4

 

 

Escape to Alaska Trilogy

ebooks available through Amazon

 

NOT WHAT IT SEEMS

Book One

Amazon
http://amzn.to/M9jeio

 

ALMOST DOESN’T COUNT

Book Two

Amazon
http://amzn.to/OrLPf0

 

NEVER A BRIDE

Book Three

to be released in 2013.

 

Also coming in 2013

Book One in the Spirit Creek Series

(historical western romance)

 

# # #

Table of Contents

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Copyright and License

Acknowledgements

Dedication

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Excerpt from Love To The Rescue

About the Author

You can find Brenda at

Links and Other Stampede Sizzler Titles Available

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