Read Not the Marrying Kind Online
Authors: Christina Cole
Tags: #historical, #historical romance, #western, #cowboy, #romance novel, #western romance, #steamy romance, #cowboy romance, #mainstream romance
www.secretcravingspublishing.com
ABOUT THE Ebook YOU HAVE PURCHASED:
Your non-refundable purchase of this ebook allows you to only ONE
LEGAL copy for your own personal reading on your own personal
computer or device.
You do not have resell or distribution
rights without the prior written permission of both the publisher
and the copyright owner of this book.
This book cannot be
copied in any format, sold, or otherwise transferred from your
computer to another through upload to a file sharing peer to peer
program, for free or for a fee, or as a prize in any contest. Such
action is illegal and in violation of the U.S. Copyright Law.
Distribution of this ebook, in whole or in part, online, offline,
in print or in any way or any other method currently known or yet
to be invented, is forbidden. If you do not want this book anymore,
you must delete it from your computer.
If you find a Secret
Cravings Publishing ebook being sold or shared illegally,
please let us know at
[email protected]
A Secret Cravings Publishing Book
Sensual Romance
Not the Marrying Kind
Copyright © 2014 Christina Cole
Ebook ISBN: 978-1-63105-069-5
First Ebook Publication: January 2014
Cover design by Dawné Dominique
Edited by Julie Reilly
Proofread by Rene Flowers
All cover art and logo copyright © 2014 by
Secret Cravings Publishing
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED:
This literary
work may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any
means, including electronic or photographic reproduction, in whole
or in part, without express written permission.
All characters and events in this book are
fictitious. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead is
strictly coincidental.
PUBLISHER
Secret Cravings Publishing
www.secretcravingspublishing.com
The Cravings Ebook Club
The Cravings Paranormal Ebook Club
Have you heard about the newest idea in
ebooks, the ebook club? Secret Cravings Publishing has two ebook
clubs, The Cravings Ebook Club or the Cravings Paranormal Ebook
Club, and we invite you to become a member.
As a new member, you will receive
Trouble
With a Cowboy*
by Sandy Sullivan and
Forget Me Not**
by
Jaden Sinclair FREE, just for joining!
You’ll also receive
4 BRAND-NEW
EBOOKS
, specially selected by our Editorial Director, every
month in a variety of genres for a total price of only $9.99 for
all 4. This comes out to barely $2.50 per book,
much less
than the retail price and you’ll be able to
enjoy your books
even before
they are uploaded to the
popular sales sites. One of several privileges of club
membership.
*
Trouble With a Cowboy
, a western,
erotic romance:
Can some slashed tires and an ornery bull
bring two hard-headed people together for some fun in the sun and a
little more?
**
Forget Me Not
, paranormal erotic
romance:
A war is brewing, a war that could destroy an
entire vampire race if left unchecked, and Julian Marino has been
requested to participate in it. He stops his search for a
long time friend to go home and discovers there is more at stake
than just his wants.
We will try to match your books to your
preferences, however, if you’re a major paranormal fan, we suggest
you join the Cravings Paranormal Club. Everything is the same
except that three of your four books will be paranormal. The
remaining book will be of a different genre.
As a club member, you will also receive:
our monthly newsletter
sneak previews of new books
exclusive interviews with your favorite
authors
special offers not available to the general
public
To join, visit the Secret Cravings
Publishing website. At the bottom of the page you’ll see a button
for the club. You can sign up there and share your preferences for
genre, format and heat level with us. You will be charged,
automatically, through PayPal, only $9.99 every month. Your books
will be shipped within 1 day after PayPal payment has cleared. You
may cancel at any time by clicking on the “unsubscribe” button
located on the Cravings Club tab at the bottom of our website and
keep the FREE BOOKS as our gift.
We hope our Secret Cravings books will
delight you each and every month.
Best wishes,
Beth Walker
Sunset, Colorado, 1872
“That’s not the way Mama does it.”
Mischief danced in the little girl’s blue
eyes. Her cheeks were flushed—a sure sign she was up to
something—but her angelic face and strawberry-blonde ringlets gave
the appearance of innocence. She clasped her hands in front of her
and smiled sweetly at her older sister.
Kat Phillips stood in front of the oven.
Heat spilled through the tiny kitchen, making it hard to breathe in
the stifling air. The tightly-cinched corset she wore didn’t help
either. She was in no mood for any of Emily Sue’s pranks.
“Doesn’t matter,” she said with an air of
confidence. “Mama’s not here, and this is the way I do it.”
The kitchen was not her domain, and the
confidence was a sham. Dressed as she was in a ruffled gingham gown
with frilly petticoats beneath the long skirts and a hideous bustle
accentuating her behind, Kat felt as out of place as she looked, a
silly goose among a flock of chickens, pretending to be a hen.
She knew little about cooking, less about
baking, and most likely her twelve-year-old sister was playing
tricks again…wasn’t she?
Emily’s ringlets bobbed as she frowned and
shook her head.
“You’re supposed to add sugar.”
“Sugar?” Kat glanced toward the tin
canister, unsure. “I don’t think so. These apples are sweet enough
the way they are. Now, scoot.” She shooed her little sister away.
“I’ve got to get this pie in the oven, and I’d say the biscuits
should be about ready to come out.”
Her stubborn sister didn’t budge.
“Mama says you’ll never get a husband unless
you learn to cook.”
“Well, Miss Smarty-pants, it so happens I
don’t want a husband.” Kat pushed a lock of sweat-damp red hair
away from her cheek. Earlier, she’d braided it, coiled it, and
plaited it atop her head in what were intended to be fashionable
loops. Already she was coming undone and her hair along with
it.
“Liar.” Emily folded her arms. “Every woman
wants a husband.”
“That’s nonsense. Now, step back.” With her
patience growing thinner moment by moment, Kat’s words were a clear
warning. She grabbed a dishrag and reached for the oven door.
“That won’t work. You’ll burn yourself. You
better put those on.” Emily pointed to a pair of thick, quilted
mitts.
“Scat!” Kat snapped the dishrag and chased
her annoying little sister from the room. She headed for the stove,
then stopped, picked up the mitts, and slipped her hands inside.
Slowly, she opened the oven door. Heat rushed at her, nearly
knocking her across the cluttered kitchen. Her mother would scold
her for making such a mess, but Kat was doing the best she could
under the circumstances. She staggered backward, tripped on the
spindly legs of a chair, and went down, landing on the hard wooden
floor with a thump of her bustled bottom and a
whoosh
of her
long skirts and petticoats.
Clumsy, awkward clothes! She hated fancy
dresses, but it was Thursday night, company was coming, and Pa
insisted she gussy up for dinner.
Muttering under her breath, Kat scrambled to
her feet. She cast a cautious look over her shoulder and groaned.
Earlier, she’d dropped an egg while beating up her batch of
biscuits. Yep. She’d managed to fall in the exact same spot, and
now she’d have a most unattractive stain in a most embarrassing
place.
Had she been the sort of woman who cried,
she would have done so, but cursing was more Kat’s style.
“Damn, damn, damn,” she muttered. “And
double damn,” she threw in for good measure, grateful Emily was no
longer close by, and grateful, too, that her father’s room was far
enough away he couldn’t hear the expletives pouring from her
mouth.
She’d never had a civilized tongue. Growing
up, she’d spent most of her time with her brother, Robb—God rest
his soul—and together they’d hung out with the ranch hands,
emulating their casual, laid-back manner and their colorful use of
language.
A simple
damn—
even a
double
damn—
was a mild expression compared to some of the oaths she
knew.
Kat eyed the stove again. Her wary gaze
focused on the oven door. With careful steps, she edged closer.
After re-adjusting the mitts, she reached
out, opened the door once more and peeked inside, disappointed by
the burnt, misshapen lumps of dough that were supposed to be
biscuits.
Damn it to hell! If her mother expected her
to cook a decent meal, she should have at least left some
instructions instead of hoping Kat would somehow figure it out on
her own.
But that’s how Amanda Phillips was. Folks
learned best by doing, she believed. But no matter how many meals
Kat tried to cook, the results always came out the same. In a word,
disastrous. She got flustered and clumsy, couldn’t keep herself or
her ingredients organized, and she never could wrangle the right
temperature out of that confounded wood stove.
Fortunately, her mother usually did all the
cooking, serving up wholesome, delicious meals for her family and
for the men who lived and worked at the Rocking P Ranch.
Of course, that was before. Things were a
lot different now.
Things had changed around the ranch, and
around the nearby little town of Sunset, as well, which was why
Amanda was away from home so much of the time. Ever since old Doc
Carder gave up the ghost and went to his reward in the great
beyond, there wasn’t a physician to be found between Sunset and
Denver, except for Abner Kellerman. No woman in her right mind
would want that old drunk birthing babies, so it was Amanda
Phillips who stepped in, visited the women in town, and saw to it
that the next generation arrived safely into the world.
Unfortunately, newborns seldom chose
convenient moments to emerge from their mothers’ wombs, and the
dinner-hour, as often as not, seemed their favorite time, second
only to middle-of-the-night arrivals.
“Reverend Kendrick’s coming to dinner, you
know.”
At the sound of the voice, Kat whirled
around. The pan of biscuits slipped from her hands and clattered to
the floor.
“Emily Sue, you’ve got to stop sneaking up
on me that way!”
“I wasn’t sneaking.”
“Yes, you were.” She stooped down to
retrieve the biscuits. Hard as rocks! She picked them up and tossed
them into the garbage bin. “And of course the reverend is coming to
dinner. He always comes to dinner on Thursday evenings.”
“Mama says he’d make a fine husband.”
“Already told you, I don’t want a husband.”
Even if she did, it sure as Hades wouldn’t be Virgil Kendrick.
“Now, you’d better go wash up before I paddle your butt—” Her hand
flew to her mouth. “Your behind, I mean. You didn’t hear me say
butt
, right?”
Emily rolled her big blue eyes. Someday,
when the little girl grew up, she’d have an entire repertoire of
feminine wiles and flirtatious gestures, Kat suspected. Now, a
dramatic sigh slipped from her rosebud mouth. “Of course I heard
what you said, but give me a nickel and I won’t tell Pa.”
“A nickel? That’s outrageous. I’ll give you
two pennies, no more.” She fished two copper coins out of a
wide-mouthed Mason jar Mama kept on the table. Tithing money went
into the jar every time somebody paid Mama for her services. Ten
percent, given to God. Pa put tithing money into the jar, too,
whenever he got paid for odd jobs. Of course, when the government
paid in full on the beef contracts, all of that money went right
into the bank, and Pa made a fine show of writing a check for the
family’s tithing and handing it over to Reverend Kendrick.