Read The Cowgirl Ropes a Billionaire Online
Authors: Cora Seton
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Western, #Westerns
Save the kitten, or win five million dollars?
She dove for the black ball of fur even as the thought crossed her mind.
* * * * *
What the hell?
A kitten—a black ball of fluff no bigger than his hand—made a beeline across his path toward the foaming torrent beside them, and in an instant Evan knew exactly what would happen next.
Bella would dive for the kitten and save it. He would cross the finish line and win the show. He would have her hand in marriage for one year.
And for three hundred and sixty-five days Bella would hate his guts because once again his priorities betrayed his selfishness.
He didn’t stop to think what he might be giving up. For the first time in his life, he thought only of someone else. Diving for the kitten, he scooped it up before Bella could even reach it, and in a feat worthy of a pro-sports greatest hits reel he scooped up Bella in his other hand and hurled her toward the finish line.
She landed with a thud in front of Jake Cramer, flinging her arms out to stop herself from rolling into him.
“We have a winner!” Jake crowed and reached down to haul Bella to her feet.
Evan sat in the dirt, raised the kitten to his face, and stroked his cheek against its soft fur.
The kitten licked his nose.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
“Seriously? You’re still living in your trailer?” Rose Bellingham asked, leaning against the reception counter of the Chance Creek Pet Clinic.
“It’s going to take a week or two until the money’s deposited in my account, and I still have to figure out what to spend it on,” Bella said. She could have answered the question in her sleep; the jewelry store salesclerk was the fifteenth person to stop by this morning to question her housing arrangements. At least the flow was down from yesterday, her first day back at work. She’d thought all of Chance Creek planned to come by and ogle the town’s newest millionaire.
“So what was he like?”
“Who?” As if she didn’t know.
“The billionaire! Was he an old geezer on the make?”
“No.” Bella blushed, realizing what her vehemence betrayed. “No,” she repeated softly. “He was actually pretty nice.”
Rose exchanged a look with Hannah, who pretended to check over the day’s client files, but was listening avidly.
“Are you going to see him again?”
“I don’t know.” It had never occurred to Bella that as soon as the closing point ceremony was over she’d be plunked into an SUV and driven straight to the Calgary airport while one of the show’s legal advisors went over the huge list of do’s and don’ts that would govern her behavior until the show aired. Someone had packed up her belongings and the minute she entered the terminal, she was led through a maze of security checkpoints and right to her gate.
She’d assumed Evan was in another car right behind her, but she didn’t see him at the airport and when she asked, the legal advisor knew nothing about it. She couldn’t believe they didn’t get a chance to say good-bye or to make plans for the future.
But maybe Evan wanted it that way.
After all, he needed to race home to San Jose to find a wife, didn’t he? Someone to marry him and secure his company. He’d told her time and time again he’d like her to be that woman, but she’d spurned that idea. So now she was alone.
Bella snapped her attention back to the clipboard she held in her hand. She had a number of appointments this morning, including cats who needed their flea shots and dogs that needed their teeth looked at. She was busier than ever. No time for boyfriends or fiancés or anything of the sort.
“What did he look like?” Rose asked.
Bella didn’t look up. “I don’t know.”
“You just spent a week with him. You must know.”
Something snapped inside her. “Of course I know. He was hot, okay? Totally, smoking hot.”
“Brown hair?” Rose pushed.
“Yes.” For heaven’s sake, couldn’t she leave it alone?
“Tall? Broad shouldered?”
Seriously? She was going to do this right now? “Yes, now if you don’t mind…”
“Is he missing something important? Like a hat? What kind of a man doesn’t wear a hat?” Rose said.
“What on earth are you talking about?” Bella straightened and turned toward Rose, ready to shoo her right out of the clinic if she was going to talk nonsense. Rose, however, wasn’t looking at her. She was gazing out the window.
At the billionaire walking up to the front door.
“Shoot, he is hot,” Hannah said, her files forgotten.
As Evan opened the door, Bella reached for the reception counter to steady herself. She hadn’t realized how much she’d missed him, but it hit her now. She felt weak in the knees. Suddenly she couldn’t breathe.
Evan scanned the small room as he walked in and took in Hannah and Rose’s presence. He nodded to them but didn’t slow down. Instead he crossed straight to Bella, knelt down in front of her and pulled a small velvet box from his pocket.
“Bella…” He trailed off, his voice rough and unsteady. He tried to speak again and failed.
Somehow she knew what he wanted to say: That they didn’t know each other well enough to be married. That he knew she was her own woman and had her own plans. That she had enough money to fund her own dreams and didn’t need his. That he still wanted her—and only her—to be his wife.
“Bella,” he said again, taking her hand. “I can’t marry anyone else. I love you. But I have to marry someone within the next two weeks. Would you…please…?”
“Yes!” she said. She tossed her clipboard away and dropped down on her knees beside him. “Yes!” She didn’t care how crazy it was or how little they knew each other. She didn’t want anyone else, either. She loved him with all her heart and that was all she needed to know.
Evan surged to his feet, Bella in his arms, and kissed her until she couldn’t breathe anymore. “Are you sure?” he asked when they finally broke free. “Are you absolutely sure? We can write it right into a prenuptial agreement; if you’re unhappy when a year’s up I’ll let you go.”
“Is that what you want?” She pulled back from him. “Marriage for a year?”
“No.” He tilted her chin up and grazed her mouth with another searing kiss. “I want marriage forever. If I could, I’d put that into our vows. That once you’re my wife, you’re mine forever and ever.”
Bella grinned. “I think that’s in there already.” She placed a hand on his chest, wanting to know for sure that he was real. She felt his heart beating under her touch, strong and steady.
“Better be,” he said. “So what do you think? Will you marry me? Will you be my wife?”
“Yes.” Joy overwhelmed her and she trembled as she gazed at him. Could this be happening to her? Could she really be so lucky? “I know it’s crazy. It’s all happening so fast.” Rose and Hannah still watched them, wide-eyed, and Bella turned their way, feeling like she owed them an explanation. “We got to know each other really well while we shot the show.”
“Obviously,” Hannah said. She grinned. “Oh, my goodness; it’s so romantic. I think it’s great! You deserve to be happy, Bella!”
Rose inched closer, craning her neck until Bella realized she was trying to see the ring Evan had placed on her finger. Bella clutched Evan’s arm with her right hand, but lifted her left hand into view. She knew the jewelry store salesclerk wasn’t evaluating the ring’s worth, although from Rose’s swift intake of breath she figured it was worth a lot. Instead, the woman was listening to the ring, or feeling its emanations, or however her crazy brand of psychic worked. She waited, heart in her mouth, for Rose’s pronouncement on their chances for happiness. She knew too many cases of Rose calling it right to doubt her abilities.
After a long moment, Rose flashed her a grin and a thumbs-up, skirted the counter to grab Hannah and pulled her into the back, closing the door behind them. More relieved than she could say, Bella turned to Evan, just in time to meet his kiss. Desire crashed over her as she pressed herself to him. She wanted him close, wanted him never to leave her again.
“I should have phoned you and let you know I was coming,” he said when they finally broke free of each other.
“No. I’m just so glad you came. I don’t care how it happened,” she said. “I missed you.”
“I missed you, too. I didn’t know if you wanted me, though. I mean…mmph!”
Bella leapt into his arms and kissed him until she couldn’t kiss him anymore, trying to show him just how much she wanted him and always would. “I won’t ever let you go,” she murmured finally into his neck.
“I will always listen to you. I promise,” he said. “I will always be here for you.”
“We’ll save all the animals and all the people.”
“I can’t wait.”
CHAPTER TWENTY
When you send a kitten down the center aisle of a church, trailing after a tempting ribbon dangled by an adorable flower girl, you have to figure your odds of it reaching the altar are mighty slim, Bella thought. Nevertheless, she smiled happily at the sight of the black feline tripping down the aisle, two rings tied to the collar around its neck. Behind it walked Hannah, her maid of honor, and Morgan, who to her surprise had been overjoyed to be her bridesmaid. Although as she put it, it should be bridesmatron. She’d gotten to know Morgan well over the past couple of weeks. Since she wasn’t as stressed out about money and losing her clinic anymore, Bella had found that Morgan, Rob, and the rest of the gang were more than willing to include her in their fun.
She lifted her eyes to where Evan stood at the altar in a dark jacket cut to perfection over his muscled frame, his eyes shining back at her with love and happiness, and her heart thrummed with an emotion she couldn’t even name. Love, of course, but something more; something like wonder.
She was marrying Evan. Not because he’d won her in a contest, but because she couldn’t imagine life without him, and he felt the same way.
Hannah and Morgan had both helped her plan the last-minute wedding. Morgan had endless energy for organizing and getting things done, and Bella no longer wondered why Hannah found her such good company.
The two women also agreed to help her find the best way to spend her new millions—and maybe some of her husband’s billions—to the best effect for Chance Creek’s homeless animals. She couldn’t wait to get started…right after her honeymoon, that was. She and Evan agreed they needed a little more time off from their normal busy lives and had booked a safe, steady cruise down to Mexico for some R and R.
She glanced up at her father, who held her arm as they walked down the aisle. At first he’d hemmed and hawed and rumbled uncomfortably when she brought up the idea of a ranch and rehabilitation center for old and injured horses, but now he’d thrown himself into the plan. He’d come close to tears the day she went home and told him she loved him, and she had a feeling from the way he held her arm so tightly now that the old man might get misty again today. She couldn’t believe they’d both harbored so much guilt about the day Caramel died that they’d nearly lost each other forever. Clothed in a bright blue mother-of-the-bride dress, her mother sat in the front row next to Craig, beaming with happiness back at Bella as they progressed toward the front of the church.
A lightbulb flashed, she winced and frowned for a moment as she took in the cameramen and film crew off to the left. She hadn’t realized her contract contained language that allowed Madelyn to document any significant changes in her life that happened because of winning the show. At least that clause ran out in a couple of months. She didn’t need a film crew hanging around forever. She saw Ellis take Madelyn’s hand and she forgave them just a little. She’d seen the ring on Madelyn’s finger earlier and the way the two looked at each other when they thought they were unobserved.
She met Evan’s gaze again, and smiled when the flower girl—Evan’s niece, Katy—and the kitten—arrived at the altar and Evan’s brother, Nate—his best man—bent down to untie the rings. Katy picked up the kitten and snuggled it as she made her way to sit by her mother in the first pew. Bella reached the altar herself and took her place beside the man she loved.
* * * * *
Evan didn’t think anyone could be happier than he was when the country preacher, Joe Halpern, pronounced them man and wife and he bent to kiss his bride. He hoped no one could read his thoughts, as he considered the night—and the lifetime—ahead of him. He couldn’t wait to be alone with Bella, but for now he’d take the time to get to know her friends—his new community.
This small chapel and country style wedding was a far cry from the society wedding the paparazzi always seemed to expect him to have, but it suited him just fine, as did the fresh, delicious food served at their reception and the local band that began to play as soon as dinner was consumed.
Nate caught up with him when he took a break from the dancing. “I guess I can’t be too angry that you found yourself a wife. Although I think you’re pissing away the family fortune on those pie-in-the-sky environmental ideas you have. I hope you’ll invest at least a portion of it in something solid like oil and natural gas. And your niece and nephew’s college fund.”