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  How the town of Shotgun Ridge, Montana, came to be….

  In the 1800s, when William Malone went off to the city to sell a string of mustangs, he also had hopes of enticing folks to come back with him to help build a new town on the Montana plains where there was talk of the railroad going through. He left his young wife, Addie Malone, and their children in the log cabin he’d built just beyond a ridge, where the grass flowed like a carpet of green and a creek bubbled along a stand of cottonwoods. On the day he returned home—bringing four other families with him—he found his young wife standing on the ridge behind their cabin, a shotgun held in her hands, and five thieves lying wounded beyond the ridge. Impressed with her strength and bravery, they had their first town meeting right then and there and named their new town Shotgun Ridge.

  With those roots, there was no way the old folks were going to let the population dwindle. The only way to do that was to round up prospective brides and get the local bachelors hitched—pronto!

  Be on the lookout for some high-handed matchmaking, as Harlequin American Romance presents BACHELORS OF SHOTGUN RIDGE.

  Dear Reader,

  When I came up with the idea for this cowboy trilogy, I knew these rugged, handsome bachelors would be the main focus. But in creating the little town of Shotgun Ridge, Montana—a town that owed its origins to a brave, strong young woman, Addie Malone, who’d defended her home against thieves with a single repeating shotgun and a fierce determination to protect her family and homestead—I knew I had to create equally as strong heroines for these men, women who would do Addie proud.

  It was a woman who saved this town once, and with the help—or meddling, perhaps—of four well-meaning old matchmakers, it will be women who save it now. But convincing these perfectly happy, commitment-shy bachelor cowboys to say “I do” is going to take some doing.

  I hope you’ll come along with me as these determined heroines attempt to claim the love of three very special, yet stubborn, BACHELORS OF SHOTGUN RIDGE, Wyatt, Ethan and Stony, in: The Rancher’s Mail-Order Bride (6/00), The Playboy’s Own Miss Prim (7/00) and The Horseman’s Convenient Wife (8/00).

  I love to hear from readers! Please write to me at: PMB 262, P.O. Box 2704, Huntington Beach, CA 92647.

  Warmest regards,

  The Rancher’s Mail-Order Bride

  MINDY NEFF

  To my sister-in-law, Donna Goodger, whose faith, generosity and goodness I admire so much!

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Originally from Louisiana, Mindy Neff settled in Southern California where she married a really romantic guy and raised five great kids. Family, friends, writing and reading are her passions. When not writing, Mindy’s ideal getaway is a good book, hot sunshine and a chair at the river’s edge with water lapping at her toes.

  Books by Mindy Neff

  HARLEQUIN AMERICAN ROMANCE

  644—A FAMILY MAN

  663—ADAM’S KISS

  679—THE BAD BOY NEXT DOOR

  711—THEY’RE THE ONE!†

  739—A BACHELOR FOR THE BRIDE

  759—THE COWBOY IS A DADDY

  769—SUDDENLY A DADDY

  795—THE VIRGIN & HER BODYGUARD†

  800—THE PLAYBOY & THE MOMMY†

  809—A PREGNANCY AND A PROPOSAL

  830—THE RANCHER’S MAIL-ORDER BRIDE*

  Contents

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Prologue

  Well, it’s about to begin, and I’ve gotta hope there won’t be no shootin’ to go along with it.

  Ozzie Peyton tapped his pen against his journal and gazed at the photo of his late wife that held center stage over the fireplace mantel where most ranchers hung animal heads and prize antlers.

  I’m the one that done the writin’ seeing as I’m the romantic in the bunch. Plus, my sweet wife, Vanessa—God rest her soul—was a schoolteacher. I didn’t spend all them years helping her grade English papers and not learn a thing or two. Besides, Vanessa taught nearly every boy and man in this town. She’d approve of the plan; she’d want to see these fine young fellows get hitched and have babies.

  But left to their own devices, those boys would just go on about their merry lives and before you know it, Shotgun Ridge would die out from lack of procreating! It’s not right. The Good Lord started us out with a dang good plan and by dog, the citizens of Shotgun Ridge have abused the whole thing! We’ve all grown old and our offspring have moved on.

  And here we find ourselves in a town full of men.

  And those men seem to have forgotten that they have a God-given responsibility to the future of mankind.

  Well, me and Lloyd and Henry and Vern have cooked up just the thing to set these cowboys to rights. We all agreed that what we need are women and babies. The gettin’ part was just a little tricky.

  Especially when it comes to makin’ decisions. Like I said, I done the writin’—and I don’t for a minute consider any of it lies—but we all, me and Lloyd and Vern and Henry, did the deciding. (And Vanessa had a say in it too, but I don’t like to go on to folks about how Vanessa and me still talk. They’d think I was touched in the head or something).

  Anyway, what we decided was to put a picture in the magazines and run a couple of ads in the big-city papers to let the women know that we got an unbalanced situation here.

  Now, I imagine young Wyatt Malone might be a bit surprised to find that his good-lookin’ mug was flashed in the fancy magazines, but the boys and me, we figured he’ll get over it. Why it’s plain as the nose on a man’s face that Wyatt’s got a hole in his heart the size of a canyon and it needs healin’.

  The thing is, I gotta wonder if we made the right decision when we picked out our candidate from the mail we got. Course it’s a little late for second thoughts seeing as how she’s due to show up tonight.

  Ozzie paused and flexed his hand, working the kinks out of his old joints. He gazed at Vanessa’s portrait, gaining strength from her beautiful, soft eyes. Nodding, he licked the tip of his ballpoint pen.

  I’ve known Wyatt Malone all his life, and the boy’s as fair-minded as they come. And that’s a pretty good thing seeing as how Miss Hannah might be a bit of a surprise….

  Chapter One

  Hannah Richmond touched the crystal pendant at her neck. The necklace had been a gift from her Aunt Shirley. Hannah had visited her aunt’s farm often as a young girl, visits that had created powerful, poignant memories that were etched for a lifetime.

  To Hannah, the necklace was a symbol of what she desperately wanted for herself and her children—life on a ranch, a slower pace, love that was genuine. It was an ideal that had grown in her mind to near obsession, an ideal that had compelled her to drive from California to Shotgun Ridge, Montana to start a new life.

  To be Wyatt Malone’s mail-order bride.

  She still went into near hyperventilation about every fifteen minutes—each time she allowed herself to think about her nerve and the enormity of the step she’d actually taken.

  She put her hand on Ian’s shoulder, gave a reassuring squeeze, both for herself and her son. Just four years old and too often he felt like he had to be a little man. Having a father abandon you tended to do that. And it wasn’t fair.

  She shivered beneath her lightweight sweater, but didn’t want to go back to the truck to get a coat.
She might chicken out and keep right on going.

  No, she told herself, she wouldn’t. This was her ultimate dream and she intended to grab it with both hands. But she sure hadn’t realized that springtime in Montana would be this cold!

  Taking a breath, she pushed through the door of Brewer’s Saloon and paused, scanning the interior. The smell of beer, cooking grease, onions and sweet cigar smoke swirled around her. A sign over the bar admonished patrons to watch their language, that this was a family establishment. She smiled, eased a bit even though butterflies still knocked against her solar plexus, stealing her breath.

  The place was more restaurant than saloon, its name misleading. Booths lined two walls. Tables draped in red-and-white-checked cloths were scattered in no particular formation across the plank floor. Through chest-high, swinging saloon doors, a separate room housed a jukebox that played a Faith Hill ballad as cowboys unwound over competitive games of pool.

  How was she going to find him?

  “Mommy?”

  “Yes, Ian?”

  “Do we get to eat now?”

  “Soon, champ.” She’d been traveling in wide-open country for what felt like hundreds of miles, and she hadn’t passed a single fast-food restaurant. She was heartened to see that this saloon was indeed an eating establishment. Not that it had been all that long since they’d last eaten, but Ian seemed to be a bottomless pit lately. Probably the boredom of being cooped up in the truck.

  She was debating whether to order first and search later when she spotted him. Her heart lurched. Just like it did every time she looked at his picture.

  He was standing by one of the booths, smiling and talking with a woman dressed in western wear who looked to be around forty. It was hard to tell.

  But Hannah knew the man was Wyatt Malone.

  Her cowboy.

  She recognized him from the magazine picture she’d carried around with her—the one now tucked inside her purse. She’d memorized this man’s features, placed her hopes and dreams on him even though they’d never met.

  This was a man whose handwriting she’d traced a hundred times, but whose voice she’d never heard.

  With Ian clutching the back of her broomstick skirt, playing peekaboo with the customers in the booths and tables they passed, she made her way across the room.

  “Wyatt Malone?”

  He turned, did a double take. “Yes?”

  Her heart fluttered again. It had been a while since a man had done a double take, given her a quick distracted pass then let his gaze slam back. It did her tattered ego good.

  And it gave her hope. It let her know that the physical attraction was mutual.

  A person could build on physical attraction. She was banking on it.

  “I’m Hannah Richardson?” She hadn’t meant to make it a question, for heaven’s sake. She sounded like she didn’t even know her own self. Which could actually have some validity given the huge chance she’d taken by coming here.

  He grinned and tipped back his buff-colored Stetson. “Pleased to meet you. This is Cherry Payne,” he said, nodding to the woman who stood by his side. “My neighbor.”

  Cherry held out her hand and Hannah took it. “Nice to meet you,” Cherry said, though there was reserve in her voice. “You’re new in town.”

  “Yes.” She sensed the other woman expected more information, but Hannah wasn’t used to having intimate conversations with strangers. At least not about why she was “new in town.” She was still getting used to the idea herself.

  Cherry shrugged and looked back at Wyatt. “I’ll leave you be for now. Call me tomorrow and we’ll talk about that bull.”

  “Sure thing.” His tone was distracted, apparently because of where his gaze had just landed…and froze.

  Hannah lifted her chin and deliberately rested her arm on the shelf of her pregnant stomach. She’d told him about the baby, and about Ian. So why did he look so surprised? As though he’d never heard her name or hadn’t the slightest idea what she was doing here.

  She felt conspicuous and out of place with a room full of cowboys watching her, and an incredibly handsome one standing right in front of her, his eyes kind, yet full of questions.

  Fight or flight signals sent adrenaline pounding through her veins, making her dizzy. Her lips felt stiff and shaky with the effort she made at keeping her features pleasant.

  Then, Ian peeked out from behind her skirt. “Boo!”

  Wyatt leaped back doing a credible job of acting scared, which sent Ian into a gale of giggles. Watching him, Hannah realized that despite his pretense, he looked like he’d truly had a jolt. Then his cheeks creased and he smiled. “Hey, there, partner. Where’d you come from?”

  “California,” Ian said and hopped up in the booth. “Are you a w-wa-weal cowboy?”

  Hannah made a grab for Ian, who’d already clutched a handful of pretzels and was stuffing them in his mouth. “Slow down buddy.” His stuttering had improved considerably in the past few months, but he still bobbled his words when he was excited or unsure.

  “Yeah, I’m a real cowboy.” Wyatt took off his hat and brushed it against his thigh. “Have a seat,” he said to Hannah.

  “I’m here about the ad?” Well, duh, Hannah. Great opening line. She slid into the booth, shifting the bowl of pretzels out of Ian’s reach. Why did she keep making her statements sound like questions?

  His features cleared to one of recognition, as though he’d finally found himself on solid ground after somebody had given him a rude push. “Ah, yes, the stud.”

  “Excuse me?”

  “The bull.”

  “No, the bride.” She handed him the ad she’d already extracted from her purse.

  She was getting a bad feeling here. Wyatt Malone had gone red in the face. And deadly quiet. He held the magazine ad and stared at it as though he’d just awakened from a coma.

  That bad feeling inside Hannah grew. “Has there been a change? Mr. Peyton said—”

  His head jerked up. “Ozzie?”

  “Yes. I wrote to him first and he assured me the ad was legitimate. But he told you that, right?”

  Wyatt opened his mouth to answer, but an older man with steel-gray hair and piercing blue eyes rushed over to their table.

  “Hannah Richmond,” he said, taking her hand and holding it between both of his. “And this must be young Ian. Welcome to Shotgun Ridge. I’m Ozzie Peyton, remember me? We wrote…uh, that first time.”

  “I remember.” But apparently, Wyatt didn’t. He was still looking shell-shocked. “I think there’s been a mistake, though,” she said softly, holding Wyatt’s gaze with hers, her eyes as well as her tone asking a question.

  “Nonsense,” Ozzie said, dismissing her statement with a wave of his age-spotted hand. “You’re just feelin’ a bit awkward and overwhelmed is all, right Wyatt?”

  “I imagine that’s the case.” His words were slow and deep, his steady gaze unreadable.

  “Good. I’ll let you two get acquainted.” Ozzie fairly ran from the table.

  Wyatt smiled, though it felt wooden. He had that sick-in-the-gut feeling as though he’d just been mounted on the meanest bronc in the state and been bucked into the next county.

  Ozzie Peyton had some explaining to do.

  “Would you excuse me for a minute, Hannah?” He got up from the booth. Keeping his smile in place, he tried to act nonchalant. For the life of him, he couldn’t figure out why he didn’t just tell her how confused he was, that he’d never seen this ad before in his life.

  A color advertisement for a mail-order bride.

  The photo was definitely of him, there was no mistaking that. Taken at his ranch, with his hat on his head, a bandanna around his neck, gloves held in one hand, arm propped on the corral fence, booted legs crossed at the ankle, his horse, Tornado, bumping a nose against his shoulder. In the background was the verdant expanse of the Montana prairie and endless blue sky that made the state famous.

  “Flag down Maedean and order yo
urself and Ian a burger. They’re messy and greasy, but the best in the county. I’ll be right back.”

  With the ad clutched in his hand, he strode across the room at an agitated clip, his boots scuffing against the scarred plank floor.

  Ozzie Peyton stood behind the bar with Lloyd Brewer, the owner of the saloon. He had to give the old geezer credit for not hightailing it out of there when he saw Wyatt coming.

  Leaning his elbows on the bar, trying to keep his voice even and reasonable, he said, “What the heck is wrong with you, Ozzie Peyton?”

  “Now don’t go getting your teat in a wringer, Wyatt.”

  “You’re going to have more than that in a wringer if you don’t start explaining. That woman over there apparently thinks she’s here to be my bride. And from what I’ve gathered so far, she got that impression from you.”

  “Well, maybe at first. The rest she sort of thinks she got from you.”

  “Me?”

  “We wrote to her.”

  “Who’s we?”

  “Me and Lloyd and Vern and Henry.”

  The four geriatric musketeers of Shotgun Ridge. God help them all. “Why?”

  “Because it ain’t right, that’s why,” Ozzie said in a stage whisper that drew the attention of several of the cowboys bellied up to the bar.

  Great, Wyatt thought. Make the spectacle public. He glanced over his shoulder, noticed that Maedean was doing more chatting than order taking with Hannah Richmond.

  Double great. The waitress would have Hannah’s life history in a matter of seconds and the rest of the town would know it five minutes hence.

  Projecting fast forward, he saw events playing out in one of two ways. Either his neighbors would rib him for advertising for a woman—or string him up if he turned her away and caused her sorrow. Never mind that not a soul in town knew the first thing about Hannah Richmond.

  The men of Shotgun Ridge were sticklers over how men should treat women, be they sister, mama…or a pretty lady who had the innocent eyes of a fawn and the lips of a siren.