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  Addie Malone, brave frontierswoman and founder of Shotgun Ridge in the 1800s, would be proud to see the town’s bustling rebirth. Just last year, it was nearly extinct. But thanks to the efforts of four matchmaking old men, Shotgun Ridge is bursting at the family seams once more. Now it was time for a new bachelor roundup—and this time the town’s preacher will be standing on the opposite side of the altar!

  “Oh, right. It’s every day that some nutty woman bursts into your life and asks you to marry her without even shaking your hand,” Amy said.

  Dan grinned. “Usually a marriage proposal prompts more than a handshake.”

  “That’s just it. I don’t know any of the rules. I have no earthly idea how to be a preacher’s wife.”

  “Same as any other wife, I’d imagine.”

  “You’re a minister!”

  “Yes.” His chocolate eyes went serious. So serious, she shivered. “I’m also a man.”

  Dear Reader,

  Happy New Year! Harlequin American Romance is starting the year off with an irresistible lineup of four great books, beginning with the latest installment in the MAITLAND MATERNITY: TRIPLETS, QUADS & QUINTS series. In Quadruplets on the Doorstep by Tina Leonard, a handsome bachelor proposes a marriage of convenience to a lovely nurse for the sake of four abandoned babies.

  In Mindy Neff’s Preacher’s In-Name-Only Wife, another wonderful book in her BACHELORS OF SHOTGUN RIDGE series, a woman must marry to secure her inheritance, but she hadn’t counted on being an instant wife and mother when her new husband unexpectedly receives custody of an orphaned baby. Next, a brooding loner captivates a pregnant single mom in Pregnant and Incognito by Pamela Browning. These opposites have nothing in common—except an intense attraction that neither is strong enough to deny. Finally, Krista Thoren makes her Harlequin American Romance debut with High-Society Bachelor, in which a successful businessman and a pretty party planner decide to outsmart their small town’s matchmakers by pretending to date.

  Enjoy them all—and don’t forget to come back again next month when a special three-in-one volume, The McCallum Quintuplets, featuring New York Times bestselling author Kasey Michaels, Mindy Neff and Mary Anne Wilson is waiting for you.

  Wishing you happy reading,

  Melissa Jeglinski

  Associate Senior Editor

  Harlequin American Romance

  PREACHER’S IN-NAME-ONLY WIFE

  Mindy Neff

  To Anne Jenkins

  My high school pal and treasured friend.

  I’m so proud of your accomplishments. You go, girl!

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Mindy Neff published her first book with Harlequin American Romance in 1995. Since then, she has appeared regularly on the Waldenbooks bestseller list and won numerous awards, including the National Readers’ Choice Award and the Romantic Times Magazine Career Achievement Award.

  Originally from Louisiana, Mindy 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 at her second home in Parker, Arizona.

  Mindy loves to hear from readers and can be reached at P.O. Box 2704-262, Huntington Beach, CA 92647, or through her Web site at www.mindyneff.com, or e-mail at [email protected].

  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†

  834—THE PLAYBOY’S OWN MISS PRIM†

  838—THE HORSEMAN’S CONVENIENT WIFE†

  857—THE SECRETARY GETS HER MAN

  898—CHEYENNE’S LADY†

  902—THE DOCTOR’S INSTANT FAMILY†

  906—PREACHER’S IN-NAME-ONLY WIFE†

  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

  Epilogue

  Prologue

  Ozzie Peyton laid out his journal as he did every night, preparing to record his thoughts and feelings, but he hesitated before picking up his pen.

  The logs in the fireplace crackled merrily. Above the mantel, he gazed at the portrait of his beautiful Vanessa. Each day he missed her even more. She was his rock, his conscience, his best friend and confidante—that she’d crossed over to the hereafter didn’t change any of those facts.

  Perhaps he was a crazy old man, but the bond between them seemed to grow stronger each day—not that he was about to admit that to anyone. Folks might start whispering about him losing his faculties, you bet. And that simply wasn’t the case.

  Now, his late friend, Ben Marshall, well, there was a shocking leave of absence from the senses, you bet.

  He picked up his pen at last and began to write:

  I must say, I never dreamed my conversation with my old buddy, Ben Marshall, would set such an unorthodox plan into action. Heck, when Ben called several months back, asking about Pastor Dan Lucas and what type of a man he’d turned into, I’d been only too happy to expound on the boy’s attributes. Maybe I shouldn’t have been so puffed-up and shootin’ my mouth off about this here matchmakin’ venture me and the boys—that’s Lloyd, Henry, Vern and me—have gotten into. So far, we’re doing right well, even if I do say so myself. Woman and babies and happy families. Love is in the air, and that’s as it should be.

  Still, I like to have a little more control over matters, and my boasting just might have watered a seed that was planted years ago—watered it a little too good, is what I’m thinking. There are sure to be plenty of raised eyebrows in a few days’ time.

  He gazed up at his sweet Vanessa, then looked away to the inky blackness of a clear star-studded night beyond the window. Vanessa would probably have a thing or two to say on the subject of meddling in the preacher’s life. Not that Ozzie himself had precisely been the one to meddle—more’s the pity he hadn’t thought of it first.

  Then again, it was risky business taking credit for the events that were already set in motion. The ramifications of it backfiring were huge.

  Ozzie licked the tip of his Bic pen and set it to the paper again.

  I tell you, I could hardly sit still in the sermon this morning at church. It’s clear as day that Dan Lucas considers himself safe from matchmaking, but preachers need love and happily-ever-after, too, you bet. After all, the boy is always insisting he’s simply a man—albeit a man with a message to tell and a gift for gab and showmanship.

  Still, I never imagined my old buddy, Ben, would up and die on us suddenly, or that he’d wave that fool betrothal agreement in everyone’s faces this way. Why it was a boyhood pact, for goodness’ sake, a lark, easily forgotten.

  Matchmaking and being on hand to watch the fireworks is one thing. Doing it from the grave is quite another. I figure me and the boys’ll need to keep a close eye on this here shebang. I just hope like heck my buddy, Ben, didn’t make a big mistake.

  Chapt
er One

  It wasn’t often that Dan Lucas found himself with time on his hands. As the minister in the small town of Shotgun Ridge, Montana, his days were constantly filled with people. Oh, he enjoyed it. Immensely. He wouldn’t trade his life here for anything.

  Each day brought changes and new challenges. He derived great satisfaction from seeing his friends find what they were searching for in life—Wyatt, Ethan, Stony, Cheyenne and Chance had all married and started families within the past year or so. Dan had gone to school with all of them, raised some Cain and gotten into his fair share of trouble with them, too, before he’d settled into his own calling.

  They had a history, he and these people of Shotgun Ridge. A bond. More than a few people had been surprised when he’d decided to follow his father into the ministry.

  He supposed getting a DUI citation while driving old man Grisby’s tractor might have fueled that surprise.

  Most days Dan considered himself content. More than content. Then others, he felt a pang. He didn’t spend a lot of time questioning or worrying, though. The future wasn’t in his hands.

  The afternoon, however, was. Amazingly, he was free for the next six hours.

  He looked out the back window of the medical clinic to the empty parking lot beyond. The patient he’d stopped in to see had left, and so had the doctors, Kelly and Chance Hammond. Needing to make a couple of phone calls, he’d made use of the clinic’s phone rather than walk back across the street to the church office, and promised to lock up on his way out. As a rule, folks didn’t lock their doors here in Shotgun Ridge, but since the clinic housed drugs, it was the exception.

  Before he shut the blinds, he gave a wave to Eddie Housen, who was riding around in his snowplow, looking for stray patches of snow to scrape. Eddie had gotten a new scoop for the front of his two-ton pickup and, like a kid on Christmas morning, was itching to use it. Too bad the weather wasn’t cooperating. Bits of snow still clung to the ground and piled in muddy mounds of slush along the roadside, but they hadn’t had any new snowfall in over a week.

  Dan laughed out loud at the forlorn look on the man’s face. Nothing worse than having a new piece of machinery and not being able to have any fun with it. If there’d been icy snow on the ground, Dan might have been tempted to hitch a ride with Eddie and see if the guy would let him have a turn at the wheel.

  But he had other plans. Anticipating a much-needed date with a certain chestnut gelding in the stable across the road at his ranch house behind the church, Dan closed the door of the back office and started down the hall. He could already imagine the brisk winter air on his cheeks, biting at his ears beneath his Stetson, sneaking beneath the cuffs of his leather gloves.

  Montana in the winter was misery to some, but Dan loved it.

  The sound of paper crinkling and a chair scraping across the floor alerted him that he was no longer alone in the clinic. He thought maybe Kelly and Chance had forgotten something. Since they weren’t expecting any more patients, they’d gone over to Brewer’s Saloon for a late lunch.

  Curious, he headed toward the front of the clinic. The smell of antiseptic and alcohol permeated the air, a far cry from the scents of aged wood and lemon oil associated with the church. Different, yet still familiar since he’d spent many, many hours in clinics and hospitals comforting the sick and dying—or their families.

  When he didn’t see anyone waiting in the reception area, he glanced into one of the examining rooms he passed, and nearly tripped over his own boots.

  He’d heard his pals talking about being poleaxed by the sight of a woman.

  He’d never understood the term until just now.

  She wore laced-up hiking boots, jeans that were frayed at the hem from scraping against the heel, a white T-shirt tucked in at the waist with a man’s flannel shirt unbuttoned and hanging loose over it. A cloud of rich dark hair brushed her shoulders with the gleaming chestnut highlights that put him in mind of his gelding’s healthy shining coat.

  In contrast to her casual clothing, her flawless skin and killer bone structure made him think of a fashion model. She was the kind of woman whose striking features would turn heads and cause any red-blooded man to develop a stutter, even if she were wearing a burlap feed sack.

  The thought that ran through his head was a cliché for sure, but he couldn’t get past it.

  She was simply the most beautiful woman he’d come across in ages.

  “Can I help you?” Thank God, he didn’t have a stuttering problem.

  She jumped at the sound of his voice. Her eyes went liquid with tears, yet her chin jutted out. Overwhelmed, he surmised, yet fighting it. He’d counseled enough people to recognize the signs.

  “There was no nurse outside, and I was feeling faint, so I just came in here to wait. I hope that’s all right.”

  Her accent signaled she was from the Deep South, Georgia or Tennessee, he guessed. “Sure…the nurse, uh, stepped out.” Actually, Kelly Hammond was a doctor, rather than a nurse. “You said you were feeling faint—?”

  Before he could finish his sentence, or put a plan of action together to get some help over here, she nodded and launched into speech.

  “It’s probably nothing that a firing squad aimed at my grandfather wouldn’t cure. If he hadn’t just passed on, he’d be fearing for his health at my hands, that’s for darn sure.”

  “I’m sorry for your loss,” Dan murmured. Although genuine pain shadowed her expressive green eyes, she appeared not to hear him.

  “I swear I’ve had it up to here.” Her hand made a slicing motion at the level of her brow. “I don’t know what’s wrong with me lately—well, I probably do, but that’s beside the point. Then again, you’re a doctor, so maybe it’s not really beside the point.”

  Uh-oh.

  “I think my brain’s on overload. Life has simply thrown me too many curves in too short of a time. I haven’t been eating like I should, I know. Maybe it’s hormones. Between you and me, doc to patient, I haven’t had sex in longer than I can remember. I mean, who has time with all the stuff I’ve had to deal with?” She rambled on without stopping, her hands keeping time with her words and punctuating her sentences like a distraught mime playing to an audience of critics.

  Dan knew he should probably interrupt. Under the circumstances, it would be polite.

  He opened his mouth to do so but wasn’t quick enough.

  “And if that doesn’t make me feel low enough to jump off a dime, now I’ve been shooed off to a town I’ve never even heard of, where I’m supposed to propose marriage to the preacher!”

  Dan nearly swallowed his tongue. He was a man rarely at a loss for words. For the life of him, he couldn’t seem to form the ones needed to head off the disaster playing out before him.

  “Can you imagine? No wonder I’m feeling dizzy. Do you think it’s hormonal? Does that cause you to feel light-headed?”

  Well…hmm. This was tricky. He cleared his throat, leaned a shoulder against the wall, tried like crazy not to smile—or choke. He was actually sweating and it was a cool sixty-five degrees in the clinic.

  “Um, I can’t honestly say…since I’m not the doctor. I’m the preacher.”

  Her eyes widened as though she’d just seen Martha Stewart drop-kick a salmon.

  “You’re the preacher?”

  “’Fraid so.”

  “Of this town?”

  “Mmm-hmm.”

  “The only one?”

  “Guilty.”

  She leaped down off the examining table, snatched up her oversize backpack purse and clutched it to her chest like a shield. “How could you just stand there and let me run off at the mouth that way?”

  “You didn’t give me much opportunity to do otherwise.”

  “I thought you were the doctor. My God, I told you I hadn’t had sex!”

  Yes, and he shouldn’t have found that quite so interesting. “You wouldn’t be the first to confide such a detail.”

  Amy Marshall covered her face with
one hand. She was mortified. That’s all there was to it. It was bad enough that she was on this ridiculously unorthodox mission in the first place. And because she felt embarrassed, that made her mad.

  Vulnerability and feeling helpless were emotions she did her level best to avoid.

  She swore, then cut off the word in mid-syllable when she belatedly realized who she’d just cursed at. The day was going from bad to worse.

  Unable to think of a smart comeback, she leveled him with a mutinous look. Talk about feeling faint. Heat coursed through her body, her heart was beating fast, and vertigo was really trying to get the better of her now.

  Her only thought was to flee. Regroup. She wasn’t prepared. She needed time to plan her words, present her case in a reasonable, logical manner.

  If such a thing were even possible.

  Good Lord. She’d been willing to undress before this man, tell him every intimate detail. That’s what one did in a doctor’s office. There was a certain expected, unquestioned trust involved in entering a medical establishment.

  Usually.

  “Being celibate’s not such a terrible thing, is it?” he asked, the corners of his lips curving ever so slightly.

  “For you, maybe.” She slammed her mouth shut before she dug herself into a deeper mess. Admitting to a preacher that she was sexually frustrated was simply too much for her overwhelmed brain to handle.

  The very preacher she was here to propose to.

  Gripping her backpack that held a small fortune in camera equipment she never went anywhere without, she tried to storm past him.

  He reached out and gently touched her arm, his smile gone, his features concerned. A blinding burst of heat shot through her like the brilliant strobe of her Nikon speed-light flash.

  That upset her even more.

  She stiffened and he immediately dropped his hands.

  “Maybe we should introduce ourselves?”

  She merely stared at him. She’d never been so horrified in her entire life. Of course they should introduce themselves. That’s what she was here for—well, not here at this exact moment, but still. She’d come to find him. A polite, civilized exchange of names was in order.