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The Kidnapped Christmas Bride (Taming of the Sheenans Book 3)(2)

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"I agree." Troy tapped his hand on the steering wheel and then exhaled.  "There are some other things going on, too. Family things." He shot a  quick glance in Trey's direction. "Dad was a real bastard when it came  to Mom."

"That's not news."

"He had an affair with Bev Carrigan. A long affair."

Trey said nothing.

Troy increased the speed on the windshield wipers. "Mom probably knew. Or found out."

Trey had heard enough. He'd only just been out a couple hours. He wasn't  ready for family conflict and drama. "They're all gone now, and the  past is the past. Maybe it's time to let sleeping dogs lie."

"Except they're not all gone, and it's not just the past." Troy flexed  his hands against the steering wheel again. "Because there is something  else going on-"

"Another affair?"

"No, but with Callan." Troy shot him a swift glance, brow creased. "When  her dad passed, he didn't leave the place to her. Or any of them."

"What?"

"There's some talk in town-just gossip at this point-that maybe he wasn't their biological father-"

"Bullshit."

"Well, why didn't he leave the Carrigan ranch to his kids?"

"I don't know. But Callan must have been pretty broken up. She loves that place."

Troy was silent a moment. "I think Dillon knows something, too, but he's not saying."

"Those two friends again?"

"More friendly than friends. While you were gone they became drinking  buddies. Every Friday night you can find them at Grey's, playing pool  and shooting the shit." Troy's lips curved. "Dillon practically lives at  Grey's on the weekends."

"He's not driving back to the ranch drunk, is he?"

"Usually he finds a warm bed in town, along with an even warmer woman."

"Our Dillon is a player."

"He's certainly enjoying being a bachelor."

"No little Sheenans on the way?"

"None that I've heard about." Troy leaned forward, turned up the music  and then halfway through the Martina McBride Christmas song turned it  back down. "There's something else I've got to tell you."

Trey glanced warily at his brother. "Brock got cancer?"

"Um, no. Thank God." He sighed. "But it's not going to make you happy."

Trey stiffened. "No?"

"It's McKenna."

Trey held his breath.

"I didn't know how to tell you, or when to tell you, but seeing as  you're out today, now, you're going to need to know." Troy's eyes  narrowed and his jaw tightened. "McKenna is getting married tomorrow."

They drove another mile in deafening silence, snow pelting the car and  windshield. Trey stared out the window blindly, seeing nothing of the  Tobacco Root Mountains and Three Forks before them. Instead he fought  wave after wave of nausea. McKenna getting married … .McKenna marrying  tomorrow …

Unthinkable. Impossible.

His stomach rolled and heaved. He gave his head a sharp shake. This  couldn't be happening. He couldn't lose her now, not after waiting four  years to make things right.

"Hey, Troy. Pull over." Trey's deep voice dropped, cracked. "I'm going to be sick."





Chapter Two




‡


These weren't butterflies McKenna was feeling. They were giant  wildebeests swarming with flies. So no, she wasn't nervous. She was  terrified.

Not terrified of marrying Lawrence, but terrified that if she didn't  marry him, the rest of her life would be just as hard as it'd been the  first thirty-three years.

She was ready to lose the Douglas off her name. Ready to no longer be  that tragic McKenna Douglas who'd lost five of her immediate family  members as a not-quite-fourteen year old in the Douglas Home Invasion  Tragedy nineteen years ago. People spoke of it like that, in newspaper  headlines.                       
       
           



       

She was ready to stop being the brave girl folks hovered over, worrying  about, petting, protecting to the point that McKenna couldn't show fear  or anxiety or everyone would hover more and worry more and suffocate her  with the worrying that changed nothing, and the hovering that made it  impossible to breathe. The only one who never hovered and worried was  Trey and she'd loved him for it.

And hated him.

But that was neither here nor there. He was the past and today she was  stepping into a bright new future as Mrs. McKenna Joplin, Lawrence  Joplin's wife.

She was more than ready to relinquish the title of ‘devoted single mom'.  Of course she was devoted, she was a mother. And yes, like all moms,  she tried to be a great mom, but she was ready for a partnership, ready  for a daddy for her boy, and a warm, kind loving husband to help carry  the burden … emotionally, physically, financially.

Lawrence would be a great partner, friend, and father for TJ, and just  minutes from now she'd be walking down the aisle, joining Lawrence at  the altar. But my God, the butterflies …

The wildebeests …

They were bad. She was shaking. She was this close to throwing up.

From joy, not nerves.

And okay, maybe a little bit of nerves and exhaustion thrown in there,  too, as TJ had spent the last week sick with a virulent flu and she'd  been up with him, night after night, fussing over his temperature,  holding him as he heaved into the toilet, measuring out thimblefuls of  fever reducer and pain killer since his five year old body ached and  ached so that her normally busy and bright boy was a whimpering tangle  of arms and legs against her.

She loved that boy to distraction. Some said she loved him too much. But  how could you ever love a child too much? Children needed love … tons and  tons of love. And fortunately, TJ was better-bouncing back the way five  year olds do-and at this very moment, tearing away with her brothers in  the groom's dressing room. Even better, she hadn't come down sick,  herself, so everything was good.

Everything was fantastic.

Which was why her eyes burned a bit, and her heart thudded. The only  thing that could make today perfect was if her mom and dad could have  been here, and Grace, Gordon, and Ty …

There were days where she didn't think about them, those who died at the  house that day, and then there were days she couldn't forget them.  Today was one of them. But then, it was natural for a bride to wish her  mom was there to help her dress, and her dad was there to walk her down  the aisle …

She blinked hard, quickly, holding back the emotion even as the door to  St. Jame's bridal dressing room opened, and the delicate light bright  strains of Vivaldi reached McKenna, the organist continuing to make her  way through the prelude play list, and then the heavy oak door closed  behind Paige Joffe, silencing the music.

"The church is full," Paige said, hands on her hips. "The flower girls  are in place. The bouquets are in the foyer. All we need is you."

McKenna nodded and reached up to wipe beneath her eyes to make sure they were dry. "I'm ready."

But Paige heard the wobble in McKenna's voice and was immediately at her  side, ruby red bridesmaid dress swishing. "What's wrong, Kenna?"

McKenna shook her head, forcing a smile. "Nothing. Absolutely nothing!"

"You're sure?"

"Yes."

"You're not getting cold feet, are you?"

"No!" McKenna's voice rose, horrified. She didn't have cold feet. Her  nerves weren't cold feet. Her nerves were an accumulation of emotion.  Fear, hope, love, loss, longing.

But was there a bride who didn't feel emotional? Was it such a bad thing  to be a tiny bit apprehensive? She wasn't a twenty-two year old virgin.  She was a mother, and it'd been just her and TJ for years. Now she was  moving her boy into a new home, another man's home. Thank goodness  Lawrence wasn't like those testosterone driven alpha males who were all  weird and territorial about raising another man's child. He wanted to be  a good stepfather. He wanted to do scouting with TJ and teach him to  fish and how to throw a ball.

Not that Lawrence could actually throw a football. Or catch a pop up  ball. But her brothers could teach TJ those things. Her brothers were  tough and testosterone-fueled. What TJ needed was Lawrence's quiet  strength. His calm, his self-control.                       
       
           



       

So, no, Lawrence Joplin wasn't a he-man, cowboy, athlete, bar room  brawler. But he was invested in the community, and constantly giving  back, which made him the right example for TJ Sheenan. The right example  for a little boy who was growing up with his biological dad in jail.

"You look beyond beautiful," Paige said, giving McKenna's silk train a  shake to make sure it didn't wrinkle. "Simply gorgeous," she added,  adjusting the long veil to float above the gleaming white silk.