Courting Country
Blurb:
Taggart Bauman has
secretly loved Kylie Gordon since they were young, but she married his best
friend. When Kylie is widowed, Taggart promises to take care of her. And even
though he could be free to profess his love, he chooses to keep his feelings a
secret. If Kylie knew that he'd failed to save her husband, she'd never forgive
him. He knows, because he can't forgive himself.
After being alone
for so long, Kylie believes an online dating service is her last chance at
finding love. But she continually finds herself in "situationships"
that require Taggart to rescue her.
When at last she
reconnects with Eldon Wenz, an old friend from their college years, she thinks
perhaps this is finally her second chance at love...but just in case, she asks
Taggart to accompany her when she travels to Eldon's ranch.
But sometimes
things are not what they seem, and when one more situationship crops up,
Taggart vents his resentment and tells Kylie she needs to work out the choices
she's making.
Will Taggart lose
Kylie forever, friendship and all, or will Kylie realize that what she's been
searching for has been right in front of her the whole time?
āIn their hearts humans plan their course, but
the Lord establishes their steps.ā ~ Proverbs 16:9
Taggart closed his ideas document and
picked up a pen. In between freelance jobs as a ghostwriter, and only two
articles pending with magazines, he needed to find someone to interview. He ran
a pen through the fingers of his right hand baton fashion, then transferred it
to his left. Not quite as adept with his less dominant hand, the pen hit the
floor.
A new email ping stopped him from reaching
for the dropped utensil. Great news. Heād received approval for his profile on
the Country Courting site Kylie raved about. He clicked on the link, checked
out the options on screen, and then sat back to consider his next move.
Heād always viewed those blind connections as
risky. Especially since Kylie posted on a site two years after Eldon died.
Taggart had cautioned her, ever aware of
Eldonās dying cry.
She acted as though she hadnāt heard
Taggartās admission of carrying for her, and found herself enmeshed in a nasty
situation rather than a lasting relationship. She deserved happiness, and
claimed she wanted the same for him. But not with him.
To help him understand her actions, heād
try the dating site without expecting any grandiose outcome. Though he wasnāt
serious about making a connection beyond friendly companionship, so Kylie
viewed h8m in a different light than friendly guy. Sheād forever be the only
woman of his choice.
Relationship. Companionship. Friendship.
All those āships made him curl his lip. How about those who found themselves in
a situationship? Now, that was a great word to describe a mess.
Scrolling through the profile pictures,
Kylieās lovely face appeared in a shot heād snapped.
She claimed her silver hair made her look
old.
He loved it. Much better than his own
unruly red thatch that she called endearing.
Kylie even said some woman would love to
run her fingers through the strands, just to experience the texture.
Now there was a possible topic for an
article. What percentage of people, men or women, took the chance on meeting
someone blind, and then ended up victims? Any manner of abusers, control
freaks, or predators could be lurking as liars behind smiling profile pictures,
even fake profile pictures. The position theyād place themselves in presented a
different manner of putting oneās life on the line. Whoād print such a piece,
since editors recognized Taggart Bauman as the author of articles written about
people who chanced physical danger on the job, or for an adrenalin rush?
He shook his head to clear it and gazed
into the image of periwinkle eyes that touched him soul deep.
His phone rang. He leaned for the pen with
one hand and reached for his cell with the other. The number wasnāt in his
contact list, but he answered anyway.
āHey, Tag, ole buddy. Got your number off
the alumni list. Decided not to wait for our twentieth reunion to connect.ā
Twentieth? Oh, high school. The voice
sounded vaguely familiar. āWhoās this?ā
āWenz. Eldon. South Dakota rancher now.ā
āHey, man. Good to hear from you. Has it
been, twenty years?ā
āHalf. The only reunion I attended was our
tenth. Then I left Lincoln and ended up taking over my stepfatherās ranch here
in South Dakota. I havenāt been back to Nebraska since. Iāve followed you.
Youāve written mighty fine words over the years.ā
āThanks, man. Nice to connect with someone
from the old gang. Wait till I tell Kylie.ā
āSheās the very reason Iām calling. Iāve
got a wild idea I need your wordsmithing help with.ā
Amazon US:
https://www.amazon.com/Courting-Country-LoRee-Peery-ebook/dp/B08HR2HJCG
Amazon UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Courting-Country-LoRee-Peery-ebook/dp/B08HR2HJCG
Pelican link: https://tinyurl.com/y6djgxnr
Bio:
Nebraska country girl LoRee Peery writes
fiction that hopefully appeals to adult readers who enjoy stories written from
a Christian perspective, focusing on the romance. These include novels and
novellas for women and men in the Contemporary, Romance, Historical, Time
Travel, and Mystery/Suspense categories. She writes of redeeming grace with a
sense of place. Her Frivolities Series and the book based on her fatherās
unsolved homicide, Touches of Time, are available on Amazon. She is who she is
by the grace of God: Christian, country girl, wife, mother, grandmother and
great-, sister, friend, and author. Connect with LoRee: www.loreepeery.com
https://twitter.com/LoreePeery
https://www.facebook.com/LoReePeery
Find her publications at Pelican
http://tinyurl.com/kwz9enk
And Amazon
https://www.amazon.com/LoRee-Peery/e/B004UAGL2W
Comments
Good luck and God's blessings with your new release
PamT
And as always, Clare, I so appreciate your graciousness.