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Remember Me, Cowboy
How Can He Not Remember Her?
Corb Lambert is ready to marry Laurel Sheridan. She’s pregnant with his baby—and Corb is the type of guy who will do the right thing. He just wishes that he could remember the passion they shared before a terrible accident wiped his memory clean.
Laurel can’t decide whether to go or stay. Corb is willing to take on his responsibility, but Laurel can’t bear the thought that he doesn’t remember her, especially since she fell for him, hard. She’s got a life in New York—but her baby deserves a father. Could he love her all over again? Or is he just staying in Montana to give her child a name? Laurel has to know now, because one person can’t do all the loving....
The door chimed and Laurel glanced up to welcome her next customer
The smile forming on her face froze the minute she saw him.
Corb Lambert.
She’d heard he’d been out of hospital for several weeks now. She’d wondered if maybe he would phone her when he was finally released, and when he hadn’t, she’d told herself she shouldn’t be surprised. He’d been through a lot physically, and had lost a brother besides. He wouldn’t have time or inclination to think about the woman he’d charmed during the week before his accident.
But now he was here, and clearly his smile and the twinkle in his eyes hadn’t been damaged one bit. “Hello, sugar. Looks like Coffee Creek got a whole lot sweeter since the last time I was in town.”
She smiled, thinking he was feeding her the same line on purpose. But when she glanced up at him, she saw no spark of recognition in his eyes. “Corb?”
He looked puzzled. Then he frowned. “Have we met before?”
Dear Reader,
Welcome to Coffee Creek, Montana, the setting of my new series for Harlequin American Romance. You’re about to meet the Lamberts—a family of ranchers and cowboys who own the largest spread in Bitterroot County, all controlled by matriarch Olive Lambert. Olive would like to control more than just the operations of the ranch—she also has ideas about what jobs her children should work and who they should marry. Does mother know best? I’ll let you be the judge.
One of the pleasures of writing a family saga is creating the setting for the stories. In this case I took a real town name—Coffee Creek, Montana—nudged it a little in the southwesterly direction, made it the head of fictional Bitterroot County and decked it out with interesting establishments like the Cinnamon Stick Café and the Lonesome Spur Saloon. There’s a two-story brick courthouse in the center of town, next to the post office and library. If you’d like to see the pictures that inspired the setting and stories, you can visit my storyboards on www.pinterest.com under CJ_Carmichael.
Once you’ve soaked in the ambience of the setting, please go ahead and meet our first hero and heroine of the series—Corb Lambert and Laurel Sheridan. Their story was so much fun to write. Just imagine you had a whirlwind courtship with a fellow, were sure you had fallen in love, and then he had a head injury and forgot he’d ever met you. What happens next? Just keep reading....
C.J. Carmichael
www.cjcarmichael.com
Remember Me, Cowboy
C.J. Carmichael
www.millsandboon.co.ukABOUT THE AUTHOR
Hard to imagine a more glamorous life than being an accountant, isn’t it? Still, C.J. Carmichael gave up the thrills of income tax forms and double-entry bookkeeping when she sold her first book in 1998. She has now written more than twenty-eight novels for Harlequin, and invites you to learn more about her books, see photos of her hiking exploits and enter her surprise contests at www.cjcarmichael.com.
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This is for the Happy Bookers, with whom I’ve shared many evenings of good conversations about books and life, bottles of wine and wedges of cheese: Cheryl, Marg, Mary, Mary-Lou,
Nancy, Rhonda, Shelli, Sunita and Susan.
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
Excerpt
Prologue
Where was the groom? Laurel checked her watch, not sure whether to feel annoyed or worried. Her best friend Winnie Hays should have been marching down the aisle of the Coffee Creek United Church ten minutes ago.
As young girls, growing up together in a Montana farming community about an hour from Coffee Creek, she and Winnie had planned their wedding days down to the color of the flowers and the flavor of the cake. Actually, Winnie had planned, and Laurel had gone along with her, claiming to want whatever it was that Winnie wanted.
For the longest time their friendship had worked that way. Winnie decided to take swimming lessons, so Laurel did, too. Winnie started dating a boy, so Laurel dated his best friend. After they’d finished high school and Winnie applied to college in Great Falls, no one had been surprised when Laurel decided to study at the University of Great Falls, too.
Only after they’d earned their undergraduate degrees had Laurel finally realized that she yearned for something Winnie didn’t—to leave Montana. So, scared to death but determined, she moved to New York City on her own to pursue her dream of a career in magazine publishing.
To her credit, Winnie never tried to talk her out of her decision. “You have to go for it, Laurel. Or you’ll always wonder what if...”
Good advice. From a good friend.
And now, three years later, on what should have been the happiest day of Winnie’s life, the bride was starting to panic. “I don’t understand. Brock promised he’d be early.”
The ceremony had been scheduled to start at three o’clock. Fifteen minutes to the hour a dark sedan had arrived from Coffee Creek Ranch driven by Brock’s eldest brother, B.J. Dark-haired B.J., with his noble high forehead and chiseled features, had escorted his mother, Olive, into the church.
Olive, still pretty at sixty, her petite figure showcased in an ivory-colored, raw silk suit, had walked proudly on her son’s arm as they made their way to the front pew. Having met her several times now during her week in Coffee Creek, Laurel still found it difficult to believe that this diminutive, soft-spoken woman ran the biggest ranch in all of Bitterroot County.
That arrival had been twenty-five minutes ago. Now the church was packed with invited guests and the organist had just started through her repertoire for the third time.
“This is so not a good sign.” Winnie grabbed bunches of white satin, hitching up her dress so she could stand on a chair for a better view down the street. “Where the hell are they?”
“They” included not only the groom, Brock Lambert, but the middle Lambert son, Corb, who was the best man—and no doubt about that in Laurel’s mind, though she’d only known him a week—and the driver, Jackson Stone.
Jackson was the quiet one. So far Laurel had been unable to engage him in any conversation lasting more than five minutes, so it was only thanks to Winnie that she knew he’d come to the Lambert’s ranch as a foster child when he was thirteen. Apparently he’d taken to ranch life so well he was now considered part of the family.
“What time did Corb say they left?” Winnie asked, though she already knew the answer.
“Thirty-five minutes ago.” Laurel bit her lower lip anxiously. The drive from the Coffee Creek Ranch to town normally took fifteen minutes. No higher mathematics degree was required to figure out they should be here by now.
“What’s happened...?” Winnie spoke softly, her gaze still fixed to the street.
“Don’t worry,” Laurel soothed. “Could be they ran out of gas or had a flat.”
“Or maybe they got halfway here only to realize that Corb forgot the ring.” Cassidy Lambert smirked. As the only girl in a family of four boys—if you counted Jackson, and most people did—she didn’t faze easily. Or conform. She’d agreed to be Winnie’s bridesmaid on the condition that she would not wear high heels. “It has to be running shoes or cowboy boots,” she’d dictated. “Take your pick.”
Which explained the cream-colored boots in butter-soft ostrich leather that she was swinging as she sat on her perch on the ledge of the same window that Winnie was peering out of.
“But if they’ve been held up,” Winnie reasoned, correctly in Laurel’s mind, “why haven’t they called?”
That was the unanswerable question. One of three men might have forgotten to charge his phone last night. But all three? Hearing tears in Winnie’s voice, Laurel stepped forward to urge her off the chair.
“You’re making me dizzy up there. Here, sit for a while. You heard Olive say that this would be the first time one of her boys had been to church in a decade. Maybe they got lost and, being men, won’t stop for directions.”
Laurel generally counted on humor in moments of tension. And she was rewarded with a wisp of a smile, before Winnie’s faced creased with worry again.
The fact was, no one could miss the church in Coffee Creek. The white steeple made it the tallest building in a town of about fifteen hundred people. Damn those Lambert men. How could they do this to Winnie? They better have one hell of a good excuse for being so late.
“I’ll call them.” Cassidy jumped softly to the wooden floor. “I’ll go get my phone.”
As soon as she’d left for the minister’s office where they’d stowed their personal effects, Winnie let out a small moan.
“I can’t stand this anymore. I’ve been dying to tell Brock, but you’ll have to be the first to know.”
“Know what?” Long familiarity with her friend’s dramatic streak meant Laurel didn’t overreact. She frowned at a scuff on her imitation Valentino pumps, then tried rubbing it off with her thumb.
“Maybe you should sit down. I don’t want you fainting or anything.”
“Fat chance, Winnie. I am not the fainting kind.” But she abandoned the scuff. This actually sounded serious.
“I called Brock at the crack of dawn today and told him to get to the church early. That there was something I needed to tell him before the ceremony.”
“So you decided to come clean about your criminal record? Good call.”
Winnie didn’t even crack a smile. “I’m serious, Laurel. I should have told him earlier, but I was in shock myself.”
Laurel didn’t interrupt this time when Winnie paused. She just waited for her friend to find the right words.
“I’m pregnant.”
Laurel could feel her mouth drop open. She couldn’t help it. Those were not the right words she’d been expecting to hear. “Holy cow. Really?”
“Yes. Two months along, I figure—”
Winnie stopped talking as the door opened. Cassidy was back, cell phone in hand, frowning.
“Brock isn’t answering.” She punched another button. “I’ll try Corb.”
No one spoke. The relentless repitition of “Ode to Joy” was getting on Laurel’s nerves.
“Damn.” Cassidy disconnected the call after reaching the answering service. Next she tried Jackson’s number. Again, no one picked up. “If this is some sort of prank, I’m going to kill them.”
But Laurel could see the worry in Cassidy’s deep green eyes. She was scared. So was Winnie. Her face had gone whiter than the fabric of her wedding gown, making her brown eyes seem almost as black as her hair.
Winnie glanced out the window again. “Someone’s coming! I think it’s Jackson’s SUV....”
Cassidy peered over her shoulder. “No. It’s a County Sheriff vehicle.”
The three women exchanged looks, no one saying what they were all thinking. This couldn’t be good. Laurel’s pulse thumped crazily in her throat as she watched the driver park in front of the church. A long-legged woman dressed in uniform, dark hair worn in a long braid to accommodate her hat, stepped out to the street. She glanced left, right, then seemed to take a deep breath before heading inside the church.
“Who was that?” Laurel wondered.
“Sheriff Savannah Moody.” Winnie’s voice was unnaturally low. “She’s a good friend of Brock’s. We were going to invite her to the wedding, but he said there was bad blood between her and B.J. I don’t know the details.”
Laurel’s mind went blank, refusing to speculate on the reasons for the sheriff’s unexpected appearance. Instead, she thought of the day, a week ago, when she’d arrived at the airport in Billings, having spent most of a day traveling to Montana from New York City.
Winnie had been called in for an unexpected dress fitting and so she’d sent the best man to collect Laurel. Corb Lambert, brother of the groom. “He’ll be the cowboy with a dimple in his left cheek,” was all Winnie wrote in her hurried text message.
Laurel hadn’t seen him at first. She was worried about her bag, which hadn’t appeared on the carousel, even though most of her fellow passengers on Delta 4608 had claimed their luggage and departed the airport at least five minutes ago.
“Please don’t let them have lost my suitcase,” she pleaded with the airline gods. Besides her clothes for the week, she stood to lose her bridesmaid gown and Winnie and Brock’s wedding gift.
And then she saw them both, in the same second. The brown, beaten suitcase with the pink ribbon tied around the handle. And the cowboy striding toward her with a grin and a sparkle to his eye that made her automatically pat her hair and suck in her tummy.
“Sugar?” He walked right up to her. “If you’re Laurel Sheridan I think Coffee Creek is about to become a whole lot sweeter.”
A corny line, but, oh, how her heart had pounded.
As it was pounding now, in a much less pleasant way.
Laurel squeezed Winnie’s hand, staying close to her friend, who’d started to tremble. They followed Cassidy out the door of the antechamber into the vestibule. Two wide doors stood open to the church where all the guests awaited. Chatter filled the air, along with the Beethoven.
And then, abruptly, the organ stopped and everyone turned, expecting to see the bride. A collective gasp washed over the room when Sheriff Moody stepped forward, instead. With a grim expression she said, “I need to talk to someone from the Lambert family.”
A brief hesitation, then B.J. stood, tall and lean in his charcoal suit and tie. “Savannah.” His grim expression grew darker. “What happened?”
Olive made her way to her feet and said what everyone in the room was fearing. “Has there been an accident?”
The silence intensified as one second stretched
into two.
“I’m sorry, Olive. But yes. There’s been an a-accident.” The sheriff’s voice broke on the last word and Laurel could feel Winnie wobble on the delicate heels of her wedding shoes. On cue, Cassidy came up on the bride’s other side and helped Laurel hold her steady.
Sheriff Moody looked from B.J. to the bride, then finally back to Olive. “Jackson’s SUV hit a moose on Big Valley Road, about five miles from town.”
The name of the road meant nothing to Laurel. She was holding her breath, praying again, not with sharp annoyance as she had at the airport, but with total desperation. Please let them be okay. Just a few cuts and bruises, she bargained, maybe a broken leg or two.
“Brock?” Winnie locked her gaze on the sheriff, who slowly shook her head.
“I’m so sorry, Winnie. Brock was sitting in the front passenger seat—the impact point with the moose. He didn’t have a chance.”
Winnie made a sound somewhere between a gasp and a cry, then pulled her hands free from the supportive hold of Laurel and Cassidy and covered her face.
Laurel wrapped her arms around her friend, her mind slipping away to the party they’d had, just last night. She and Corb had been dancing. They’d had a few beers. The lights were low and her body had tingled at the touch of his hands on her waist and shoulder. When she’d stumbled, Corb said, “Tired? Let me walk you home, sugar.”
He’d done more than just walk her home. A lot more. Never in her life had she fallen for somebody this hard. This fast.
“What about Corb?” B.J.’s voice was stretched tighter than a barbed wire fence. “And Jackson?”
“Jackson was driving, wearing his seat belt and the air bag was able to cushion him from the worst of it. He’s badly bruised and shaken, but he’s okay.”
And Corb?
“Your other brother was in the backseat. He should have been fine, but I’m afraid he wasn’t wearing his seat belt. As we speak he’s being medevaced to Great Falls. I can’t say how bad his injuries are. You’ll have to talk to the doctors for that.”
“Is he conscious?” Olive asked, her voice rough, eyes desperate.
The sheriff shook her head. “No.”
Chapter One
Two Months Later
Laurel was making the rounds of the Cinnamon Stick Café with a fresh carafe of coffee, when she noticed Maddie Turner’s mug needed refreshing. She paused to serve the stocky, gray-haired rancher, who glanced up from the papers she was reviewing to give her a smile.
“Thanks, Laurel. Could you get me another cinnamon bun, too, please?”
“You bet, Maddie.” After two months of running the Cinnamon Stick while Winnie convalesced on her parents’ farm, Laurel was a fixture with all the regulars. And Maddie Turner, owner of the Silver Creek Ranch, sure did love her baked goods.
When she’d first started working at the café, Laurel had drooled over the cinnamon buns, too. Now, just the sight of one of the frosted goodies made her queasy. Laurel tried not to inhale as she plated one of the buns, then passed it to Maddie.
Back behind the counter, she put on a fresh pot of coffee. As she filled the carafe with water from the tap, her gaze was drawn out the window to the line of willow trees that grew between the café and the creek for which the town was named.
Another lovely September day. She wished she had time to get out and enjoy the sunshine, but, as usual, she was being run off her feet.
When Winnie told her, ten months ago, that she’d fallen in love with a cowboy and was going to move to Coffee Creek to open her café, Laurel had thought how quaint.
Now she knew better. The café was charming to look at, the food was devilishly delicious, but the work? It was damned hard. The first month she’d had so much to learn, she’d been running all day long. Then, when she’d finally found her rhythm, she’d caught some sort of bug that she still hadn’t managed to shake.
What she needed was rest, but she wouldn’t complain. How could she, in the face of what Winnie was going through? Thank heavens for Eugenia, Vince and Dawn, Winnie’s regular staff. Without their help, and willingness to work extra hours, she could never have kept Winnie’s café afloat while her friend struggled to deal with the double whammy of losing her fiancé and dealing with what had turned out to be a difficult pregnancy.
Laurel still couldn’t believe what had happened.
Imagine losing your fiancé on the day of your wedding. Actually being in the church, in your gown, waiting... Laurel felt sick every time she thought back to that day.
In the awful hours following the grim news, she’d canceled her flight back to New York, and she’d promised Winnie she would stay in Coffee Creek as long as she was needed, never guessing she’d still be here two months later.
But with Winnie laid up in bed on doctor’s orders, what choice had she had? She couldn’t let Winnie lose her business as well as the man she’d been planning to share her life with.
With a long sigh, Laurel replaced the coffee carafe in the machine. Maddie, finished with her paper and her coffee, waved as she made her way out of the café and into the ancient Ford truck angle-parked out in front. Laurel was clearing her table when Vince Butterfield, Winnie’s baker, came out from the kitchen.
She couldn’t believe it was eleven o’clock already. “Time to call it a day?”
He nodded, never one to use a word when a gesture would do.
“See you tomorrow, Vince.”
He tipped his head in her direction, just half of a nod this time, then made his way out the back door.
Laurel still found it amazing that this man—a weathered and scarred ex-bronc rider who looked about ten years older than his real age of sixty-two—was responsible for the bakery’s rich cinnamon buns, mouthwatering bumbleberry pies and buttery dinner rolls. He came in every morning, except Sunday, at four in the morning and worked his magic for seven hours before getting on his bike and riding out to his trailer ten miles from town.
Winnie had confided some details of his past to Laurel—a former rodeo cowboy with a drinking problem, he liked the early hours at the bakery since they left him too exhausted to stay up much past eight in the evening. Early to bed meant no late nights at the bar, which meant no more drinking.
“He figures this job saved his life,” Winnie told her. Laurel wondered how Winnie knew so much about him. The man had never said more than three words in a row to her, and those had been, “nice meetin’ ya.”
The door chimed and Laurel glanced up to welcome her next customer. The smile forming on her face froze the minute she saw him.
Corb Lambert.
She’d heard he’d been out of the hospital for several weeks now. And had wondered when she was going to see him.
It seemed now was the moment.
He looked good, though his hair had been cropped and she could see a long scar on the side of his head. His dimple flashed when he gave her a smile, though not as deeply as before. Laurel figured he’d lost about fifteen pounds.
He came up to the counter hesitantly, holding his hat politely in hand.
Through the grapevine, Laurel had kept posted on Corb’s recovery from the accident. He’d been in a coma for forty-eight hours, and in critical condition for several days beyond that. All in all he’d been in hospital for almost three weeks, with visits strictly restricted to family members only.
Or so Laurel had been told when she’d called the hospital to ask about him.
She’d wondered if maybe he would phone her when he was finally released, and when he hadn’t, she’d told herself she shouldn’t be surprised. He’d been through a lot physically, and had lost a brother besides. He wouldn’t have time or inclination to think about the woman he’d flirted with, and charmed, during the week before his accident.
But now he was here, and clearly his smile and the sparkle in his eyes hadn’t been damaged one bit by his accident. She took a cloth to the clean counter, willing her heart to return to its regular standing rate of sixty-five beats per minute.
“Hello, sugar. Looks like Coffee Creek got a whole lot sweeter since the last time I was in town.”
She smiled, thinking he was feeding her the same line on purpose. But when she glanced up at him, she saw no recognition in his eyes. “Corb?”