âMuffinâs gone,â she screamed, tears pouring down her cheeks.
âWhat?â he asked.
âMy dog,â she sobbed, rushing past him to go back outside. âMuffin! Muffin!â She continued shouting that one word as she frantically searched her front yard.
He stepped onto the porch, wondering what kind of mess heâd gotten himself into. If he were sensible, heâd head back to the SUV, climb inside and maybe phone this into the police on his way back to the distillery But what kind of guy would leave a woman alone in a situation like this?
âHey!â he called, still having no clue of her name. âWhatâs Muffin look like? Iâll help you look.â
She froze a moment, looking at him as if she couldnât tell if he meant it or not, then, âHeâs a golden cocker spaniel. About this high.â She gestured to just above her knee. âHeâs wearing a red collar with a gold heart ID tag on it and he has a lot of fur.â
âOkay.â He nodded and shoved his phone back into his pocket. âIâll have a quick drive around. Why donât you go check if any of the neighbors have seen him?â She appeared more worried about the dog than the house and the culprit looked long gone, so he decided to focus on the mutt first, as well.
âThank you,â she said, her voice choked as she rushed over to the house on her right.
Callum jogged back to his SUV, climbed in and, shaking his head, turned the key in the ignition. When heâd woken up that morning heâd been engaged and planning a wedding. Now it appeared he was single and looking for a strangerâs dog. What crazy thing could happen next?
* * *
The McKinnels of Jewell Rock
RACHAEL JOHNS is an English teacher by trade, a mum twenty-four-seven, a chronic arachnophobe and a writer the rest of the time. She rarely sleeps and never irons. A lover of romance and womenâs fiction, Rachael loves nothing more than sitting in bed with her laptop and electric blanket and imagining her own stories. Rachael has finaled in a number of competitions, including the Australian Romance Readers Awards. Jilted, her first rural romance, won Favourite Australian Contemporary Romance in 2012, and she was voted in the top ten of Booktopiaâs Australiaâs Favourite Novelist poll in 2013. Rachael lives in the West Australian hills with her hyperactive husband, three mostly gorgeous heroes-in-training, two fat cats, a cantankerous bird and a very badly behaved dog. Rachael loves to hear from readers and can be contacted via her websiteâwww.rachaeljohns.com. She is also on Facebook and Twitter.
For Beck Nicholas and Jackie Ashendenâtwo awesomely talented writers who have been with me almost from the beginning of this crazy journey and have become great friends in the process.
Chapter One
âYou have arrived at your destination,â announced the deep, monotone voice of Chelsea Porterâs GPS.
She slowed her car, frowning as she looked up at the sign that loomed above the private bridge to her right: McKinnelâs DistilleryâOregonâs Best Whiskey since 1977.
Definitely not a place of residence. Perhaps sheâd misread the name and address on the client form. Before continuing, she grabbed her cell out of her purse, pulled up her email and checked the details that one Miss Bailey Sawyer had supplied.
Mr. Callum McKinnel, and then what sheâd assumed was a residential address in well-to-do Jewell Rock but appeared to be the home of the renowned McKinnelâs Whiskey. She didnât drink herself but her grandfather had sworn McKinnelâs was the best whiskey in the world. And, like most other members of her family, heâd drunk enough of the stuff to know.
You couldnât live in these parts without having heard of the McKinnel family. Rumor had it the great-great-grandfather of the current McKinnelsâand there were a lot of themâhad once been a bootlegger. It was his face on the bottleâs famous label. Criminal or not, heâd been a handsome devil and, from what sheâd heard, his descendants had inherited his good looks.
Now that she was here, staring across the bridge, she couldnât believe she hadnât recognized the name. Thereâd been an obituary in the newspaper a month or so ago for Conall McKinnelâheâd been the big boss at the distillery for almost forty years until his recent death thanks to a sudden heart attack. Then there was Lachlan McKinnelâa chef who had won numerous awards, he occasionally appeared on local television and blogged his unique recipes online, all while single-handedly raising his disabled son. Callumâwhom she guessed to be one of Lachlanâs brothersâwas probably as close to a celebrity as sheâd ever get and her stomach clenched with uncharacteristic and ridiculous nerves.