âIt wonât work.â
âWhat wonât?â Thalia asked. She had the nerve to look innocent.
âTrying to convince me to take the part. It wonât work.â
He had her full attentionâand that was becoming a problem. Her eyes were wide-open, her lips were barely parted. All heâd have to do was lower his head.
Against his every wish, his head began to dip.
He could not kiss her; he could not be turned on by her; he could not be interested in herâbut he was. She was going to ruin the life heâd made, and he almost didnât care. It was almost worth the way she looked at him, soft and innocent and waiting to be kissed.
Almost.
Dear Reader,
Welcome to the Bar-B Ranch, home of one of the hottest heroes Iâve written, J.R. Bradley. J.R. has a secret, you seeâhe used to be James Robert Bradley, the hottest actor to come out of Hollywood since Brad Pitt. But he gave up the fame and moneyâalong with the constant scrutiny and pressureâwhen he bought his own ranch and a whole bunch of cows.
Since then, J.R. has beenâwell, he wouldnât call it hiding, but you get the idea. Heâs got peace, quiet, cows and a surrogate family he trusts with his life. Yup, heâs got everything he ever wanted. Or so he thinks.
Into this carefully constructed life rolls Thalia Thorne, a producer looking for James Robert Bradley to star in a new Western movie. J.R. says no in no uncertain termsâbut then a blizzard forces both of them to reconsider their positions. While the temperatures plummet outside, things inside get very hot. Suddenly J.R. finds himself questioning his entire existence. When the ground thaws, will he let Thalia leave? Or will he go with her?
A Real Cowboy is a hot story of accepting the past and redefining the future. I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it! Be sure to stop by www.sarahmanderson.com and join me when I say long live cowboys!
Sarah
Award-winning author SARAH M. ANDERSON may live east of the Mississippi River, but her heart lies out West on the Great Plains. With a lifelong love of horses and two history teachers for parents, she had plenty of encouragement to learn everything she could about the Wild West.
When she started writing, it wasnât long before her characters found themselves out West. She loves to put people from two different worlds into new situations and see how their backgrounds and cultures take them someplace they never thought theyâd go.
When not helping out at her sonâs elementary school or walking her rescue dogs, Sarah spends her days having conversations with imaginary cowboys and American Indians, all of which is surprisingly well tolerated by her wonderful husband. Readers can find out more about Sarahâs love of cowboys and Indians at www.sarahmanderson.com.
To Robert and Nancy, the best in-laws
a woman could ask for. You donât often get to choose your family, but even if I hadnât married their son, I would have chosen them anyway.
The wheels of Thaliaâs rental sedan spun on the gravel as the driving winds tried to push her off the road, but she kept control of the car. It was nice to have control over something, even if it was a Camry.
Because she certainly did not have control over this situation. If she did, she wouldnât be stalking James Robert Bradley to the middle-of-nowhere Montana in what could only be described as the dead of winter. Hell, she didnât even know if sheâd find him. And, as it had been close to an hour since sheâd seen another sign of life, she wasnât sure sheâd find anything.
Still, there was a road, and she was on it. Roads went places, after all. This one cut through miles and miles of Montana grassland that was probably lush and green in the summer. However, as it was late January, the whole landscape looked lifeless and deserted. Snow so old it had taken on a gray hue lined the road. If she were filming a postapocalyptic movie, this would be perfect.
At least it wasnât snowing right now, she told herself in a forcibly cheerful tone as she glanced at the carâs thermometer. It was twenty-two degrees outside. Not that cold, really. She had that going for her. Of course, that didnât include the wind chill, but still. It wasnât like it was subzero out there. She could handle it.
Finally, she passed under a signpost that proclaimed Bar B Ranch, which also announced trespassers would be shot. The Camryâs wheels bounced over a metal grate a part of her brain remembered was called a cattle guard. She checked the address sheâd entered into her phoneâs GPS, and a sense of relief bum-rushed her. She was actually in the right place.
This realization buoyed her spirits. James Robert Bradleyâs agent, a small, nervous man named Bernie Lipchitz, hadnât wanted to give up the address on his most famousâand most privateâOscar-winning client. Thalia had been forced to promise Bernie sheâd give his latest would-be starlet a role in the new movie she was producing,