âThereâs onlyâ¦you.â
All of the moisture seemed to dry up in her mouth. Her gaze slowly slid over him. The last time sheâd seen him had been months ago. Sheâd wanted to talk with him then, but her brothers had been determined to keep her away from him.
Her brothers were keeping secrets from her.
Only fair, really, because sheâd been keeping plenty of secrets from them, too.
Mark was a handsome man. Powerful and commanding. He had high, slanting cheeks, a long, hard blade of a nose and lips that wereâ¦sexy. Sensual. Sheâd spent far too much time thinking about Markâs lips over the years.
âWhat the hell are you doing here, Ava? I thought you were staying away.â
Not from him, but from Austin. From the McGuire ranch, because that place held too many painful memories for her.
But when no place seemed safe, where were you supposed to go?
Prologue
âHelp me!â
Her cry broke through the night, a long, loud, desperate scream.
Mark Montgomery had been standing on his front porch, staring up at the starry sky, but at that terrified call, he whirled around. At first he didnât see her. The darkness was too thick.
Thud. Thud. Thud. Thud.
He heard the unmistakable sound of a horseâs hooves pounding across the ground. Someone was riding fast and hard, coming straight toward him.
He leapt off the porch.
âHelp me!â
Her cry was even louder this timeâand it was definitely a womanâs voice. But there werenât any women at his ranch tonight. His mother had passed years ago, and there werenât any female ranch hands scheduled for a shift.
Then he saw the horse. It burst into the clearing near his house. The horse was a beautiful big black mare that he recognizedâthat was Lady. And Lady...Lady belonged to the McGuires, his neighbors who lived about ten miles away.
What theâ?
A small figure was curled low on Ladyâs back, hugging the horse tightly. The horseâs sides were shaking, its body wet with sweat after what must have been a brutal ride.
A ride in the middle of the night?
âM-Mark?â
And he knew that voice. Not screaming now, but soft, almost broken. He wanted to run toward that horse and rider, but he was afraid of spooking Lady, so he approached slowly, carefully. When the horse neighed, he reached out and softly touched Ladyâs mane. âItâs okay.â Then he reached up for the riderâAva.
He could see her now. There was no mistaking Ava McGuire, not with that long, wild tumble of her hair. The moonlight and starlight spilled down onto her face, and the fear there made him lose his breath.
Some of his ranch hands had come into the yard, but they stayed a few feet back. âGet the horse!â Mark ordered as he pulled Ava off Lady.
She was like ice in his hands, and hard, heavy trembles kept raking her delicate frame. Ava had five brothers, all big, hulking military types, and Avaâthe baby of the familyâshe was different. Delicate... Fragile... She wasâ
Crying. Because heâd just touched her cheeks and he could feel the wetness there. He wrapped his arms around her and held her tight. âWhat is it? Whatâs happened?â
âSh-shot...â
He could barely make out what she was saying.
âThey...they were waiting...in the h-house...â
He caught her arms and eased back so that his gaze could sweep over her. âAva, did someone hurt you?â Rage pumped through him. Ava was only sixteen. If some jerks had hurt her, he would make them pay.
Her teeth were chattering. âDead.â She seemed to push out the word. âIâm scared. Theyâreâdead.â
Markâs whole body stiffened. âWho, Ava? Who are you talking about?â
She threw her body against his and started sobbing. âM-my parents! I saw them...the men...had guns! I heard the gunshots. I ran.â Her sobs grew even harder. âI left them there...â
He held her as tightly as he could. There had to be a mistake. Her parentsâthey were fine, werenât they?
âPlease,â Ava begged him. âHelp my parents. Help them!â
* * *
BUT THERE WAS nothing he could do. When Mark and his men went to the McGuire ranch, they didnât see the attackers. They just saw the blood.
Mark and his men made it to the ranch before the cops did. He was the first one in that placeâand he would never forget the terrible sight that greeted him.