âGabe! Come over,â the matchmakers yelled. âWeâve figured out the perfect man for Katie to marry so youâll be off the hook.â
âThereâs a rancher with four children. He needs a mother for them. Katieââ
âNo! Sheâs already raised her brothers and sisters.â Gabe remembered Katieâs face when heâd asked if sheâd gone to college. His heart ached for her lost dreams.
âThereâs the minister. Katie would make an excellent ministerâs wife,â Florence said.
âNo, I donât wantââ Gabe stopped, frustrated. âDamn! Isnât there someone who would let Katie be Katie? Who would help her? She deserves the best!â
âWell, of course she does,â Edith said. âI told them that, but they argued with me.â
He nodded eagerly at Edith. âYeah? Who did you think would do for Katie?â He wasnât going to marry Katie off to just anyone.
âWhy, Gabe, dear, the perfect man is you.â
Cactus, Texas.
Gabe Dawson carefully pulled into a parking space on the town square. He didnât want to have a wreck on his first day back in town. With memories pouring into his head, he feared he might be too distracted to drive.
Heâd grown up here, learning about life, sharing, hunting, camping, riding with his friends. Falling in love for the first time. Katie.
âGabe!â
The man standing by his car door waited for him to acknowledge his presence. Gabe opened the door and got out. âMac Gibbons!â he replied, grabbing one of his best childhood friends into a bear hug. âHow did you know I was here?â
âIâd been to see Cal. Your new Mercedes caught my eye. Nice car.â
âYeah, thanks.â The car was a result of his recent success. âI was on my way to see you.â
âAbout your grandmotherâs will?â
Gabe nodded.
Mac reached out and squeezed Gabeâs shoulder in silent sympathy. âCome on, letâs get it over with. Then we can visit.â
Mac Gibbons knew Gabriel Dawson was in for a shock. He decided it would be better not to procrastinate. He hoped Gabe would take some time to think, not make a quick decision.
He led his old friend into his offices. After introducing him to his secretary, an efficient middle-aged woman, he took him down the hall, stopping at the first door.
âAlex, let me introduce an old friend, Gabe Dawson. Alexandra Langford is my partner.â
âLangford?â Gabe repeated, a question in his voice.
Mac nodded. âAnd Tuckâs wife.â
Gabe smiled. âTuck always was a lucky man. But Iâll admit, I never thought heâd marry.â
Mac chuckled. âOne look at Alex, and he was a goner.â
Alexandra gave her partner a knowing look. âYou donât have room to talk, Mac.â
âYeah,â he agreed with a contented sigh.
âYou remarried?â Gabe asked, astounded. Heâd been around when Mac had lived in Dallas. He knew how badly his friend had been hurt.
âHe married and is a daddy twice over,â Alex added.
Macâs grin only widened. âNever mind that. Weâll catch up later. First, weâve got some business to conduct.â
He led his friend into his office and shut the door.
Before sitting down, he pulled a legal file from his file cabinet. âYour grandmother changed her will last year.â
Gabeâs head snapped up. âDo you mean Iâm not the heir?â
It wasnât that he needed his grandmotherâs estate. As an attorney with a large firm in Dallas, he earned a more-than-healthy salary. Then heâd taken a risk on a personal injury case and had won big. Big enough that heâd never have to work again.
But heâd loved his grandmother. He wouldnât want to think heâd disappointed her.
âYouâre still the heir,â Mac assured him, âif you meet certain conditions.â
âCertain conditions?â Foreboding filled Gabe. His grandmother had fussed about his lifestyle. Surely she hadnâtâ
âYou know how amazed you were that Tuck and I were both married?â
Gabe stared at his friend. What did their marriages have to do with anything? âWell, yeah, Tuck was determined never to marry and you, well, I was there when you went through your divorce. I remember how bitter and hurt you were.â
Mac nodded. âSpence and Cal are married, too,â he added, naming two other friends. âIt seems our mothers were frustrated that we hadnât married, any of us, and made a bet to see who would get the first grandbaby. They were so successful, they inspired a lot of other mothersâ¦and grandmothers.â