Houston Sadler was a wealthy man. A billionaire. And he was accustomed to getting exactly what he wanted.
Gabrielle had seen the love in Houstonâs eyes when he looked at Lucas, and that love might blind him to the fact that this was the child sheâd planned and carried. This was her baby.
He showed her to her room, and it was even larger than sheâd expected. There was even a crib and changing table.
âYouâre exhausted,â Houston commented.
And as if it was the most normal and routine thing in the world, he took Lucas from her arms and carried him to the crib. He didnât lay the baby down right away, but instead kissed his cheek and smiled at him.
Gabrielle could see it thenâthe strong resemblance. It was uncanny and unnerving just how much Lucas looked like his father. He was indeed a Sadler.
That didnât do much to steady her nerves.
Blue Springs Ranch, Texas
Houston Sadler climbed down from his horse, eased off his Stetson and smacked it against his jeans to get rid of some of the dust heâd accumulated on his ride. Bear, his buckskin gelding, snorted in protest, and Houston led the horse into the stables so he could brush him down.
Neither of them got far.
âDonât move,â someone said.
Houston didnât have time to move, or think, before he felt the barrel of a gun jam against his back.
âLift your hands so I can see them,â the gunman added. Or rather the gunwoman, because that was a femaleâs voice.
Now the question was, what the hell did she want?
âIf youâre after money, thereâs none in the stables, and I donât have my wallet with me,â Houston let her know.
He lifted his hands, releasing Bearâs reins so the gelding would get out of the way. He damn sure didnât want his horse to get hurt when he took down this would-be robber. And there were no ifs, ands or buts about it, he was going to take her down. No one got away with pulling a gun on him.
âIâm not after your money,â she spat out, as if heâd insulted her. Her voice was clogged and hoarse, and he thought he heard her sniffle.
âAre you thinking about kidnapping me?â he asked, trying another tack.
If so, she wouldnât get far, because his ranch hands were all over the place. In fact, one could and probably would come into the stables at any moment. All of Houstonâs men knew his schedule and knew heâd be at the tail end of his daily ride. At least one would likely come in and offer to groom Bear.
âIâm not here to kidnap you.â Her voice was little more than a whisper now, and she didnât add anything else to tell him her intentions.
So, if this wasnât about money, then it was about love or revenge. But those were the likely reasons if he was dealing with a semisane person. He could rule out love, since he hadnât had more than a basic, no-strings-attached sexual relationship with a woman since his wife died three years ago.
That left revenge.
And if that was the case, then she probably intended to kill him. Or at least try.
âDo I know you?â he asked. Houston angled his head just slightly and looked over his shoulder. Then he cursed.
Oh, yeah. He knew her.
âGabrielle Markham,â Houston grumbled, and turned to face her.
He also dropped his hands. His mouth dropped open, too. She was the last person he expected to see in his stables with a gun on him. But he rethought that.
The last time theyâd crossed paths was ⦠what?⦠a year ago? Maybe longer. Sheâd been dressed in a dove-gray business suit in the Bexar County courthouse, where sheâd tried to sue his jeans off on behalf of her client, who also happened to be her brother, Jay.
Sheâd lost the case. Or rather, itâd been dismissed for lack of evidence.
Which meant Houston was back to the revenge motive, even though this was a pretty extreme measure for someone sour over losing a legal battle. People lost legal battles to him all the time.
Houston stared at her, trying to make sense of this situation and her. She certainly wasnât wearing a business suit today. Khaki pants and a pale pink shirt that was bulky and loose. She was also pale, no makeup, and the whites of her brown eyes were red.
Sheâd been crying, all right.
Her short, blond hair was spiky and uncombed, and it didnât look as if sheâd done it to make a fashion statement. The cool October breeze rustled through it, messing it up even more than it already was.
âWhat happened?â Houston wasnât just alarmed now, he was concerned. Not so much for the woman who was holding him at gunpoint, but for whatever had driven her to come out to the Blue Springs ranch and commit a felony.