Forever Dreams (Montana Brides) (22 page)

BOOK: Forever Dreams (Montana Brides)
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“Tiptoeing isn’t going to do much good at this stage.”

“I was being respectful.”
 

Trent grunted and rolled onto his side.

“Hey, where have my pillows gone?”
 

“Don’t push your luck, short-stuff. Believe me, after the last couple of days we’ve had I’m more interested in sleep than exploring nocturnal activities with you. Goodnight, Gracie.”

“Goodnight,” she muttered, settling down for a good night’s sleep. What was left of it, anyway.

Gracie woke up before Trent stirred. She doubted even the cows were mooing, it was so early. Dragging her feet to the floor, she stumbled toward her bedroom. Trent wasn’t going to catch her anywhere near his bed on their first official morning of being married. She liked a little bit of adventure in her life, but she’d be pushing her luck way too far if she thought she could get away from his wondering hands.
 

A slight detour in their marriage plans wasn’t what she needed. Slight detours could be lethal, especially given their detour in a hotel room in the middle of Sin City.

She smiled as she quietly pulled on her jeans. It wasn’t often a girl woke up to the first day of her marriage, well, the first day she knew she was married, getting dressed in another bedroom. She’d bet her last paycheck that most new wives wouldn’t want to be out the bedroom door before their husbands popped an eyeball open. But here she was, Gracie McKenzie, on the run and proud of it.

“Gracie?”

“Out here.” She pulled a sweatshirt over her head and ran onto the landing.
 
“I’m about to go downstairs and make breakfast.”

Trent stood in their bedroom door, squinting at the glare coming through the windows. “What are you doing up so early?”

“It’s six thirty. The cows are calling your name.”

Glancing down at his watch, he groaned. “It must be the emotional toll you’re taking on me. A man’s nerves can only stand so much stretching until something has to give.”

Gracie’s eyes traveled over his half naked body. She frowned at the grin slipping across his face. “You’d better be careful it’s not the elastic in those boxers doing all the giving.”

He leaned against the doorframe. “Worried you might like what you see?”

She laughed as she skipped down the stairs. “Have you forgotten? I’ve already seen what you have to offer.” And he didn’t need to bother asking if she’d liked what she saw. He knew she had.

“No. I’m not going in there.”

Grabbing Gracie’s hand, Trent pulled her toward Dominique’s. “There’s no way I’m going into Aladdin’s Cave to buy you an engagement ring. It’s here or nothing.”

“Would you stop causing a scene,” she hissed. “I will not spend thousands of dollars on a chip of diamond that won’t be on my finger for long.”

“Stop being so pessimistic. You’ll be old and wrinkly before you know it and still threatening me with divorce.”
 

Pulling her hand out of Trent’s grasp, Gracie scowled at him. “You might as well give in because I’d sooner go without.”

He looked down at his pint-sized rottweiler. Gracie’s red hair practically sizzled with indignation as she glared up at him. It didn’t matter how long she stayed his wife. She’d remember each week with more than a chip of synthetic crystal attached to her finger. If it was the last thing he ever did, she’d be wearing the biggest diamond ring he could find. But looking at the scowl on her face, it wouldn’t be happening today.
 

“Fine. Forget about an engagement ring. We’ll only get our wedding bands from here.” He pulled her through the door and up to the front counter before she had time to argue.
 

A sympathetic man might have felt insulted by the withering look she sent his way, but he was made of sterner stuff. Trent glared right on back, until the sales assistant interrupted their contest to see who could glare for the longest.
 

After a lot of debate, Gracie finally chose a slim gold wedding band. No decoration, no inset jewels. Just a plain, gold, band. The sales assistant tried her best to entice Gracie toward some of the more flamboyant designs, but she wouldn’t listen. Plain gold suited her just fine.

While Trent paid for the ring, Gracie shot outside.
 

“Was the sight of all those diamonds too much?”

She poked her nose in the air. “No. I just needed some fresh air after all that schmoozing you did with the sales assistant.”

“Schmoozing? Whatever do you mean?”

“You know very well what I mean, Trent McKenzie. Every time that woman got near a tray of diamond rings you kept drawing attention to their setting and color. The poor girl thought all her commission days had come at once.”

“Weren’t you even a little tempted?”

“Nope.”

Trent smiled. “Not even by the princess cut diamond you kept zig-zagging back to?”

“I didn’t zig-zag back to anything,” Gracie said. “I was just trying to get out of the store before you charmed the poor girl behind the counter into marrying you as well.”

“One wife’s enough. We’d better go and get something to eat before you chew my other leg to the bone about the cruel barbarian I’ve turned into.”

Gracie managed a half decent huff, but still snuggled under his arm when he held her around the waist. She felt pretty fine tucked to the side of him. Trent’s heartbeat pick up a notch as he remembered the snuggling that’d gone on earlier in the day.
 

After they’d had breakfast, Gracie left to do her chores and he’d caught up with Jordan. Five hours later he’d headed back to the barn on his own. Gracie had been up to her elbows in water, washing Daisy after a run in the lower fields. Somewhere between the water and horse shampoo she’d ended up in his arms.
 

Gracie had kissed the daylights out of him in a way that made the hay bales look like a mighty fine landing pad for a set of newlyweds. Until Jordan turned up, that is.
 

Like the bucket of cold water Jordan tipped over Trent’s head, his brother’s arrival had cooled the temperature down to a low simmer. Gracie hadn’t hung around to help him dry off. She’d used Jordan’s arrival to resurrect the no touching policy and had disappeared quick-smart into the house.
 

“What do you feel like for lunch?”

Trent blinked. The only thing he wanted wasn’t on any menu he’d heard about. And Gracie wasn’t open to an all you can eat buffet. “How about we head across to the Emerson Grill?”

“Sounds good to me. Isn’t Sandra Lee’s somewhere around there?”
 

A groan built in his chest at the thought of another monster shopping trip.
 

Gracie rubbed the side of his waist with her hand. “I promise not to be too long.”
 

Trent looked down at the long, dark lashes fluttering in his direction. His breath caught in his throat. God in heaven, he’d turned into a ball of mush. No one would believe how much disruption this woman had caused to his well ordered life. Just when he thought he was heading in one direction, she’d do a three-point-turn and twist him around in knots. The slightest glance out of her big blue eyes left him hanging in mid air, wondering when the ground had disappeared.
 

 
“There’s another person I need to see while I’m in Bozeman.”

“Don’t tell me,” he said. “You’ve decided to relive our magic moment in Vegas and we’re booked in to see a priest?”

“Not quite. Erin’s found some more information in the library records. I said I’d call in on our way home.”

“Sounds like it could be a long afternoon.”

“Don’t worry, Trent. I won’t lead you astray.”

He wouldn’t have been so sure about that.

CHAPTER TEN

Trent pulled himself out of his truck, staring at the rag-tag bunch of vehicles parked along the street. Greg and Jenny Matthews had bought their single story cedar home more than five years ago. They’d been busy renovating it ever since; in-between three kids, two dogs and a cat of dubious pedigree.

“Hey, dude.”

Trent turned and grinned at Alex Green, walking toward him with the gait of a man confident in his own skin. He looked like a cowboy who spent his life falling on top of ornery steers.
 

The break in his nose had long since healed, but the crooked bump remained. Alex thought it gave his face character. Trent told him he was after a sympathy vote from the ladies. “I didn’t know you were back in town. Heard you got roughed up by a pretty little steer over in Idaho.”

“Nothing pretty about wrestling with six hundred pounds of prime beef. Mom said you’ve been doing a little wrestling of your own. I didn’t even know you were dating anyone.”

Trent had wondered how long it would take the gossip mill to broadcast his marriage to the world. Five days had to be one of the slowest turn-around times in the history of Bozeman. “Happened kind of fast.”
 

“You could say that again. She must be something to get you walking down the aisle so damn fast that you couldn’t wait until you got back home.”

There hadn’t been much walking involved. Sitting in the shuttle while Elvis officiated at their five minute wedding hardly seemed like the most romantic way to start married life. But then Trent hadn’t been interested in romance. Not then.
 

He didn’t have a clue how to explain his marriage to a group of men he’d known for most of his life. Call him a coward, but he hadn’t planned on coming into town for the baby-sitting half of his Friday ritual. But Tess had convinced Gracie to head over to Billings with the other halves of the men sitting inside Greg’s home. He was just relieved that Jordan had decided not to come and watch his brother make a fool of himself.
 

Trent rang the doorbell and waited with Alex for someone to unlock the gates of hell. He could hear Greg’s three boys screaming like banshees inside the house, and a deeper voice, probably Greg, making even more noise.
 

Ben Taylor opened the door, balancing his five month old niece in his arms. His wide grin couldn’t hide the dark smudges under his eyes. Unexpected fatherhood hadn’t been easy on him. “I don’t know if I should let you in. I lost twenty bucks to Nathan because of your wedding vows. You’ve never had an impulsive bone in your body, what happened?”

“The love bug bit him on his ass,” Alex laughed over Trent’s shoulder. “And she’s going to give him grief for the rest of his life.”

Ben stood back and let them pass. “Maybe you deserve to come in, then. Take a look around before you decide to add a few more munchkins to this gang of kids. It should put you off for life.”

Nathan walked toward them. “Unless it was a shotgun wedding.”

“Bloody hell you lot,” Trent groaned. “I’m not even in the door and you’ve got me booked into antenatal classes. Gracie’s not pregnant.” But hot damn, the thought wasn’t all that hard to swallow.
 

Nathan scowled at him. “Well don’t just stand there, come and get a drink before Greg makes another circuit with the kids. You’ll get flattened in the stampede.”

“I’ll meet you out there,” Ben said. “I’m going to put Emma down to sleep.”

Trent followed Alex and Nathan through the house and onto the deck. He looked around the backyard, smiling at the bikes and scooters parked against the fence.
 

Nathan passed him a can of beer, still cold from the bucket of ice stashed beside the house. “We’ve all heard the condensed version of what happened in Vegas. Now you’d better tell us what really happened.”
 

Trent stared at Nathan. “How did you find out?”

“Mom,” Nathan said. “She told me word started circulating on Monday that you got yourself hitched. I’ve been waiting for a call.”

Adam Jefferies poked his head out of the kitchen window. “And Doris told me when I called into Jake’s.”

Out of all of Trent’s friends, Adam was by far the tallest. Built like a beanpole, he had arms and legs that hadn’t made it past the gangly teen stage. But the man could move when he needed to. Especially when a woman decided she could get used to being a lawyer’s girlfriend. It was unfortunate that the lawyer in question didn’t believe in long-term commitment. Adam preferred short-term parking rights with a number of women, one after the other.

Greg appeared on the deck with five boys trailing after him. “Don’t say anything until I get back. I’m just going to put this lot to bed.”

Trent watched the heads walking behind Greg as he disappeared back inside the house. “Only three of those kids belong to Greg and the other two boys are Chris’s. So where’s Chris?”

Adam came out of the kitchen with a can of cola in one hand and a thick steak sandwich in the other. “He’s taken Debbie over to Great Falls for the weekend. Greg and Jenny are babysitting.”

Trent popped the tab on his can and sat on one of the chairs, risking a quick glance at his friends. They all stared back. “You can’t all be desperate for news of my wedding?”

“Desperate isn’t a word I’d use,” Nathan drawled. “Stunned, shocked…maybe even amazed would sum up what I thought when I heard you’d gone and got yourself hitched.”

Trent took a swig of beer. He had a feeling he was going to need it. He shot a glance at Alex. The damn grin on his face was enough to give Trent itchy feet. He’d left his phone on vibrate in case something happened in Billings and Gracie needed him to pick her up. He wished like hell he could make some excuse and go and see just what she was up to. But half the men in the house had their phones within pounce distance. They’d be no getting away from them in a hurry, so he settled down for a long interrogation.

Ben raced out the double set of doors, skidding on the edge of the doorframe. “Have I missed anything?”

“Nope,” Nathan frowned. “We’re just waiting on Greg, then Trent’s going to tell us why he let the rest of us single men down by getting himself a wife.”

Trent left the can of beer on the deck and headed across to the bucket for a cola. Four pairs of eyes followed his every move. Before they got started on his sorry excuse for matrimonial bliss, he needed to do some digging of his own. “So,” he cleared the frog that marched up his windpipe. “How’s your dad going, Alex? I haven’t seen Jim around much.” And that would have to be about as subtle as a sledgehammer.

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