Read The Reluctant Cowgirl Online
Authors: Christine Lynxwiler
Tags: #Contemporary, #General, #Romance, #Fiction, #Love stories, #Christian fiction, #Man-woman relationships, #Christian, #Arkansas, #Cowboys, #Actors
The Reluctant Cowgirl | |
Christine Lynxwiler | |
Barbour Publishing, Inc. (2009) | |
Rating: | **** |
Tags: | Contemporary, General, Romance, Fiction, Love stories, Christian fiction, Man-woman relationships, Christian, Arkansas, Cowboys, Actors |
Romance author Lynxwiler (_Along Came a Cowboy_) tries to set up a city girl/country boy attraction of opposites in this tale of aspiring actress Crystal McCord, who flees New York for her parents' ranch in Arkansas after her urban cad of a boyfriend sleeps with her roommate. But since the city girl is from the country, there really isn't much fish-out-of-water tension, nor a lot of any other kind of plot tension. The titular cowgirl isn't sufficiently reluctant around her handsome rancher neighbor Jeremy Buchanan, and a dark plot complication—a missing child—resolves itself rather quickly. Crystal's family history provides another wrinkle, and a smidgen of depth. Clever dialogue flows easily and wittily, almost screenplay-like, the best thing about this romance. Those who like their inspirational romance over easy will be happy to meet the McCord family, with enough siblings and backstories to kick off a series.
(Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Top Pick! This old-fashioned romance set in present-day Arkansas is the first book in Lynxwiler''s fantastic new must-read McCord Sisters series. Crystal and Jeremy begin as friends, and their love develops over time. Be prepared to drop everything and settle down in a nice cozy place, because you will not want to leave Crystal and Jeremy until their story is told.
(Cheryl Hanson
Romantic Times
20090310)
Overall,
The Reluctant Cowgirl
is a very humorous and heartwarming story of love, loss, redemption, and how God''s always waiting for his lost children to come home. Lynxwiler definitely ended this mesmerizing story much too quickly.
(Kelsey Shade
CBA Retailers and Resources
20090224)
Romance author Lynxwiler (Along Came a Cowboy) tries to set up a city girl/country boy attraction of opposites in this tale of aspiring actress Crystal McCord, who flees New York for her parents'' ranch in Arkansas after her urban cad of a boyfriend sleeps with her roommate. But since the city girl is from the country, there really isn''t much fish-out-of-water tension, nor a lot of any othe kind of plot tension. The titular cowgirl isn''t sufficiently reluctant around her handsome rancher neighbor Jeremy Buchanan, and a dark plot complication--a missing child--resolves itself rather quickly. Crystal''s family history provides another wrinkle, and a smidgen of depth. Clever dialogue flows easily and wittily, almost screenplay-like, the best thing about this romance. Those who like their inspirational romance over easy will be happy to meet the McCord family, with enough siblings and backstories to kick off a series.
(_Publisher's Weekly_ )
The longing Crystal has for home and family comes off the page as clearly as if they were your own. As she battles with her memories and longs for what she lost when she moved away, love unexpectedly creeps into her heart in the form of a neighborly cowboy. Jeremy is the epitome of what makes us all love a cowboy. He’s kindhearted, has a great work ethic, a heart of gold, and a heartache all his own that he bears silently. The twists and turns of the story make it a journey worth taking. This is truly a sweet, heart-warming story that makes you happy to share in the heartache and the joy. Definitely a page turner!
(Donna Bas
Novel Editions
)
What can I say? I''ve read Ms. Lynxwiler''s books before and like them. That is part of the reason I chose this one. And...I like it. Easy enough to say. What did I like about it? Probably a lot of it had to do with the fact that I like just about anything to do with cowboys/cowgirls/country life. I like the friends-turn-boyfriend/girlfriend angle. I like the during-the-hard-times-you-lean-on-God story line. This book had all three. As an added bonus, the heroine has brothers and sisters, and it''s book one. And that means...you guessed it...more books! Yay!
This story is about faithfulness, forgiveness, family, and friends. (Did I just alliterate? Comes from living with a former Bible college graduate.) Anyway...Crystal McCord and her twin dreamed of being on Broadway. When her twin is killed in a car wreck their senior year of high school, Crystal goes alone. For almost 7 years she worked hard to make it, but only had supporting roles in off-Broadway productions. Her current play closes at the same time her family needs help on the ranch so she goes back to visit. Her intentions of going right back to The Big Apple change when she is the only one able to stay and help.
Crystal has to face that maybe
her
dream isn''t what she thought it was. When she re-discovers the faithfulness of God, she is able to recognize that fact.
Neighbor Jeremy Buchanan has his own troubles, but sacrifices his time to help out, also. His ex-wife has taken their daughter and he can''t find her. When his situation looks like it is taking a turn for the worse, he has to learn about trust and forgiveness.
Crystal and Jeremy become friends and she helps him look for his daughter. Things seem to be going well, until Crystal has a call to try out for a part, a lead part, on Broadway. Will she stay or go? I can''t tell you, you have to read for yourself. :) I will tell you this: I look forward to reading the rest of this series.
(Jen T
Many Blessings Equals Busy Life Blog
)
Heeding Sinatra’s advice, Crystal McCord left Arkansas to make it as an actress in New York City. In spite of good reviews for her acting, the play she is in making a Splash folds as the critics kill it. When she returns to her rent controlled apartment, Crystal finds her boyfriend Brad who missed her performance sleeping with her roommate Sasha. Since her family called for a meeting anyway, the Arkansas traveler decides to go home to her parents’ ranch to heal from the play’s closing and the betrayals.
When neighboring rancher Jeremy Buchanan and Crystal meet, sparks fly. She metaphorically considers him to be her potential leading man in this regional theater, but he has a history with her type. As they fall in love, both have decisions to make and stereotypes to overcome.
How you’re going to keep her down on the ranch after she’s seen New York is the underlying theme in this entertaining contemporary romance in which author Christine Lynxwiler avoids dissing either the location as tastes and desires matter. THE RELUCTANT COWGIRL is a fun tale due to the misconceptions of the lead couple re the other. With a strong supporting cast, readers will enjoy this light inspirational as the wannabe in the clouds actress and the grounded rancher fall in love. See ALONG CAME A COWBOY for an even deeper Arkansas character study.
(Harriet Klausner
The Merry Genre Go Round Reviews
)
Arkansas
Promise Me Always
Forever Christmas
Along Came a Cowboy
Even though I suppose there are little towns named Shady Grove in every state, including Arkansas, the particular Shady Grove in
The Reluctant Cowgirl
is a purely fictional place with purely fictional people, plunked down in the middle of northeast Arkansas, somewhere around Sharp County.
To Tracy Bateman,
I couldn’t have done it without your continuous support and encouragement—and most of all, your friendship.
You inspire me.
Special thanks to all my critique partners and supportive family.
And to Elizabeth Borngeret for the wonderful
Broadway insight. Any errors are mine and not hers.
“Mark my words. Someday Julia Roberts will be bragging that Broadway star Crystal McCord used to serve her sandwiches.”
“Right, Mia,” Crystal drawled into the phone as she looked out the dingy cab window at the small theater. Distance-wise, the green awning was a stone’s throw from Broadway. But on days like this, that stone seemed to weigh a ton. “Julia Roberts came into the diner
one
time, and I was so nervous I messed up her order. I can’t really see her bragging about knowing me. Besides, you’re my agent. You have to say that.”
The cabbie made a left and swung around to the back of the building. Crystal balanced the cell phone against her cheek and fished his fare from her purse.
“You’re too modest. Why do you think I took you on?” Part of Mia’s magic as an agent was her supreme confidence in her clients. She counted on it being contagious. And usually it was. “Look. You’re a fantastic actress. If this play hadn’t closed so quickly—”
“My daddy always said
if
is the biggest little word in the English language.” Crystal put her hand to her mouth. Where had that come from? Apparently her brother’s e-mail had made her more homesick than she’d realized. And that’s why she had to put it out of her mind for now.
“Yes, well,” Mia replied, without missing a beat or questioning the quote, “your daddy isn’t in show biz. Here we deal in ifs on a daily basis. And like I was saying,
if
this play hadn’t closed so quickly, it would have been your fast track to Broadway.”
A weary smile lifted Crystal’s lips. “
Fast
track?”
At least Mia had the grace to laugh. “You and I both know you’ve put in a hard six years here. But the media loves an overnight success. So when you
do
hit Broadway with a bullet, we’ll spin it that way.”
“Almost seven years actually. And I wish I had your confidence.”
The cab driver eased his car up to the back door of the theater and stopped.
“Closing nights are always tough.” Sympathy laced Mia’s voice. “Just get through tonight. I’ve got leads on several auditions. You’ll have a new play by next—” Mia gasped. “Crys, listen to this late review I just found.”
Crystal shifted her hand, preparing to flip the phone shut. “I’ll have to read it after the performance. I’m here. Besides, good or bad, I’d rather not hear it right now.”
Mia sighed loudly. “Fine, spoilsport. Call me later. Oh, and Crystal?”
“Yeah?”
“Break a leg.” Mia snickered at her own tired joke.
“Ha-ha.” Crystal closed the phone and shook her head. Why had she ever told Mia how sick she got of hearing that?
The cabbie cleared his throat.
Her gaze jerked to meet his impatient eyes in the mirror. “Sorry.” She dropped her phone back into her bag, fumbled his fare into his hand, and jumped out. “Thanks.”
Crystal waited for an oncoming cab to pass then crossed the street. She jumped as the cab honked at the car in front of it. An answering honk came quickly. She wove her way around a parked moving van.
She was always amazed by how easily plays came and went. Two weeks ago,
Making a Splash
had opened to great expectations. Then the bad reviews had started. As a supporting actress, she’d been lucky enough to escape mention by name, but guilt by association was bad enough.
The aroma of fresh-cooked hotdogs drifted to her from the small vendor by the door, and her stomach growled. She nodded to the white-capped man.
He gave her a toothless grin. “Half price for you,” he called.
She laughed. “You only say that because you know I don’t eat before the show.”
He sent her a broad wink. “When the curtains close, the cost doubles.”
“I’ll have to take my chances.” Today she bantered almost on automatic pilot. She just felt so tired inside. With two fingers she caressed the tiny daisy pendant that hung around her neck. Brad had picked a fine time to be a no-show. Some wannabe fiancé he was.
As if on cue, her purse vibrated. She stepped over to the edge of the sidewalk and retrieved her phone from the big red bag. She pressed a button to read the text message.
TEXT ME LATER IF YOU WANT ME TO MEET YOU FOR THE CAST PARTY.
She started to hit Reply but accidentally landed on the message that had irritated her an hour ago.
HELPING DENNIS MOVE TONIGHT. DON’T FREAK OUT. AFTER ALL, I SAW OPENING NIGHT AND YOU WERE GREAT. BREAK A LEG.
Her lips tightened and she shoved her phone back into her purse. She could text him at intermission, and he’d have plenty of time to make it for the cast get-together. Right now, she needed to concentrate on the show.
***
“It’s been nine months.” Jeremy Buchanan slammed his fist on the old oak table and pushed to his feet. “Why can’t we find her?”
Sam gave him an uneasy look and stood. “Being patient is never easy. This time it was a dead-end lead. But next time...”
Jeremy stared at the private investigator, whose Adam’s apple bobbed as he swallowed.
Shame coursed through him. The situation he was in was no one’s fault but his own. Yet here was a grown man half afraid of him. He nodded and slapped Sam ... gently ... on the shoulder. “I’m sure next time
will
be different. I appreciate your not giving up.”
Sam nodded, but Jeremy was pretty sure he didn’t imagine a bit of hurry in the man’s step as he let the screen door slam behind him.
Jeremy crossed the kitchen and stood by the cordless phone, waiting for the call he knew was coming.
Five, four, three, two, one,
he counted down. The phone chimed loudly and he lifted it off the cradle and hit the Talk button. “Hi, Mom.”
“Actually, it’s me,” a deep voice said, embarrassment evident.
Jeremy couldn’t resist a sad grin. That had been the way for forty years. His mom had always suckered his dad into doing her dirty work. “Oh. Hi, Dad. Sorry.”
“That’s okay. Your mom—”
Jeremy heard a murmur in the background.
“We...” His dad cleared his throat. “We wanted to know what you found out.”
“Nothing. Dead end.”
The silence on the phone line hurt almost as bad as the news from the PI had.
“I figured it was.”
“Yeah, me, too.”
“Hang on, your mom wants to talk to you.”
Jeremy tightened his fingers on the phone.
“Jeremy?”
“Hi, Mom. Sorry the news isn’t better.”
“Don’t give up hope, son. God hears our prayers.”
Jeremy nodded, even though she couldn’t see him. “I know.”
“Your dad wants to know if you want to come over for supper.”
“Nah, I’ve got soup in the refrigerator. I think I’ll read awhile and turn in early tonight. I promised Jonathan I’d check the hay crop in his bottom field and see if the cold snap the other night got it. But you better have coffee ready when I get done with that,” he teased halfheartedly.
“Yeah, we know how cranky you are without your caffeine in the morning.” Her teasing was as forced as his, but at least she tried. “See you, then. Love you.”
“Y’all, too.”
***
Crystal slipped inside the backstage area. She closed her eyes and let the familiar smell of turpentine and the noise of sound checks calm her like a cup of chamomile tea. She might be tired, but there was no denying her love for the theater.
“Crystal?”
She jerked her eyes open.
Zee, the stage director, frowned at her, his gold eyebrow hoop lifting. “You okay?”
She smiled. “I am. It’s just been a long day, and you know closing nights are always rough.”
“Hmph,” he grunted. “Especially when they’re forced on you. But you’ll be great. Just like always.” She was surprised he didn’t ruffle her hair. He wasn’t much older than she was, but in spite of the fact that she was twenty-five, most of the show people still treated her like she was a teenager. The joys of being short.
“Thanks, Zee. You’re sweet.”
“Tell that to Tink. I need all the help I can get with her.” A grin flitted across his tan face, the long scar from his ear to his chin puckering slightly.
“I’ll put in a good word for you.” Crystal laughed and hurried into the crowded dressing room.
Her friend and castmate, Tina, or “Tink,” as Zee called her, waved from an empty station. She ran both hands through her dark spiky hair and finished with her arms straight up in the air in a ta-da motion. “There you are.”
Crystal motioned toward Tina’s hair. “Turquoise, huh? Cool.”
Tina fluffed her multi-colored spikes. “Yeah, thanks.”
Every few weeks, Tina’s highlights changed color. Tonight, they matched her blouse and her eye shadow.
“I’m all done with my hair and makeup. Want me to do yours?”
“Thanks. I’d love that.” Crystal sank onto the chair and closed her eyes.
Tina briefly massaged her shoulders. “Girl, you’re tighter than a fiddle string tonight,” she said, in her thick Texas drawl.
“I know.” Crystal sighed and tried to relax.
Tina’s hands flew as she brushed through Crystal’s shoulder-length hair. “Why do I think that sigh isn’t all because the play’s closing?”
Crystal jerked her head up to meet the woman’s gaze in the mirror.
The heavy black eyeliner around Tina’s eyes didn’t hide the compassion there. “What’s wrong?”
Crystal shrugged. “Nothing really.”
Tina snorted. “Nothing, my foot.”
Those blue eyes never missed a trick. Crystal sighed again. “Isn’t it enough that the play
is
closing? And that you, Zee, and I will have to try to find another job Monday? What if we don’t get one together?”
Tina grabbed a folded-up newspaper and stuffed it into Crystal’s bag. “I know you don’t want to see it now, but read it after the show.”
Crystal laughed. “Must be some review. First Mia, now you.” She held up her hand. “But you’re right. I don’t want to know.”
Tina snatched a pick off the counter and attacked Crystal’s hair, artfully styling it into the homeless look necessary for the first scene. “Don’t worry. We’ll get a gig together. You audition where you want to, and we’ll tag along. We’ve done it before. What else?”
“Brad texted to tell me he couldn’t make it tonight. Something came up.”
Tina shrugged. “Wedding-Proposal Ken can’t make it tonight, huh? That’s a little irritating, and you know the right answer to his question anyway, you just don’t want to admit it. I’m pretty sure there’s something bigger wrong, unless I’m way off base.”
A smile tugged at the corners of Crystal’s mouth, but she was careful not to show it. Tina got a kick out of calling Brad “Ken” as in “Ken and Barbie,” but other than that, she had good instincts. In every way.
Tina paused with the teasing comb above Crystal’s head. “Might as well tell me. You know you want to.”
“Maybe you need to go to work for one of those psychic hotlines,” Crystal drawled.
“Very funny. You know I don’t believe in that mumbo jumbo. I just know you. Nice try changing the subject though. And if you really don’t want to talk about it, far be it from me to be pushy.”
Crystal grinned. “Pushy? You?” She considered taking the out. But Tina was her safety valve, and right now she really needed that. “I got an e-mail from Aaron.”
Tina tapped her lip with the comb and stared at the ceiling for a second. Then her gaze met Crystal’s in the mirror again. “Aaron. Got married a couple months ago. Right?”
“You amaze me.”
She shrugged. “I don’t have any family but my grandpa to keep up with. So keeping your six brothers and sisters straight is a challenge. Besides, it was an event worthy of your going home for a visit. That in itself is rare enough to make me remember it.”
“I visit.” Crystal heard the defensiveness in her voice, but she couldn’t seem to help it. “Holidays are a bad time to get away in this business. You know that.”
Tina opened her mouth then shut it again. She took a deep breath and smiled. “So what did Aaron have to say?”
Crystal closed her eyes for a second as she remembered the e-mail. “He and Bree have gotten a chance to move to inner-city Chicago for a year and do some mission work with at-risk boys.”
“Ah, that’s sweet.” Tina slapped Crystal’s arm. “Too bad they don’t want to move to the Big Apple. We could use a little more gospel around here, don’t ya think?”
Crystal nodded absently. “I guess.” Tina and Zee were always trying to get her to go to church with them. In a way, that was probably what had drawn her to them in the beginning. Even though she’d quit going to church when she moved to the city, she still believed in God. She just wasn’t sure He cared about people who had turned their backs on Him. “This is a special houseparent program that Aaron and Bree have a chance to participate in.”
“Good for them.”
Crystal looked in the mirror at the dark smudges under her eyes. “Aaron was twelve and just about to initiate into a Chicago gang when his grandmother died and we got him. So he feels a strong need to do this. Stop boys from getting into gangs. Provide a place where people care about them and give them boundaries.”
Tina smiled. “And introduce them to Jesus.”
Crystal ignored her comment. “Anyway, Aaron called a family meeting for tomorrow.”
“You going?”
Crystal snorted. “To Arkansas? I’ll be auditioning and you know it.”
“On Saturday?”
“All next week. It would be a waste to just fly there and fly back. Not to mention annihilating my tiny savings.”
“So everyone but you is going to be there.”
She shrugged. “Probably. But they know I can’t make it.”
“Can’t or won’t?” Tina muttered. Before Crystal could respond, she spoke in a normal voice. “So what’s the problem with Aaron leaving?”
“He’s Dad’s right-hand man.”
“Don’t some of your other sisters and brothers live nearby?”
“Yeah, but they’re busy with their own lives. Aaron’s been the main one who takes care of the cattle. And Mama and Daddy are going on an overseas trip in a week. I think he’s afraid they’ll cancel.”
“Mission trip?” Tina asked, her voice dry, as she deftly started on makeup.
Crystal nodded. “With a second honeymoon tacked on for good measure.”
“Honeymoon or no honeymoon, your family’s so holy, ‘The Hallelujah Chorus’ must burst out spontaneously every time they’re together. I bet they bug you worse than we do about going to church.”