His Valentine Triplets. Tina Leonard
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Название: His Valentine Triplets

Автор: Tina Leonard

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Современные любовные романы

Серия:

isbn: 9781408978108

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       “And besides,” Pete chimed in, “someone’s got to marry off the rest of our brothers. We don’t need half of us causing trouble in our bachelor phases.”

       “Jonas, Sam and Rafe.” Creed shook his head. “My twin, Rafe, and Jonas, the eldest of the bunch, and Sam, the youngest of the bunch. I’d say we still need you, Aunt Fiona.”

       “Don’t coddle me,” she said. “Don’t try to lure me with babies and matchmaking and spitting in Bode’s eye. I know what’s best, and what’s best is that Burke and I leave you men to unite against a common foe.”

       They all stared at their tiny, determined matriarch.

       “Damn,” Rafe said, “that’s pretty strategic thinking, Aunt.”

       She nodded. “One of my better plots, I must say.”

       He glanced around the large library. His brothers lounged in various positions, some looking lazy (but always ready for action), some rumpled (hard workers), and Jonas, who looked cranky, as always.

       Rafe loved his brothers. They were a tight-knit band.

       “But what if we don’t unite?” he asked. “What if we turn on each other?”

       “Would you?” Fiona asked, looking at him.

       “Hell, I don’t know. There’s a ranch at stake.” He shrugged. “Without your hand on the reins, we might go running wild through the New Mexico desert.”

       “I doubt it.” Fiona’s voice was crisp. “Anyway, today’s flare-up has convinced Burke and me of what we’d been discussing since Bode launched his grab for your land. We think you are better off without me here to rile him. I’ve divided the ranch up into six equal parts. For the three of you who are married, I’ve put your portion in your name. For those of you who are not married, your portion is in trust, which you will receive upon my death or your marriage, whichever comes first. Without me here, I’d say it won’t be marriage.”

       She nodded and took Burke’s hand. “It has been an honor to raise you. We love you like our own sons. We always did. There are a lot of questions you may one day want to ask, and when you’re ready, we’ll answer them for you. And remember that everything you think you know isn’t always what is. Take good care of each other, and most importantly, be brothers.”

       Fiona and Burke made their way from the library. Rafe tried not to gawk at the departing figures of their aunt and uncle. “I think she’s serious.”

       Sam nodded. “She really believes she’s the source of Bode’s anger. I say we just kill him.”

       They all snorted at him.

       “She can’t go back to Ireland,” Jonas said. “We need her here. She belongs here. Burke belongs here. They haven’t been back to Ireland in over twenty-some years. What are they going to do there?”

       The brothers turned to stare at him.

       “That is the most emotion I think I’ve ever heard you spew,” Rafe said. “I feel like I’m in the presence of the angel of human psyche.”

       “There’s probably no such thing,” Sam said, “but that was pretty heavy, Jonas, for a tight-ass like you.”

       Jonas threw a tissue box at them. “Go ahead, bawl your brains out. We all want to.”

       “I’m not crying.” Rafe took a deep breath, not about to let himself get drizzly, although he did feel like a water balloon in danger of being punctured. Fiona’s decision had left him pretty torn up. “I’m going to convince Fiona she’s worried over nothing. I’m—”

       They heard a door slam. The brothers glanced at each other.

       “Must be going out to check on the horses,” Creed offered.

       “Or to change her holiday lights. It’s about time for her to take down the Fourth of July décor-anza.” Pete nodded. “She left them extra long because all the little girlies liked them so much. She said her great-nieces should always have sparkly decorations to look at.”

       Fiona was famous far and wide for her lighting displays. Rancho Diablo always looked like a fairyland, sometimes draped with white lights, sometimes colored—but always beautiful. “I want to wring Bode’s scrawny chicken neck,” Rafe said.

       “I do, too,” Judah said, “but that’ll just land us in jail.”

       “Miserable old fart.” Rafe couldn’t believe what had happened. His luscious Julie had to know that her father was beginning to go around the bend. Not that she would ever admit to such a failing in him, locked in her ivory tower of daddy-knows-best. “Maybe Bode has terminal dumb-ass disea…” Rafe stopped, listening to a sound that had caught his attention. “Was that a motor? A vehicular motor? Visitors, perhaps?”

       Or Bode serving up more trouble.

       The brothers looked at each other, then jumped to the many windows of the library to study the driveway in the dimming evening light.

       “That is a taxi,” Jonas said, “and if I’m not mistaken, our aunt and uncle just bailed on us.”

      Chapter Three

      “I’m not sure what any of this means,” Sam said to Rafe a week later. They were all busy trying to adjust to Fiona and Burke’s sudden departure. He waved a bunch of legal documents. “It seems our aunt was keeping a lot of secrets.”

       Rafe gazed out toward the horizon of Rancho Diablo. The two of them were in Fiona’s library, Sam having called him there to vent his frustration with their aunt’s dispensation of the ranch. “You’ll figure it all out.”

       “I wish I’d known half the stuff before we got knee-deep in battling Bode. Did you know that originally this land was owned by a tribe? Our father bought it from them.”

       Rafe shrugged. “That explains the yearly visit from the chief, maybe.”

       “Yeah, it sure does. The tribe retained the mineral rights to the property.”

       Sam sure had his full attention now. Rafe turned away from the window to goggle at his brother. “All mineral rights?”

       “Oil, gas, silver—you name it, it’s not Rancho Diablo’s.”

       Rafe couldn’t help grinning.

       “What’s so damn funny, Einstein?” Sam snapped.

       “Bode doesn’t know.” Rafe laughed out loud.

       After a moment, the thundercloud lifted from Sam’s brow. “That’s right, he doesn’t. And he can’t sue a tribe for their mineral rights. Well, I guess he could, but he wouldn’t win. This is a signed and properly executed document.”

       They both sank onto a leather sofa and chuckled some more. Jonas poked his head in, favoring each of them with a grumpy gaze.

       “Don’t you two ever do any work?” he СКАЧАТЬ