Wander Canyon Courtship
They can’t let this wedding happen
But Matrimony Valley has only happy endings
Baker Yvonne Niles has nothing in common with cowboy Chaz Walker—except the upcoming marriage of her aunt to his stepdad. Convinced the two aren’t right for each other, Chaz and Yvonne are determined to halt the wedding. But between the cake and family drama, they’re discovering an undeniable attraction. Can an unlikely match ever become a recipe for happiness?
He couldn’t breathe properly with her staring at him like that...
“You okay?”
“Yeah, sure.” Yvonne’s voice was breathless.
A curl of panic gripped Chaz. “You need to be careful around livestock,” he said in the most practical tone he could muster with the small tornado in his chest.
“Good to remember.” Her awestruck tone took on a whole new timbre, which only added to his panic.
“So, that’s the herd and the ranch.” The absurd pronouncement made him want to whack his head.
“I see why you love it so much.” She seemed as desperate to fill the air between them with words as he was. “It’s beautiful.”
It was as if every single detailed memory left a mark. “We should head back. Lunch will be ready and then we’ll head into town.”
“Sure,” she said a bit too brightly as she settled herself into the passenger seat. “No problem at all.”
That was where she was wrong.
Because Chaz didn’t like the idea of Yvonne being anywhere in Wander Canyon—anywhere in Colorado for that matter—without him...and that was a very big problem indeed.
Allie Pleiter, an award-winning author and RITA® Award finalist, writes both fiction and nonfiction. Her passion for knitting shows up in many of her books and all over her life. Entirely too fond of French macarons and lemon meringue pie, Allie spends her days writing books and avoiding housework. Allie grew up in Connecticut, holds a BS in speech from Northwestern University and lives near Chicago, Illinois.
Books by Allie Pleiter
Love Inspired
Matrimony Valley
His Surprise Son
Snowbound with the Best Man
Wander Canyon Courtship
Blue Thorn Ranch
The Texas Rancher’s Return
Coming Home to Texas
The Texan’s Second Chance
The Bull Rider’s Homecoming
The Texas Rancher’s New Family
Lone Star Cowboy League: Boys Ranch
The Rancher’s Texas Twins
Lone Star Cowboy League
A Ranger for the Holidays
Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com for more titles.
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WANDER CANYON COURTSHIP
Allie Pleiter
And he shall turn the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to their fathers.
—Malachi 4:6
In memory of my dear father-in-law, Les Pleiter,
who had his own wonderful whirlwind senior romance.
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Epilogue
Dear Reader
Excerpt from The Cowboy’s Faith by Danica Favorite
Chapter One
Yvonne Niles gawked at the man standing at her bakery counter. “If I didn’t know better, I’d think you don’t want your dad to marry my aunt.”
Chaz Walker ran one hand across his strong jawline. His glare told Yvonne that was exactly what he thought of Aunt Pauline’s engagement to Hank Walker. “So I take it you’re fine with it?” he challenged with intense, dark eyes.
Auntie P. and her beau, Hank, had been in her bakery shop not an hour ago choosing the cake for their upcoming Matrimony Valley wedding. The older couple seemed to be flat-out in love despite knowing each other for only a handful of months. Sure, the quickness of their engagement took everyone by surprise, but she wasn’t about to confess her few niggling doubts to this man. “Not really my call, is it? Or yours.”
She’d seen several control freaks as part of Matrimony Valley’s now-thriving location wedding business, but this son’s interference with his father’s wedding topped the list. It was usually mothers of the bride who made life difficult. Son of the groom was a new one, to be sure.
“My dad just told me they ordered a chocolate wedding cake.”
Yvonne put on her best bridezilla wrangler voice, which seemed ludicrous to use on the handsome yet brooding cowboy currently standing in her bakery. “Yes, Pauline wants me to make my signature Black Forest cake. Because she knows how good it is and how everybody loves it.” It was true. That cake had been written up in Southeastern Nuptials magazine as the best, most unusual wedding cake in the region. It was her signature cake. She pointed to the article and photograph framed on the bakery wall to underscore the point.
Were he not currently boasting a scowl cold enough to have frozen Matrimony Falls despite it being a very warm September, she might have called Chaz downright attractive. “My dad hates chocolate. She up and ordered a chocolate cake. Doesn’t that tell you something?”
She’d met too many men like this—ones who could never understand why the rest of the world wouldn’t bend to their will on even the tiniest of issues. Neal had been exactly like this. Isn’t that just the way? she thought to herself. The first good-looking single man to show up in the valley in a long time, and he turns out to be a self-centered know-it-all. And about something as innocuous as his father’s wedding cake, to boot.
Yvonne and her partners in the valley didn’t do cookie-cutter weddings. They created amazingly individualized nuptials. With a determined smile, Yvonne pulled out her sample book and paged over to a gorgeous white-iced Black Forest cake with luscious cherries and powdered-sugar-coated chocolate shavings piled on top. “Maybe your dad enjoys giving his bride a cake she likes. Couples do that, you know. At least the happy ones.”
Unhappy Chaz Walker glared at her for a moment, as if stunned by her refusal to see his side of things. Yvonne glared right back until the man silently turned on his boot heels and left the bakery.
She watched his long strides take him back across the street to where Chaz was staying with his father. Clearly he was strong, for when he reached the heavy front doors of Hailey’s Inn Love, he yanked them open as easily as if they were paper. Auntie P. was about to become this grumpy cowboy’s stepmother. Hadn’t Mama always said, “You don’t just marry a man, you marry his whole family”?
“Bless your heart, Auntie P.,” Yvonne said aloud as she watched the door shut behind the broad-shouldered man. “I think you’ve got one rough ride ahead.”
* * *
Yvonne sat down next to her aunt half an hour later as the high noon sun cast glorious colors on the Smoky Mountains behind Matrimony Falls. “Auntie P., I need to talk to you about something.”
The clearing where they sat looked as beautiful as an oil painting. Almost two dozen happy brides and grooms had been united in the open-air “cathedral” that had been built in this grove. The grand and peaceful spot was among her very favorite places on earth—and perhaps the best place to have what might be a tough conversation.
Pauline gave her a concerned look. “What’s wrong?”
Yvonne had rehearsed six different ways to bring the subject up, but she opted to ditch them all in favor of a direct approach. “How do you think Chaz feels about your wedding?”
Pauline surprised her by frowning. “Oh, he’s not especially in favor of it.”
Yvonne fought the urge to pick her jaw up off the grass. “You knew?”
“Well, of course I know. The man’s about as transparent as glass—not that he goes to much effort to hide his concerns.”
“Doesn’t that bother you?”
Pauline raised a dubious eyebrow. “Have you spent even ten minutes with Chaz?”
“He came into the bakery a bit ago.” She might have found his eyes stunning were they not framed in a face that seemed to be stuck in a perpetual scowl. As it was, Chaz bore little resemblance to the happy, love-struck groom who had told Pauline to “order whatever cake her heart desires.” Like father, like son? Hardly. “He gave me an earful about your wedding cake.”
“Our cake? Oh, the chocolate part, I’m sure. He and Hank are die-hard vanilla fans. It’s why I chose the white icing, but I expect he didn’t give you a chance to explain that.” Pauline folded her hands in her lap. “I’m sure you realized Chaz doesn’t have a high opinion of anything. I don’t take his doubts personally.” She gave a sm
all laugh. “Shame to waste those fine features on such a sourpuss, don’t you think? Some days I think he hates everything and everybody.”
Yvonne couldn’t believe Pauline’s laugh. “So you’re okay with this?”
Pauline fluttered one hand. “Well, of course not. Why do you think he’s here? It’s not as if I need his help to organize a wedding. That’s what y’all do here, isn’t it?”
Not just Yvonne’s, but the jobs of most people in the valley now centered on creating weddings. Mayor Jean Matrim Tyler—who herself was married in front of these falls just last winter—had cast a vision to reinvent this dying mill town into a destination wedding location. That dream had started to really take hold, and several brides—another of Yvonne’s dear friends, the town florist, Kelly, among them—had followed suit earlier this year. In fact, the prime wedding season just wrapping up had been the most successful to date.
None of which could explain the restlessness in Yvonne’s soul. Even the chance to give Pauline the wedding of her dreams hadn’t drowned out the hum of dissatisfaction. “I don’t think bringing him here helped convince him to get on board.” Aunt Pauline was never one to back down from a challenge, but Yvonne thought she might have chosen a monster of an obstacle in trying to gain Chaz’s endorsement.
“What is it you always say?” Pauline asked. “Folks argue about cake and flowers when they can’t bring themselves to argue about the real stuff? Chaz thinks we’re moving way too fast.”
Yvonne had to give her aunt credit. Most brides she knew would take serious offense at that, but Pauline seemed to accept it without bile.
“Of course, it’s not really me he’s wary of. It’s change. He can’t stomach that his daddy—we all know Hank is Chaz’s stepdaddy but that doesn’t change anything—is moving on and making choices Chaz doesn’t agree with.”
As a matter of fact, she didn’t know Chaz was Hank’s stepson. He referred to Hank as “Dad” in the bakery. She’d called Hank “your dad” right in front of Chaz and he’d not corrected her. Pauline had told her Hank was a widower with two sons. Yvonne had assumed Chaz and his brother were from that earlier marriage. Evidently not. “Hank’s been married twice before?” It would have been nicer not to sound so shocked.
“Wyatt is from Hank’s first marriage when he was very young. Wyatt’s mama left Hank when Wyatt was still a little thing.” She gave a sigh. “I think that’s why Wyatt is such a mess. Little boys don’t get over things like that, even though they’d never admit that. Mariah—who’d had a terrible marriage of her own—came along with Chaz in tow about seven years later. They had loads of happy years together before Mariah died. So only Wyatt is Hank’s blood son. He treats both boys well, but I think they still feel the difference. Those two men couldn’t be more different.”
“How so?”
“Well, you’ve met Chaz. A handsome fella, but a bit of a stick-in-the-mud. Sure he knows how everything ought to be.”
She’d had only one conversation with the man, but handsome know-it-all seemed a fair assessment of Chaz. “And Wyatt?”
“The opposite of all that. A lost soul. Bit of a black sheep who’s never rebelled far enough to actually leave home. Can’t quite get his ducks in a row and isn’t even sure he wants to.” Pauline looked at Yvonne. “In other words, everything Chaz isn’t...including blood.”
“And you want to marry into this mess of a family?” Yvonne winced. When was she going to learn to think before blurting things like that out?
Pauline got that dreamy look in her eye Yvonne saw on every Matrimony Valley bride. “I’d marry into ten messes for Hank. I’ve waited a long time to lose my heart, honey. I’m not about to let a whopping case of sibling rivalry scare me off my chance.”
“I don’t think there’s anything that scares you, Auntie P.”
“Oh, I don’t know about that. But I don’t expect you young people to understand how easy it is to be certain of what you want at our age.” Her aunt’s choice of words sent a pang of guilt between Yvonne’s ribs. After all, she’d had her own doubts about the speedy engagement and not had the nerve to say anything that might dampen Auntie P.’s happiness.
“So you’re sure about Hank?” was the most she could muster.
“No one’s ever sure, darlin’. But waiting for sure doesn’t make much sense when you’ve only got so many years left on this earth.”
Yvonne never liked it when Pauline talked like that. Pauline was younger in her seventies than most people in their fifties. “Oh, Auntie P., you’ll live forever.”
Pauline put her arm around Yvonne and gave her a big hug. Pauline gave the best hugs—no holding back, never the first to let go. So different from Mama’s careful embraces. “I will in heaven, baby. That’s where eternity happens. But here on earth, the clock’s a tickin’.” She plopped a big kiss on the top of Yvonne’s head, just the way she’d done since Yvonne was a little girl. “Hank says he has a big announcement to make at dinner tonight. Let’s just say a big prayer that whatever it is will smooth things over a bit.”
A big prayer indeed. Yvonne put her head on Pauline’s shoulder. When I grow up, I want to be just like her. Faith-filled and feisty and fearless.
Chapter Two
When Chaz opened the hotel room door after lunch, he expected to see Dad in hip waders, ready to spend the afternoon fly-fishing. Instead, the man wore khakis and a bright green polo shirt. A polo shirt was something he’d never seen Dad in before. Were it not for the familiar boots under the khakis, Chaz might have had to look twice to see if it really was Dad.
“Change of plans,” Dad said, stating the obvious with an apologetic smile. “So you’re gonna want to change your clothes.”
Chaz had been looking forward to a few hours of peaceful fly-fishing. This morning’s ridiculous standoff with the pretty-but-annoying baker had put him in an irritated mood, and he was looking forward to some quiet companionship. The sport was one of the things he enjoyed most with his father—it always fed both their spirits. And since Wyatt had never possessed the patience required of a fisherman, it had been something unique to the relationship between Chaz and his dad.
Something he clearly wasn’t going to get to do today.
“I’m not dressing like that,” he said, trying—but not necessarily succeeding—to keep his voice light and teasing as he motioned Dad into the room.
Hank puffed up his chest at his uncharacteristic attire. “Pauline bought these for me.”
I could have guessed that, Chaz thought sourly as he closed the door. He opted instead to strive for a reluctant compliment. “Very spiffy.” Leery of the new agenda for the afternoon, he asked, “So we’re going someplace else instead of fishing?”
“Okay by you?” Dad asked.
The earnest look on Dad’s face made it impossible for Chaz to say anything but “Sure. As long as I don’t have to put on a tie or anything.”
“I should check, but I don’t think so.”
You don’t think so? Chaz swallowed his annoyance. He hadn’t packed a tie. Dad hated ties. Why should he even need to check if they were doing something requiring a tie?
Then again, Chaz hadn’t expected to be here at all. There seemed to be no logical reason why Dad invited him on this wedding planning trip. Dad had to know he wasn’t thrilled at the prospect of leaving the ranch in Wyatt’s care. Wyatt could barely run the ranch for an hour on his own. Chaz couldn’t fathom how he’d handle the five days they were here in Matrimony Valley to firm up wedding plans and for Hank and Pauline to attend a wedding of a friend of Pauline’s. It’s pointless for me to be here. Why did I ever let Dad talk me into coming?
“Pauline is taking all of us to the Biltmore this afternoon,” Dad pronounced. “It’s a big fancy estate over by Asheville. Wedding’s mostly nailed down, so we can do a bit of sightseeing before that nice steak dinner I promised you.”
Chaz picked those three sentences apart. “Wedding’s mostly nailed down” meant that choices had already been made, and his mission to salvage at least some of this event for his dad with any degree of male dignity was probably all but gone. “Big fancy estate” sounded like nothing he’d find interesting or a remotely fair trade-off for time spent fishing with his father. Most worrisome of all, “All of us” meant that not only was he expected to go on this fussy field trip, but it was also likely Yvonne would be coming, as well.