
The Stillwell Cowboys Book 3
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S. L. Adams
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Chapter 1
Book 3: The Savior Cowboy
MIRIAM
Poinsettias blanketed the front of the church. A vibrant red garden of festive plants surrounded the casket of a man who hated Christmas.
Preston Priggishwine would be horrified if he knew the church was decorated for a holiday he deemed commercialized rubbish, while his funeral service was being held there.
Too bad the entitled son of a bitch was dead.
I took my place in the front pew with my stepchildren, where the grieving widow of the beloved media mogul belonged.
My last social event as Mrs. Preston Priggishwine.
I could taste my freedom. I was ready to leave my short-lived, arranged marriage behind me and move on with my life. The first step was getting far away from Ornate Bay, the snooty suburb of Vancouver where I grew up.
My belly fluttered, the tiny kicks a reminder that I would never be completely free of Preston.
I loved my babies, and I would never hold the sins of their father against them. They wouldnât grow up in a dictatorship household like I did. My children would be free to choose their own path in life.
âIâve known Preston for over fifty years,â the minister said. âWe met while attending an all-boys private school, and weâve been friends ever since. He was a man of faith who never missed Sunday morning service.
âPreston was a successful businessman, carrying on the legacy his father left him with Priggishwine Media. He was a pillar of our community and a loving husband and dedicated father.â
I glanced down the pew at my stepchildren.
Pru was the only daughter, the eldest of the four children from two of Prestonâs three previous marriages. At age forty, my stepdaughter was fifteen years my senior.
Sheâd stayed away for the past twenty years, missing out on the love and dedication, until her old man was dying.
Pru wasnât stupid. She wanted to make sure she got her inheritance. I couldnât really blame her. She earned it, growing up in a home very similar to my own.
The three boys were in their thirties, the eldest the only one who stuck around. Preston Junior was now the CEO of the family empire.
The younger two lived on the East Coast and wanted nothing to do with their father, refusing to visit him on his deathbed. I had no idea why they decided to make an appearance at his funeral.
People sobbed behind me while the minister droned on about Preston and what a great man he was. It was such a tragedy that he was taken at the young age of sixty-five, when he still had so much life left to live.
Blah, blah, blah.
The fact that not a single tear had been shed in the family pew spoke volumes about what kind of man he really was.
I glanced at my watch.
How much longer was this going to drag on?
At least we didnât have to go to the cemetery. Preston was being entombed in the mausoleum.
A huge to-do was being held at the country club, but I had no plans to attend.
There was a plane ticket in my purse. A first-class seat on the red-eye next to my stepdaughter.
***
It took forever to get out of the church. Hundreds of people showed up for the funeral, and they all wanted to offer phony condolences.
If one more person rubbed my belly and said what a shame it was that my babies would never know their father, I was going to lose my mind.
âReady to make a run for it?â Pru whispered.
âIâm six months pregnant with twins, Pru,â I laughed. âIâm not running anywhere.â
âI didnât mean literally, but I see your father heading this way, so you might want to put some speed into that waddle.â
âMiriam!â he called out.
I hustled toward Pruâs car, my sensible, flat-heeled boots propelling me across the dry pavement. If it had been an icy day, I wouldâve never escaped.
Pru jumped into the driverâs seat and hit the gas, swerving around the crowd of people still lingering in the parking lot.
âAre you going to answer that?â she asked when my phone started ringing.
âIf I donât, heâll just keep calling.â
âYou could turn it off.â
âI could, but then heâs apt to call the police or have one of his goons track me down.â
âWonât he do that anyway?â
âProbably.â I sighed. âIâm not exactly going into hiding by staying with you.â
âThereâs no reason for you to hide, Miriam,â she said. âYouâre twenty-five, and your father has no say in how you live your life.â
âThat doesnât mean heâll stop trying.â
âYou have to be firm with him.â
âIs that how you escaped from your father?â
âYes,â she confirmed.
âIâm not as strong as you, Pru.â
âWhat makes you think I was strong back then?â
âI donât know,â I said. âI canât picture you being a wimp. You had the courage to stand up to your father.â
âYouâre not a wimp, Miriam. Answer that damn phone, and tell your father to go fuck himself.â
I stared at the screen, my finger trembling when I hit the answer button.
âHello, Father.â
âMiriam, youâd better be on your way to the club.â
âIâm not going to the reception.â
âYes, you are, young lady,â he ordered sternly. âHow will it look if Prestonâs wife isnât at his funeral? You have an image to uphold, Mrs. Priggishwine.â
âI went to his funeral, Father.â
âAnd now youâre going to attend the reception at the club, because that is what is expected of a grieving widow. Do you understand?â
âYes, Father.â
âGood girl.â
I hung up the phone, tucking it away in my purse.
âMiriam,â Pru chastised, shaking her head with a heavy sigh.
âItâs just easier to lie to him.â
âWhatâs going to happen when you donât show up?â
âI donât know.â
***
âWhen are they going to start boarding?â I whispered, glancing around nervously.
âThey should be calling first-class passengers soon,â Pru said, emptying her glass of wine.
âI just want to get on the plane before my father shows up.â
âDid you tell him where you were, Miriam?â
âNo, of course not,â I said. âPreston told him.â
âThat little weasel,â she muttered. âWhy would he do that?â
âBecause heâs your fatherâs son. Itâs all about business.â
âYes, I know,â she sighed. âPJ is so far up your fatherâs ass, the tip of his nose is permanently stained brown.â
âEw!â I cried. âWhat a disgusting analogy.â
âAccurate though,â Pru chuckled.
âMy father threatened to come and drag my disobedient ass home.â
âHeâd have to purchase a first-class ticket to get in here.â
âMy father is worth forty-five billion dollars, Pru. Iâm pretty sure he can afford a first-class ticket.â
âOr buy one for his goon,â she whispered, nodding her head toward the door.
I glanced over my shoulder.
âHe sent Feltham!â I gasped. âHe wonât take no for an answer.â
âThatâs our boarding call,â she said when they requested first-class passengers over the PA.
âHow am I going to get past him?â
âMiriam,â Feltham said in the quiet but commanding tone heâd been ordering me around with my entire life. âLetâs go.â
I grabbed my carry-on and followed Pru toward the exit, ignoring the six-foot-eight monster in the three-piece suit. He followed us to the gate, his heavy footsteps sending a familiar bolt of terror through me.
Whenever I was disobedient, my father sent Feltham to discipline me, leaving it up to his goon to determine what was required to make me comply with his orders.
Barrett Stone never dirtied his own hands. He always paid someone else to carry out what he considered to be unpleasant tasks not worthy of his time.
âKeep moving,â Pru said, letting me go ahead of her in the short line.
âMiriam,â Feltham commanded. âDo not get on that plane.â
The attendant finished scanning my boarding pass and checked my ID. My heart was pounding when I hustled down the gangway as fast as my pregnant body would go. I could hear Feltham arguing with the lady at the gate.
What if he actually boarded the plane?
âAre you okay, miss?â the flight attendant asked when I stepped onto the plane.
âYes,â I panted. âJust a little out of breath. But Iâm fine. I have a doctorâs note that says itâs safe for me to fly.â
Pru appeared a moment later, shaking her head. âHe wonât get on the plane,â she said. âHe wants them to escort you off.â
âOh no!â
âNo worries, Miriam. I told them heâs your ex-boyfriend, and heâs trying to stop you from leaving him.â
âDid they believe you?â
âYes,â she confirmed, taking the window seat. âSit down. I assume you want the aisle, since you have to pee all the time.â
âThe flight is only ninety minutes.â
âYouâll have to go at least once.â
I settled in the aisle seat, my eyes trained on the door as the passengers filed in. âWhat if he decides to get on the plane?â
âThey wonât let him. Airport security was talking to him when I left. He was making all kinds of threats.â
âThatâs not Felthamâs style. Heâs usually calm, cool, and collected. Always in control.â
âHe knows how angry your father is going to be when he returns without you.â
âMy father will send him for me. Do you really want him showing up at your door?â
âWeâll deal with it. He canât force you to go with him.â
âHe doesnât use physical force,â I said. âFeltham is very intimidating. He knows how to get what he wants without resorting to violence.â
âYou have to be strong, Miriam. Stand up to your father. Otherwise, youâre going to end up back under his thumb, until he finds another man to marry you off to as part of his next business deal.â
âYou have no idea what heâs like, Pru.â
âMy father wasnât exactly a pushover.â
âHe didnât send thugs after you when you left.â
âNo, he didnât. He tried to use my trust fund to manipulate me. But I didnât need it. I had one from my grandmother that he couldnât touch.
âIt wasnât a lot of money, but it was enough to keep me going until I got my feet on the ground.â
I breathed a sigh of relief when the plane started moving.
I was finally free.
âAre you crying?â Pru asked.
âItâs just hormones.â
âI know itâs scary to leave everything youâve ever known behind, but if you donât, your life will never be your own. And your father will do the same thing to your daughters. Is that what you want for them?â
âNo,â I whispered.
âYouâre going to be just fine,â she said, reaching over to squeeze my hand. âI didnât have a belly full of babies when I ran, but I was a lot younger than you, and I survived.â
âI really appreciate everything youâre doing for me, Pru.â
âI know what happens to the women in the social circle we come from, and until someone breaks the cycle, it will just keep happening. The men have all the money and power.â
âPJ isnât going to change anything.â I sighed.
âNo, definitely not,â she agreed. âI canât believe his wife lets him order her around like that.â
âHer father is Hudson Hillsbride. She was raised in that type of environment.â
âYes, the Hillsbrides,â she muttered. âThey were family friends growing up. I couldnât stand them.â
I stared out the window as the plane took off, the lights of Vancouver slowly disappearing as we headed up into the clouds, carrying me to my new life.
A new beginning for me and my daughters.
***
âYou werenât kidding when you said you lived in the country.â I laughed, leaning forward to rub my achy back. âWe havenât passed another car in a long time.â
âItâs five in the morning,â Pru said. âIf it was summer, you might see some tractors out at this hour, but not at this time of year.â
âHow much farther to your house?â
âAbout twenty minutes. I hope you donât have to pee. Thereâs nowhere for me to stop now.â
âI can hold it for a bit longer.â
âI bet youâre tired. Why didnât you sleep on the plane or during the three-hour car ride from Calgary?â
âI couldnât get comfortable.â
âI suppose not,â she said, glancing at my belly.
âWhat is your husband like?â
âBrooks is a pussycat,â she shared. âAt home, anyway. But Brooks, the CEO, is a different person. He runs the family business with a firm hand and keeps his brothers in line.
âBrooks is the only one with any business sense. He is the reason that Stillwell Enterprises is so successful.â
âAre you sure heâs okay with me staying until I have the babies?â
âHe doesnât know youâre coming.â
âWhat?!â I cried.
âHeâs not going to say no. Youâre pregnant and penniless.â
âI have some money saved.â
âYouâre going to need every cent of it later on, Miriam. I canât believe my father made you sign a prenup.â
âYour father was a cold-hearted and self-serving man.â
âYouâre too kind with your words, honey. He was a cruel bastard. A ruthless fucking asshole. And Iâm glad heâs dead.â
âPru!â
âWould you rather me be like all those phony snobs at the funeral?â
âHe was still your father.â
âThat doesnât mean he gets a free pass. The only reason I came home was to make sure I got my inheritance. My father was a lot of things, but stupid wasnât one of them. He knew why I was there.
âBut on some weird level, I think he respected that, because itâs something he wouldâve done. He was proud of me for growing up to be a shrewd businesswoman, with no scruples.â
âHow can you be okay with that, Pru?â
âItâs who I am. I own it. If there is one thing that Iâm not, itâs phony.
âExcept when it comes to closing real estate deals. Those require a certain level of fakeness, if you will. Itâs a necessary skill to be successful. And fake Pru is very good.â
âDo you have a big house?â I asked, chewing on my lower lip while I glanced out at the dark, tree-lined country road.
âItâs nothing like the houses you and I grew up in, but itâs plenty big enough,â she confirmed.
âItâs a three-thousand-square-foot, one-story ranch, with a full basement. But the basement isnât finished. We just use it for storage.â
âHow many bedrooms do you have?â
âFour.â
âI guess thatâs plenty of space for two people.â
âYes, it is, but we have houseguests right now, so itâs a bit crowded.â
âWho are your guests?â
âMy brother-in-law and his dingbat fiancĂ©e and his three illegitimate humans from three different mothers.â
âOh my.â
âJasperâs house burned down last summer. The crazy half-sister of one of his children set it on fire, because she wanted him, or some silliness.
âIâm not really sure how setting a fire in a manâs house is the way to his heart, but the girl is as cuckoo as her mother.â
âOh my goodness,â I gasped. âThatâs terrible.â
âYes, it is,â she agreed. âI arrived home one afternoon, after being in Vancouver for most of the summer, as you know, and found my home littered with baby crap.
âCami, thatâs the fiancĂ©e, was out on my terrace with the psycho half-sister.
âThe girl was planning to kidnap Cami, deliver her baby, and then kill her and stuff her in the deep freezer with her dead father, and take the baby back to Jasper.â
âThatâs very scary,â I said. âWhat happened?â
âI restrained the girl until the police arrived and saved Camiâs life.â
âWow. That mustâve been very frightening for you.â
âYes,â she replied absently, staring straight ahead at the road. âAnyway, Brooks invited Jasper and his brood to stay at our house without even discussing it with me, knowing full well how I felt about Cami.
âThatâs why I didnât feel that I owed him any advance notice you were coming to stay.â
âIâm not really comfortable just showing up unannounced, Pru.â
âItâs fine, Miriam.â
She slowed down, turning into a private laneway. I gazed up at the archway. âStillwell Ranchâ was spelled out on a wrought iron sign hanging from the top of the wooden gate. Large ornate sconces lit up the entrance.
Pru followed the main road, her headlights bouncing off a large farmhouse with a barn and silos next to it.
âThatâs the main house,â she explained. âBrooks and his brothers grew up there.â
âWho lives there now?â I asked just before she took a sharp left down a narrower laneway.
âBrooksâs older brother, Huxley. He and his wife, Suzy, have ten children. Some are grown and out on their own, though.â
âDid you say ten?â
âYes,â she snorted. âThe Stillwells are a virile bunch.â
âBut you didnât have any.â
âHere we are,â she announced.
âThe lights are on,â I noted. âSomebody is up early.â
âBrooks gets up at five every morning. And Jasper and Cami have three infants. Theyâre up and down all night.â
âThree babies must be a lot of work.â
âWeâll leave our luggage in the trunk,â she said. âThe boys can get it later.â
I followed her up the walkway, the fancy path lights illuminating exquisite interlocking brick weaving between perfectly manicured bushes covered in a light dusting of snow.
âYou have a gardener?â
âYes,â she confirmed. âI donât have the time or inclination to maintain my outdoor living spaces, and my husband wouldnât know a hoe from a hose.â
She entered a code in the keypad and pushed open the front door. The comforting aroma of fresh coffee and toast put me at ease in the sterile foyer.
I smiled at the contrast of marble tiles and antique furniture with childrenâs shoes scattered across a cheap plastic mat. Tiny winter jackets and hats were piled on the vintage caned window bench.
I knew a lot about antiques, but not because I had any particular interest in them.
My late husbandâs house was full of expensive old furniture. And he liked to bore me to death with long, detailed explanations about the history of each piece.
The apple didnât fall far from the tree, at least when it came to home furnishings. I thought Iâd gotten to know Pru while she was staying with us.
But how well did I really know her?
Did she inherit more than just a love for antiques and smart business sense from her tyrant of a father?
Heavy footsteps approached from the back of the house and what I assumed was the kitchen, based on my pregnancy-enhanced olfactory senses.
My stomach churned with trepidation.
Nobody likes an unexpected houseguest.
And I was starting to get the impression there was trouble in my stepdaughterâs marriage.
I had an English degree.
Words usually flowed easily from my brain.
Tall, dark, and handsome was so cliché.
I lost all respect for my romance authors when they used that to describe the hero. My collection of heartwarming love stories was long gone. Tossed in a dumpster after my husband discovered them.
I thought Iâd secured a great hiding spot in the Priggishwine mausoleum, but apparently, it wasnât good enough.
âI wasnât expecting you until tonight,â the man boomed, glancing curiously at me, his dark eyes going straight to my belly.
âI got an earlier flight,â Pru said.
âWhoâs your friend?â
âMiriam Priggishwine, my stepmother.â
His eyes widened, his thick, but well-manicured brows shooting up to his forehead. Every hair in his close-cropped cut was in place, rich brown, with just a tad of gray at his temples.
âNice to meet you, Miriam,â he said, stepping forward with his hand outstretched. âBrooks Stillwell.â
I accepted it, his large fingers swallowing my tiny hand when he pumped it gently.
He held on a little too long.
I gazed into the most gorgeous eyes Iâd ever seen.
But it wasnât the perfect shade of dark chocolate that sent my heart on the upside-down roller coaster at top speed, in reverse, through three loops.
It was the magnetic pull.
The strong and immediate connection.
Familiarity.
Like Iâd met this man before, in another lifetime.
Brooks Stillwell was my soulmate.





































