Crystal Green - Her Montana Millionaire

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Stories of family and romance beneath the Big Sky Damned long legs He tried - фото 1

Stories of family and romance

beneath the Big Sky!

Damned long legs.

He tried to cleanse all impure thoughts from his mind.

Gams. A French starlet mouth pouted with red lipstick. A svelte figure covered by an elegant black-and-white dress suit.

Where had this woman come from?

“Pleased to make your acquaintance,” she said, sliding her hand across the table, laying her fingers over his own. His skin heated from the contact.

Excellent. He was forty-three years old. Wasn’t he too mature to be getting excited over hand-holding? Evidently not.

He shifted in his chair when she started stroking his thumb.

“Relax, Max. I don’t bite.” She smiled. “Not unless you want me to.”

Her Montana Millionaire

Crystal Green

Her Montana Millionaire - изображение 2

www.millsandboon.co.uk

CRYSTAL GREEN

lives near Las Vegas, where she writes for the Harlequin Special Edition and Blaze lines. She loves to read, overanalyze movies and TV programs, practice yoga and travel when she can. You can read more about her at www.crystal-green.com, where she has a blog and contests. Also, you can follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/people/Chris-Marie-Green/1051327765 and on Twitter at www.twitter.com/ChrisMarieGreen.

Karen Taylor Richman:

thank you for your support and faith

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 One

Just as Jinni Fairchild swooped into a prime parking space at MonMart, some uptight prig laid on his horn.

“Sorry, cupcake,” she said to no one in particular. “I’m the best parking pilot there is.”

Even in her younger sister’s sardine can of a compact car, Jinni was the queen of smooth moves, the duchess of derring-do. Not that it mattered in a small town like Rumor, Montana, where the citizens drove down the autumn-hued roads with lazy-Sunday nonchalance. Put them on a New York street and they’d be road kill in a matter of seconds.

She sighed on this wave of nostalgia. She really did miss the city.

The runner-up in the parking lot contest jammed on his horn once more, but this time it was a long, angry blast. Almost like unintelligible curse words strung together by one, endless electronic howl.

Unconcerned, Jinni turned off the Honda Civic’s trembling engine and yanked on the emergency brake. She had a lot to do at MonMart, shopping for her sister, Val, who was recovering from breast cancer.

That’s right—cancer. Her own baby sister.

It was unnatural, a thirty-five-year-old woman contracting a life-threatening disease. Jinni was the eldest, the one who’d hit the big four-oh this year. Why hadn’t she been the recipient?

Jinni shook off the sadness. Val wouldn’t want her to break down in tears again, especially in the parking lot of a middle-class shopping mecca. Would she?

No, absolutely not. Instead, Jinni would concentrate on getting over the fact that she was about to enter a store that sold food products, clothing and goods at discount prices. Sadly, it was no Saks Fifth Avenue.

Yikes. Going inside might taint her forever.

Nonetheless, she’d brave this trek into primitive bargain territory for the sake of her sister. Besides, once Val got better Jinni could wave goodbye to MonMart and Rumor and return to her own life. And if this last week of sheer boredom hadn’t hurt her, she’d survive intact.

Outside the car, a door slammed. Jinni paid it no heed. She was used to noise—lots of it. The snarl of traffic outside her Upper East Side window, the squeal of brakes and the rapid stutter of shouts, the shuffle of a thousand footsteps as they passed under her luxury apartment.

She whipped a tube of lipstick out of her Gucci handbag, tilting her starlet sunglasses down to the bridge of her nose in order to achieve maximum damage with the fiery cosmetic.

A polite tap shook her window. Wait, almost done with the lipstick. Blot, blot, blot. There, ready for the world.

She adjusted her glasses back over her eyes, finally giving the time of day to her caller.

The first thing she noticed was that it was a man. Oh, grrrr, and a good-looking one, too. Eyes the brilliant blue of airport lights against the night, hair dark and thick, touched with just a splash of gray throughout. A strong chin, slightly dimpled.

Jinni rolled down the window, allowing in the ash-bitten October air. The recently doused fire that had damaged the surrounding area still haunted the atmosphere with a tang of smoke and charred wood.

“Well, hello,” she said, smiling.

The man stared at her as if she’d taken off her delicate lace brassiere and snapped him in the face with it. Then, after a moment, he stood to his full, impressive height—so high that Jinni had to crane her neck out the window to catch sight of his face again.

He motioned to his car, which was idling in back of hers, angled toward the parking place as if it could squeeze right on in and butt her out.

A Mercedes-Benz. In this speck on the map known as Rumor. Very interesting, indeed.

“You roared into my space like you owned it,” he said, his voice deep, rich and livid.

Jinni let his tone pour over her. Males. She loved the timbre of their words, the breadth of their hands. She batted her lashes, forgetting that she was wearing sunglasses. At least she could carry the flirty gesture over to her voice. It was a distinctive talent.

“Oh, did I goof? I didn’t realize that you Montana men defend your parking spaces with such territorial zeal. How excitingly alpha.”

She made sure that she didn’t sound rude, just cheeky. But this guy wasn’t getting it. In fact, he seemed even angrier.

“Listen, lady. The last thing I need is another confrontation, another thing to tick me off.”

Well. This wasn’t amusing at all.

With infinite care, Jinni rolled up her window, fixed a wide-brimmed black hat over her blond French twist, then opened the door and stretched out a stockinged leg, capped by a four-inch, black-and-white Prada pump. With clear fortitude, the man tried to keep his eyes on her face, but when she curled the other leg out of the car, he lost the battle.

But not for long. As she stood to her own five-foot, ten-inch frame—her height, oh, the misfortune of it since so many rich, famous men were deceptively short—she came up to just beneath his chin.

Jinni all but swooned. It wasn’t often she had to peer up at a man.

“Hey, studmuffin,” she said, her New Yawk accent emerging with a cheerful challenge, “you lost. Got it? I had the speed and the skill. Now, if your fragile male ego can’t accept that fact, I and the rest of the female nation apologize profusely.”

Was that a smile nudging at his lips?

No. Oh, no. It was a frown. Completely the opposite.

He nodded, as if each motion was another slashed pen stroke on a growing list of what he didn’t like about Jinni Fairchild.

“Hmph.” She turned around to lock and shut her door. Darn town. No limousine service, not even a nearby car rental agency.

When she faced him again, the man had taken a defensive stance, arms crossed over his heavy coat, crisp button down and classy tie. Looked like Armani, to Jinni. Even his wingtip shoes were polished, expensive, much like his linen pants with their dollar-bill-edged creases.

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