thank you girls. enjoy the novel .bism allah nabdaa:
chapitre one
Marnie McGovern heard the crash and knew that the beautiful stained-glass doors she'd taken months to create had just met a tragic end. She rushed out of the Baked Valentines bakery in Union Junction, Texas, not expecting to see a handsome man turn off his motorcycle and survey the damage he'd created.
"Are you all right?" Marnie quickly asked the stranger.
"I am. These doors aren't." His gaze met hers. "Someone's going to be very angry."
Trembling hit her knees. "I can't say angry is exactly how I feel, but it's close." She pushed back the tears as she realized there was nothing left of the doors that could be salvaged. In her eagerness to get the project done before the birth of her baby, whose due date was in a few days, she'd put everything into her creation.
Hired by Pansy Trifle and Helen Granger to design a door worthy of the love they felt for the town of Tulips and the saloon they owned, Marnie had identified with their vision. The beautiful doors were to have been delivered and installed that afternoon.
"I'm glad you're not hurt, though."
"I don't suppose I can replace them."
She could barely take her gaze off of the fragments twinkling on the street in the late August sun. "No. But thank you for offering."
John Colby, wealthy daredevil, entrepreneur and philanthropist, realized for the first time in his life he'd come across something money couldn't buy. From the heartbroken slump in the very pregnant woman's shoulders, he knew he'd destroyed something that mattered more to her than money. He wished he'd seen the artwork and stopped in time.
He hadn't been going fast, but the delicate glass was nearly translucent, with gentle touches of pink and red. He hadn't seen it as he'd turned his large Harley into the street. Now not a piece of glass remained in the door frames that had been leaning against an old-fashioned wooden sawhorse.
A truck pulled up in front of the bakery, and a tall, muscular cowboy jumped out. "What happened?"
"Mason," Marnie said, "I won't need you to drive me to Tulips today after all."
John looked at Mason evenly. "I'm afraid I've done some damage here."
"I'll get a shovel from the girls." Mason directed a frown at John. "And a broom and trash can," he said, striding toward the Union Junction hair salon.
John wasn't sure why the cowboy thought a shovel would be found in a hair salon, but he was from the city, not a small town. He supposed things were different here. On a cross-country trip across the United States by Harley, he'd seen a lot of things he'd call stranger.
He looked back at the beautiful woman, wanting more than anything to put a smile on her face and take the sadness from her eyes.
He noted a lack of a ring on her finger, but that could mean anything. But if she was a single mom… "I take it you're an artist, and this was your work." Lying in the street in shards…
She nodded, her pageboy haircut sending a light brown wave of hair across her cheek. So this was also a financial blow he'd dealt, and John decided to see if he could at least make that part of it up to her. "If you could tell me the cost of the doors, I'm happy to replace your supplies, though I know I can't replace your time and effort."
Her hazel gaze settled on him. "Thank you."
She turned away. John realized she was holding back tears she didn't want him to see. He didn't even know her name, and he'd made her cry. John put his hands on her shoulders to comfort her, regretting his impulse when her shoulders stiffened. "Tell me how I can make this up to you."
Marnie wasn't sure what this man might be offering, but it was obvious that he wanted to take some responsibility for his actions. Having had a fiancé who'd decided that married life wasn't what he really wanted, she no longer expected that from any man. Marnie didn't know if her surprise at the stranger's offer was due to the fact that he was extraordinarily handsome and she'd expected him to be shallow. Or maybe it was his motorcycle, which made her think he was one of those men who just liked to pass through life without commitments.
She was prejudging him.
Mason returned with two shovels, handing one to the broad-shouldered newcomer. "What's your name, stranger?"
"John Colby. From West Virginia."
Mason nodded. "I'm Mason Jefferson of the Double M ranch. Used to be known as Malfunction Junction. This is Marnie McGovern," he said, finishing up the introduction curtly. "Start shoveling, John. Marnie, go inside and have Valentine fix you a cup of something and sit down. You're making me antsy that you'll go into labor or something."
Marnie's gaze settled on John. He stared at her with deep apology in his dark eyes.
But she didn't need apologies from a man. She'd heard a lot of those.
She went inside the bakery.
"Marnie's a single mom," Mason said to John. "With a baby on the way, she won't be able to do another set of these doors. She's going to have her hands full."
John handed the shovel back to Mason. "Thanks for the tip. Hang on a sec, would you? I'll be back to clean up my mess."
John followed the tiny brunette into the bakery.
"I'm not just talk," he said. "I intend to stay here and help you."
"You're an artist?" she asked, surprised. He didn't seem the type to sit still long enough to even draw a stick figure.
"No. But I can watch that baby you'll be delivering soon while you work on another set of doors."
Marnie stared at the man who'd destroyed her dreams, her heart nervously thundering, her attention caught.
Sensing her resistance, he smiled a slow, sexy smile. "Come on," he said, his voice a sinful lure. "I'd make a great house husband while you work. I promise the service is delivered with a smile, satisfaction guaranteed."