The Accidental Bridegroom
Also by Ann Major
Lone Star Dynasty
Love with an Imperfect Cowboy
One Night? Or Forever?
Men of the West
Wild Lady
The Fairy Tale Girl
Meant To Be
Texas: Children of Destiny
Passion's Child
Destiny's Child
Night Child
Wilderness Child
Scandal's Child
The Goodbye Child (Coming Soon)
Standalone
Santa's Special Miracle: A Novella
In Love With the Enemy: A Short Story
The Baby Machine: A Novella
I Will Find You
The Accidental Bridegroom (Coming Soon)
Watch for more at Ann Major’s site.
THE ACCIDENTAL BRIDEGROOM
by
Ann Major
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Book Description
The past: Cathy Calderon was the wild, willful heiress her dangerous stepfather hired hard-edged bodyguard Rafe Steel to protect. Rafe never mixed business with pleasure until Cathy set her sights on seducing him.
Six years later: Just as Cathy is about to marry a man her family approves of, Rafe discovers she never told him she’d had his daughter, who is an enchanting, pint-sized replica of the woman he can’t forget. Even though her stepfather has threatened him if he ever goes near Cathy again, Rafe can’t walk away from her or his secret daughter.
Then Magic Goes Haywire: When Cathy commissions a curandera whose love spells always go awry to make a love potion for her bridegroom but “accidentally” shares it with Rafe on The Day of the Dead, the spark between them flares out of control.
A Note from Ann Major
It was so much fun to revisit this story which, out of the books I’ve written, is one of my personal favorites, maybe because it features a Hispanic heroine and the Day of the Dead.
Growing up in South Texas the Hispanic culture has always been dear to my heart, and when I was at The University as we UT grads say in Texas, I majored in Spanish.
I have always loved celebrating Halloween and the Day of the Dead together. Because I was inspired by the setting of this book, I was lucky enough to visit Oaxaca during the Day of the Dead festival. While there, my friends and I went out to a cemetery that was paved with marigolds and partied to all hours with locals who had decorated graves and were hanging out with the spirits of their departed, loved ones while listening to live symphonic music.
Enjoy…ANN
Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
Book Description
A Note from Ann Major
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Epilogue
Dedication
Preview of The Accidental Bridegroom
Preview of Lone Star Dynasty Series
Preview of Passion’s Child
Praise for Ann Major
Ann Major E-Book List
About the Author
Copyright Page
Prologue
Rock and roll music drifted out of the mock French chateau behind the high white wall. The rich brats at the Calderon party sounded like they were having a hell of a good time, and maybe they were. Frankly, Rafe Steele felt too sulky and bored to give a damn. His pain pill had worn off, and the nine stitches in the middle of his back where a green-haired woman had bitten him last night had begun to throb.
It was Saturday night, his first night back in his hometown, Houston. He was dead tired from a six-month marathon in L.A. guarding JoJo, the leader of a heavy metal band of crazies.
Rafe needed to relax and that meant doing something interesting that would take his mind off things. He would have preferred a hot date or some kind of action, or even his TV remote and a good bottle of booze.
Anything would have been better than hanging out here. It wasn’t that River Oaks Boulevard with its fancy-ass mansions, sweeping lawns and shady live oaks was too rich for his blood. It was that it was too damned dull.
At least that’s what he told himself.
Maybe a lot of poor suckers thought this was the lifestyle to die for. Maybe they got their kicks out of mile-long reflecting pools and yards full of naked statues and dozens of pretentious fountains.
Rafe had seen the spread on this place in the Houston Post. That’s how he knew the inside was even gaudier. There were twenty-one-foot ceilings, tall windows and eleven-foot arched doorways. The swirling black marble stairway was the talk of the town. Everything in these houses was meant to impress. And everyone inside had the same ambition.
Who needed it?
Rafe had read somewhere that the rich were different.
Nobody had to tell him that. Not when his own father—
Rafe decided not to get himself going on that one.
Yeah, the rich were meaner and greedier and phonier. They had to have more; they wanted people to think they were better and smarter. But the downside was they were more frightened than most people and had way more to hide.
So, who needed them? Any of them? Especially a slimeball like Calderon.
You, you dumb jerk. You make your living protecting them. Down deep you think they are better and smarter.
Unbidden came the memory of a blue-eyed little boy staring up a high wall, wanting to be acknowledged by the man who lived behind the wall more than anything.
Rafe struck a match, hunkering low and cupping his hands to hide the glare that lit his lean, harsh features, which were sullenly handsome in that dangerous way most women found so attractive. He inhaled deeply, and lazily watched the azure smoke of his cigarette drift up through the warm night air. Then he threw it on the ground and stamped it out.
He shouldn’t smoke. He knew that. And he was quitting, tomorrow.
There were at least a dozen off-duty cops guarding every entrance and every exit.
So what the hell was he doing here, skulking around in the shadows like some spy on a cloak-and-dagger mission? Rafe could’ve strangled Manuel for giving Armi Calderon the glowing recommendation that had landed him this babysitting job guarding Armi’s twenty-year-old stepdaughter, Cathy, who was home from college. Because Calderon had been determined to hire him then.
Manuel, Rafe’s boss, had been right in the middle of giving Rafe a rash of heat for walking out on JoJo Johnson when the phone had rung. They’d been shoving a bottle of booze back and forth across Manuel’s desk, discussing the matter like any two normal professionals…at the top of their lungs.
Manuel had been yelling that even the JoJos of the world deserved the best protection money could buy, that that’s what his security agency was all about, that that’s why guys like Rafe who couldn’t fit in anywhere else had jobs.
Rafe had been defending himself, defying Manuel to find anyone stupid enough to stick with JoJo day and night for more than six months—especially after one of JoJo’s cuties had bitten a hunk out of his back when he’d told her JoJo already had company and had escorted her out of the star’s suite.
When Rafe had yanked up his black T-shirt so Manuel could see the big white bandage in the center of his lean, hard-muscled bac
k, Manuel had studied the dragon tattoo on Rafe’s left biceps, instead. “Where the hell did you get that?”
“Singapore. The Navy. Back when I was a sucker for Chinese art,” Rafe drawled lazily.
“Then you should love JoJo. JoJo’s an artist. He’s the world’s biggest—”
Manuel was about to say rock star but Rafe beat him to the punch with a string of descriptive curse words that more accurately fit the lunatic. Rafe was just warming up when Calderon’s call had come in.
“Armi—” Manuel had broken off in a hush, his face grim as he motioned Rafe to shut up, whispering hoarsely, “This may be your big chance to redeem yourself, Steele.”
“Oh, no, you don’t! I want the week off.”
Manuel had flipped on the speaker so Rafe could hear, too.
“I want an extra bodyguard—tonight,” Calderon’s voice boomed. “Chris is throwing Cathy a big party, and there’s been another death threat, amigo. I need a new man for a few days, somebody nobody around here knows. Someone just for Cathy.”
“No problem, Armi.”
“You don’t understand.” The brash voice lost its bluster. “Cathy is a problem. She’s run off everybody my regular security people have put on the job. I need someone very experienced with uncooperative clients. That’s why I thought of your operation.”
“Well…” Dubiously, Manuel studied Rafe’s unshaven face, his long black ponytail and his single, glittering earring.
“You told me you didn’t want me protecting women anymore,” Rafe mouthed silently.
Manuel frowned as if he was remembering Consuelo, too. “Well, some of my guys are a little too…er…rough-cut for someone as carefully protected as your daughter.”
“You owe me, amigo, big time.”
A shadow passed over Manuel’s face. “Right,” he said. “I’ll find someone. But on such short notice, it’s going to cost you.”
“Fine. Cathy won’t stand for another uptight jerk with a crew cut bossing her around.”
It was then that a slow grin had spread across Manuel’s heavy features and he’d reached across his desk and yanked Rafe’s shoulder-length ponytail meaningfully. “No crew cut, amigo.”
Rafe erupted out of his seat like a cannonball. Booze shot everywhere. “Oh, no, you don’t, amigo!”
“You should have cut your hair when I told you to,” Manuel whispered, chuckling as he mopped his perspiring forehead.
“What was that?” Armi demanded.
“Just one of my…er…rough-cut guys.”
“And she can’t even suspect this guy’s a bodyguard.”
“Believe me, she won’t.”
“Damn it, I said no!” Rafe thundered, grabbing his leather biker’s jacket with all the flashy zippers and storming to the door, zippers jangling as loudly as his nerves.
“Steele, you walk out on this one, and you’re fired!” Returning to Calderon, Manuel said smoothly, “Sorry… How does long hair, a dragon tattoo and an earring sound? I have a guy who’s been protecting a heavy-metal rock star and his group. He’s a little rough around the edges, but he ought to be able to handle one well-bred young lady.”
“He’s perfect.”
“Perfect…” Manuel’s keen dark gaze flickered over Rafe. “Maybe. Let’s keep our fingers crossed she goes for his pretty blue eyes.”
End of conversation. End of the pleasant week off Rafe had planned. But the beginning of his burning determination to go into business for himself with Mike.
Before Rafe had stormed out, Manuel warned softly, “Watch yourself. Calderon is dangerous. We go back a long way—to Mexico. He’s a hell of a lot tougher and a hell of a lot meaner and way, way smarter than that singing piece of scum JoJo Johnson. Don’t get creative. Just take care of his daughter. He won’t understand a stunt like you pulled with my daughter.”
“No handcuffs, I promise,” Rafe said. “And—just for the record—I never laid a hand on your precious Consuelo…even though she tried to get very friendly.”
“You wouldn’t be alive if she hadn’t convinced me of the same thing.”
“She’s alive because of what I did.”
“Which is why I give you so many career-advancement opportunities, amigo. Like tonight.”
“Yeah. Right.”
Rafe forgot he was quitting and lit another cigarette. Then he blew a smoke ring and peered through it at the high white wall. So far, he hadn’t seen hide nor hair of his precious charge. But he knew what she looked like. She was just another typical rich girl—tall and skinny with a lot of golden hair. She’d probably grow up to be another boring socialite like her much-written-about mother.
So here he was, watching the princess’s heavily guarded castle wall and waiting, the cigarette butts by his right boot proof he’d been there for hours.
He inhaled again and blew a couple of smoke rings. Hell, there was nothing better to do.
And then he saw it.
Over where the oak tree grew by the wall.
At first he thought it was just a bit of moonlight glittering on the top of the wall. Even so, he felt a rush as he squashed out his cigarette and lifted his binoculars.
Like shooting stars, a pair of sequined high heels sailed over the wall.
Next came a slim naked foot with scarlet-tipped toes. Rafe couldn’t see the rest of the girl because she was behind the tree.
He focused on the long, skinny foot. He’d guess size ten, but even so, somehow it was dainty.
There was no way to know if the foot belonged to Cathy, but Rafe didn’t care much after he saw the leg. It was so shapely and gorgeous, it got him hot instantly. So hot he had to remind himself that he was on a job and that he was a professional.
Then he saw the rest of her, curved breasts, slim waste, and ample butt as she eased her body down the trunk onto the wall. Her fluid grace made him remember the way a particularly talented topless dancer had slithered up and down a pole in a dive he’d visited the last time he’d done undercover.
Not that this girl was topless, but the low-cut white chiffon dress that rode up her slim, voluptuous curves left too little to a male imagination as expert and fertile as Rafe’s. She was too tall—and maybe a little too skinny for his usual taste—but tonight he didn’t much care. She had a shock of fiery gold hair that spilled out of two diamond clips. A single strand of diamonds sparkled at her throat. Her high cheekbones gave her slender face a natural elegance, and she had the sweetest, most kissable, generous mouth.
He sucked in a sharp breath as he recognized the Calderon girl. In no way had the photograph captured her potential. She radiated vitality that made him know she would sizzle like a live wire.
She leaned down to help someone on the other side of the wall. Then a man in a tux swung a wobbly leg up beside her and straddled the wall. He teetered from side to side, and she tried to steady him. But he fell to the sidewalk, anyway, collapsing in a heap in the azaleas.
As lithely as a cat, Cathy jumped down beside him. But when she had him untangled from the hedge, he grabbed her and began to kiss and paw her. She struggled loose and ran down the street away from the house, fumbling with her purse. But he ran after her, staggering clumsily as he seized her by the waist and hurled her against the wall. Ruthlessly he pulled her against him and turned her face to his, devouring her mouth. She kicked and lashed out, but the brute was so liquored up he just laughed as he dragged her to the ground. The diamond necklace was ripped from her throat.
Rafe had seen enough. In seconds, his long legs were loping across the street. Then his fingers were digging into the surprisingly hard muscles of the big lout’s neck and yanking him off. But as Rafe did so, the girl got in the way. When Rafe stomped down on those scarlet-tipped, bare toes by mistake, she screamed and kicked him, throwing him off-balance. He had to glance down to make sure he wouldn’t hurt her again. The drunk spun around, and cracked a fist through Rafe’s jaw.
As the world blackened, the girl jerked a can out of her purse a
nd squirted wildly. Too wildly, because Rafe’s eyes and nose and mouth smarted as if she’d sprayed him with acid.
He couldn’t see. He couldn’t breathe. His nose was running; his sinuses burned all the way back to his brain.
Then the other guy hit him again, and Rafe careened backward. His head hit concrete, and he went out like a bad lightbulb.
When Rafe came to a minute or so later, his burning head was nestled in a soft, white chiffon lap. Delicate, light fingers were stroking the whiskers of his unshaven cheek. Those same fingers moved to his earring and lifted his ponytail.
Through slitted black lashes, he peered warily at the girl’s anxious face.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered contritely. “My aim was off.”
Her lush breasts crushed his forehead when she bent closer. Her hair fell out of her clips and about her cheeks in sexy tangles. He caught the scent of lavender soap.
Unconventional bodyguard meets difficult client. In spite of his burning sinuses and his anger that she probably thought him an incompetent wimp, he decided maybe this wasn’t so bad, after all.
Rafe groaned, and she jumped. His hand went to the bump at the back of his head. There was an acidic, peppery taste in his mouth, and his nasal passages stung every time he rasped for air.
But she smelled so good in spite of his injured sinuses, and his view of her luscious breasts was so fantastic, he began to care less about the rest.
Watch yourself, Steele. “Where’s the guy who slugged me?” he demanded.
“Jeff?” She beamed proudly. “I got rid of him—”
Major male-ego attack. Major. He was supposed to be protecting her. “You—”
Saucily she shook a little white spray can. “It’s something I ordered out of one of my bodyguard’s catalogs.”
Rafe sat up slowly, rubbing his head. Little stars were whirling round and round. Vengefully, he ripped the white can out of her hand and tossed it into the gutter.