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  Stone Heart

  A Single Mom & Mountain Man Romance

  Contents

  Title Page

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Epilogue

  Exclusive: Broken Cowboy

  Cabin Fever

  The Mountain Man’s Second Chance

  Best seller: Damaged Goods

  Rye Hart Sneak Peeks

  Copyright

  Click here to join Rye’s Newsletter and receive a steamy bad boy romance in your inbox for free.

  As a thank you, I’ve included an exclusive full-length, never before released romance: Broken Cowboy, as a bonus after the main story. Enjoy!!

  PROLOGUE

  Is this real?

  Is this actually happening?

  My hips connected with his kitchen counter as the kissing intensified. His hands were all over me as I threaded my arms around his neck.

  I felt alive.

  On fire.

  Ignited with electricity and surging with pleasure. I couldn't help myself. Even though a part of me was wracked with a guilt that made me nauseous, I couldn't stop. His tongue traveled along the roof of my mouth, making my knees grow weak.

  My legs gave out from underneath me as his arms tightened around my body.

  I could feel his rock-hard cock pressed against me. He wanted me as badly as I wanted him. There was something about that notion that made me smile into his kiss as his hands traveled my curves. He cupped my ass and gripped my thighs, bouncing between letting me lead and taking what he wanted. He pinned me against his counter as my hands traveled down to his chest.

  I could feel the swell of his strength underneath my fingertips.

  His hands gripped my ass again, and I jumped against his body. I wrapped my legs around his waist, my hands threading through his hair. My lips traveled down his neck as he carried me through his house and then closed a door behind us with his foot.

  We were in his bedroom, and his hands were sliding up my shirt.

  Piece by piece, we ripped our clothes off. He yanked my shirt over my head, and I fell to my knees and took his pants with me. He pulled me off the floor and tossed me onto his bed, his eyes filled with a predatory instinct.

  I watched him remove his boxers, taking in the thick cock he had bouncing between his legs.

  He crashed into me, our naked bodies taking in one another. I ran my hands up and down his back, caressing the chiseled muscles there. His arms were bulging with veins, and his legs were trimmed with sinewy strength. He was sin incarnate, and I couldn't get enough of him.

  His lips traveled down my neck, nipping and sucking at my delicate skin. His hands were firm but gentle, holding me to his bed but not pinning me so I couldn't move. His lips wrapped around my nipples, lapping and sucking and making my thighs grow wet with want.

  I spread my body open for him as he continued to travel down the length of my form.

  My eyes locked with him as he dipped between my legs. That cheeky little grin spread across his face. My legs were shaking, waiting in anticipation for what was going to come next. His lips kissed my thighs and lapped up the juices already gathering on my skin.

  Then, he parted my pussy folds and began to devour me.

  His tongue was heavy and thick. He pressed on my clit as his beard tickled the sides of my pussy. He tossed my legs over his shoulders as my hands threaded through his tendrils, pulling him as close as I could get him. My hips rolled, and my toes curled. Moans of ecstasy and desire fell from my lips. I groaned at him. Growled at him. Allowed the animal inside of me to unleash. I could feel my pussy dripping onto his lips as he lapped me up, swallowing me down and humming at my taste.

  I could feel it, that white-hot sensation in my abdomen. My heels propped up on his strong shoulders, and he raised up, bending me in half and rendering me motionless. His hands pinned my hips, and his thumbs caressed the backs of my thighs. I felt my world spinning and colliding, shattering into pieces as electricity shot through my brain. My mouth opened and my eyes screwed shut. My toes curled into his skin as his tongue pressed deep into my pussy.

  I couldn’t take it anymore. I needed to feel it.

  “Yes, baby. Yes. I’m coming. I’m coming. I’m com—”

  CHAPTER 1

  CINDY

  “Mommy, is Grandma gonna be okay?”

  “Why would you ask that, Lily?”

  “She seemed sad when we left.”

  “She’s always sad when you leave, honeybee. She misses you when you’re gone,” I said.

  “So, nothing bad happened?” Lily asked.

  “No, sweetie. Nothing bad happened.”

  “Why doesn’t Grandma come to visit us then?” she asked.

  “Because Grandma can’t move as easily as we can.”

  “Are you calling her old?”

  “No. Grandma’s not old. She’s got a lot more life in her, but that doesn’t mean she can move like we can.”

  “Is that why Grandma always only wants to rock and read me a story?” she asked.

  “Maybe Grandma likes reading to you. What’s wrong with that?”

  “Sometimes, I wanna run around outside with her.”

  “Then ask her to do that next time. Grandma might have to sit on the porch, but she’ll watch you while you do it.”

  “Will you run around with me outside?” she asked.

  “We can play tag when we get home. How does that sound?”

  “Yeah! Tag with Mommy!”

  I looked into the rearview mirror and took in my daughter’s eyes. Lillian looked just like me. Auburn hair, apple cheeks, and fair skin that held a tan instead of burning in the sun. But she didn’t have my eyes. They weren’t a sea green like mine. She had her father’s eyes, that crisp sky blue I’d fallen in love with all those years ago.

  Even though he’d been gone a year, it still hurt to look into my daughter’s eyes.

  “Mommy?”

  “Yes, honeybee?”

  “Why do you call me honeybee?” Lily asked.

  “Do you want me to call you something else?” I asked.

  “Grandma calls me princess.”

  “Well, that’s Grandma’s nickname for you. That’s why I don’t call you princess.”

  “Daddy called me princess.”

  I gripped my steering wheel hard as tears brewed behind my eyes.

  “That he did,” I said.

  “Does Grandma call me princess because Daddy isn’t here to do it anymore?” Lily asked.

  “I think so, yes.”

  “Do you not call me princess because it hurts to say it because Daddy’s gone?”

  My daughter always had a way of reminding me that she had her father’s intuitive spirit. She was remarkable for her age.

  “A little bit,” I said. “But I’m fine.”
r />   “I miss Daddy.”

  “I miss him, too, honeybee.”

  “You wanna know what I miss the most?” Lily asked.

  “What’s that?”

  “I miss his coffee.”

  “What?” I asked.

  “The way his coffee smelled. You drink gross coffee. It’s all black and nasty. But Daddy’s coffee always smelled like flowers.”

  “Flowers,” I said.

  “Mhm. Like the flowers we have in our backyard.”

  “I don’t think Daddy’s coffee smelled like flowers. I think his hair smelled like flowers.”

  “No, Mommy. It was his coffee. I know. I tasted it.”

  “You drank Daddy’s coffee?” I asked.

  “It was only one time! It was still gross, but it tasted like it smelled.”

  “You’re a little booger, you know that?”

  She giggled and stuck her tongue out at me playfully. I laughed and shook my head as we turned onto our street. I kept my eyes on the road as my daughter started singing to herself. She was starting kindergarten in a week, and I couldn’t believe the time had flown by so quickly. She was growing so big, and her language skills exceeded most her peers. At one point I was afraid she would fall behind.

  When her father died, she stopped talking altogether for several months, and I was worried she would regress in all the progress we’d made with her. Instead, when she did start talking again, she was using words I hadn’t even known she knew. It was like conversing with a teenager sometimes.

  “Mommy, look!”

  I shook my head as I pulled into the driveway, my eyes scanning the scene in front of me.

  “Nikki!” Lily said.

  I saw my best friend waving from the porch as she jumped off the side. She came running up to Lillian’s door and ripped it open, unstrapping the girl from her car seat. The two of them hugged and kissed on one another as I got out of the car. Seeing them like this always warmed my heart.

  I shut the car door and listened to it heave and groan like it was protesting the fact that it was still in use.

  “You really need a new car,” Nicole said.

  “Maybe but I can’t afford that right now. I need to work on getting this house paid off first,” I said.

  “Aunt Nikki, you wanna play tag with me and Mommy?” Lily asked.

  Nicole gave me a dubious look before she planted a kiss on my daughter’s cheek.

  “It’s almost dinnertime, so how about this? You go inside and get changed and then figure out what you want for dinner. Then, after dinner, we’ll run around for a bit. How does that sound?” Nicole asked.

  “Yay! I’m going to go change!”

  Lillian wiggled out of Nicole’s grasp before she held out her hand for my keys. I rolled my eyes and plopped them into her hand and then watched my daughter unlock the front door. From not even crawling to speaking in coherent sentences to being well beyond her years in occupational therapy, it was a miracle what Bradley and I were able to accomplish with her.

  It pained me to know that he wouldn’t be here to see her off to her first day of kindergarten.

  “How you holding up?” Nicole asked.

  “It’s hard, going and seeing Bradley’s mom. He looked so much like her,” I said.

  “It’s good for Lily to have a relationship with them, though.”

  “I’d never keep her from them, Nikki. They’re family, and they adore Lily.”

  “But I know it’s not easy on you. I wanna make sure you’re okay,” she said.

  “Thanks. I appreciate it. But shouldn't you be at work?”

  “Eh, figured I could use a day off. Tuesdays are my slowest days anyway. I wanted to make sure you guys got back in okay.”

  “I love you,” I said. “You know that?”

  “I know. Which is why we’re having wine tonight. Got it chilling in the fridge.”

  “You're the best.”

  I heard a door slam open, and I whipped my head around. My nosey neighbor was charging out of her house and making her way to mine. I furrowed my brow in confusion as her eyes swept over my car. I watched her nose crinkle almost in disgust, and part of me wanted to slap her.

  Yes, my car was old. Yes, it was rusting on the undercarriage. But it was all I could afford after selling off everything to try and pay down as much of the mortgage on our house as I could.

  When Bradley died, I had to take any job I could. Nicole hired me as a part-time employee until I could find something better, but no one wanted to hire a full-time mom with no work experience for any full-time position in this town. I sold off all I could, bought the cheapest car I trusted to haul my daughter around, and then threw everything else at our debt.

  I knocked out most of it, but I still had forty thousand left on our mortgage to get rid of.

  “Welcome back,” said the neighbor.

  “Thank you,” I said.

  “How was the drive?”

  “It was fine.”

  “In that car?” she asked.

  “Yes. It gets me from point A to B safely. That’s all I can ask for.”

  “Where’d you guys head off to?”

  None of your damn business.

  “Lily’s grandmother’s place.”

  “Your mother or in-laws?” she asked.

  “My in-laws. Technically.”

  “You separated or something? I can sympathize. I’ve been separated twice.”

  I looked over at Nicole, and she held her hands up. I watched her backtrack onto the porch and catch Lily just as she was heading out the door.

  Nicole was trying to convince Lily to go inside with her so they could start cooking dinner, which I knew would result in Nicole simply ordering pizza.

  “Or something,” I said.

  I watched my neighbor nod her head as she took one last look at my car. She was new to the neighborhood. At least, new to me. I grew up here. My life with Bradley bounced me around to all sorts of places around the country.

  Base life wasn’t the most glamorous thing, but we always talked about how we wanted to raise Lily near family. I grew up in Bend, Oregon, a town of ninety-one thousand people but the feel of small-town living. It was where I’d made my life. It was where I’d first met Bradley. It was the place I’d dreamed of getting back to whenever we wanted to settle our family down.

  One more deployment.

  All we had to do was get through one more deployment.

  “You okay?”

  My neighbor’s voice pulled me from my trance as I met her gaze.

  “Oh yes I’m fine, thank you,” I said. “If you don’t mind, I’m gonna go inside and make up some dinner.”

  “You mean order pizza.”

  I eyed the woman carefully as I took a step back from her.

  “Your friend stepped out on the porch and asked you what kind of pizza you wanted. Went back in when you didn’t answer. You okay?” she asked again.

  “Uh-huh,” I said. “Well, then yes. Pizza. I should probably go.”

  “Sure. One thing, though. Your car was humming down the street. You should probably get it looked at. It’s going to kick up a fuss with the neighborhood if you don’t.”

  I had a feeling the only person who would kick up a fuss was her.

  “Yeah. I’ll, uh, keep that in mind.”

  I stumbled up the porch steps and shoved into the house. Nicole rushed to my side, locking the door behind me as Lily sat at the table. She was playing with her dolls and talking about how much pizza she was going to eat, and I was glad she was distracted.

  I was still very unsettled by my neighbor’s intrusion.

  “Okay, I love you. So I’m going to say this with all my heart. You need a damn security system up in the place, girl.”

  “You gonna pay for it?” I asked.

  “You need to protect yourself and your daughter. Look, I know you guys have only been back in town for a couple of months, but that woman isn’t right. She’s way too nosey for her own good.
No wonder she’s had so many divorces. They probably couldn’t shut her up.”

  I kept my mouth shut. I didn’t want to argue about the security system in front of Lily. She didn’t need to hear anything that would cause her worry.

  “Can I ask you a question?”

  “Sure,” I said, sighing.

  “Why don’t you keep pursuing your bed and breakfast plans?” Nicole asked.

  “Been a bit preoccupied lately,” I said.

  “You know you can do it, even on your own. Right?”

  “I honestly don’t know. Maybe, one day I will try again. But right now, there are more immediate things that need to be tended to.”

  “Like?”

  “Bills, Nicole. Those things I have to pay on a monthly basis.”

  “Bradley would’ve wanted you to—”

  I took a peek at Lily to make sure she wasn’t hearing our conversation by the front door.

  “He always encouraged you to be independent. He loved that fire about you. Seeing you chained to a job you hated would break him inside,” Nicole said.

  “He also understood a sense of duty and a need to provide for his family, Nikki. I’ve got to dig myself out from underneath this mortgage before I essentially take on another one for a bed and breakfast. It’s just going to take time.”

  “But how much time? No offense, but we’re not getting any younger babe,” Nicole said.

  “The point is, I’m working on it. Slowly, but it’s happening.”

  Knowing that arguing with me was futile, Nicole switched tactics. “You should get the guy next door to give your nosey neighbor a stern talking to.”

  “What do you mean?” I asked.

  “While you were gone, a new guy moved in next door. I came by to check him out for you. Make sure he was all right.”

  “You came over to see if he was sexy enough for you to waste your time on,” I said with a grin.

  “That too. And by the way? It’s hard to see behind all that hair of his. He’s gruff and rugged. Got a beard and all that shit.”

  “God forbid a man have body hair.”

  “Body hair. Not facial hair. Clean that shit up. He could be a serial killer,” she said.

  “Nicole. Lily’s at the table,” I said.

  “Sorry. But, you should make friends with him and get him to talk to your neighbor. I bet she’d back down.”