Texas Hearts Book One 
HER HEART FOR THE ASKING
Mandy Morgan swore she’d never step foot in Texas again after Beau Gentry left her for life on the rodeo circuit eight years before. But now her uncle’s heart is failing and she has to convince him that surgery will save his life. She never dreamed the first thing she’d see when she stepped off the plane would be her biggest nightmare...the one man she’d never stopped loving.
Beau Gentry had the fever for two things: the rodeo and Mandy Morgan. But for Beau, loving Mandy was complicated by his father’s vendetta against her uncle. This led him to make the hardest decision of his life and he can still see the bitterness and hurt on Mandy’s face. All these years it has killed him to think Mandy had forgotten him and moved as far away as possible from him. But now they’re back in Texas, and he’s going to do all he can to win back her love.
Beau Gentry had the fever for two things: the rodeo and Mandy Morgan. But for Beau, loving Mandy was complicated by his father’s vendetta against her uncle. This led him to make the hardest decision of his life and he can still see the bitterness and hurt on Mandy’s face. All these years it has killed him to think Mandy had forgotten him and moved as far away as possible from him. But now they’re back in Texas, and he’s going to do all he can to win back her love.
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Excerpt
"What are you 
doing here?" Mandy Morgan asked, dropping her too-heavy overnight case on the 
sun-roasted tarmac.  After a grueling forty-eight hour work stint and a 
five-hour flight from Philadelphia, she stood wilting under the brutal Texas 
sun, facing her biggest nightmare.
Beau 
Gentry.
She groaned 
inwardly, drinking Beau in with her eyes as if she hadn't had a drop of water in 
months.  Eight years was more like it.  If she were eight years smarter, she 
would be moving her aching feet as fast as she could in the opposite direction.  
But all she could do was stare at eyes so bright they rivaled the blazing sun.  
At lips so kissable she'd spent the better part of her adult life trying to wipe 
the memory clean from her mind.  
She had 
expected Beau would have aged some.  When she allowed herself to think about him 
at all, she reminded herself.  The faint lines etched in the corners of his 
sleepy gray-blue eyes gave a hint of maturity, but most probably caused by long 
days in the cruel sun. 
She fought the 
urge to take a closer look at his ruggedly handsome features, but failed.  How 
could he have gotten better looking after being abused by every bronc-busting 
horse on the rodeo circuit?  His angular jaw, strong and determined, was shaded 
with beard growth that was probably a day old, maybe more.  Mandy suspected if 
Beau grew a full beard, it would grow in thick and be the smooth texture of his 
almost black head of hair.  She forced aside past memories that gave her such 
knowledge with renewed irritation.  
The man didn't 
even have the decency to have a crooked nose.  What should have been bent and 
awkward from being broken a few too many times was instead long and straight, 
shaped perfectly between high cheek bones most women would swoon over, or kill 
to have themselves.  But on Beau Gentry, it was just one thousand percent robust 
cowboy.
Damn 
him.
"I'm your ride 
out to the Double T," Beau said, gripping the edge of his white straw cowboy hat 
and tipping it in a cordial gesture.
She ground the 
heels of her low pumps into the soft tar to contain her growing irritation.  Did 
he think she was an idiot?  "No way."
"'Fraid so," 
he said, his expression slightly askew.
"Hank didn't 
mention anything about you coming to get me when I spoke to him on the 
phone."    
"I suspect he 
thought you would have found some excuse not to come if you knew I was picking 
you up."
"He would have 
been right.  Why didn't one of the hands come get me?"  
Settling his 
hand at the base of his neck, Beau replied, "You're looking at him.  As of three 
weeks ago I am one of the ranch hands at the Double T."
What?!  Mandy 
fought the urge to keep her surprise from showing, but immediately failed.  Beau 
Gentry was the son of her uncle's biggest rival.  It hadn't stopped her from 
falling head over heels for the man on those long, lazy summers she came down to 
the ranch to visit her aunt and uncle.  Of course, back then, rodeo was all Beau 
cared about, not his father's spread.  Not her, she remembered painfully.  
He was going 
to go PRCA and be a world champion.  It was his dream and all he ever talked 
about.  He was good enough to do it, too, Mandy thought wryly.  So good, he 
hadn't given her a second glance when he rode out of Texas without her eight 
years ago on the heels of a golden sunset.
Her chuckle 
was almost hysterical.  "You really expect me to leave this airport with 
you?"
"That was the 
plan," he said smiling, his gray eyes seeing more of her than she wanted him to 
see.  He held his ground.  He had to know how difficult it was to see him after 
all this time.  It didn't matter that he didn't share her unrest.  He could have 
at least had the decency to think about her feelings.  But then he hadn't 
thought about her feelings eight years ago when he broke her heart, so it didn't 
seem he was any more incline to do so now.
Beau Gentry 
might be clueless, but there was no way Mandy was going anywhere with him.  No 
way she'd spend the next two hours bouncing up and down in a hot pickup truck 
breathing in his scent and wrestling with memories...
Mandy twisted 
on her heels and surged in the opposite direction.  "Forget it," she called over 
her shoulder.  
There had to 
be a cab going somewhere.  Anywhere.  A hot, sticky bus would be a lot more 
inviting than spending the next few hours in inescapable close quarters with 
Beau.
"Mandy, what 
are you going to do, walk all the way to the Double T?"
"I'm sorry you 
were dragged out here like this, Beau.  But I'm afraid it was a waste of your 
time.  I...can rent a car."
Behind her, 
Mandy heard his heavy sigh and the sound of his boots stop short on the tarmac.  
Defeat?  Regret?  She wasn't sure, but she was very sure she shouldn't care.
Since Mandy 
had just come off a forty-eight hour work-marathon and let her cell phone 
battery run down, she concentrated on finding a payphone.  
"It's been a 
while since you've been around.  The car rental service went belly up here two 
years ago.  About the closest thing you could do to get away from me right now 
is to take a cab to the bus depot.  And I'll just have to pick you up when you 
get to Steerage Rock anyway."
She stopped 
walking when she reached the pay phone just outside the small terminal, angling 
back to see where Beau was standing.  The airport was small enough not to have 
gates.  All passengers exited the plane on the tarmac.  She glanced past the 
booth to the boarded up window near the entrance to the small building that 
housed the air tower, the terminal and a small restaurant-a fast food diner of 
sorts.  The peeled paint of the weather-beaten banner didn't hide the letters of 
a rental car company that indeed had gone out of business.  
She blew out 
an exasperated breath of frustration in the already hot Texas heat.  She wasn't 
ready to give up.  Right now, a bus looked as if it might be a possibility, 
since the last orange taxi just pulled out of the parking lot with one of the 
passengers who'd been on the same flight she'd taken.  She remembered seeing a 
bus depot not far from here when Uncle Hank used to pick her up.  It wouldn't 
take her all the way to the Double T, but close enough not to put Uncle Hank or 
Aunt Corrine out when she called and asked for a ride.
She was being 
ridiculous.  Part of her knew that, accept her behavior as being childish.  But 
part of her rationalized it as necessary.  She knew all too well the dangers of 
being with Beau Gentry.  It had taken Mandy too long to get over him and she 
wasn't about to let anything allow the man to seep into her heart again.
"I can 
manage," she said resolutely.
"I suspect you 
could.  You seem to have done fine for yourself, judging by the fancy clothes 
you're wearing and that designer luggage."
With a fistful 
of quarters in her palm, she swung around, cradling the phone in her other 
hand.  Leveling him with a warning stare, she said tightly, "I don't think 
you're in a position to judge me after what you did."
His face 
showed a momentary flash of regret.  "That was a long time ago, Mandy."
She gripped 
the quarters in her hand, felt her pulse hammer in her wrist.  "I have a long 
memory."
Turning her 
attention back to the task at hand, Mandy decided the phone book was useless.  
What was the company name on the side of that yellow cab?  It had been eight 
years since she'd been in Texas.  Eight years was a long time for a county to 
change.  Who could she possibly call if her one and only ally in Texas sent the 
one man she swore she'd never lay eyes on again?  
Defeated, she 
dropped the out of date phonebook, and chided herself for not charging her cell 
phone before she left for the airport.  She had most of her numbers on speed 
dial and couldn't even recall the number for the Double T.  It would teach her 
to let her cell phone battery run down again, leaving her unprepared.
"Tell me, 
Beau.  Why did you come here?  Someone else could have easily come for me.  Why 
did it have to be you?"
His gray-blue 
eyes lost some of their luster and grew solemn.  There was a time long ago when 
she thought she could stare at those eyes and be lost in them for hours.  You 
still could, she realized with sudden regret.  
Not a good 
sign.  
He adjusted 
his hat in that lazy way he always did.  "Because Hank asked me to.  That's 
why."
There was her 
life in a nutshell.  Beau was asked.  And Mandy wasn't.  Mandy was never asked, 
she was told.  And like the good girl she was raised to be, Mandy always 
complied.  
She thought 
back to the conversation she'd had with her mother just three days ago with 
renewed irritation. 
"I'm not 
asking, Mandy," Leandra Morgan had said over the phone.
I'm telling 
you.
Her mother 
didn't have to actually say the last part for Mandy to know what she was 
thinking.  It was a given.  It followed every request the woman ever made.  I'm 
not asking you to keep your tongue.  I'm not asking you to come to your cousin's 
party.  I'm not asking you to apologize to your father.  I'm not asking you to 
work for the family business...or date the son of your father's biggest client.  
I'm telling you. 
Three days ago 
Mandy had sat in her downtown Philadelphia office on the phone with her mother, 
impatiently drumming her foot on the lift on her chair.  "I am knee deep in this 
project for Dad, Mom.  There's just no way I'm going to be able to get away.  I 
can't make both of you happy at the same time."
"You'll just 
have to find a way."  Leandra's voice came like static over the phone.  "Your 
uncle...isn't himself.  It's been a long time since you've visited him in 
Texas.  I think it would do him some good to see you again.  I think it's time 
you go."
A tug of 
emotion had squeezed her chest.  It had been years since she'd visited Uncle 
Hank and Aunt Corrine at the Double T.  She'd never told her mother why she'd 
stopped her summer visits, and thankfully, her mother had never pushed for a 
reason.  Mandy suspected her mother had just accepted her decision to not make 
her summer vacation as Mandy asserting adolescent independence, wanting to 
remain in Philadelphia to enjoy some summer freedom with her friends.  She'd 
never spoken about what happened that last summer.  Never confided of her first 
love.  And that was just fine with Mandy.  She didn't need to be reminded.
"I'll call 
Uncle Hank and explain.  I can't get away now.  He'll understand," she'd 
said.
"You make it 
happen, young lady."  I'm not asking.
A voice boomed 
over the outdoor loudspeaker announcing the arrival of another flight.  Mandy 
was immediately pulled back to the present, back to Texas, and the hot tarmac 
she now stood on, heels sinking into the sun-softened tar.  
"We've got a 
couple of hours ahead of us.  I'm going to get something cold to drink for the 
ride," Beau said, ambling toward the building.  Turning back, he asked, "You 
want something?"
Yeah, I want 
you to go away.  I want to forget the way you broke my heart all those years 
ago.  But she knew that was futile.  She'd been a fool to think she'd gotten 
over him.  If eight years and countless dates with very eligible men hadn't 
exorcised the memory of Beau Gentry from her heart and soul, nothing would.
Mandy glanced 
at him, defeat sitting just beneath the surface of her composure, and shook her 
head.
How could he 
act so normal?  How could he be asking her something as simple as whether she 
wanted a soda when the last time they'd seen each other had been such a 
sham?
And how dare 
he be so handsome after a two hour ride in a hot pickup truck?  His white 
tee-shirt stretched taut across his muscled shoulders.  She knew first hand just 
how strong those arms were when they were wrapped around her in a warm embrace.  
After years of breaking every wild bronc on the circuit, they were sure to be 
even stronger.  
There wasn't 
an ounce of body fat on the man.  His jeans weren't a tight fit, even baggy in a 
few places where she longed to lazily roam her hand over and on a few occasions 
long ago had.  But on Beau, there was nothing sloppy about it.  Just high 
voltage sex appeal that had her rampant heart doing an acrobatic dance right 
there on the blazing tarmac.
And he was 
nonchalantly asking if she wanted a soda.
The door 
closed behind him as he stepped into the building and Mandy watched through the 
tinted window while he wandered over to the soda machine in the corner and made 
his selection.  He stood there, his weight shifted lazily to one hip in a 
never-do-care way.
She tore her 
gaze away from her torture.  Beau Gentry might look like a dream come true from 
the cover of Modern Cowboy, but she was an utter disaster after her long 
flight.  Suddenly aware she was still wearing yesterday's silk suit, she ran her 
hands down her skirt in a futile attempt to smooth out the wrinkles.  Giving up, 
she rummaged through her purse for a barrette and a comb.  Anything to pull 
together hair that had become unruly from neglect, heat and the wind.  Settling 
on a hairband and her fingers as a comb, she wrestled her 
normally-wavy-gone-curly-in-the-heat dusty blonde hair into a pony tail.  She 
hated that it made her look sixteen again.  But there wasn't much she could do 
until she could get back to the ranch and unpack her things.
As Mandy 
watched Beau walk out into the sunshine with two Root Beers and a bag of chips 
in his hand, she reasoned she wasn't as vulnerable as she had been then.  
Letting the likes of Beau Gentry stomp on her heart was something she wouldn't 
do ever again.  She was a woman now.  She could do this.  She led corporate 
business meetings.  She used her innovative ideas to dazzle prospective clients 
into spending millions of advertising dollars with her father's firm.  She'd 
just purchased an elegant townhouse in one of the trendiest sections of 
Philadelphia.  All she had to do was pull herself together and she could handle 
this situation like the professional she was.
"I'm not 
going," she said, cursing inwardly for sounding like a spoiled child.  So much 
for the corporate executive touch.
Beau's lips 
curled into a slight grin.  He wouldn't win any points if he ticked Mandy off by 
laughing at the way her chin tilted up in defiance.  That hadn't changed much.  
Or the flash of fire in her deep brown eyes.  They still looked as black and 
contrasted wildly with the natural streaks of blond in her hair.  He'd always 
found that appealing, adorable as all get-out.  Already his fingers itched to 
dig in and let the soft curls of her hair tumble in his hand.
But she had 
changed.  Any fool could see that Mandy Morgan had blossomed into a five star 
beauty while he'd been out roaming the country these last eight years.
She was still 
slim as she was at sixteen, but her figure had filled out in all the right 
places that made a man take notice.  The light rock in her hips that had taunted 
him when she was sixteen had matured into a graceful sway he found hypnotizing.  
Although she'd chewed off most of her lipstick, he noticed she now wore a slight 
hint of makeup on her cheeks and eyes, giving her the more exotic look of a 
woman.
And she still 
had the power to make his head spin like a lasso chasing a calf.  He longed to 
see her smile again, hear her laugh bubble up from her soul.  But given the way 
things ended between them, and the way she stood before him now with her arms 
knotted tightly in front of her chest, her jaw set, he knew she wouldn't crack a 
smile just to spite him.
Lord only knew 
why Hank insisted he be the one to pick her up at the airport.
"Did you hear 
me?" she finally said when he didn't answer her.
"Yeah, I 
did."
Her dark eyes 
widened slightly.  "Oh.  Good."
Beau reached 
down and picked up her leather garment bag, watching as her bewildered eyes 
followed his movement.
"It doesn't 
change anything though.  Hank asked me to pick you up at the airport and bring 
you home, and that's what I'm doing if I have to toss you over my shoulder and 
drop you in the pickup."
Mandy gasped.  
"You wouldn't dare!"
"Wanna try 
me?"  He couldn't help but smile.  She just looked too darlin' getting all hot 
and flustered.  She had to know he wouldn't give up.  Not just because she was 
virtually stuck, and knew it, but because she knew he would never refuse Hank's 
request.
She sighed and 
closed her eyes.  "You touch me and I'll..."
"What?"
"I'll..."
"Afraid of 
what you'll do?"  His smile widened just thinking.  "Or are you afraid of how 
you'll feel in my arms again?"
A veil of pain 
hooded her delicate features.  She wasn't just defeated, he realized.  She still 
hurt after all these years.  Guilt stabbed at his gut just thinking of how she 
was going to feel when she finally reached the Double T and she learned the real 
reason she was called back to Texas.
Somehow, on 
those long drives from rodeo to rodeo these past eight years Beau had fantasized 
about Mandy forgiving him one day for what he'd done.  Maybe even understanding 
why he'd had to do it.  As the years went on, he figured she'd have forgotten 
all about what the two of them had shared that summer, and moved on with her 
life.  He didn't want to think of her finding comfort with another man, 
forgetting the way she used to melt like butter in his arms, the way they 
breathlessly clung to each other to steal just one more kiss before turning in 
each night.  But it would have been easier for her if she had.
Looking in her 
haunted eyes now, Beau realized that was truly a fantasy.  Her pain was still as 
raw as the day he'd left her eight years ago.  
He gripped the 
bag of chips he'd just bought from the vending machine so hard it popped.  
"Look, we have 
a long ride ahead of us.  If you want, you can blast the radio with any station 
you want and pretend someone else is driving."
"You'll just 
start whistling to remind me you're there," she said, staring at the ground.  
She 
remembered.  Every trip to the local rodeos he'd been pent up with 
anticipation.  She liked to listen to the radio in the truck and when he was 
nervous, he'd whistle and it annoyed the tar out of her.  But she teased him 
anyway, telling him if he was going to whistle, he could at least do it in key.  
Having her 
remember that one small detail gave him a slice of hope.  No, they'd never be 
able to pick up where they'd left off eight years ago.  That part of his life 
was dead and buried.  But maybe he'd have a chance to repair the damage he'd 
done.  Maybe they could be friends.
Mandy threw 
her purse over her shoulder and headed toward the parking lot, leaving him to 
deal with her luggage.  His eyes were drawn again to the graceful sway of her 
slender hips and the memory of her silky soft lips against his.
Being friends 
with Mandy as a consolation prize to having her in his arms did nothing to 
dispel the loneliness he suddenly felt in seeing her again after all these 
years.  But it would have to do.
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