Quinn's Woman

Read Quinn's Woman for Free Online

Book: Read Quinn's Woman for Free Online
Authors: Susan Mallery
Tags: Category, Hometown Heartbreakers
tarp where he’d spent the first part of the night. Of course, then he’d had a sleeping companion. He’d traded the company of an intriguing and beautiful woman for comfort. Not much of a trade.

    Memories of the previous evening made him smile. When D.J. woke up and saw he’d escaped, she was going to be spitting nails. Too bad he would miss the show. At least he knew she would come looking for him at camp, demanding to know how he’d done it. He’d made sure of that by leaving his cut ropes coiled up neatly beside her. The message was clear - he’d escaped and he’d had a knife that she’d missed. No way would she be able to resist a challenge like that.

    Fifteen minutes later he was sipping coffee at one of the tables in the mess tent. He’d spread out the morning paper, but instead of reading, he was watching the main entrance, waiting for a tall, shapely brunette to burst inside and demand an explanation... not to mention retribution.

    Instead he saw his brother stroll in. Gage looked around him, saw him and started across the dirt floor.

    “You made it,” Gage said, and grinned.

    Quinn rose and they shook hands, then embraced briefly. After slapping each other on the back and reassuring themselves that each had survived and was well since their last meeting, Quinn glanced at the man who had accompanied Gage.

    His brother stepped back. “This is Travis Haynes. He’s the local sheriff here.”

    Quinn shook hands with the man, then frowned when he realized there was something familiar about him. He was sure he and Travis Haynes had never met; Quinn didn’t forget faces. Yet there was something that teased at the back of his mind...almost a memory, but not quite.

    Travis looked him over, then shook his head. “I’ll be damned,” he said, then motioned to the table. “We should probably sit down and talk this over.”

    Curious but not concerned, Quinn settled back in his chair. Gage took a seat across from him with Travis sitting to his right. Gage rested his forearms on the table.

    “You’re doing okay?” he asked Quinn.

    Quinn sipped his coffee. “You have something to say, so say it.”

    Gage nodded. “I just--”

    Travis leaned forward. “I should go. After you two talk we can all get together.”

    “No.” Gage shook his head. “Stay. This concerns you. Besides, if Quinn has some questions, you’re the best one to answer them.” He returned his attention to Quinn. “Sorry to be so mysterious. I didn’t want to tell you in a phone message or a letter. I appreciate you coming here.”

    Quinn shrugged. His work kept him out of touch with his family for months at a time. Their only way to communicate was to leave a message at a special number and wait for him to get back to them. Sometimes he was able to respond in a few days, but most of the time it was weeks or months. Gage had left his first message nearly two months ago. His second, requesting Quinn meet him in Glenwood, had been delivered just as Quinn had returned to the States.

    “Have you talked to Mom?” Gage asked.

    “A couple of days ago. She said everything was fine.” He frowned. Had she been hiding something? Was she sick?

    Not surprisingly his brother knew what he was thinking.

    “She’s okay,” Gage told him. “I wondered if she’d mentioned anything...” He leaned back in his chair. “This is harder than I thought.”

    “Just spit it out.”

    “Fair enough.” Gage stared at him. “Ralph Reynolds isn’t our biological father. He and Mom couldn’t have kids together. They both wanted them so she got pregnant by another guy. Someone she met in Dallas. His name is Earl Haynes. Travis here is one of his sons. Which makes him our half brother.” Gage grinned. “Actually, we have several. It seems there are a lot of Earl Haynes’s sons running around the world.”

    Quinn heard the words, but at first they didn’t have any meaning. Ralph Reynolds was not their biological father?

    A half-dozen

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