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Forever Hunted
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Forever Hunted
Forever Bluegrass #9
Kathleen Brooks
Contents
Also by Kathleen Brooks
Family Trees for Keeneston
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
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
Epilogue
Also by Kathleen Brooks
About the Author
All Rights Reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
* * *
This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons living or dead, actual events, locale, or organizations is entirely coincidental.
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An original work of Kathleen Brooks. Forever Hunted copyright @ 2018 by Kathleen Brooks
Created with Vellum
Bluegrass Series
Bluegrass State of Mind
Risky Shot
Dead Heat
* * *
Bluegrass Brothers
Bluegrass Undercover
Rising Storm
Secret Santa: A Bluegrass Series Novella
Acquiring Trouble
Relentless Pursuit
Secrets Collide
Final Vow
* * *
Bluegrass Singles
All Hung Up
Bluegrass Dawn
The Perfect Gift
The Keeneston Roses
* * *
Forever Bluegrass Series
Forever Entangled
Forever Hidden
Forever Betrayed
Forever Driven
Forever Secret
Forever Surprised
Forever Concealed
Forever Devoted
Forever Hunted
Forever Guarded
* * *
Shadows Landing Series
Saving Shadows
* * *
Women of Power Series
Chosen for Power
Built for Power
Fashioned for Power
Destined for Power
* * *
Web of Lies Series
Whispered Lies
Rogue Lies
Shattered Lies
Family Trees for Keeneston
Davies Family Tree
* * *
Keeneston Friends Family Trees
1
Sixteen months ago . . .
* * *
Carter Ashton tossed back a bourbon as his good friend and neighbor, Zain Ali Rahman, danced by with his new bride, Mila, wrapped in his arms. For a small town like Keeneston, weddings were a big deal regardless of the fact that Zain was a prince. It made no difference to the people of Keeneston that there were princes, kings, queens, presidents, or prime ministers in attendance that night. It was one of the things Carter loved about Keeneston. Folks only cared about their loved ones, not their status. Consequently, it was also the worst thing about Keeneston. They cared a little too much, which left privacy as a bad word.
Carter tapped his finger against the top of his empty glass and the bartender poured another finger of bourbon as Carter’s attention shifted to watch Cy Davies dance with his wife, Gemma. Carter had known the entire Davies family ever since he was born. They were like family to him, until now. Now Cy Davies was the unmovable boulder of overprotective father that stood between Carter and the only person he wanted to dance with—Cy’s daughter, Reagan.
True, he’d danced with her before . . . many times, in fact. It shouldn’t be a big deal, but it was. Because this time was different. This time he didn’t want to be friends anymore. This time he wanted to dance with the woman he found irresistible, not the girl he’d grown up riding horses with.
Carter shot back the bourbon as his eyes locked onto Reagan. Her long, copper-red hair, normally worn down, was pulled up tonight in an elaborate updo, leaving the long column of her neck and smooth skin of her back on full display from the draped fabric of her dress. Her gown was a deep emerald green, drawing attention to her hazel eyes. The front of the gown came up to her neck as it hung over her shoulders and draped down, revealing her bare back, shoulders, and all the way to the top of a rounded ass he desperately wanted to put his hands on.
Reagan wasn’t normally so dressed up, and this reminded him of what he already knew of the tomboy he grew up with—she’d turned into an athletic, beautiful woman. Her body was toned from riding horses, setting up her horse transport flights, and working on a farm. Yet her body still seemed soft with womanly curves, such as the curve of her butt, the flair of her hips, the swell of her breasts.
Carter tapped his glass to ask for another bourbon. Reagan and he were friends—good friends. But things had changed instantly six days earlier. Unfortunately, Carter worried it had only changed for him. They’d been riding at his farm. Carter had a new horse he was excited to show his father, Will. His father was turning over more and more control of the farm to him as Will had taken over running the new professional football team he co-owned in Lexington. Carter’s father had been a quarterback in the NFL until his Grandpa William had had a heart attack. Carter’s dad had come back to Kentucky, taken over the farm, and even produced a couple of Kentucky Derby winners. And now it was Carter’s turn to make his own mark in the horse racing industry. He had recently purchased a new horse and wanted Reagan’s opinion on him. All his life, it had been Reagan’s opinion he sought and respected. So it was just another day when she’d come over to check out his horse.
Dressed in jeans and a T-shirt he’d seen her in a thousand times, Reagan had put the horse through his paces. When she came to a halt in front of Carter, her red hair was wild from the ride, her hazel eyes flashed in the pleasure of a breakneck ride, her mouth tilted up laughingly, and her breasts rose in exhilaration. Carter had been struck hard and fast by a bolt of lightning, or lust. Whichever, it didn’t matter. What mattered was that right then he’d wanted to pull one of his best friends from the saddle and do things best friends don’t do with each other. Things that involved being naked and screaming each other’s names.
But Carter had never been the kind of man to just grab what he wanted, especially if what he wanted was a woman. His father and mother had instilled deep levels of gentlemanly manners in him. So instead of acting out of lust, Carter had held up his hands to her and smiled when she slipped from the horse and into his arms.
Instantly aroused, Carter’s hands had trailed down her back as he smiled at her, holding her a little longer than he’d ever done before. “He’s magnificent!” Reagan had laughed as she grabbed his biceps. Carter’s smile was known for turning women speechless with a flash of dimple and a whole lot of promise of what he could do with his lips. It was the same one that had the husband-hunting women’s group, the Keeneston Belles, putting him on the top of the Keeneston�
�s Most Eligible Bachelor list.
“I’m glad you like him,” he had said seductively, pulling her closer to him. But he hadn’t been blind or delirious. It hadn’t worked. It had worked before. In fact, it had never failed. But Reagan hadn’t picked up on the subtle signs he’d been giving her. Instead, she’d patted his arm and broken from his embrace to rub the horse’s neck.
“Are you going to race him?” she had asked instead.
Carter had approached her and placed his hand next to hers on the horse’s neck as he had looked down at her. “I believe I will. Reagan,” he’d said, his voice husky with desire as he’d reached out and taken her hand in his. He wasn’t even going to think about it. He was going to ask her out. No wondering about hurting their friendship. No second-guessing if they should date. He’d known it down to his core. In that split second, she was his and he was hers.
“Damn,” Reagan had cursed when her phone rang. She’d pulled her hand from his and answered with a sharp “What now, Dad?” She’d looked up at Carter and smiled before rolling her eyes. “Da-a-ad, give it up. I’m just with Carter.”
And right then his heart had plummeted. Just Carter? Just?
“Yeah, I’ll be there in ten. Okay. Love you too.” Reagan had grimaced with annoyance with her father as she tucked her phone into her back pocket. “What were you going to ask before my dad interrupted?”
Carter’s hopes had been dashed. “I was going to see if you were bringing a date to Zain and Mila’s wedding.”
Reagan had laughed and shook her head. “As if I’d put anyone through the torture of having to spend a day with my dad threatening to kill him. He’d ruin any fun I could have.”
“He doesn’t have to. Maybe if he liked the guy . . .” Carter had said, thinking of how he and Cy were on great terms.
Reagan had snorted. “Please. Any guy will turn into public enemy number one once they show an interest in me. That’s why I only date outside of the state. It’s handy being a pilot.” She’d winked.
“Are you dating someone now?” Carter had held his breath hoping she wasn’t. He’d broken up with his last girlfriend three months before and hadn’t thought twice about dating again until Reagan thundered toward him in all her wild glory. It had seemed the rest of his life balanced on the answer to this question.
“No. I’ve been too busy this last month to do anything but eat, sleep, and fly. In fact, I have to fly out the day after the wedding. But you know that. I’m flying two of your mares to California.” Before he could respond, she’d looked at her watch and slapped his shoulder like best buds. “I need to go help my dad. Great horse, Carter. This was fun. Let’s do it again soon.” And then she’d left without looking back.
They hadn’t been together since that day. Carter had tried to get Reagan to come back to the farm to ride, but she’d been too busy and then he’d been too busy. But now she was thirty feet from him in a beautiful gown at a wedding celebrating the love between one of their good friends and his new wife. This was the moment for Carter to make his move. He set his drink down and wound his way along the edge of the dance floor toward the woman he wanted as his best friend and something so much more.
* * *
Reagan smiled to no one in particular. Her sister, Riley, had left her to go dance after catching Reagan casting glances in Carter’s direction. Riley believed Reagan was keeping a secret, and she was. But she wasn’t going to tell anyone what it was, even her twin sister. It was hard to admit to herself that, above all else, Reagan wanted Carter Ashton to kiss her. The trouble was that was something friends didn’t do. Carter had never shown interest in her other than a riding buddy and a good friend. How could she tell him she wanted more—way more? It was a relief when Riley stopped interrogating her to go dancing among most of their cousins, which left Reagan standing on the sidelines watching others with their dates. She’d kill to have a date, but she had a father issue. And it boiled down to one simple fact . . . having an ex-spy as a father sucked. He tried to slip GPS devices into her clothes. He would regularly try to hack her phone. And he would always scare off any date she or her sister had brought home.
“If I wasn’t a lesbian, a man like that would be exactly what I would want,” Veronica, Zain’s assistant, whispered behind her champagne glass as she stopped to stand next to Reagan. If Reagan were a lesbian, Veronica would be out of her league. The tall blonde knockout was always walking perfection. Red lips, a perfect manicure, and a brain that ran circles around everyone else’s. She was organized, smart, a problem solver, and did it all without a hair out of place or raising her voice. Reagan was more of a disorganized, fly-by-the-seat-of-her-pants girl who had inherited the temper that came with her red hair. However, she could spy with the best of them.
Reagan turned to see who Veronica was talking about and saw Carter tossing back a bourbon and setting it on the bar top. “Carter?”
“Don’t tell me you haven’t noticed how sexy he is? Even I have noticed that.”
Reagan looked at him as he buttoned his tuxedo jacket and turned toward her. Their eyes locked and Reagan gulped. His brown eyes were a couple shades darker than the bourbon he’d just enjoyed, but his hair was brown with tinges of auburn that always seemed to shine in the light.
“He’s my friend. One of my best friends, actually,” Reagan said to Veronica as Carter began to walk toward her. Dear Lord, he was sexy, and she didn’t think it was just the tuxedo.
“Seems like he’s coming this way. I doubt it’s for me,” Veronica teased.
Reagan looked away from the man walking toward her. If only. Carter was one of her best friends. She liked him, a lot. She thought he was attractive. The only problem was they never showed any inclination toward being something more. She wouldn’t know how to do that. Flirting was not something Reagan excelled at, and reading the signs to know if he was open to it would be impossible since she didn’t speak that language. Disable a GPS tracker, sure. Figure out if someone was flirty, nope. “He probably wants to talk about his new horse.”
Veronica’s eyes went wide, and she hid her smirk behind her glass. “Riding may be on his mind, but I don’t think it’s a horse he’s thinking about.”
Before Reagan could ask, Carter was standing in front of her. Reagan shot Veronica a glare. She’d never been flustered in front of Carter before, but now she was nearing full-blown panic. She was having a very hard time thinking of anything except for what Veronica had just said.
“You look beautiful tonight, Reagan. Would you like to dance?”
Reagan looked at Carter’s outstretched hand and back to his face. He was smiling, and a hint of a dimple could be seen on his freshly shaven face. “Sure,” she said, placing her hand in his as the music moved from a fast song to a slow song.
Carter pulled her hand to his chest as he slipped his other hand around her waist. Was he holding her too close? Reagan’s breathing hitched as his fingers dug into her hips, pulling her closer to him. Her questioning eyes shot to his as he smiled at her. He moved slowly, sensuously, or maybe it was normal, but Reagan was flustered as she tried to read the signals he was sending. She wasn’t sure what was real and what was stuck in her mind from the talk with Veronica.
Carter’s hand drifted from her hip, and Reagan focused all her attention on where it traveled, up and around her back before sliding inside the loose draping material of her dress where her bra strap would have been. Reagan’s breath caught at the feel of his hand against the bare skin of her back. His muscular thigh pressed between her legs as he dipped her backward to the music. As her dress parted at the split up to her thigh, his leg brushed against her intimately at the same time his fingers fluttered against her, achingly close to the side of her breast. The moment seemed to last forever, but it was over in a second. Carter stood her upright, released her, stepped to the side, and began to clap with the others, thanking the band for the great song.
“I’ll see you tomorrow, Reagan. Thanks for the dance.”
> Reagan stood dumbly on the edge of the dance floor, watching as Carter walked out of the reception and into the night. What had happened? Whatever it was, it had left her breathing hard, flushed, and tingling in spots not meant for best friends. One thing was for sure: in those four minutes, Carter Ashton had made her feel more alive than she’d ever felt in her life. Now, just what the hell was she going to do about it?
2
Reagan was busy in the cockpit of her plane as Diego, her horse handler, loaded the two mares from Ashton Farms into the small Embraer 140 plane. After stripping all the seats and overhead bins, her plane was only big enough to hold two horses, Diego, and two grooms, but she had big plans to expand the operation. Her plan had been to start small and develop a solid customer base, then she would buy a larger plane. So far, so good. As one of only a few air transport companies dedicated to the horse industry, she was constantly booked and already operating in the black. Owners of horses worth tens of millions of dollars liked to know their horses were on their own plane as opposed to being loaded as cargo on other larger commercial flights.