The Sunstone Brooch : Time Travel Romance by Katherine Logan (i am reading a book TXT) π

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- Author: Katherine Logan
Read book online Β«The Sunstone Brooch : Time Travel Romance by Katherine Logan (i am reading a book TXT) πΒ». Author - Katherine Logan
Austin was the incarnation of his sports nicknameβthe Dragon. His height, broad shoulders, muscular arms, and hands the size of a small state would scare sensible people shitless. But men with something to prove would give him what he wantedβtrouble, big trouble. Before the accident, Austin had been a marshmallow off the court, but now his attitude screamed, βTry me.β
βLook at him,β Tavis said.
βYeah. His attitude sucks. Weβre in the Wild West. Somebody might just push him hard enough, and heβll get himself killed.β Remy scratched his chin, and his nose twitched as if nerve endings were collecting sensory information like catβs whiskers. βWe could all be pushed further than we want to be, overreact, make a mistake, and end up dead.β Remy was quiet for a minute. βIf I get shot, can you go back in time before that happened and stop it?β
βI asked that question once. I didnβt get a straight answer. But I believe if something happens while weβre out of our time we canβt undo it. It is what it is. If you get shotββ
βThatβs not true. Kenzie changed her grandfatherβs history.β
βThatβs different.β Tavis thought back through the clanβs history to find an example. βHereβs what I mean. If Kenzie had died on Omaha Beach, David couldnβt have rewound the clock and gone back for her at a different time. Dead is dead.β
βFuck.β Remy thought a minute. βNope. That isnβt right. Remember what happened to Jack? He died, and Charlotte and David went back to a time before the Union could hang him and kept it from happening.β
βI guess dead isnβt dead,β Tavis said. βBut Jack might be the exception. So letβs donβt test the theory, okay. Weβre trained soldiers, sailors, and Marines. We know what weβre doing.β
Remy pointed his thumb over this shoulder. βHe doan know what heβs doing, and if ya ask me, bringing him was a shitty idea. Heβs been doing nothing but complaining. He might push me to do something Iβll regret.β
βWhat? Cut out his tongue?β
βDoan tempt me.β
βYou know heβs doing it on purpose. If he makes us miserable enough, we might give in and take him home. Just ignore him.β
βI wish I could.β
Austin lifted his hat. βYou two just going to stand there and whisper about me, or are you going to figure out where the hell we are? Iβm done with this. Take me home. Iβve got work to do.β
βWeβre not going home, you son of a bitch. Stop complaining,β Remy snapped. βWeβll go home after we find JC.β
Austin dropped his hat over his face and crossed his arms and ankles.
Tavis had been having prickling sensations ever since he arrived, and he wasnβt sure what they meant. There was a disturbance in the unfolding of time. He felt it every time he traveled, but this was different.
He also sensed Erik was here. If so, that meant he was watching over Ensley and JC. Theyβd still have trouble, but nothing they couldnβt handle. If their lives were in danger, Erik would step in, but sometimes the Viking waited too long. At least in terms of Tavisβs definition of βlives in danger.β
βIβm going down alone,β Tavis said. βIf the three of us ride up unexpectedly, unannounced and uninvited, thereβll be trouble. Iβll signal if JCβs there. If not, Iβll come back to get you, and weβll reevaluate.β
βDoes that mean we can go home?β Austin asked, this time not even raising his hat.
βHell, no. Weβre here to find JC, and we woan leave till we do.β Then Remy said to Tavis, βIβll give you fifteen minutes. If you doan signal for us to come down, weβre coming after ya.β
βOkay. Fifteen. But donβt start counting until I cross the river.β Tavis put the map and compass away and remounted his horse. βDonβt beat the shit out of Austin while Iβm gone.β
βIβll try not to,β Remy said.
Tavis rode down off the butte, crossed the river, and trotted toward the ranch. He checked the time. It was almost noon. There was a chance theyβd be back at the Colorado ranch by supper. But if that was the way it was supposed to work out, why bother to kidnap Austin?
Because this isnβt going to be easy, and we wonβt be going right back. The shitβs going to hit the fan. I feel it in my bones.
Tavis followed the smoke and arrived at a ranch house built about thirty yards from the cottonwood-lined riverbank. The cabin looked substantial enough, with two chairs on the porch, gently rocking in the breeze. He rode slowly into the yard and stopped a few feet from the porch.
βHello. Anybody here? Iβm not looking for trouble. Iβm searching for James Cullen Fraser. Have you seen him?β
Nothing happened for a minute, then another, and another. Tavis was about to ride around to the back of the cabin when the door creaked open, and a woman came out, holding a rifle like she knew how to use it.
βWhy you lookinβ for him?β
βHeβs my cousin. I heard he might ride out here to do some hunting with Teddy Roosevelt. Is he around?β
She shook her head. βRode off a week ago.β
βDo you know where he was going?β
βKentucky.β
βLexington, I guess,β Tavis said. βWas he traveling by himself?β
The woman shook her head again. βHad his wife with him.β
Tavisβs gut reacted before his mind did. But then it made sense. JC must have found Ensley and used a fake marriage to protect her.
Tavis took off his hat and slapped his leg, grinning. βHot dang. Guess he finally convinced Miss Ensley to marry him.β
Tavisβs informality relaxed the woman, and she lowered the rifle. βMiss Ensley didnβt go with him.β
That didnβt sound like JC. Something else was at work here. Tavis worked up a laugh he didnβt feel, so the woman would keep feeding him information. βAw shucks, maβam. Are ya telling me they broke up already?β
βOh, no.β The woman smiled. βYou could tell theyβre mighty
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