“Who said that?” Jill asked.
“I did.” She laughed. “Come on, handsome cowboy. Take me home and to bed.”
Jill raised an eyebrow.
“I’m not that tired.” Callie winked.
Jill reached up to the top shelf and handed her a bottle of Jack Daniel’s. “Happy Valentine’s Day, and thank you.”
Chapter 28
The bunkhouse looked wonderful, smelled wonderful, and felt even better when they got home that Saturday night. The peace and quiet when Jill walked inside surrounded her like Sawyer’s arms. She dragged a chair from the table to the woodstove. Both kittens scampered away to safety at the noise coming across the wood floor, and Sawyer raised an eyebrow.
“What are you doing?”
“Making it still Valentine’s Day.”
“I can reach the clock. I’ll do it. How much of Valentine’s Day do you want left?” he asked.
“Thirty minutes.”
He wound the clock back to eleven thirty. “Now what?”
She went into her bedroom and returned with a box of maple doughnuts and a long, thin box. “Happy Valentine’s Day, darlin’. Open it. I can’t wait to see what you think of it.”
He sat down on the sofa, and she joined him. She’d found the romantic coupon book at the store where she finished buying party supplies. It had a coupon for a romantic breakfast in bed, one for a picnic to the place of his choice, and several that made her blush when she read them.
He chuckled when he picked it up from the box, laughed at the first coupon, roared at the ones that made her blush. He hugged her so tight she thought her ribs would break and kissed her a dozen times. “Thank you, darlin’. It’s a present that will last all year if we use one a week. And doughnuts too. Wait.” He peeled off the one for breakfast in bed, anything he wanted, and handed it to her. “I want doughnuts, your strong black coffee, and you for breakfast in the morning.”
“I think that could be arranged,” she said.
“Happy Valentine’s Day.” He pulled a long, slim box from the coat he’d draped over the back of the sofa.
“Did you buy me the same thing? If so, we’ll have to use two a week,” she said.
“Open it and see,” he said.
“Oh, Sawyer,” she gasped when she opened the box and saw the bracelet. “It’s beautiful.” She threw her arms around his neck and kissed him so passionately that her knees went weak. She recognized the infinity symbol and hoped that it wasn’t just a trinket he’d bought but that it really told the story of their lives together.
“Double infinity. No end in sight for my life with you.”
“And none in sight for mine with yours,” she said.
Tears filled her eyes as she handed the bracelet to him and held out her wrist. “Put it on me. I love that it’s yellow gold.”
He fastened the bracelet around her arm, and she shifted her position until she was sitting in his lap, arm held out so she could look at the bracelet. “Did you have it special made?”
“No, it came right out of the counter, but I knew it was you when I saw it.”
“I’m going to wear it all night so I can see it first thing when I wake up in the morning. Infinity means never having to say good-bye, doesn’t it?”
* * *
“Yes, it does. I could never bear the thought of telling you good-bye. There was a ring in the store that had a story.” He hadn’t meant to tell her about the ring until the right moment. He’d already planned the perfect proposal, right before his parents came at Easter. Then he could introduce her as his fiancée if she said yes.
She touched the bracelet with her other hand. “A better story than this?”
“You be the judge when you hear it,” he said.
When he finished, tears were rolling down her cheeks and leaving drops on the front of her hot-pink Western-cut shirt. “I love that story. The ring would carry wonderful blessings with it. Did I tell you that I don’t believe in luck? I believe in blessings, though, and coming to Burnt Boot was the best blessing I’ve ever been given.”
The moment was perfect right then, but Sawyer couldn’t make himself reach into the other coat pocket and bring out the little white box with the ring inside. It was too soon. They needed more time.
“I feel the same, even if we did get off to a rocky start there at first.” He hugged her tighter, wanting never to face a morning without her. If she passed away the next morning, he was sure that in three days he would join her, just like the people in the story about the ring.
Miss Piggy and Miss Chickadee made a running leap for the sofa, climbed up the arm, and chased each other across the back. On one trip from end to end, they got tangled up in his coat and the ring box fell out.
Jill was so intrigued with her bracelet that she didn’t see it, but Sawyer saw it as a sign. She could say no, and he’d ask again every Saturday night until she said yes, but he was about to give her the chance to refuse or say yes.
He set her to one side, dropped down on one knee, and held out the box. “Jillian Cleary, I love you with my whole heart. Will you marry me?”
He popped the box open, and a fresh batch of tears started. “It’s the ring, isn’t it?” she whispered.
“I figure we might have seventy years together with it,” he said. “We can have it sized later. Please say yes.”
“Yes, yes, yes.” She threw her arms around his neck.
He removed the ring and slipped it on her finger. “Fits perfectly. Was meant to be. Your eyes are the same color as the emerald.”
“I love it. It can be my wedding band too. I don’t need another one, Sawyer.”
“Long engagement or a short one?”
“Thirty-six hours. We’ll be at the courthouse Monday morning as soon as it opens.”
He gathered her into his arms and carried her to their bedroom. “I was hoping for Easter. I didn’t dream you’d say yes and want a simple wedding at the courthouse.”
“Why wait? I’m sure that I want to be with you the rest of my life. And besides, you can have the office for your movies now. Rhett can have my room, and I’ll never have to sneak across the cold floor to sleep with you,” she said. “And you’ll always remember our anniversary, because it will be right after Valentine’s Day.
“I was going to propose in a romantic setting,” he said.
“Nothing is more romantic than this night. I love you so much, Sawyer. I never thought I’d be blessed to find my soul mate.”
“Oh!” she gasped when she saw the little bear from the antique store on her pillow.
“That is to remember our first Valentine’s Day together,” he said.
“I love you, Sawyer.” She brought his lips down to hers.
He kicked the door shut with his boot heel and gently laid her on the bed. “Infinity, darlin’, starts right now, and it has no end.”
Dear Readers,
A few months ago, four cowboys showed up in my virtual world with a story to tell. I’d met three of them—Sawyer, Rhett, and Finn—in Cowboy Seeks Bride, but the fourth one, Declan Brennan, was altogether new to me. But the other three cowboys said they wanted their own series and that Declan was an integral part of it, since he’s a Brennan. Seems the Brennans and the Gallaghers have been in a feud for more than a hundred years in Burnt Boot, Texas, and who better to tell me all about it than Declan Brennan?
After writing the first two books in this series, I’m not totally sure the Burnt Boot gossip vine could survive without the feud. There’s a possibility it would be listed on the top of the endangered species list. But the pig war in this book leaves us all with the idea that the feud will never be settled.
Summer is beginning here in southern Oklahoma as I finish this book. Winter finally left us about two days ago. We had forty-eight hours of gorgeous spring weather, and then boom, it was tornado weather and heat. But you will be reading this book when it’s winter, and that’s when Sawyer and Jill first met, in the bitter-cold wind in Burnt Boot. So bundle up, pour a glass of wine or a cup of hot chocolate, and settle in for another adventure in Burnt Boot.