Valentine's Fortune
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About this ebook
"You're safe now."
His voice was a seductive whisper as he pulled her from the blazing restaurant. But on the run and pregnant, Bethany Burdett knew she had to forget the brave fire fighter who'd risked his life to save hers. Until Darr Fortune tracked her down
Ever since he spirited the unconscious stranger to safety, the youngest Fortune brother was haunted by a powerful desire to see her again. And when a blizzard stranded them together, Darr knew he'd risk it all again for the enigmatic mother–to–be who aroused much more than his protective instincts .
Allison Leigh
A frequent name on bestseller lists, Allison Leigh's highpoint as a writer is hearing from readers that they laughed, cried or lost sleep while reading her books. She’s blessed with an immensely patient family who doesn’t mind (much) her time spent at her computer and who gives her the kind of love she wants her readers to share in every page. Stay in touch at www.allisonleigh.com and @allisonleighbks.
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Book preview
Valentine's Fortune - Allison Leigh
Prologue
"Miss? The deep voice seemed to come at Bethany from a long, hollow distance.
I’m with the Red Rock Fire Department. You’re safe now. Just open your eyes."
Her throat hurt. Breathing in made her nose burn. She wanted to sleep. How long had it been since she’d had a decent night’s sleep? Since before…before what?
Her brain searched, but all it found was fog. Thick, choking fog.
Come on now, darlin’. Open your eyes for me.
She was floating in the fog. Was she flying? Someone had told her if she flew in her dreams that meant something good.
A dream. That was it. She was dreaming.
Dammit, make a hole,
the deep voice barked. She needs air.
She winced. She wanted to shrink away from the harsh command in his voice. Didn’t he know she was sleeping?
Breathe through my mask.
The voice was low again. Intimate. It’ll help.
Something covered her face. She pushed at it. Tried to protest. Sucked in oddly sweet air. She turned her head away. No.
The word scraped her raw throat.
That’s it, Miss. Come on back to us. You’re doing fine now.
She could follow that voice anywhere. Even up and out of her dreaming fog.
You’re safe now,
he coaxed softly. A lover’s whisper.
No. That wasn’t right. Her lover was…where?
She frowned at the pain inside her head. No.
Yes, you are safe. I promise. Just open your eyes. You’ll see. Can you tell me your name?
Bethany. The name sighed through her. My name is Bethany.
She jerked, her eyes flying open to stare into the face of the man speaking to her.
Voices. Shouting. Sirens. Smoke. Flashing lights.
It all accosted her in that instant and fear shot through her, making her stiffen. She tried to work her hand to her abdomen, but couldn’t seem to manage it. What?
Can you tell me your name?
Relief was swift, but fleeting. She hadn’t said her name. Or if she had, he hadn’t heard it. Not over the incredible clamoring confusion surrounding them.
She started to clear her throat. Coughed. What was the name she was using? Barbara,
she finally supplied. Her voice wasn’t much more than a croak. Her brain just didn’t feel like cooperating. Burr—
Not Burdett. Not Burdett. Burton.
That was her borrowed name. What happened?
Don’t worry about a thing now, Barbara. You’re safe,
was all he said. I’ve got you now.
He was carrying her, she realized, and just as quickly she felt consumed with dizziness. She closed her eyes, but that didn’t help. I feel sick.
The floating, rocking motion ceased. I’ll bet. I’m going to put you on the stretcher now. Just relax.
She opened her eyes again as he settled her on a firm, blessedly steady surface. What happened?
she asked again. He had streaks on his face. Like war paint. And shoulders wider than a linebacker. He looked armed for battle.
She realized vaguely that a large white van was next to them.
I almost didn’t find you when we were clearing the restaurant.
He’d leaned down closer to her and his voice was softer. Impossibly gentle.
Comforting.
She blinked. Rubbed her eyes. Realized that they were watering.
The smoke was thick in there. You were unconscious,
he said. They’re going to take you to the hospital. Just as a precaution. Make sure you’re all right.
She didn’t want to go to the hospital. She wanted, she wanted…she didn’t know what she wanted. A fire,
she said, stupidly. Thickly. Even now, she could see the lick of hungry red lighting the sky beyond the van—an ambulance. And beyond that, a rise of thick, cloying smoke.
Oh, God.
She slid her hand over her abdomen. Please, please be all right. I came for an enchilada.
His teeth flashed. Afraid you’ll have to wait a while for that. Inhaling smoke the way you did can make you pretty woozy,
he said.
It wasn’t war paint on his face. It was soot. And the armor he wore was a fireman’s uniform.
"You rescued me?"
Yes, ma’am.
She realized his grin was slightly crooked. And you’re gonna be just fine, Barbara. D’ya have someone you want us to call? Husband? Boyfriend? Who were you with at Red?
Red. The restaurant. She’d been treating herself to the first meal out she’d had since she’d landed in Red Rock. A woman only turned twenty-five once in her life, right?
Barbara?
Her mind was wandering. She knew it. She just couldn’t seem to make herself stop. I’m not married.
It seemed to be the only clear thought in her head. There’s no one to call.
We’ve got her now, Darr.
A woman and another man appeared beside the stretcher and before Bethany could marshal another coherent sentence, they pushed the stretcher and she felt herself slide smoothly into the rear of the white ambulance. The woman followed her.
But Bethany wasn’t looking at her.
She was watching the fireman, still standing there.
And then the ambulance doors closed and she wanted to protest, but it was already too late, because she could feel the vehicle begin to move.
The ambulance attendant closed her cool fingers around Bethany’s wrist. What’s your name, ma’am?
Bethany closed her eyes again. In her mind, though, was the firefighter’s crooked grin. His deep, gentle voice.
Barbara.
Again, the lie scraped along her raw throat. Barbara Burton.
Chapter One
Two Weeks Later
"You know you’re nuts, right? Might even say you’re obsessed. Face it. The woman’s gone. Like a lot of folks, she was probably just passing through Red Rock, anyway."
Darr Fortune eyed his brother, Nick, over the lunch counter at SusieMae’s. Thanks for the support.
Nick grinned. That’s why you wanted me to move back here, isn’t it? Give my baby bro some ego boosting?
Yeah. That was it,
Darr agreed drily. He was the youngest of five, it was true, with an entire decade between him and JR, the oldest. But one thing he’d never particularly lacked was ego. A trait shared by his four brothers. Didn’t have a thing to do with the Foundation.
"You just wanted me to put in my time there so your conscience would be clear to play around with matches and rescue damsels in distress. Nick flicked the pink message slip that sat on the counter between their empty lunch plates. Around them, SusieMae’s buzzed with customers. Most likely because SusieMae’s pretty waitresses wore short, sassy little checkered dresses that looked as though they’d been designed by Daisy Mae, herself.
Like the blond babe you’ve been hunting for since Red went up in smoke."
I haven’t been hunting for her.
The denial was weak, and he knew it. So did his brother, considering the way Nick snorted. "I’m only trying to follow up. Make sure she’s all right. I did pull her out of a burnin’ building." He kept his voice light. Not even Nick would know how hard that was.
Two weeks ago, Darr. And nobody says you’re not a hero. Though why you want to go into something that’s on fire when everyone else with a lick of sense is trying to get out still escapes me.
He pushed a pair of glasses onto his nose and picked up the message slip. Whoever wrote this ought to be sent back to school. I can’t tell the sevens from ones, and is that last number an eight or what?
Devaney took the message.
Darr slid the message out of his brother’s fingers and peered at it himself. He’d been puzzling over the writing ever since he’d found the message tacked to the board outside his quarters at the firehouse. Except for the street—I think it’s Windrose—I can’t read the rest of the address he wrote down, either. And Devaney can’t remember.
The other man was a hell of an engineer, but he was miserable when it came to remembering the details of anything that didn’t pertain to a burn. He couldn’t even tell me who called with the address.
It probably hadn’t been the hospital, relenting on its confidentiality stance. More likely, it was one of the cabbies Darr had bribed. Hitting it lucky by finding the one who’d actually driven Barbara Burton away from the hospital when she had checked herself out almost as quickly as the ambulance had gotten her there.
I’m telling you. Obsessed. You ought to put that attention into taking the next promotion exam for captain.
Darr let that pass and Nick picked up his coffee mug, which had gone empty for too long, and gestured toward the waitress behind the counter. Hey there, sugar. Have some hot stuff any time soon?
Sugar, more commonly known as Lorena, strolled over and leaned against the lunch counter, giving them both a healthy view of her award-winning cleavage above pink and white checks while she refilled Nick’s cup. This soon enough for you, cutie pie?
It is now,
Nick toasted her with his cup.
You want a top-off, Darr?
Lorena barely looked his way. Why would she? Darr was a regular in SusieMae’s. Had been since he’d moved to Red Rock from California alone himself, a few years back. She’d learned quickly enough that he wasn’t the kind of man she wanted—namely, someone other than a firefighter.
Nick, however, was fresh pickings.
I’m good, Lorena. Thanks.
Heard you’re working at the Fortune Foundation,
Lorena said to Nick. A financial analyst. Guess little ol’ Red Rock must seem pretty tame after Los Angeles.
Darr got used to it well enough.
Nick eyed her, his amusement plain. And I’ve always been better at everything than my baby brother.
Lorena glanced at Darr. Really.
Her speculative gaze slid back to Nick’s. I might just have to test that out someday.
Lorena, order’s up,
SusieMae barked from the kitchen. She did not wear a dress short on length and low on material. A true blessing to the thriving community of Red Rock, Texas.
Lorena straightened up in a leisurely way. See you later, cutie.
She went over to the window and collected her order.
Maybe Red Rock’ll be more entertaining than I thought it would be,
Nick mused.
Oh, Lorena’s entertaining all right.
Darr pulled out his wallet. But she doesn’t want just a good time. She wants a ring and a baby carriage, too.
Now, what makes a perfectly attractive woman want to go ruining things that way?
Nick shuddered as he pulled a clip of folded bills from his pocket. I got it.
Darr tossed enough bills onto the counter to pay for his own meal with a decent tip for Lorena included. The Fortunes might be a wealthy bunch, but he’d always made his own way on his own terms. I’m not broke.
Not that he was earning here what he’d pulled down back in California. But his reasons for coming to Red Rock had much less to do with money than to do with his sanity.
Which Nick figured he’d now lost, anyway, given his futile hunt for the blonde from the fire at Red.
Maybe he’s right.
Making certain that Barbara Burton was all right wouldn’t erase what had happened with Celia in California.
Geez.
Nick’s voice brought Darr back from thoughts of the woman he hadn’t been able to save despite his best efforts. "Nobody said you were broke. Maybe you’d better go find the blonde, after all. A roll with a pretty woman might make you less touchy. Most folks are happy to get a free meal."
I’m not looking for a roll.
Just a way to sleep at night. He shoved the message slip into his pocket and grabbed his leather jacket off the empty stool beside them, heading for the door. Or a free meal.
Nick caught up to him, pulling on his own coat. Christ, it’s cold. This time of year the weather shouldn’t be much different from Los Angeles. If I’d wanted to freeze, I could’ve taken that job in Chicago I was offered last year. Did you see the weather report this morning? They say if the storm veers, it could actually snow here.
Don’t bet on it. I don’t care what the weather reports say. It hasn’t snowed here in more than twenty years.
But they could see their breath, which wasn’t at all usual, and the sky looked heavy and gray. "So how are things going at the Foundation?"
Nick shrugged, shoving his bare hands into his pockets. They’re fine. Working for a philanthropic outfit is definitely different. Red Rock is different than it used to be, too. Helluva lot bigger.
They reached their vehicles—Nick’s racy Porsche and Darr’s not-so-new black pickup, parked slantwise into the curb in front of the busy diner. How long are you going to keep hunting for this woman?
Until I find her. Darr pulled open his truck door. I’m not hunting.
Yeah, right. You know there’d be easier chicks to have the hots for than some woman who basically disappeared in the night.
I don’t—
Save it.
Nick shook his head and pulled open his own door. Why d’ya think Uncle Patrick wants to meet us out at the Double Crown later? His and Lacey’s place in town would be more convenient than Lily’s.
Lily had been married to their father’s and uncle’s cousin, Ryan Fortune, and after his death had thrown herself even more into the kind of good works that Ryan had always favored.
At first I thought it must be something to do with the charity event Lily’s hosting at the ranch later this month, but now I don’t think so. Patrick wouldn’t call in the entire family for a children’s picnic. I hope to hell it’s not ’cause he’s sick or something.
Nick grimaced. It was all too easy remembering when their mother, Molly, had died just two years earlier. Typically though, neither one of them commented on that. You got the shift off?
was all Nick asked.
Switched with another guy to get it.
Dad and the others are taking a car in from the airport, so I could pick you up on my way out there.
Darr shook his head. I’ve got some stuff to do first. I’ll just see you there.
Stuff. Like your blonde.
Nick shook his head again, as if he wanted to say more, but he refrained, and slid down into his car. Later.
Darr returned the brief wave and got behind the wheel of his truck. He didn’t watch Nick pull out into the moderately busy traffic on the main drag behind him. He was too busy trying to decipher the address Devaney had jotted on the phone message.
Nick was right: Darr was nuts. What else could explain the lengths he’d gone to trying to track her down?
Barbara Burton.
His thumb beat against his steering wheel as he waited for a rusted-out station wagon to pass.
It wasn’t just her name that stuck in Darr’s thoughts.
It was those cornflower-blue eyes of hers.
No, not just blue. Despite the light that night, mutated and muddled by the flashing beacons, by spotlights, by smoke and flames, he’d been able to see that bruising color. The panic in them, followed by relief. Trust. The intimate, soul-wrenching kind of trust that had absolutely nothing to do with sex and everything to do with a basic human need for connection.
That, and the discernible swell of her abdomen that he’d felt when he’d lifted her unconscious and otherwise very slender form, off that smoke-filled restroom floor.
A horn tooted.
He blinked, and shoved the truck into Reverse, backing out into the road, clearing the parking spot for the SUV waiting behind him.
For two weeks, he’d tried to coax and cajole information about Barbara from anyone and everyone who’d had contact with her the night of the fire. The best he’d gotten out of the emergency room had been that she’d left AMA—against medical advice—in a cab. That had led to some greasing of palms at all the cab companies that could conceivably service the community of Red Rock, which was located about twenty miles outside of San Antonio.
His attempts had involved a fair number of cab companies. It had meant a lot of grease.
Darr probably would have been wiser to let Nick pay for his lunch.
He turned off Main and wound his way through a quieter, modest residential area until he reached Windrose. There, he turned left and began hunting for the first possible combination of house numbers from the message.
Four houses later, he’d netted himself two slammed doors in his face and a third, more kindly shake of a head before the door closed. In his face. The fourth house, he hadn’t gotten an answer to his knock at all, but the sight of two motocross bicycles and an abandoned hockey stick in the front yard made him pause.
Barbara Burton had told him that night that she had no husband. And while he strongly suspected that she was pregnant now, she nevertheless looked too young to have children old enough to ride those bikes. Still, he scrawled a note on the back of his business card that he was looking for Barbara Burton and tucked it into the doorframe.
He returned to his truck, and headed back in the other direction. The street narrowed. Well-tended yards grew smaller and then disappeared altogether.
He grimaced when the pavement ended, leaving nothing but scattered gravel and ruts.
In the few years since he’d moved