Spotlight & Giveaway: Christmas with the Cowboy by Jeannie Watt

Posted November 16th, 2022 by in Blog, Spotlight / 17 comments

Today it is my pleasure to Welcome author Jeannie Watt to HJ!
Spotlight&Giveaway

Hi Jeannie Watt and welcome to HJ! We’re so excited to chat with you about your new release, Christmas with the Cowboy!

 

To start off, can you please tell us a little bit about this book?:

Christmas with the Cowboy is book one of my Return to the Keller Ranch series. It’s the story of Reed Keller, who left the ranch at eighteen because he and his father were too alike in temperament to live and work together. Now Reed is back on the ranch with his fourteen-year-old daughter. He’s determined to forge a new relationship with his father and be a model dad himself, but the reappearance of his old flame, Trenna Hunt, who left him because her wealthy father convinced her that Reed was going nowhere, complicates his homecoming. Now Reed and Trenna have to figure out if the sparks that are still flying between them should be ignored, or fanned into a flame.
 

Please share your favorite lines or quote(s) from this book:

I like this paragraph because it shows family dynamics as Daniel, the patriarch, is told that one of his ranch hands, Henry, broke up a fight in an usual way and his granddaughter, Lex, reacts.

“Wait,” Daniel said to Reed, his fork poised in the air above his plate. “Henry came at you guys with the tractor?”
“He was trying to distract Hunt’s men.”
“With a 20,000-pound farming implement.”
“It’s what he had at hand,” Reed said dryly. He was about to say more when he noticed Lex’s gaze ping-ponging between him and his dad.
Daniel also seemed to notice and focused back on his plate. “I don’t want to think that Henry’s losing it or anything.”
“He probably knew what he was doing,” Lex offered. “Dad says he’s a good operator.”
“He is. But you never, ever…” Daniel sighed and looked at Reed. “You know what I’m about to say.”
After four kids, Daniel had all but lectured himself out, so now he tended to keep it to the basics.
“Tractors are not distractors?” Lex asked, her eyes wide with mock innocence.
Daniel stared at her, and for a moment, Reed thought his dad was about to tip over, but when he did, it wasn’t in the way he expected. Daniel’s face broke into a wide grin. “Well put. Maybe we need to have Henry write that a couple hundred times.”
“Did you ever do anything dangerous with a tractor?” Lex leaned forward, her tone earnest.
“There’s very little your grandfather didn’t do,” Audrey said, pushing back her chair. “And what he didn’t think of, this one did.” She pointed at Reed.

 

What inspired this book?

I’m inspired, as always, by the ups and downs of ranch life. I like to explore family dynamics, and having lived in a ranching area for many years, I’ve watched ranch kids grow up, move away, and sometimes come back home. There’s always a question of who will run the ranch as parents get older, which inspired this series.

 

How did you ‘get to know’ your main characters? Did they ever surprise you?

I really enjoy exploring the effect of birth order, so in this series I have the independent somewhat stubborn eldest son, Reed; the easy going middle child who wonders about his place in life, Spence; and the twins, Em and Cade, with whom I get to explore not only facets of being the youngest in a family, but also of being a twin.

I get to know my characters by writing them. I get a sense of who they might be and how they might play off one another and then start writing. I’m not big on filling out character information sheets unless I really get stuck and have to figure out what motivates them. Generally they talk to me as we go.

 

What was your favorite scene to write?

One of my favorite scenes was when the hero’s mom, Audrey, realizes that she’s accidentally engineered the first meeting between Reed and the former love of his life, Trenna Hunt. Not only that, the meeting is about to happen in front of Reed’s daughter, Lex.

Audrey was about to reply when her attention jerked to the large window over the kitchen table. Her mouth opened, then closed again, and she shifted her attention back to her son.
“We need to talk.”
“What?” Reed caught sight of dust rising in the air at the far end of the driveway.
“Now.”
Lex was watching her grandmother with a look of open curiosity, the tea towel in one hand. Audrey gave her a quick smile, then took Reed by the elbow and steered him into the living room. He glanced back at the rooster tail, figuring it was still a mile away.
“What?” he asked as soon as Audrey had him at the far side of the living room, noting that she’d hauled him far enough from the kitchen to keep Lex from “accidentally” hearing what she had to say.
“This may be a false alarm, but…you know how I’ve always talked about arranging all the ranch records and photos and…general history…into some kind of order?”
“Yes…?”
“I started. And I hired help.” Her mouth flattened and she met his gaze. “I thought I’d have time to tell you. I mean, it shouldn’t matter, but it might and—”
His mom was never like this. Ever.
“What the—?”
“Trenna. I hired Trenna Hunt. She’s going to teach history at the community college starting in January, and I asked if she’d help me. She said, yes, then you told me you were coming home a few weeks early, and she’s not supposed to start until next week, and there was still time to tell her I didn’t need her if that turned out to be the case—”
“Mom. Chill. I’m good.” Stunned but good. “It’s been more than fifteen years.”
Audrey let out a breath. “Yes. But it seemed only fair to warn you ahead of time.”
“Fifteen years, Mom.”
“Right.” She gave him a cautious look, which clearly said that she didn’t know if fifteen years was enough time. It was. He’d built a new life and so had she.
“I’ll just head out and meet her then,” Audrey said, smoothing her hands down the sides of her jeans.
“Does she know about me and Lex being here?”
Audrey shook her head. “Not that you’re already here. You both moved up your timetables.”
“Go meet her, Mom. I’ll be right out.” Trenna Hunt. Fifteen years. As he’d said, a long time.
Why the hell was his stomach knotting?
“So,” Lex said lightly, staring into the bowl as she scooped out dollops of dough. “What’s up?”
“Old girlfriend.” Reed knew that unless it was absolutely necessary, it was best not to hide things from an inquisitive teen.
“One that required a red alert?”
“Bad breakup,” Reed said shortly.
Lex put a hand on her hip. “When did this happen?”
“Before you were born.” He’d done his share of dating after the sting of his failed marriage had worn off, but had yet to bring a woman home to meet the family so to speak, Lex being that family.
“Must have been some breakup.”
“Uh-huh.”
“Care to share?”
He shook his head. He’d told her enough, and although she pushed her tongue against the inside of her cheek in a thoughtful way, she accepted his decision.
“Suit yourself.” She turned back to the cookie dough. “But I want an introduction.” She met Reed’s gaze again. He frowned, and she said, “Sue me. I’m curious.”
“I’ll sue you, all right.” He gave her nose a tap, and she batted his hand away. But as he headed for the door, he caught her curious sidelong glance, which made him hope that she didn’t launch an investigation.

 

What was the most difficult scene to write?

One of the more difficult facets of the book to write was the hero being torn between being a good dad and wanting to build a relationship with the heroine. After an emergency, he meets with the heroine to explain that he has to choose his daughter.

“I’ve never introduced Lex to the women I’ve dated over the years. Even the ones I had relationships with. It was easy, what with me living on the ranch, to keep my social life and my family life separate, but now…”
“What’s wrong with her meeting the women you dated?”
“It felt weird. And you can see how she warms up to people. It seemed wrong to have her get used to having someone around, get attached, then have that person disappear.”
“I can see that when she was younger, but she’s a teen, Reed.”
“A young teen. Which is an emotional time, if I remember correctly.”
“It is.”
“I won’t shortchange her, and I don’t know how to juggle the two sides now that I’m the caretaker.”
“Did you ever talk to her mom about this?”
“I…no. I did not discuss my dating protocols with my ex.”
“Maybe you should have.”
“Here’s the thing—Lex needed me last night and I wasn’t there.”
“Your mom was.”
“I should have been there. I have a responsibility, and Lex has to be my primary focus.”
Trenna studied her hands as the truth hit her. This was it. The sign from the universe she’d been waiting for. The indication of what she needed to do.
She looked up, meeting his gaze squarely. “I’m considering a job on the other side of the country.”

 

Would you say this book showcases your writing style or is it a departure for you?

This book is in my usual style. I love exploring families and ranch life.

 

What do you want people to take away from reading this book?

I would like people to take away a warm feeling and a desire to get to know the other Keller siblings, Spence, Cade and Em.

 

What are you currently working on? What other releases do you have planned?

I am currently working on book three of the Return to the Keller Ranch, Cowboy Meets Cowgirl. (Em’s story.)

My upcoming release is book two of Return to the Keller Ranch, Her Cowboy Baby Daddy (Spence’s story).

 

Thanks for blogging at HJ!

 

Giveaway: An ebook copy of Christmas with the Cowboy & 3 Tule ebooks

 

To enter Giveaway: Please complete the Rafflecopter form and Post a comment to this Q: Where do you fit in your family birth order? Oldest, middle, youngest, only? Do you think that birth order affects temperament?

 
a Rafflecopter giveaway

 
 

Excerpt from Christmas with the Cowboy:

“Hey, Lex…” Reed Keller glanced at his fourteen-year-old daughter as he drove under the massive log arch marking the entrance to his family ranch—the ranch he’d left at the age of nineteen for the good of all involved. “You’re okay with this. Right?”
Lex sent him a look edged with teenage irony. “If I said no?”
“We’d talk.”
“Again?”
“Right.” They had talked this thing to death—he and Lex’s mom, Candice, and her husband, Gregg Lawrence.
They topped a small hill and the Keller property spread before them. Not the largest ranch in the area, but one of the most picturesque, nestled up against the foothills of the Absaroka Range.
“I’m good,” Lex said softly, a touch of awe in her voice. “I love this place.”
Reed’s throat tightened as he took in the familiar view. He loved this place, too, just as he loved his dad, but staying on the ranch hadn’t been an option until now. Too many fireworks between the two of them.
When he’d left, he’d assumed that one of his siblings would stay on to help run the place. Instead, all three had left the ranch for other careers, with their parents’ blessing, leaving the folks with only two hired hands and summer day help.
Daniel and Audrey Keller had told their kids more than once that they’d expected them to go their own ways—they’d raised them to be independent—but Reed always suspected that they’d secretly hoped that at least one of their children would return home. Well, one of them had, and it was not the one they’d been expecting. With the former ranch manager, Jim Myers, having retired in August, and the other long-time hand, Henry Still Smoking, about to do the same, somebody needed to come home. Circumstances decreed that he be the one.
“Pretty isolated here,” Reed pointed out.
Lex cocked an eyebrow at him; a trick he was pretty certain she’d practiced in the mirror. “It isn’t like I’m here forever, and I can talk to my friends. Plus, I have three weeks of online classes before Christmas break to help take the fun out of the day.” She smiled as the dots in the field ahead of them began to assume the shapes of horses. “Grandma said I can do all the horse stuff I want after I finish my schoolwork for the day.”
“The snow might slow you down.”
“What snow?”
Indeed, the fields were still yellowy green, and although there was a snowline, it was high in the mountains behind the ranch.
“It’s coming.” But he hoped it held off for a while so Lex could get some riding in. He didn’t want her to die of boredom between now and the end of February when he and her mom would decide whether she would return to school in Bozeman or continue distance learning on the ranch. It all depended on how well Gregg responded to the cancer treatments he was about to begin. Doing horse stuff would give his daughter something positive to focus on.
“I was hoping for a white Thanksgiving,” she said, her gaze fixed on the snow-free pastures they were driving past. “So that Gregg and I could ski before he had to leave.”
“Next year.”
She smiled at him, a hint of sadness touching the corners of her mouth, and he reached out to rub her shoulder. Thanksgiving was gone, and Christmas was coming up. Her first holiday without her mom and stepdad. A sucky way to spend Christmas, compounded by concerns about Gregg’s health, and it was up to him to make things as good as they could be.
“I’m okay,” she said, as if reading his thoughts. “This is the way things are and, yeah.”
“And yeah,” Reed agreed.
She ran her fingers through her short dark hair. “But you know, if you need to talk…”
Reed shot her a look, meeting her eyes before pulling his gaze back to the long, graveled drive. If he was so transparent that his kid was offering moral support, then he needed to suck it up.
Yes, he was anticipating friction between him and his dad, but that was a matter of habit. There’d always been friction, although logically, there shouldn’t be any now, because Reed was doing what his dad had always wanted him to do—slowing down, traveling the straight and narrow, focusing on a stable future instead of the next big adventure.
In other words, he was no longer acting like his dad had acted back in the day before marrying Reed’s mother, Audrey. And both he and his dad would be on good behavior with Lex living on the ranch. He’d finally figured out that most of their issues stemmed from conditioning. Just as a horse learned to respond automatically to certain signals, so had Reed and his dad. In other words, they automatically butted heads first, asked questions later.
“I’m good,” he said, because Lex seemed to be waiting for a response.
“Mom said that I shouldn’t worry if you and Grandpa yell at each other.”
“We’re not going to yell.” But it was probably a good thing that Candice had dropped the warning, just in case there was an explosion or two as he and his dad found their footing.
He and Candice had made a colossal mistake when they’d married fifteen years ago, months shy of Reed’s twentieth birthday, but in the years after their divorce and her remarriage, they’d developed a bond centered around Lex, the product of their short union, and in the process, they’d become friends.
Had they known one another better back in the day, they would never have wed, and Lex probably wouldn’t have been born, so there was something to be said for two headstrong kids making stupid decisions.
Granted, things had become more complicated when Candice married Gregg, but it was impossible not to like the guy, and the transition into thruple parenting had been easier than expected thanks to Gregg’s easygoing nature and robust common sense. The unconventional family dynamics marked one of the few times in Reed’s life where things fell into place, and he’d managed to leave them there. The Holloway Ranch, where he’d lived and worked until a few days ago, was only twenty minutes from Bozeman, which meant he was a constant presence in his daughter’s life and she in his.
“It’s okay if you do yell at each other.” Lex gave him another irony-laced look. “Don’t worry about scarring your child. I watch the WWE.”
Reed rolled his eyes behind his sunglasses. Had he been as together as his kid back in the day, maybe things would be different now. He had a feeling that Lex’s personality was the result of being an only child and having three adults presenting a united front from the time she was a toddler, coupled with the fact that she inherited her grandmother’s down-to-earth personality and patience, as well as her mom’s wry sense of humor. The real blessing was that she seemed comfortable in the here and now. She didn’t need to search for the big adventure the way Reed and his father had. She seemed content to read and study, hang with her friends, and tend to her pet guinea pigs, Calvin and Cedric, who were in a travel cage in the backseat of the Dodge.
A few minutes later, Reed parked the truck between the main house his parents lived in and the slightly smaller house, known as the Little House, where Reed’s grandparents had lived. Now it was the guesthouse, and for the next several months, Reed and Lex’s home. If he stayed, he’d probably invest in a mobile home and free up the Little House, but he wasn’t investing until he was certain that he and his dad did okay.
Reed’s mother, Audrey, met them on the porch, enveloping first Lex, then Reed in a hug. She smelled of ginger and home and, as usual, was dressed in jeans and a loose flannel shirt over a tee, the sleeves rolled up to just below the elbows.
“I’ve been baking,” she said as she released her hug and stepped back. “And you know what that means.”
“Fire alert?” Reed asked.
She shot him a dark look. “I have not let myself get sidetracked once.”
“I can bake now that I’m here,” Lex said.
“That would be amazing.” Audrey beamed and pulled Lex against her in a one-armed hug. “There’s a Christmas bake sales coming up and the family baking, and…well…I can use all the help I can get.”
“But not at the expense of your classes,” Reed said. Every time he said something along those lines, he felt a twinge of conscience because he hadn’t given a rat’s ass about classes. But he should have.
“As if,” Lex said on a sniff.
“How’s Gregg?” Audrey asked, glancing from Reed to Lex, then back to Reed.
“Mom and Gregg got to Virginia yesterday,” Lex said. “They’ll start tests tomorrow.”
Reed nodded his agreement. Gregg’s best shot at beating the disease invading his body was at a specialty clinic on the opposite side of the country, and the four of them had agreed that the best course of action was for Reed and Lex to move to the family ranch during the treatments. Lex had segued to online classes after the first quarter of the school year, and hadn’t muttered a word of complaint—to Reed or Candice, anyway—even though it had to be rough, leaving her friends and face-to-face interactions behind.
It’s temporary, Reed reminded himself. Lex understood that eventually they would find their new normal, and then the only question would be, where would he land? On the family ranch if all went well, but truth to tell, he was still a little uncertain about giving up his autonomy. His ability to live it up now and again without causing his family to worry. Having a kid had definitely helped him cut back on following his wild urges, but if he wasn’t booked for time with Lex, and one or more of his fellow ranch hands were in the same mood, he still enjoyed cutting loose.
Those days were over for now. He was temporarily a single parent, and he intended to be a decent role model.
“I’m glad the clinic could get him in earlier than scheduled,” Lex said as Audrey ushered her through the door into a kitchen that smelled of ginger, molasses, and burning sugar.
“The cookies—”
Well accustomed to the drill, Reed beat his mom to the oven, grabbed the hot pads off the counter, and opened the oven door to pull out a sheet of only slightly overbaked gingersnaps.
“More snap this way,” he said, and Audrey rolled her eyes.
“It looks like it’s just some of the sugar that burned, Grandma,” Lex said as Audrey quickly shoveled cookies onto a waiting wire rack.
Cautiously Audrey tipped up a cookie with the spatula and peered underneath it. “You’re right.” She wet her finger and marked a tick on an imaginary score sheet.
“Do you want me to finish these?” Lex asked, gesturing at the bowl of dough covered with a tea towel.
“You have unpacking to do.”
“I’d rather bake cookies,” she said. “I have a lot of time to unpack.”
“Not with the schedule your grandfather has lined out.”
Lex’s eyes went wide. “He’s making me work?”
“You’ll like it,” Audrey said cryptically. “I’ll let him tell you about it.”
“Where is he?” Reed asked.
“Checking the north fence. We’ve had issues up there.”
“What kind of issues?”
Audrey was about to reply when her attention jerked to the large window over the kitchen table. Her mouth opened, then closed again, and she shifted her attention back to her son.
“We need to talk.”
“What?” Reed caught sight of dust rising in the air at the far end of the driveway.
“Now.”
Lex was watching her grandmother with a look of open curiosity, the tea towel in one hand. Audrey gave her a quick smile, then took Reed by the elbow and steered him into the living room. He glanced back at the rooster tail, figuring it was still a mile away.
“What?” he asked as soon as Audrey had him at the far side of the living room, noting that she’d hauled him far enough from the kitchen to keep Lex from “accidentally” hearing what she had to say.
“This may be a false alarm, but…you know how I’ve always talked about arranging all the ranch records and photos and…general history…into some kind of order?”
“Yes…?”
“I started. And I hired help.” Her mouth flattened and she met his gaze. “I thought I’d have time to tell you. I mean, it shouldn’t matter, but it might and—”
His mom was never like this. Ever.
“What the hell?”
“Trenna. I hired Trenna Hunt. She’s going to teach history at the community college starting in January, and I asked if she’d help me. She said, yes, then you told me you were coming home a few weeks early, and she’s not supposed to start until next week, and there was still time to tell her I didn’t need her if that turned out to be the case—”
“Mom. Chill. I’m good.” Stunned but good. “It’s been more than fifteen years.”
Audrey let out a breath. “Yes. But it seemed only fair to warn you ahead of time.”
“Fifteen years, Mom.”
“Right.” She gave him a cautious look, which clearly said that she didn’t know if fifteen years was enough time. It was. He’d built a new life and so had she.
“I’ll just head out and meet her then,” Audrey said, smoothing her hands down the sides of her jeans.
“Does she know about me and Lex being here?”
Audrey shook her head. “Not that you’re already here. You both moved up your timetables.”
“Go meet her, Mom. I’ll be right out.” Trenna Hunt. Fifteen years. As he’d said, a long time.
Why the hell was his stomach knotting?
“So,” Lex said lightly, staring into the bowl as she scooped out dollops of dough. “What’s up?”
“Old girlfriend.” Reed knew that unless it was absolutely necessary, it was best not to hide things from an inquisitive teen.
“One that required a red alert?”
“Bad breakup,” Reed said shortly.
Lex put a hand on her hip. “When did this happen?”
“Before you were born.” He’d done his share of dating after the sting of his failed marriage had worn off, but had yet to bring a woman home to meet the family so to speak, Lex being that family.
“Must have been some breakup.”
“Uh-huh.”
“Care to share?”
He shook his head. He’d told her enough, and although she pushed her tongue against the inside of her cheek in a thoughtful way, she accepted his decision.
“Suit yourself.” She turned back to the cookie dough. “But I want an introduction.” She met Reed’s gaze again. He frowned, and she said, “Sue me. I’m curious.”
“I’ll sue you, all right.” He gave her nose a tap, and she batted his hand away. But as he headed for the door, he caught her curious sidelong glance, which made him hope that she didn’t launch an investigation.

As soon as Trenna Hunt caught sight of the classic Dodge truck parked next to Audrey Keller’s sensible SUV, a knot began forming in her midsection. Each of the Kellers had strong preferences in their choices of vehicles. Twins Em and Cade preferred Fords. Spence, the middle child, was a Chevy man through and through, as were his parents.
Reed was the lone Dodge guy.
Trenna forced herself to exhale the breath she’d just realized she was holding. A classic Dodge very similar to the one Reed drove when they were together did not mean that Reed was home. He was coming home, but not until closer to Christmas, and Trenna figured that if she didn’t want to continue helping Audrey catalog documents after he arrived, she’d have enough information by that time to advise from afar.
As she got closer, the Dodge looked more and more familiar.
So what if it’s his rig? Years had passed, and time heals all wounds.
Except for those that it didn’t.
Trenna told herself to get a grip. There is a very good chance this isn’t Reed’s—
The thought stuttered to a stop before it was completed. It was definitely Reed’s truck, because that was definitely Reed following a harried-looking Audrey out the front door of the ranch house.
She’d always known she’d bump into her teen love at some point, especially after moving back to Marietta, but she hadn’t expected a near heart attack when it happened.
Guilt was a cruel bitch.
She closed her eyes, sucked in a breath.
You’ve got this.
But as she pulled to a stop on the opposite side of the SUV from Reed’s truck, her heart was still hammering.
Maybe she should have sought Reed out a long time ago, got that closure.
He probably didn’t feel anything about their breakup, having rebounded, married, divorced, had a child. Yeah. He had other issues at play in his life. She, on the other hand, never felt anything except for a boatload of bad at the way things had ended.
She pulled the keys from the ignition and palmed them. They were different people now and probably didn’t have nearly as much in common as they’d had when they’d been together fifteen years ago.
Right. Fifteen years. Think about that.
Yes. They would start fresh. What else could they do?
Trenna pulled in a long breath, then shoved the car door open before she had second thoughts and abruptly drove away.
“Audrey, hi.” She smiled at the woman, who, though dressed in denim and flannel, with her rich brown hair knotted on top of her head, exuded an air of casual elegance.
“Trenna.”
Audrey looked like she wanted to say more, but Trenna turned to face Reed whose expression told her that he, too, was fighting for equilibrium. He wore his classic closed look, which had the effect of making him appear both coolly distant and hot as hell.
A whisper of relief went through her, because although the hot-as-hell part wasn’t helping, closed-down Reed was safe. He wasn’t going to engage, which worked for her because, holy shit, she hadn’t expected to feel a surge of…whatever this was. Attraction coupled with regret coupled with low-key panic that she was reacting to him like this.
“Reed.” She cleared her throat. “Long time.”
He nodded, his gaze traveling over her, making her wonder how much she’d changed since he’d last seen her. She’d lost the baby fat in her face and her hair was a touch lighter than the sun-kissed dark blonde she’d been blessed with naturally—mainly because her sun-kissed dark blonde was shifting to brown, and she liked being a blonde. And it was wavy now, bordering on curly, because she’d gotten tired of her hair and the flat iron battling for supremacy. One morning she’d simply tossed the device into the trash and never looked back.
“Yes.” The simple answer was delivered without a smile. She could live with that.
She turned back to Audrey, talking a little too fast as she said, “I was on my way to an appointment, which just got canceled.” She took a breath and slowed her words. “Since I was nearby, I thought we could discuss the project, look at time frames, and determine what could be accomplished in the short term.” She shot Reed a quick glance. “I, uh, wouldn’t have dropped by without calling if I’d suspected you had…”
Guests? Company? The prodigal son back in the fold?
“I’m early, too.” The corners of Reed’s gorgeous mouth curved up, as if he was forcing himself to act natural, the half smile causing her to flash on all kinds of things she’d be better off not remembering. “It’s good to see you, Trenna.”
He sounded like he meant it, which meant he had better control of this situation than she did. “Let me introduce you to my daughter, then you and Mom can get to work while I unload our stuff in the Little House.”
“Great. Excellent.”
She blew out a silent breath as the three of them started toward the house. Reed has a daughter. She knew that, but it was still kind of mind blowing.
She had several college degrees. Reed had a kid. They’d traveled different paths, thanks to her dad, and for the most part, she didn’t regret her life choices. Now she wondered if that was because she hadn’t allowed herself to think on the matter.
Audrey held the door open, and Trenna followed Reed inside the kitchen that had once been her home away from home. She’d forgotten how much she’d loved about the homey space. At the counter, a dark-haired girl was scraping the last of the batter out of a mixing bowl. She paused mid-swipe and gave Trenna a curious once-over.
“Trenna, this is my granddaughter, Reed’s daughter, Lexa.”
“Lex,” the girl said with a grin. “Nice to meet you.”
“Nice to meet you.” Trenna used her teaching voice, which made her feel more in control, even if it came off as a bit phony. Of course, the girl was the image of Reed. Angular face, cleft chin, a mouth that was fuller than her father’s, but the same basic shape. Trenna once again found her stomach knotting.
She shoved the sensation down as deep as she could and smiled at the girl. “Your dad and I are old friends.”
“I heard,” she said in a way that had Trenna shooting Reed a quick look, catching him mid–eye roll. What on earth had he said?
Trenna turned to Audrey, thinking the matter was best dropped until she had better mental footing. “If you don’t have time to meet today, what with family arriving and all—”
“Lex is finishing the cookies and Reed is hauling stuff, so yes, I have time. We can meet in my office—”
The words were barely out of her mouth when the sound of an old-school diesel engine brought everyone’s attention to the window. A dually Chevy pickup pulled to a stop next to Trenna’s car, and Daniel Keller, Reed’s dad, got out. Unlike Audrey, he had changed. He was still a strikingly handsome man, but his once dark hair was now silvery white, and despite his determined steps, he moved like a man recovering from an injury. Everyone in the kitchen held in place as he stomped up the steps and pushed open the door, rattling it in the process.
“You cannot believe what that asshole Hunt has done—” He stopped short as his gaze fell on Trenna, then he shot his wife a questioning look.
“It’s okay,” Trenna said in the most normal tone she’d managed since arriving. “I have no illusions about my father. Please…carry on.”

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
 
 

Book Info:

This Christmas, it’s time to rebuild bridges…

Hard-living cowboy Reed Keller is returning home to the same ranch his father kicked him off of fifteen years ago. He knows he’s in for some battles with his headstrong dad, but his dad needs help and Reed needs a place to raise his daughter, Lex. Reed’s determined to put the past behind him and concentrate on being the best father he can be, especially with Christmas around the corner. Also around the corner? The woman he’s never been able to forget.

Trenna Hunt has finally broken free of her controlling father to pursue her own goals, but she never would have accepted the temporary job at the Keller Ranch helping to compile the family’s history if she knew the sexy, reckless cowboy Reed would come home. They’ve both changed, but Reed’s still as impossible to resist as when they were teenagers.

Reed knows he needs to keep his focus on his daughter and building their future, but he can’t help longing to keep Trenna in it. Will she trust him enough this time to stay?

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Meet the Author:

Jeannie Watt is the author of over 20 contemporary romances and the recipient of the Holt Medallion Award of Merit. She lives in a small ranching community—a place where kids really do grow up to be cowboys—with her husband, dog, cat, horses and ponies. When she’s not writing, Jeannie enjoys sewing retro fashions, running, and buying lots and lots of hay.
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17 Responses to “Spotlight & Giveaway: Christmas with the Cowboy by Jeannie Watt”

  1. EC

    I’m the youngest and to a certain degree birth order does affect one’s temperament.

  2. Nicole (Nicky) Ortiz

    I am the second born out of four.
    I’m not sure
    Thanks for the chance!

  3. Lori R

    I am right in the middle and I do believe birth order has some influence on a person’s tempermanet but there are other factors that can influence it too.

  4. Latesha B.

    I’m the oldest of five and temperament definitely fits the birth order.

  5. Ellen C.

    I’m number 6 out of 9. I would say that birth order can definitely influence temperament, and how one is treated as well.

  6. Patricia B.

    I am the oldest of 6. I feel it does make a big difference in how you you are treated by your parents, what is expected of you. I was also the oldest grand child on one side of the family and second oldest on the other.I can see the difference in temperament in siblings and cousins and it is primarily related to birth order.

    • Laurie Gommermann

      I am the youngest of 3 children. My brother is 7 years older. He was always the favorite! He was a leader, a high achiever , a tough act to follow. My sister and I are 20 months apart. We fought when we were little but grew closer when she went away for college. She struggled with anorexia in college. She was also an excellent student and very popular. Again a tough act to follow. I was always trying to do well academically Always trying to be like my siblings. After a while I realized I had to be me.. I was more of an introvert. People say the youngest is spoiled, not true. My mom was tired of being tied down with 3 kids. She farmed me out to her friends and neighbors to babysit so she could go golfing or meet friends or play cards.
      I ended up being closer to my best friend’s mom than to my own.

      I think temperament is something your born with.