Spotlight & Giveaway: To Marry a Texas Cowboy by Julie Benson

Posted October 2nd, 2020 by in Blog, Spotlight / 27 comments

Today it is my pleasure to Welcome author Julie Benson to HJ!
Spotlight&Giveaway

Hi Julie and welcome to HJ! We’re so excited to chat with you about your new release, To Marry a Texas Cowboy!

 

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

Zane would do anything for the grandmother who raised him after his parents’ divorce. Not about to let the only person he trusts other than his three college buddies be taken advantage of, Zane convinces her he, rather than her personal assistant, should manage Lucky Stars Weddings, her wedding planning business during her surgery recovery. But Zane figures, how hard can that be? The assistant will deal with brides and events, while he manages finances. No sweat.

McKenna hopes working as an assistant to the owner will get her career as a wedding planner back on track after being unemployed for a year and a half. When her boss needs hip surgery, McKenna believes this is an opportunity to prove she’s able to handle more responsibility. Then she discovers her boss’s grandson will be in charge and her carefully ordered world goes haywire.

Somehow these two people must find a way to work together to help the woman they both care about, and along the way they learn opposites do attract.
 

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

Here’s an example from the scene with Zane, McKenna, a bride and her maid of honor I refer to in question 5. I love how it illustrates a difference between how men and women think.

Zane tried to tune out the women talking about how else Susannah would incorporate her color scheme. Who wanted to waste their New Year’s Eve at a wedding? Not him. Why did a bride have to ruin a perfectly good holiday and football night? From the color scheme, they chatted back and forth about whether to eat or check out dresses first.
Ridiculous. It wouldn’t take him and his buddies a minute to decide. You hungry? No. Me neither. We’ll eat later. Done. Issue settled. But women made every discussion as hard as finding hair on a frog.

 

What inspired this book?

The inspiration for my Wishing, Texas Series came from my oldest son when he visited his Texas A&M Corps of Cadets friends. I predicted they’d still be friends ten years after graduation. (They are!) I thought it would be fun to create a series of friends with a similar bond, who still got together in a small town.

As to Zane’s story, To Marry A Texas Cowboy, when I created my heroes, I knew he’d be the charmer-commitment-phobe. I imagined him having a grandmother he’d do anything for, and she would bring him back to Wishing. Then I set out to find the worst thing I could do to him. I thought make him take over his grandmother’s wedding business and put him at odds with a strong woman who sees through his ploys.

 

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

Zane is easy-going and incorporates fun into everything he does, even work. Life is a journey to be savored. He’s incredibly handsome. So good looking that women fawn over, cater to him, and will do almost anything to catch his eye. But his relationships never go past superficial. While on the surface, he appears the classic playboy, I saw Zane as a counterfeit one. Playing the field is his protection against repeating his parents’ mistakes.

With Zane being laid-back, I had to pair him with a driven businesswoman because I knew they’d push each other’s buttons. (For me, there’s nothing more fun to write than two characters who do that.) McKenna has career goals, is organized, and gets things done. She takes charge and expects the best out of those she works with. While she appears strong, in her personal life, she’s unsure. Moving around a lot as a child made making friends difficult and she struggles in personal relationships.

McKenna didn’t surprise me as much as Zane. Mainly because I knew him from the other Wishing books. In those, he was smooth with women, quick with a comeback and confident. When I gave Zane his own story with McKenna, his personality changed, and he clammed up. He drove me crazy, and I didn’t know what to do. Finally, he told his buddies (and me) what was going on. McKenna was different than any woman he’d known. None of his ways to deal with women worked with her. That was a huge revelation for me and helped me define Zane and McKenna’s relationship.

I know some basics about my characters before I start writing. For To Marry A Texas Cowboy, I knew Zane was a charmer, and McKenna was a strong, independent businesswoman. I knew a little about their past, such as what trauma impacted them emotionally, and what drove them in the story. But for me, I get to know my characters once they start talking to each other and interacting. It amazes me how often my hero and heroine reveal things I didn’t know about them in their dialogue.

 

What was your favorite scene to write?

My favorite scene comes after one where a maid of honor and an old flame of Zane’s wants to rekindle their relationship. Zane external actions give one impression, while he feels another. McKenna is horrified by the incident and confronts Zane about his behavior. That scene was fun, but I enjoyed writing McKenna and Zane’s discussion afterward more. The back and forth dialogue was a blast to write. I hope the scene showcases McKenna and Zane’s differences while getting across the underlying chemistry sizzling between them. Here’s an excerpt.

When McKenna entered the barn, dust and bits of hay floating in the air caught the sun, sparkling like minuscule stars.
“Hey, Chance. Life been treating you well today?” She followed Zane’s voice. The horse snorted and whinnied. “I miss you, too, pal.” More snorting and whinnying. “Even if I could take you, you’d hate California. It’s nothing like Texas.”
Surprised by the almost wistful tone in Zane’s voice and feeling as if she was eavesdropping, McKenna called out. He stepped out of the stall, glanced her way, then scooped up a pile of hay with a pitchfork and disappeared.
When she stood outside the door and peered inside, Zane dumped the hay into the feeding trough on the far wall, his biceps flexing with his movement. Her palms grew sweaty and a flush spread through her.
How could a man who played video games for a living have such remarkable arms? His faded maroon Texas A&M association of former students’ T-shirt dotted with darker spots from sweat clung to his broad chest. She shook her head. Why couldn’t Aggies simply say alums?
“Once I finished here, I intended to come to the office to see you.”
“I can’t believe you would return to the scene of the crime so soon.”
“Crime? What’re you talking about?” He stepped past her, leaned the pitchfork against the opposite wall, and shut the lower half of the stall door. “I meant to thank you for getting me away from Campbell before she tore off my clothes.”
At his lighthearted, joking tone, every muscle in McKenna’s body tensed. Secretly, she’d hoped he’d take responsibility for his actions. So much for that. “You think today was funny? Do you know how hard it was for Ginny to convince Susannah and her parents to have the wedding in Wishing rather than a fancy destination wedding? She feared the wedding would appear rinky-dink and hokey here. Since the invitations haven’t gone out, she can still change to a destination wedding. Doing that would be disastrous. Because of the number of guests, we’ll make three times more on this wedding. Lucky Stars can’t afford to lose that income.”
“You done? Ready to let me get a word in?” he asked as Chance poked his head out between them and shoved his nose under Zane’s hand.
She crossed her arms over her chest, leaned back on her right heel, and nodded for him to proceed.
“Don’t get your panties in a bunch worrying about Susannah cancelling. Mayor Timmons won’t let her. He likes being the big cheese, and he can only do that if the wedding’s in his kingdom.”
Considering what McKenna knew of the mayor, he could be right, but that didn’t mean she’d let Zane wiggle out of his actions. “However, he also gives Susannah anything she wants, which means we have to keep her happy. If she gets upset, so will her parents. That would get around town and would hurt our reputation.”
“Was Susannah upset when she left?”
“No.”
“Did they pick a dress?”
McKenna nodded. “The one you had Campbell try on.”
“Then what’s the problem? The bride left happy. The dress was picked out. Mission accomplished.”
How could he fail to grasp the seriousness of what happened? How could he laugh it off simply because of a good outcome? Unless they dealt with what caused the issue, they’d be in a similar situation again, and next time they might not be as fortunate. “It could have been a disaster if Susannah and Campbell had gotten into a major argument. Susannah could’ve claimed we didn’t handle the situation properly. She still might.”
McKenna shared the bride story she’d told Grace. “Darby discovered one bad review affected the business negatively for three months. Because of the risk, today’s behavior can’t be repeated.”
“I can’t control Campbell.”
“I was referring to your behavior.”
“I didn’t do anything wrong.”
“You’ve got to be kidding.” McKenna’s harsh, raised voice echoed around them.
Chance snorted, shook his head, and shifted nervously.
Zane smoothed a hand over the animal’s neck and crooned reassurances. “We need to take this outside. I don’t want Chance gettin’ upset. We don’t know what happened to him before we got him, but he was seized in a cruelty case, so it can’t have been good.”
What was wrong with her? How did this man so easily destroy her self-control? Now she’d scared a traumatized horse.
Before setting off to follow Zane, she turned to the animal. “I’m sorry, Chance. I didn’t mean to scare you.”
When she joined him outside by the corral, Zane stood with one foot on the lowest rail as he leaned against the top one. McKenna stopped a few feet away.
“What you need to focus on is the good outcome. Quit borrowing trouble. Be thankful you got the job done,” Zane said.
“That’s right. I got the job done. I cleaned up the mess you created and kept it from blowing up in the company’s face,” McKenna said, keeping her voice even, despite her rising ire.
“I didn’t do anything. Campbell did.”
“That’s where you’re wrong. If you’d hadn’t folded when she—”
“Let me tell you something, little lady. Campbell has a temper when she’s in a mood, and today she was in a doozy. Her nickname in high school was Hurricane Campbell. She was fixin’ to strike, and if she had, then you’d have had trouble. That was why I agreed to stay. Who knew picking out a dress could be that big a pain in the ass?”
“With brides and wedding details involved, nothing’s easy. However, when Campbell started flirting and getting amorous—” Heat rushed up McKenna’s neck, into her face.
Amorous? If Susannah hadn’t been seated on the love seat, Campbell would’ve tried to toss him down on it and climbed on top of him. “You should have immediately handled her, making it clear her behavior wasn’t appropriate.”
He laughed. “I kept her from wrestling me to the ground and jumping my bones. I also prevented her from giving you another shiner. All without setting off her temper. I’d say I did a pretty damn good job handling her.”
He thought she couldn’t protect herself? New kids often got picked on in school. She’d toughened up fast and learned some fancy footwork. “I didn’t need you protecting me. I’m not a delicate miss.”
“The appropriate response is thank you.”
“Thank you.” She paused, weighing whether she should continue pressing her case.
Technically, Zane was her boss, though temporarily, but she owed it to Ginny to watch out for her best interests. She knew the wedding industry, while Zane didn’t. She owed Ginny so much for giving her a job when she’d been at her lowest. “There is a rule in the wedding industry. Personal relationships with someone connected with the bride and groom is off-limits because it rarely goes well. I suggest you follow that while you’re managing Lucky Stars.”
“That’s gonna be tough at AJ and Grace’s wedding since I’m a groomsman,” he joked.
“You know I didn’t mean their wedding. You need to take this seriously. There’s nothing funny about what happened today.”
“While today wasn’t, why can’t a job be fun? Life’s too short to spend it being miserable eight or more hours a day.”
“I enjoy my job, but that doesn’t mean anything goes. There must be structure and rules. Incidents like flirting with or dating bridesmaids, relatives, or friends of the bride or groom isn’t professional and can’t happen.”
“In a town the size of Wishing when there’s a wedding near everyone’s connected to the couple in one way or another.”
McKenna tsk-tsked in exaggerated sympathy. “I guess you’ll have to cowboy up and deal with it.”
“What is it with everyone’s fascination with my love life? First Ginny, then Grace, and now you,” he snapped, his voice tinged with frustration.
McKenna laughed. “Talk about a huge ego. Yours has to be the biggest around, but get this, Mr. Small Town Loverboy. I don’t give a flying flip about your personal life. What I care about is my job. What you did today caused problems for me. Can I have your word you won’t get romantically involved with anyone associated with our clients?”
Zane straightened, crossed his arms over his broad chest, and his mesmerizing gaze drilled into her. “No.”

 

What was the most difficult scene to write?

I think the toughest scene to write involved the first wedding McKenna and Zane coordinate together when the singer cancels. McKenna is forced to face her stage fright and painful memories. I kept getting the emotion wrong. Characters whined too much, were over-the-top dramatic, or too detached. You name a wrong way to react, and I did it with the four characters in this scene. Thankfully, a dear friend and minister, helped me brainstorm and get it right. (I hope :)) The scene became a huge turning point for Zane and McKenna’s relationship. Here’s an excerpt.

Determined to find a replacement and give this couple their perfect day with the song they’d chosen, McKenna called her wedding singer contacts. Five minutes later, she’d come up empty, having run into the same issues Jennifer had. In desperation, she even called the reception band’s lead singer, but he wasn’t familiar with the songs.
Out of options and time, she texted Zane to join her in the sanctuary. When he arrived, her heart pitter-pattered faster at the sight of him. She’d thought he looked amazing last night, but today? What described way beyond amazing? His dark charcoal suit paired with a black shirt buttoned completely accentuated his tanned, blond good looks, making her light-headed.
“You need help?”
She sure did. She needed help keeping her mind on the wedding details.
Shaking herself mentally, she focused on the problem at hand and shared the bad news. “I’ve called everyone I can think of. Singers are booked, sick with the virus that’s going around or have other plans.” She handed him her tablet containing her singer contacts. “Can you think of anyone else?”
After scanning the list, he said, “I can think of one.”
“Wonderful. Who is it?” She waved her hand through the air in dismissal, excitement surging through her over the hope of not disappointing Katharine and Rainy. “I don’t care who it is. Call.”
“I don’t need to. She’s standing right here.”
McKenna collapsed onto the nearby pew. “No. You can’t mean me.”
He nodded.
“I can’t. I’m not a professional singer. I haven’t sung since I was in an a cappella group in college.”
“Do you know the songs?”
“Yes, but it doesn’t matter because I can’t sing in front of people.”
Zane pointed behind them and up. “This is an old church with a balcony. You’d be singing in back of everyone. No one would see you unless they turn around.”
“That’s not what I meant, and you know it,” she snapped, frustration over his sarcastic response filling her voice. She paused, inhaling and exhaling slowly as she counted to ten. “I can’t sing in public where people can hear me.”
“You have an incredible voice. When I heard you, you were singing a cappella. That’s more difficult than with an accompanist. You can do this.”
Too bad Erin didn’t get your beautiful voice. With her looks and your voice, she could’ve been a star.
McKenna cringed at the memory of her father’s words when he and her mother had come to hear her a cappella group performance. Uncertainty and anxiety tore through her, making her heart race and clouding her vision. “I wish I could, but I can’t. Katharine and Rainy will have to settle for an instrumental version.”
“What if they won’t?” Zane sank onto the pew beside her and flashed her a mischievous grin. “I’ve been told brides can be very particular about wedding details.”
“No fair using my words against me.”
“You’re saying that because it’s right.”
Singing wasn’t her job. If she sounded like a cat with its tail caught under a rocking chair, no one would expect her to step in. Why should she be expected to because she had a decent voice?
The large double church doors opened behind them. While she and Zane couldn’t see who entered, feminine voices and laughter floated toward them. They’d run out of time.
She’d hold a bride’s dress out of the way while she peed. She’d clear debris from the outside ceremony area after a storm blew through. She’d run to an ATM for cash when a couple forgot money to pay the minister, but she refused to fill in for a singer.
McKenna turned to Zane. “I’ll lay out the situation, explaining how Jennifer and I called every replacement we knew, and unless they know of someone, our only option is Martin playing piano arrangements. Hopefully, they’ll understand there is nothing more that can be done.”
His right eyebrow crooked upward at her last statement, as if to say there was something she could do.
“Stop saying that.”
“I didn’t say a word.”
“But you were thinking I could fix this problem, but I can’t.” She reached out to him, her hands fluttering before she placed them on his forearm. “I need you to support me on this. Please?”
He nodded. “You’re in charge.”
She jerked away and glared at him. “That is so not funny.”

 

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

I think it’s the same style as other books I’ve written. There’s a touch of humor with deeper emotions and themes regarding family, betrayal, and life purpose running underneath. Once again, I have characters who believe they’ve dealt with their past, but events occur to poke those old wounds and prove otherwise. But isn’t that true in real life? I know it is for me. I often think I’ve overcome a past hurt or loss, and then something brings it rushing back to knock me on my butt. I guess in that way, I really do write about what I know.

 

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

There are two things. One, people who are very different can learn from each other and become better people if they’re not too stubborn to be open to the possibility. Two, our past doesn’t have to determine our future. We have the power to change our story.

 

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

Right now I’m deciding if I can carry on the Wishing, Texas series with stories about characters we’ve met or if I should go with a new series. I have an idea about four soldiers who struggle to return to civilian life after a suicide bomb leaves them emotionally and physically scarred. When their lives crumble, a relationship forged with a resident in a small Texas town during their deployment draws each soldier to there in search of a fresh start.

 

Thanks for blogging at HJ!

 

Giveaway: An ebook copy of To Marry a Texas Cowboy & a coffee mug (US only)

 

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Excerpt from To Marry a Texas Cowboy:

Prologue
“Grandmothers shouldn’t have favorites, but I have to admit Zane is mine,” Virginia Logan said to her friend, as they sat having coffee on Judy’s small apartment patio. Despite fall’s arrival on the calendar in Wishing, Texas, the temperature and the air remained warm.

“I don’t think having a favorite is a problem as long as you don’t treat anyone that way.”

Ginny nodded in agreement. “I’d never admit it to anyone else, and if anything, I’m tougher on Zane, but that boy always has been special to me.”

How could she not love Zane a bit more when he reminded her so much of her dear late husband? Her grandson possessed her husband’s crooked smile. The one that made women’s hearts turn over. Zane’s eyes were the same vivid green that sparkled when he turned on the charm. He’d also inherited his grandfather’s sense of humor that had made her laugh during the roughest of times.

“Bless him, Zane’s coming to stay for my surgery.”

“But not your son?”

Ginny shook her head. “He’s on a trip with Carla. Not that he’d be any help if he came.” Ginny’s hand tightened around her glass of iced tea. “I was so thankful to have that boy after all those miscarriages that I indulged him. If I had it to do again, I’d raise him differently. I wish Zane hadn’t paid the price for my mistakes.”

And blast her son and first daughter-in-law for failing to see what their fighting did to their child. But then her son had been too busy juggling his secret life with his girlfriend and their children, while her daughter-in-law had been bent on revenge. “I wish they could’ve loved Zane more than they hated each other. Thankfully, I didn’t make the same mistakes with Zane.”

When her son and daughter-in-law filed for divorce, they forced Zane to choose who to live with. Way too perceptive for his age, Zane had known why his parents pawned the decision off on him. They wanted to move on—her son with his new family and her former daughter-in-law with her new boyfriend. Zane was part of the old life they both wanted to erase. Rather than choose between his parents, Zane had asked to live with his grandparents.

“You did a great job raising Zane. He’s a fine man.”

“He is, but the older he gets the more he shuts himself off from everyone except his few close friends.”

Not that anyone would suspect the fact. Zane, the life of any party, could stroll into a room and within five minutes capture most everyone’s attention. The females because of his looks and charm, the men because they hoped his magnetism would rub off. But none of the connections were real or meant a thing to Zane. They were all hat and no cattle. It was as if he expected other people to disappoint him, so he never let them in. That way when they did let him down, it wouldn’t hurt as much.

An idea had been floating around in her head for a few days and a little voice inside said today was the day to act. “Would you mind taking a trip to the well today?”

“You needing to make a wish?” Judy asked.

“That’s exactly what I’m thinking.”

Not fifteen minutes later, they arrived at the town’s historical park surrounding the wishing well and the tiny graveyard. They walked along the flagstone path toward the white picket fence. The tall grass in the surrounding field danced as the warm fall breeze brushed through it. At the gate, Ginny paused and traced the raised lettering on the iron plaque.

The gate creaked and squawked as she opened it and when they stood before the worn, old well, Ginny brushed her hand over the rough limestone. The stones remained as strong and vibrant as the day Alice stood here to make a wish for her sister, Anne.

Ginny adored this place. A sense of calm and love surrounded her here. Energy hummed in the air, vibrating with the memories of those who’d sought help for loved ones. Beyond the well with its weathered gray wooden roof stood four worn, chipped headstones. Such a simple place yet filled with such pure ardor and magic.

Though most young folks around town thought the legend was dreamed up by smart businessmen years ago as a marketing ploy, Ginny believed in Wishing’s famed well, along with fairies, leprechauns, and happily ever after. She always had.

According to the legend, Anne and Alice grew up as close as sisters could be until Anne moved to Texas with her husband Sam. Alice remained back east caring for their aged parents. Anne and Sam built a fine life on this land and were raising three children when the Civil War began. When Sam left for war, Anne found herself overwhelmed. She begged Alice to come to Texas to help, and her sister obliged. Together the two women held on to the land and kept the children fed and safe during those terrible years. When the war ended and the surviving men started coming home, Sam wasn’t among them. As more time passed without word on her husband, Anne became despondent and took to her bed.

Her heart heavy with worry for her sister, Alice stood at this very well one day, knowing her sister had given up. Not knowing what else to do, tears running down her face and falling into the well as she leaned over it, Alice tossed in a coin and wished for Sam’s safe return to the family that loved and needed him so desperately.

A few days later, her wish came true. Sam returned, along with the stranger who’d nursed him back to health after finding him near death beside the road.

The coin clutched in Ginny’s hand vibrated and heat raced through her. Please let this place work its magic for Zane. I don’t want him living the same superficial life his father has.

“Zane needs to learn there’s more to life.”

Ginny held her hand over the well and released the coin. It pinged off stones before splashing into the water. “I wish Zane would meet someone who turns the tables on him, makes him let go of the past, and helps him trust people again. And if he finds someone he could love, that would be an added bonus.”

Chapter One
“I suppose you think jumping a barbed wire fence naked is a good idea too.”

Zane Logan resisted the urge to cringe at his best friend Cooper’s comment as they stood in a corner of the Lucky Stars event barn at AJ and Grace’s engagement party.

For ten years since they met as freshmen in Squadron Twenty-One in the Corps of Cadets at Texas A&M University it had been him, Coop, Ty, and AJ. Banding together, they’d survived that arduous freshman fish year and had a helluva good time in college. Since then, though they’d gone their separate ways, they’d kept in touch and gotten together a few times a year at Ty’s ranch. No matter what life threw their way, they were there for each other. But their lives were changing.

Ty was married and he and Cassie were raising her niece. AJ was engaged. But the biggest shock had hit Zane when he arrived at Cooper’s place last week. What he’d expected to find was Coop climbing the wall from small-town boredom. Instead, he’d walked in on a party with his best friend down on one knee proposing.

“Maybe managing Ginny’s business while she’s recovering isn’t the smartest thing I’ve ever done, but what else could I do? I couldn’t let her trust an assistant she’s only known three months.”

Not only hadn’t he wanted to take over Ginny’s business while she recovered from hip replacement surgery, he’d had a helluva time convincing her to let him. But he should’ve expected unsolicited advice. Since he, Coop, and AJ had kept their apprehension about Lauren, Ty’s first fiancée, to themselves and she left him at the altar, they’d promised to share future concerns, no matter what the subject, how sensitive or painful. Still, Coop could’ve used a little tact.

“Why isn’t your old man helping out?”

“He’s in Europe trying to patch up marriage number three. Good thing, too, because he’d be a worse choice than her assistant.” How could folks as wonderful as his grandparents have raised such a shit for a son? Someone who would lead two completely separate lives with two families?

“I’m thinking a man who breaks out in hives when he hears the word wedding has no business managing a wedding planning company,” Cooper said. “If you ask me, that’s looking for trouble.”

Zane wouldn’t let Grandma Ginny, the one person who’d been there for him his entire life, loving him unconditionally and acting as a guiding force, put her future at risk. He’d do anything this side of legal for her.

Even run Lucky Stars Weddings.

As Zane scanned the barn built after his grandfather died, regret swept over him. The Lucky Stars Ranch had been his escape from his parents’ fighting long before he moved here in middle school. He preferred the original barn with its rough walls rather than this one’s sanded and sealed boards. His grandfather’s barn had smelled of hay and horses rather than fresh flowers. Horses nickering and Grandpa Paul’s cheerful whistling had filled that space rather than polite conversation, background music, and the ding of crystal clinking together during toasts. But when his grandfather died, running a cattle ranch had been too much for his grandma. Needing a way to provide for herself and being known for giving fabulous parties, she’d turned that love into a wedding planning business.

Zane smiled at his best friend. “I was at Ty’s wedding and didn’t need allergy meds.”

“Does that mean you’ll be at my wedding?” Coop asked.

“I wouldn’t be anywhere else, but I’ll bring Benadryl in case.”

“Good thing, because I expect you to be my best man.”

Despite Zane’s quick he’d-be-honored response, concerns for Cooper churned in his gut. How could Coop know Cheyenne well enough to marry her after a couple months, especially when he was a lightweight in the experience department? He’d had only had one serious relationship before Cheyenne, and if Olivia hadn’t died, they’d be married now. While Cooper had dated a time or two since, calling them disasters would be an understatement. Now here he was engaged to the first female he’d dated more than twice.

Zane hoped his friend remembered their promise to be honest went both ways. “You sure about this, Coop? It’s awful sudden. You didn’t tell me you were dating Cheyenne.”

The fact stung. But what really tore him up was learning Ty and AJ had known Cooper intended to propose.

“I may not have your experience with women, but I know when it’s right. This is very right between me and Cheyenne,” Cooper said, his face lighting up in a dopey way.

Cooper told Zane how he’d met Cheyenne when she and Ty’s little sister Aubrey arrived at his front door asking for his assistance getting Cheyenne a service dog. “Next thing I knew, I was training a dog for her; she was helping me collect data for the SeizureReader and working in my animal clinic.”

“And I thought I moved fast.”

“After Olivia, I never thought I’d feel this way again.” Cooper shook his head. “Who would’ve thought Ty, AJ, and I would all fall in love with women we met in Wishing? You’d better watch out, buddy, or whatever’s in the water could get you, too.”

“Thanks for the warning. To be safe, I’ll stock up on bottled water.”

Not that Zane didn’t love women. He did. But because he wasn’t built for a one-on-one, long-term relationship, to avoid any misunderstandings, he spelled out his expectations when he asked a woman out.

Just so you know. I’m not interested in a long-term relationship. I’ll never put a ring on your finger. If you want a man to do those things, find someone else.

His father hadn’t shown his mother that courtesy. Nope, he’d stood in front of a justice of the peace, recited vows to love and honor, and broke every single one of them having a second family on the side. Zane vowed he wouldn’t lie to a woman the way his father had.

Shaking off the memories, Zane prayed his friends had better luck in the marriage department than his parents.

“If the plan is to protect your grandmother’s interests and not run her business into the ground, you need to keep the antimarriage attitude to yourself,” Cooper said.

“What business is Zane running into the ground?” Ty asked as he joined them.

Before Zane could answer, AJ walked up. “Hide me. You’d think folks wouldn’t talk shop at my engagement party, but they are.”

“That’s what you get for inviting half the town,” Ty said.

“I wanted to keep the party little, but Grace worried people would get offended and think she was being New York City snooty.”

“I told you living in a small town would drive you crazy,” Zane said, his voice filled with good-natured ribbing.

“Better watch what you say, Zane, since these folks will be your clients.”

Zane glared at his best friend. For the supposedly quiet, thoughtful one, Cooper had a lot to say tonight.

“Clients? Did I miss something?” AJ asked.

Coop hooked his thumb toward Zane. “You’ll never guess what he’s done.” Without waiting for an answer, he continued, “He’s agreed to manage Lucky Stars Weddings while his grandmother’s recovering.”

His buddies stared at him as if he’d agreed to run naked through the streets.

“And you said my job would drive me nuts,” AJ said. “You’re going to realize there’s a whole different definition of the word when a woman is planning her wedding.”

“Now that’s funny, right there,” Ty said and slapped Zane on the back. “Mr. Confirmed Bachelor helping brides pick out invitations and flowers.”

Guffaws erupted around Zane.

“I won’t be doing any bride or event crap. Ginny’s assistant will handle that. I’m managing the administrative and financial work,” Zane said.

Not that he was thrilled with those tasks either. He’d discovered that the hard way when he and a coworker Cody started their video game design company, Big Stake Games. They’d imagined a workday filled with creative freedom to design games like the one their company had rejected, Cowboys and Zombies set on a ranch based on the Lucky Stars. Then reality set in. Payroll, taxes, human resources, and endless other details they discovered neither of them enjoyed needed attention. Lacking the funds to hire a financial exec, they’d divided those duties. As the company grew, Cody talked him into adding designers and programmers instead of an administrator, and his owner responsibilities multiplied.

Lately, Zane spent more time in meetings discussing budgets, staffing, productivity, marketing and sales projections than he spent creating games, further removing him from what he loved doing. Not exactly what he had in mind or wanted when he and Cody started the company.

Hoping to dispel his gloomy thoughts and have fun, Zane scanned the room searching for a diversion. His gaze landed on two women. The first, a tall, stunning blonde wore skinny jeans and a tight shirt with a low-cut V-neck, laces holding it in place over her ample breasts. Standing with her was a somewhat familiar, pretty brunette dressed in low-rise, tight jeans and an off-the-shoulder floral number.

“Zane? Want to come back to earth?” AJ said as he waved his hand in front of his face.

“Who’s the blonde in the navy lace top?”

“That’s Susannah Timmons,” Ty said.

“That’s huge-overbite, Coke-bottle glasses Susannah?” Zane asked. Contact lenses, and a couple surgeries—nose and boobs—unless he missed his guess, had done wonders for her appearance.

“Put your eyes back in your head. She’s engaged.”

“She’s having her wedding here. I bet she’s one scary bridezilla,” AJ said, shuddering in exaggerated horror.

“That’s for sure. She brought her cat to see me. Talk about having pretty girl syndrome,” Cooper said, using their term for a woman who felt the world should overlook her mistakes, help her whenever necessary, and give her endless chances because of her looks.

“Unless she’s getting married in the next six weeks, and the countdown started after Ginny’s surgery last Thursday, it won’t be my problem.” Zane glanced at the women again. “Who’s her friend?”

“I’m surprised you don’t recognize her. That’s Campbell Alverez.”

No wonder she looked familiar. He and Campbell had dated on and off during high school and college summer breaks. “She still lives here?”

“She moved in with her folks six months ago,” AJ said.

“I might give her a call if I get bored,” Zane said.

“Word is she went through a nasty divorce.”

The news made Zane pause. After a divorce, women went one of two ways. One, they loosened up, went a little wild, and made up for lost time. Or, they grew bitter and subconsciously punished men for their ex’s actions. If Campbell chose the first, great. They could have fun, but if memory served, she possessed a temper, making the second option more likely.

AJ thumped him on the arm. “Did you hear me, Zane?”

“Sorry. What did you say?”

“I asked what Cody thinks of you taking off six weeks?” AJ asked referring to Zane’s business partner.

“That’s the great thing about the gaming industry. I’m not chained to the office. We have a lot of people working remotely. I’ll simply be more remote than most.”

“You’re going to juggle your company and your grandmother’s? Are you crazy?”

He explained how with the time difference between California and Texas, he could knock out Ginny’s business first thing in the morning. When his office opened in LA, he’d have some juggling to do, but after five Texas time, he’d have a couple hours with the Big Stake Games office still open.

“I hope it goes that way for you, pal,” Ty said.

“Sounds like you’ve thought this through, and it should be simple,” Cooper said, rubbing his knuckles along his jaw line. “But that would make me nervous because it’s usually the simple things that catch us.”

“Especially when women are involved, and the wedding industry is full of ’em,” AJ added.

“Apparently you weren’t listening when I said I’m the behind the scenes man. I won’t be dealing with brides, mothers of the brides, or bridesmaids.” As long as Ginny’s assistant proved capable. “Speaking of the business, how’s McKenna doing handling tonight, AJ?”

“McKenna gets things done,” AJ said. “Grace and I told her what we wanted, picked out the food, and she took it from there. All we had to do was show up. She’s definitely a type A personality.”

“Good. That’s exactly who I need so I can steer clear of receptions and clients,” Zane said.

“What did McKenna say when she found out you were taking over?” Ty asked.

“She doesn’t know yet.”

“Why not?”

“I only got here a day before Ginny’s surgery. I couldn’t get her to change her mind about putting me in charge until we were on the way to the hospital. Then with her being in the hospital for a couple days, and this party, I figured it best to save the news for the office on Tuesday.”

“Boy is your first day going to be rocky.”

“I don’t see why,” Zane said.

Ty clapped him on the shoulder. “You say that now but working with a strong-willed woman when it’s just the two of you is different than managing geeky gamers.”

Cooper nodded. “I found that out when I hired Cheyenne.”

His friends had lost their minds if they thought he couldn’t manage one woman. Supervising staff was the same no matter what the company, and he appreciated strong, driven employees, female or male. “If she does her job, we won’t have a problem. You can’t think I’ll have trouble dealing with a woman?”

AJ tilted his head toward the bar across the room. “See that woman coming out of the back toting a bucket of ice?”

When Zane turned, a tall woman dressed in a full denim skirt stopping at her cowboy boots, a long-sleeved white blouse with a red bandana and a baggy denim vest stalked toward the bar. He cringed. His grandma showed more skin than this woman.

Between the way she dressed, her no-nonsense stride, and wearing her mousy brown hair in a tight spinster bun, she looked like she’d stepped out of Little House on the Prairie. The woman had no fun written all over her. “That’s McKenna?”

Ty nodded. “You still want to stick with the you-won’t-have-trouble-with-her answer?”

“Absolutely. She’s a woman, and I haven’t met one I can’t charm with a little sweet talk and a smile.”

His friends glanced back and forth between each other, shaking their heads, grinning and looking at him like he was too dumb to know what day it was.

“You want to put money on it? Say ten bucks, because I say you’re wrong,” AJ said.

Zane chuckled. “You’re on.”

“What’s the specific criteria? How do we judge being able to ‘charm her’ or ‘not having trouble’ with her?” Cooper asked, his brows furrowed in thought.

“Ask her for a date? If she says yes, you win. If she turns you down, we do,” AJ said.

“No way.” Zane shook his head. Dates indicated a man was interested in a woman romantically. Afterward came expectations of a call and a second date, neither of which would happen. “Asking her out would give the wrong impression.”

“Ask her to dance,” Cooper suggested.

Zane smiled. Dancing was harmless, lasted less than four minutes, and wouldn’t leave her with the wrong impression. Perfect. “By the end of the night I’ll have gotten McKenna to dance. Everyone in?”

His friends nodded.

“Watching you go down in flames is going to be more fun than we’ve had in a long time,” Cooper said.

“All right, enough of you men being holed up in the corner,” Grace said, cutting off Cooper’s comment when she, Cassie, and Cheyenne joined them.

“I was fixin’ to come find you to dance,” AJ said as he linked hands with Grace and kissed his fiancée’s cheek. “But none of this line dancing. I want a slow song so I can hold you.”

Zane rolled his eyes at his friend’s besotted voice and lovestruck look.

“Great idea,” Cooper said, wearing a similarly enamored grin, as he slid his arm around Cheyenne’s shoulder.

Cooper dancing? Mr. Two Left Feet? In the ten-plus years Zane had known his best friend, he’d never seen him dance. Not even to a slow ballad. Zane shook his head. He’d known men to do ridiculous things when in love, but he never thought his best friend would act that way.

“You should join us on the dance floor,” Cassie said.

“The three of us dancing would be a little awkward.”

Ty’s beautiful blonde wife laughed.

“Get your own girl. This one’s taken,” Ty said.

“From the looks you’ve gotten since you arrived, that shouldn’t be difficult. You’ve caused quite a stir,” Cassie said.

Zane smiled. “And I’m fixin’ to cause more.”

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
 
 

Book Info:

She lives by a set of rules. He aims to break each one.

When Zane Logan returns to Wishing, Texas, he’s shocked to learn that his grandmother has hired an assistant to manage her wedding planning business as she heals from surgery. With five marriages between his parents, just the thought of weddings breaks him out in hives. To look out for his grandmother’s financial interests, Zane takes charge. He doesn’t trust easily, especially when the assistant is prettier than a Texas spring day.

Childhood taught McKenna Stinson an important rule: never count on anyone but yourself. She dreams of working hard to have her own business. Stepping in for a successful wedding planner in a small town known for big weddings is the perfect opportunity…until her employer’s grandson announces he’s the new boss. He’s cynical about love and knows nothing about weddings—so why is she falling for him?

Even worse, Zane’s so hot McKenna has to make up two new rules: don’t date a man more attractive than you and never, ever, date a man you work with.

Book Links: Amazon | B&N | iTunes | Kobo | Google |
 
 

Meet the Author:

An avid daydreamer, Julie Benson doesn’t remember a time when she wasn’t creating stories. After graduating from the University of Texas at Dallas with a degree in Sociology, she worked as case manager for a social services agency before having her children. Three boys, and many years later, she started actively pursuing a writing career to challenge her mind and save her sanity. Now she writes full time in Dallas, where she lives with her husband, their three sons, two lovable black dogs, a mischievous brown one and a turtle. Julie says, while her house is never quiet or predictable, it is full of heroes.
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27 Responses to “Spotlight & Giveaway: To Marry a Texas Cowboy by Julie Benson”

  1. Jeanna Massman

    Friendship in the heart is rare but worth hanging on to. It involves shared memories, shared loyalties and shared love!

  2. Pamela Conway

    You keep in touch & you know that you & your friend are there for each other no matter what.

  3. Lori R

    I have several long distance friendships. I think our pasts bind us together and we are always there for each other no matter what. We also take time to talk with each other.

  4. Amy R

    What makes a friendship last despite distance and not seeing someone? share a connection with the person

  5. anna nguyen

    sending each other random messages and thoughts. and knowing that it will put a smile on your friend’s face

  6. clickclickmycat

    If you are always there for your friend when needed, that goes a long way to keeping a friendship.

  7. Charlotte Litton

    Always being there for the other, keeping in touch and not getting mad if they don’t call. You call.

  8. penneyblog

    I have to say love! like my husband and I he was in England and I’m here in the USA we talk and wrote letters many times a week for 2 years then got married in London and moved back here. This month we will have our 34th Annv.

  9. eawells

    Having your back, no matter what, trust, understanding, compassion, and just being there when needed. Willing to bury the bodies and not ask questions.

  10. dholcomb1

    You have to want to keep in touch, and the best of those are when you can pick up like no time has passed, even if it has been years.

  11. rkcjmomma

    Communication no matter what it is. A simple text, email or a card! Maybe even a letter!

  12. Patricia B.

    A solid friendship based on shared experiences and interests can last forever, even if you only see each other every few months or every few years. My husband was in the Air Force for 24 years, during most of which we were married. The units he was assigned to were close knit and the people were wonderful. They get together every two years and it really is like we saw each other just a few weeks ago. We just sort of pick up where we left off and catch up with each other. I enjoy Julie Benson’s books. They are heartfelt with just the right touch of humor, and have characters we can easily relate to.

  13. Nicole (Nicky) Ortiz

    The connection they share and communication
    Thanks for the chance!

  14. Terrill R.

    A solid friendship to start with and then commitment to stay in each other’s lives when marriage, kids, and work start to take precedent.