Prairie Storm (Cowboys of The Flint Hills #4) Read online




  PRAIRIE STORM

  A COWBOYS OF THE FLINT HILLS NOVEL

  (Book 4)

  TESSA LAYNE

  Shady Layne Media

  www.tessalayne.com

  Copyright © 2017 by Tessa Layne

  Kindle Edition

  Cover Art by Razzle Dazzle Design

  Published by Shady Layne Media

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, distributed, stored, or transmitted in any form or in any manner without written permission except in the case of brief quotations included in critical articles and reviews. For information, please contact the author.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of copious amounts of wine, long walks, and the author’s overactive imagination, or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  In Loving Memory of Uncle Jack

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Welcome to Prairie!

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  About Prairie Fire

  More Books in the Cowboys of the Flint Hills Series

  Acknowledgements

  Welcome to Prairie!

  Where the cowboys are sexy as sin, the women are smart and sassy, and everyone gets their Happily Ever After!

  Prairie is a fictional small town in the heart of the Flint Hills, Kansas – the original Wild West. Here, you’ll meet the Sinclaire family, descended from French fur-trappers and residents of the area since the 1850s. You’ll also meet the Hansens and the Graces, who’ve been ranching in the Flint Hills since right before the Civil War.

  Prairie embodies the best of western small town life. It’s a community where family, kindness, and respect are treasured. Where people pull together in times of trial, and yes… where the Cowboy Code of Honor is alive and well.

  Every novel is a stand-alone book where the characters get their HEA, but you’ll get to know a cast of secondary characters along the way.

  Get on the waiting list for Prairie Storm and the rest of the Cowboys of the Flint Hills

  Additional books in the series:

  PRAIRIE HEAT – Blake Sinclaire & Maddie Hansen (on sale now!)

  PRAIRIE PASSION – Brodie Sinclaire & Jamey O’Neill (on sale now!)

  PRAIRIE DESIRE – Ben Sinclaire & Hope Hansen (on sale now!)

  PRAIRIE FIRE – Parker Hansen & Cassidy Grace (coming in 2017)

  PRAIRIE FEVER – Gunnar Hansen & Suzannah Winslow (coming in 2018)

  PRAIRIE ECSTACY – Colton Kincaid & Lydia Grace (coming in 2018)

  PRAIRIE LUST – Jarrod O’Neill & Lexi Grace (coming in 2018)

  PRAIRIE REDEMPTION – Cody Hansen & Carolina Grace (coming in 2018)

  Help a Hero – Read a Cowboy

  KISS ME COWBOY – On Sale This Summer Only

  Six Western Romance authors have joined up to support their favorite charity – Heroes & Horses – and offer you this sexy box set with Six Full Length Cowboy Novels, filled with steamy kisses and HEA’s. Grab your copy and help an American Hero today!

  Visit www.tessalayne.com for more titles & release info

  Sign up for my Newsletter here

  Hang out with me! Join my Facebook Reader Group – Prairie Posse

  CHAPTER 1

  Axel Hansen stopped whistling and stared in disbelief at the text he’d just received from his brother, Gunnar.

  G: I thought you said we had interns arriving from K-State not scientists from CPARC

  “What in the hell is CPARC?” The phone buzzed again.

  G: Pops says they’re arriving in 20?

  “Jesus.” Axel gripped the phone harder, wishing like heck he could toss it into the nearest water trough. So much for enjoying a quick swim in the creek before his interns arrived. He’d been looking forward to a dip in the icy water all morning, too. He could always count on Pops putting a damper on his fun.

  If he sorted this quickly, maybe he could at least stick his feet in the water for five minutes. Enjoy the fresh spring air and breathe in a little peace and calm before channeling the frenetic energy of college kids. He might not have the same tireless energy as an undergrad, but he wasn’t too old to inject a little fun into each day. Have a few laughs. Why work if it couldn’t be fun too? He glanced at the time as he stalked out of the bunkhouse in search of Gunn and Pops. Maybe luck would be on his side. He tapped his phone.

  A: Where are you?

  G: Training arena.

  A: On my way

  Axel jammed the phone in his pocket and tried to rein in the stream of irritation shooting through him. Of course Pops was interfering in his decisions again. Ruining his perfect balance of fun and hard work. Why should he expect something different? “He’s still in charge,” Axel spoke to a horse munching lazily in the paddock.

  And Eddie Hansen would be until the day he finally decided to let Axel and Gunnar buy him out. Axel had been waiting ten years to take over the ranch operations with his brother. To update and innovate. And for ten years he’d struggled under the hawkeye of his overbearing father. Been undermined and bossed like he was still an unruly teenager. And today would be no different.

  By the time Axel reached the arena, he’d clamped down on his ire enough to have a conversation, although it simmered just under the surface. Going at Pops head on never worked. Humor was the only way he’d ever managed to deal with his father. Especially when Pops got a burr stuck up his ass. For starters, it beat breaking things with his fist. And Pops wouldn’t listen to him anyway, so why give the old man the satisfaction of knowing he’d gotten under Axel’s skin?

  The arena door stood wide open and Axel paused a moment just inside to let his eyes adjust to the dim interior. His dad and brother stood on the far side of the arena, heads bent together. A thread of worry snaked through him, which he immediately brushed away. Maybe this time Gunn would help deflect some of the tension that always seemed to arise between them. He squared his shoulders, put on his cheeriest smile, and called out as he crossed the empty space. “What’s going on, Pops? We’ve got interns coming later this afternoon. Gunn says we have scientists too?”

  Eddie Hansen’s blonde head snapped up. “That’s not my problem, son. That was your harebrained idea.”

  “You mean hosting interns was my brilliant idea,” Axel grinned, letting his mouth stretch a little wider. “Which I ran by you three months ago.”

  Eddie’s eyes widened in disbelief.

  “At poker night with Uncle Warren.” Axel stroked his chin, ignoring the press of frustration below his collarbone. “I seem to recall you saying it was a great idea then.” Of course, Pops might have had three beers in him and was feeling pretty
relaxed when Axel had broached the subject, but he still should have remembered. He remembered the deals he made over poker games, why not this?

  “Hmph.” Eddie answered dismissively, and turned back to the clipboard Gunnar held. “You’ll have to call them off.”

  These arguments always felt worse in front of Gunnar. Gunnar the golden child. Gunnar the perfect. A tendril of jealousy licked through him. He loved his brother, had worshipped him when they were kids. And that was part of the problem – everyone loved Gunn.

  But him? He was an afterthought. The sidekick. The joker. And no matter how hard he tried, he couldn’t shake that perception.

  But he was sure as hell going to try again today.

  Axel bit his tongue and counted to three. “I can’t, pops,” he said evenly – a win given how close he was to blowing his stack. But he’d never throw a temper tantrum. Not in front of Pops or Gunn, or anyone else for that matter. It was bad for relationships and business. And he’d never give either of them the satisfaction of losing his cool. Not today, not ever. “I won’t,” he amended. “It would be bad PR for us.”

  That got Eddie’s attention. It was the only card Axel had to play today, but it would be enough. His father was prideful. Overly prideful, so he pressed his point. “How would it look to the alumni association that one of their biggest donors bailed out on a bunch of interns?” Axel let that sink in. The K-State community was small, and Hansen stables relied on many alums for business.

  “Furthermore,” Axel continued, “they’re giving us a stipend. Are these scientists from CCRAP paying you?”

  Gunnar sniggered. At least someone thought his joke was funny.

  Eddie scowled. “Hold on a fat second, son. Zack Forte is a personal friend and I’m doing this as a favor to him.”

  “And he’s a gazillionaire who can afford to pay you a little something for your trouble,” Axel countered, his voice becoming more clipped. “A lot of something.”

  “He buys our livestock. That’s enough.”

  Not nearly.

  Axel shook his head tsking. “This is why we’re barely in the black. You gotta think with the business brain.” He tapped his temple, giving his father a saucy wink. “I mean, we all know you’ve got a man crush on the dude, but seriously… didn’t you always teach us to think with the brain up here?”

  Gunnar snorted, covering a laugh.

  Eddie’s eyes flashed. “What are you saying, Son? That I don’t know how to run my ranch?” Eddie’s voice grew cold.

  Goddammit. He’d pushed his father too far. Again. Axel stretched his hand at his side to avoid making a fist. He knew better than to take on his father when the steely glint flashed in his eyes. “You know that’s not what I meant.”

  Eddie’s hard gaze swept between Axel and his brother. “Let me remind you boys I’m still in charge here, and I will be until the day I’m ready to let you buy me out.”

  Axel rolled his eyes. He hated it when his dad pulled the boss card. Hamstrung his ideas for innovation or cost-cutting. He clamped his jaw down, grinding his teeth. He was thirty-two for chrissakes. Not a kid anymore. How much longer was he going to have to wait before he could run things the way he saw fit? “And when’s that gonna be, Pops? Gunn and I aren’t getting any younger.”

  Eddie narrowed his eyes. “You can start by settling down. We’ve got a legacy to pass on, and all you two are concerned with is joking around.”

  “That’s all Axe,” Gunn offered with a little smirk.

  “Aww, c’mon.” Heat raced up Axel’s spine. “You’re not all business, and you know it. You can have fun and still have a good business.” These conversations exhausted him. They happened so often he could predict what would be said next.

  Eddie crossed his arms, mouth flattening. “You two don’t like the way I run things? No one’s keeping you here.”

  Axel clamped his jaw and took a slow breath, hands on his hips. There was the rub. No one was keeping him here. His dad had made it perfectly clear for years that he was welcome to leave if he didn’t like it. But there was a cost to leaving Eddie had laid out years ago that was unacceptable to Axel. So he’d stuck it out, chomping at the bit to be his own man.

  Axel’s heart thudded heavily against his ribs. He loved his family more than anything. Losing them wasn’t an option. “You’re right, Pops.” It hurt him to say that, but he’d just have to keep trying to find a way to be at peace with his dad’s decisions. Especially when they conflicted with his own. Resignation sank through him. “I’ll figure something out.” He spun on his heel and stalked out of the arena, mind spinning with alternatives. If he was successful at one thing, it was coming up with new ideas. His brain teemed with them.

  The bright sunshine momentarily blinded him and he reached for the sunglasses he kept in his breast pocket as he dialed his sister.

  “’Sup Axe?” Hope’s voice held a cheerful lilt.

  Axel couldn’t help but smile. Married life suited his sister. She’d softened in all the right ways and her confidence was contagious.

  “I’m hoping you can help me out of a jam.”

  She chuckled low. “Let me guess, Pops have you over a barrel again?”

  “Something like that.”

  Her voice grew serious. “You don’t have to stay, Axe. Everyone can see you’ve only got a half a heart in your work.”

  “You would too, if the rug was pulled out from under you at every turn.” Bitterness rose in his throat. “He won’t take me seriously.”

  “Welcome to the club,” she said wryly. “But you don’t exactly make it easy. It’s not like you take anything very seriously.”

  That chapped him. “What else am I going to do? Why shouldn’t we have fun? What’s the point if we’re not?”

  “Exactly. What is the point, Axe? You don’t have to stay.”

  Except that he did. Eddie was so hung up on a Hansen legacy he’d made it clear that if Axel wanted a future stake in Hansen Stables, he’d not only have to stay, but produce an heir. With Eddie it was all or nothing. Axel reached the training pen on the far side of the complex and paused, kicking at the post.

  “I’ve sunk the last ten years of my life into the stables. And Dad would disown me. And now that Maddie has a baby…”

  Hope snorted. “He didn’t disown me.”

  “You’re a girl.”

  “You’re a sexist. Now, do you want my help or not?”

  “I’ve got four students from K-State set to arrive later this afternoon for a two month internship. Dad informed me that there are two scientists coming from Zack Forte’s group and he’s insisting we put them up here.”

  “Two months?”

  His stomach sank at the hesitation in her voice. “I know. It’s a big inconvenience, but I’ll make it worth your while. K-State is providing us a generous stipend. It’s yours. It should more than cover room and board.”

  He hated losing the stipend. Worse, he hated asking his little sister for help. He was the one who was supposed to take care of her, have her back. Not ask her to bail him out. He scrubbed a hand across his jaw. “Any chance you have room over there?”

  “Ben is down by the creek today putting the finishing touches on the tree houses. They’d have to double up because we already have bird watchers lined up for two of them… and they’ll be… rustic.”

  “I’ll take it.” Relief washed over him. One crisis averted, at least. Question was, when would his dad cause another? Because there would be another, and he’d be the one looking bad. Again. His throat tightened at the knowledge.

  “Axe?” Hope’s voice cut through.

  “What?” he barked, then instantly regretted his tone of voice. Hope was throwing him a rope, not chastising him.

  “I think you need to settle down. You need the gentle touch of a good woman, Axe.”

  He rolled his eyes, not missing the laughter in her voice. “Your sarcasm is not appreciated.”

  “Give as good as you can get, brother dear.�


  Oh, she was enjoying this. Ever since she’d married Ben at Christmas, she’d taken every opportunity to needle him and Gunnar about settling down.

  “Why don’t you worry more about producing the heir Pops wants?”

  “It’s more fun worrying about you.” Her voice turned serious. “And speaking of, you need to worry more about what you want out of your future instead of pleasing Pops. Blink and you’ll be forty. Then what?”

  She was right. Then what? Would he end up a crusty old codger like his uncle Warren? “You can take out an ad for me in Rancher’s Monthly.”

  “Ha. Ha. Be careful what you wish for, Axe.”

  “Don’t have time for that now. I think Forte’s men just arrived. Gotta run.”

  Hope clicked off, and he stayed at the rail, listening to a vehicle skid to a stop at the top of the hill where they kept their trucks.

  Great.

  Just what they needed around the stables. Two crazy-assed scientists tearing up the freshly graded drive. Or worse, spooking the horses.

  Best put on a smile and make them feel welcome. Zack Forte had been a valuable client over the years, and Axel didn’t want to piss Forte off any more than his dad did. He was just going to have to make the best of a shitty situation. But he’d be damned if he hurried his ass up the hill to fall all over them with a welcome mat. No harm in letting them cool their heels.

  He shot off a text to Gunnar letting him know their ‘special’ guests had arrived, adjusted his aviators, and trudged up the hill. Might as well get the meet and greet over with so he could get back to his day.

  God, he’d need to hit the Trading Post tonight for nothing else than to release a head of steam and maybe find a pretty lady to help him take off the edge. He never suffered for female company, but it had been years since he’d been serious about anyone. Maybe Hope was right. Maybe it was time for him to settle down. Too bad there was no one in Prairie that held his attention for more than a moment.

  As he rounded the corner at the top of the drive, he stopped short. Unless he was sorely mistaken, the khaki covered ass that pointed skyward as its owner reached for something inside, was no man’s.