Justice Lonesome has enjoyed a life of bounty.
Even so, she’s inherited the curse of the Lonesome. A poet’s soul. Which means she’s still searching for something. Searching for peace. Searching for the less…that’s more.
And when the foundation of her life is pulled out from under her, grieving, she goes to the mountains to find her oasis. She hits Carnal, Colorado and decides to stay.
Deke Hightower lost everything at the age of two. He lost it again at fifteen. His life has not been about bounty. It’s been about learning to live with less, because there’s no way to get more.
Deke’s also watched all his friends go down to the women who gave them what they needed. He wants that for himself. But he knows that search isn’t going to be easy because he’s a rider. His home is the road. That’s the only place he can breathe. And the woman who takes her place at his side has to do it sitting on the back of his bike.
When Deke meets Justice, he knows she’s not that woman. She’s cute. She’s sweet. And she’s into him, but she’s got it all and Deke knows he won’t fit into that. So he holds her at arm’s length. Establishes boundaries. And Justice will take it because she wants Deke any way he’ll let her have him.
But when Justice finds herself a pawn in a dangerous game, Deke makes a decision.
When he does, he has no idea he’s just opened himself up to bounty.
EXCERPT:
“Jus.”
Deke’s
voice carved into the perverse, bitter sick my brother and his mother stirred
up in me and I lifted my gaze, twisted my neck and looked to his face.
He
was not close.
But
he was concerned.
And
that concern undid me.
I
turned fully to him, dropped my head and fell forward.
He
was not near and then he was, right there for me to collide with as everything
pressed into me. So much, I couldn’t hold it back, and the tears came.
He
wrapped his arms around me as he stepped farther into me so he could hold me
close.
That
was when I started sobbing. My body shaking with it, automatically burrowing
into his heat, his solidity, his bulk, all Deke.
His
arms tightened.
“I
miss him,” I whispered into Deke’s chest through a hitch.
The
words with that hitch barely sounded before I felt Deke’s hand glide up my
spine and tangle in my hair.
“Get
it out, Jussy,” he murmured, his words stirring the strands at the top of my
head so I knew he was bent to me.
Deke.
Fuck
me, Deke.
“My
brother’s a p-p-piece of shit,” I pushed out through the tears.
Deke’s
arm around me got tighter and the tips of fingers started stroking the side of
my ribs.
Even
this did not make me feel better. In fact this—all that was Deke enveloping all
that was me—made it better at the same time so much worse.
“He’s
contesting the…the will,” I shared.
Deke
said nothing.
I
kept crying.
It
came to me slowly that I was pressed hard to him and had my hands clenched into
his tee at the back. I felt the damp material against my cheek and knew how
many tears had leaked and that Deke took them from me.
I
also knew he was being cool, a nice guy, because that was who he was.
But
I couldn’t let this go on.
So
I pulled my shit together, unclenched my hands and smoothed the shirt before I
dropped them to his waist and tipped my head back.
“Sorry.”
Lamentably,
he took my cue and let me go.
Incredibly,
he didn’t do this completely.
He
put his hands on either side of my neck and bent close so his face was a couple
of inches from mine.
“Think,
from what you’ve told me, you get that times get bad. Hope, Jussy, you also get
that those times pass. Whatever’s happening, this will pass.”
Jussy.
Shit.
I
nodded because that was all I could do.
“Sorry,
I…well, your shirt’s all wet,” I said, taking one hand from him to wipe my
face.
“It’ll
dry.”
I
nodded again.
His
fingers curled around my neck gave me a gentle squeeze.
“You
good?”
I
was not.
I
gave him another nod anyway.
His
eyes moved over my face and I knew he knew that nod was an inaudible lie but he
didn’t call me on it.
He
just said quietly, “Good,” gave me another squeeze and dropped his left hand.
But
with his right, he lifted it up and I held my breath because I thought he was
going to touch my face, dry a tear, something.
Instead,
he raised it to the top of my head and tousled my hair before he gave me
another close look, turned and walked away.
Shit,
Deke comforted me then tousled my hair like I was his little sister.
Shit.
I
didn’t like that.
But
it was kind and it was sweet and it came from Deke.
So
as was becoming my lot, I’d take it.
Deke doesn't want much in his life, enough to get by and the ability to move along as he pleases. He's never felt the desire to stay in one place and put down roots.
These two have an initial meeting years before we get to the real story, and it's a significant moment for Justice and Deke in different ways. When they find each other again, neither shows recognition of their past moment, but there is something between them. Deke is content to not act on that spark between them, and Justice knows his mind won't be changed, but then, it does.
Bounty is typical in that it brings unexpected problems, and leads the characters on an emotional journey together. Deke finds more in Justice than he ever thought he wanted or needed and Justice finds that Deke makes her willing to do things she wouldn't have without him, like picking up the roots she's trying to lay and move with him.
I love how Kristen Ashley gives us such a depth of love and understanding between two people, there's always this moment, this sudden detail that pushes things to another level. But we see how truly cared for the characters are, we see a huge level of trust and faith and love and have hope that things can work out and end well for everyone. I also adore the way we get to see the town rally around the couple in need, doing whatever is needed, what has to be done to keep everyone safe.
Bounty is yet another winning story in the Colorado Mountain series and Deke is my newest favorite KA man!
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