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Big Sky Mountain. Linda Miller LaelЧитать онлайн книгу.

Big Sky Mountain - Linda Miller Lael


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ranch was just a few miles outside of it. If he passed out cold at his own wedding, he’d still be getting ribbed about it when he was ninety.

      While the next bridesmaid started forward, he did his distracted best to avoid so much as glancing toward Brylee Parrish, his wife to be, who was standing at the back of the church beside her brother, Walker. He knew all too well how good she looked in that heirloom wedding gown of hers, with its billowing veil and dazzling sprinkle of rhinestones.

      Brylee was beautiful, with cascades of red-brown hair that tumbled to her waist when she let it down. Her wide-set hazel eyes revealed passion, as well as formidable intelligence, humor and a country girl’s in-born practicality.

      He was a lucky man.

      Brylee, on the other hand, was not so fortunate, having hooked up with the likes of him. She deserved a husband who loved her.

      Suddenly, Hutch’s gaze connected with that of his half brother, Slade Barlow. Seated near the front, next to his very pregnant wife, Joslyn, Slade slowly shook his head from side to side, his expression so solemn that a person would have thought somebody was about to be buried instead of hitched to one of the choicest women Parable County had ever produced.

      Hutch’s insides churned, then coalesced into a quivering gob and did a slow, backward roll.

      The last bridesmaid had arrived.

      The minister was in place.

      The smell of the flowers intensified, nearly overwhelming Hutch.

      And then the first notes of “Here Comes the Bride” rang out.

      Hutch felt the room—hell, the whole planet—sway again.

      Brylee, beaming behind the thin fabric of her veil, nodded in response to something her brother whispered to her and they stepped forward.

      “Hold it,” Hutch heard himself say loudly enough to be heard over the thundering joy of the organ. He held up both hands, like a referee about to call a foul in some fast-paced game. “Stop.”

      Everything halted—with a sickening lurch.

      The music died.

      The bride and her brother seemed frozen in mid-stride.

      Hutch would have sworn the universe itself had stopped expanding.

      “This is all wrong,” he went on miserably, but with his back straight and his head up. It wasn’t as if he hadn’t broached the subject with Brylee before—he’d been trying to get out of this fix for weeks. Just the night before, in fact, he’d sat Brylee down in a vinyl upholstered booth at the Silver Lanes snack bar and told her straight out that he had serious misgivings about getting married and needed some breathing space.

      Brylee had cried, her mascara smudging, her nose reddening at the tip.

      “You don’t mean it,” she’d said, which was her standard response to any attempt he made to put on the brakes before they both plummeted over a matrimonial cliff. “You’re just nervous, that’s all. It’s entirely normal. But once the wedding is over and we’re on our honeymoon—”

      Hutch couldn’t stand it when a woman cried, especially when he was the cause of her tears. Like every other time, he’d backed down, tried to convince himself that Brylee was right—he just had cold feet, that was all.

      Now, though, “push” had run smack up against “shove.”

      It was now or never.

      He faced Brylee squarely.

      The universe unfroze itself, like some big machine with rusted gears, and all hell broke loose.

      Brylee threw down her bouquet, stomped on it once, whirled on one heel and rushed out of the church. Walker flung a beleaguered and not entirely friendly look in Hutch’s direction, then turned to go after his sister.

      The guests, already on their feet in honor of the bride, all started talking at once, abuzz with shock and speculation.

      Things like this might happen in books or movies, but they didn’t happen in Parable, Montana.

      Until now, Hutch reflected dismally.

      He started to follow Brylee out of the church, not an easy proposition with folks crowding the aisle. He didn’t have the first clue what he could say to her, but he figured he had to say something.

      Before he’d taken two strides, though, Slade and Boone closed in on him from either side, each taking a firm grip on one of his arms.

      “Let her go,” Boone said quietly.

      “There’s nothing you can do,” Slade confirmed.

      With that, they hustled him quickly out of the main chapel and into the small side room where the choir robes, hymnals and Communion gear were stored.

      Hutch wondered if a lynch mob was forming back there in the sanctuary.

      “You picked a fine time to change your mind about getting married,” Boone remarked, but his tone was light and his eyes twinkled with something that looked a lot like relief.

      Hutch unfastened his fancy tie and shoved it into one coat pocket. Then he opened his collar halfway to his breastbone and sucked in a breath. “I tried to tell her,” he muttered. He knew it sounded lame, but the truth was the truth.

      Although he and Slade shared a father, they had been at bloody-knuckled odds most of their lives. They’d made some progress toward getting along since the old man’s death and the upheaval that followed, but neither of them related to the other as a buddy, let alone a brother.

      “Come on out to our place,” Slade said, surprising him. “You’d best lay low for a few hours. Give Brylee—and Walker—a little time to cool off.”

      Hutch stiffened slightly, though he found the invitation oddly welcome. Home, being Whisper Creek Ranch, was a lonely outpost these days—which was probably why he’d talked himself into proposing to Brylee in the first place.

      “I have to talk to Brylee,” he repeated.

      “There’ll be time for that later on,” Slade reasoned.

      “Slade’s right,” Boone agreed. Boone, being violently allergic to marriage himself, probably thought Hutch had just dodged a figurative bullet.

      Or maybe he was remembering that Brylee was a crack shot with a pistol, a rifle, or a Civil War cannon.

      Given what had just happened, she was probably leaning toward the cannon right about now.

      Hutch sighed. “All right,” he said to Slade. “I’ll kick back at your place for a while—but I’ve got to stop off at home first, so I can change out of this monkey suit.”

      “Fine,” Slade agreed. “I’ll round up the women and meet you at the Windfall in an hour or two.”

      By “the women,” Slade meant his lovely wife, Joslyn, his teenage stepdaughter, Shea, and Opal Dennison, the force-of-nature who kept house for the Barlow outfit. Slade’s mother, Callie, had had the good grace to skip the ceremony—old scandals die hard in a town the size of Parable and recollections of her long-ago affair with Carmody Senior, from which Slade had famously resulted, were as sharp as ever.

      Today’s escapade would put all that in the shade, of course. Tongues were wagging and jaws were flapping for sure—by now, various up-to-the-minute accounts were probably popping up on all the major social media sites. Before Slade and Boone had dragged Hutch out of the sanctuary, he’d seen several people whip out their cell phones and start texting. A few pictures had been taken, too, with those same ubiquitous devices.

      The thought of all that amateur reporting made Hutch close his eyes for a moment. “Shit,” he murmured.

      “Knee-deep and rising,” Slade confirmed, sounding resigned.

      * * *

      KENDRA SAT AT the


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