Chapter One
"Matchmaker at two o'clock," Turner McBride said to his
brother Graham.
"Damn. Maybe if I don't make eye contact she'll go away."
"Doubtful. She's headed this way."
Clara Perkins, aka the Matchmaker, was a nice older lady but
for reasons unclear to Graham, she'd made it her mission in
life to find him a girl. Him and his brothers, Turner and
Spencer. But since he was the oldest of the McBride
brothers, she was focused on him. He could hear her saying
in her little-old-lady Texas drawl, "It's criminal that a
man—a doctor yet—of your age is still single. I've got just
the girl for you."
This was the latest in a seemingly endless line of women
she'd introduced to Graham. Every one of them had been just
the girl for him. At first he'd fought it, but eventually he
gave up. It was easier to make a date than to deal with
Clara's disappointment if he didn't. If they liked each
other, fine. If not, it was one date. Most of the women were
nice and he'd enjoyed them, but Clara had also picked a few
real stinkers.
"Who is it this time?" he asked his brother, still with his
back to the women.
"You're in luck. Clara's got Bella Benson with her."
"Bella Benson? Oh, the one who owns Bella's Salon on Main
Street?" Last Stand was a small town, so he knew who she
was, but they'd never actually met.
"That's the one. Don't worry, though." Turner gave him a
smart-ass grin. "I imagine you're too old for her," he said
before deserting him.
"Chicken," Graham muttered under his breath. Graham didn't
particularly like parties. He couldn't stand to make small
talk, which was also one of his problems with blind or
arranged dates. It was hard to have a decent conversation
with a woman you hardly knew. Nine times out of ten, if he
didn't bring a date, he'd get cornered by someone wanting to
set him up with yet another woman. And he didn't want to ask
a woman out simply to discourage the matchmakers. It made
him feel like a wuss.
But Minna Herdmann's birthday bash was a command
performance. Every year on April 7, Last Stand, Texas,
hosted a birthday party for its oldest resident. This was
the seventh year the one-hundred-two-year-old matriarch had
been honored in that manner. Everyone in town was invited
and most of them attended or at least dropped in to wish
Minna happy birthday.
"Graham," he heard Clara call out.
Resigned, Graham turned around to greet Clara and her latest
protégé. He could always pretend to get a call from the
hospital. After all, no one needed to know that he wasn't
actually on call today.
And then he saw her. Momentarily dumbstruck, Graham stared
at the vision standing in front of him. Her blonde hair was
long, falling well past her shoulders, with part of it
pulled back in a braid with gold beads threaded through it.
And it was streaked with rainbow colors. Rainbows. Pastel
colors of turquoise, pink, purple, pale green, blue, and of
course, blonde. It should have been hideous, or at the
least, strange, but it wasn't. Oddly enough, it suited her.
But then, she was a good ten years or more younger than him
and very pretty, to boot.
Then he realized Clara had the identical hairstyle and dye
job, except her hair was pale silver and not as long. And
streaked with rainbow colors. Wow.
At least they weren't dressed alike.
Clara wore a pink dress with ice cream cones on it. Large
ice cream cones.
Bella wore a sleeveless rainbow-colored minidress in the
same pastel colors as her hair, turquoise cowboy boots on
her feet and lots of bangles on her arms. She looked good.
No, she looked hot. The thought disconcerted him a little
but there was no denying that from the tips of her
rainbow-colored hair to the soles of her fancy turquoise
cowboy boots, Bella Benson was smokin'.
"Graham, here's someone I want you to meet," Clara said.
His gaze collided with Bella's. She didn't look nervous or
ill at ease. Maybe she was as accustomed as he was to
Clara's machinations. She smiled at him. Damn, she had a
dynamite smile. Why had he never really noticed her before?
Because she's way too young for you, dumbass.
"Mrs. Perkins, how are you?" he asked, managing to collect
himself.
"Now, Graham, you know I've asked you to call me Clara a
million times. And I'm as fine as can be expected at my age.
Though Minna's got several years on me and look at her," she
said, waving a hand in the honoree's direction. The
matriarch sat under a huge awning on the patio of the
Carriage House restaurant, also one of the oldest fixtures
of Last Stand. Minna waved back, in the regal, old-fashioned
way she had, prompting a smile from Graham. She wore a pale
blue dress and her silver hair was braided and wrapped
around her head in a style that had no doubt been popular
almost a century ago when Minna was a young woman.
Taking Bella's arm, Clara tugged her forward. "Bella, this
is Graham McBride. He's a doctor at the hospital. He's a
fancy kind of specialist. Something to do with hearts.
Graham," she continued, "this is Bella Benson. She owns the
beauty shop on Main."
"It's nice to meet you," Graham said, offering his hand.
She took his hand in a firm grip and smiled that beautiful
smile again. Her eyes were brown. Luscious, chocolate brown,
like that of a sweeter-than-sin candy bar. "Nice to meet
you, too."
Her voice was husky, with more of a drawl than a twang. He
was intrigued, and growing more so, in spite of his
irritation at being railroaded by Clara once again.
"I'm going to talk to Minna," Clara announced. "Bella,
you're a sweetheart. It's been fun being twins," she said
with a twinkle in her faded blue eyes. "I may be back in
before long to have you do something permanent in the color
department."
"Any time, Clara." She smiled at the older lady and watched
her go. Then she turned to Graham and said, "Number fourteen."
Graham blinked. "Excuse me?" What the hell did that mean?
"You're the fourteenth man Clara's introduced me to. And
judging from your expression when you first turned around,
I'm guessing I'm about number forty-five of the women she's
introduced to you."
He stared at her for a minute, then threw back his head and
laughed. "I didn't realize I was so obvious. As to the
number, I stopped counting a long time ago."
"Ah, but you've known her longer than I have."
"True. Clara was one of my father's patients before he
retired." He steered her toward a table, guiding her away
from the center of the patio.
The Carriage House, both indoors and out, was decked out in
balloons, streamers, flowers and Texas memorabilia. Chairs
and tables of all sizes were spread out over the flagstone
patio, and music played softly from outdoor speakers. Graham
congratulated himself on scoring one of the last remaining
tables with a little shade.
"You realize Clara is going to immediately announce to all
her friends that she is the matchmaker supreme," Bella said,
taking a seat.
"No harm in that." Not exactly true. If Clara thought she'd
finally found him a girl he liked, he'd never live it down.
Then again, maybe she'd quit throwing women at him.
Bella nodded in Clara's direction. "She's already at it. See
her talking to Mrs. Herdmann?"
"Mrs. H is the guest of honor. That doesn't mean they're
talking about—" He broke off as both ladies turned to stare
right at them with wide smiles. Clara even winked.
Bella laughed. "Don't worry. They'll forget all about us
once they realize we aren't going out together."
"You're probably right," he said. "But what if we do go out
together?"
Bella crossed her legs, showing a stretch of shapely, tanned
leg when her dress rode up a little. "Why, are you asking me
out?"
"Yes," he said. "Can I take you to dinner Saturday night?"
"That depends."
"On what?"
"Are you asking because you want to go out with me? Or are
you asking because it's easier to go along with Clara than
to fight her?"