Written in the Stars Read online
Table of Contents
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
Epilogue
Written in the Stars
A Small-Town Bachelor Romance, special Christmas edition
Abby Knox
Copyright © 2017 by Abby Knox
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Publisher’s Note: This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are a product of the author’s imagination. Locales and public names are sometimes used for atmospheric purposes. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, or to businesses, companies, events, institutions, or locales is completely coincidental.
Edited by Aquila Editing
Cover Designer: Mayhem Cover Creations
Dedicated to my crazy redhead. Everything is a little less fun without you and your smart-ass remarks. I wish you could have been here for selfies, Instagram, old people on Facebook, Gilmore Girls, LOST, The New Girl, and all kinds of other amazing shit. And mostly, for every Christmas since you went to the stars.
Contents
Written in the Stars
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
Epilogue
An excerpt from Abby’s next title, Coming in January 2018
About the Author
Also by Abby Knox
Written in the Stars
A Small-Town Bachelor Romance, special Christmas Edition
By Abby Knox
Nobody puts cowboy Devin Halpert in the corner office. But on the day his new assistant arrives, he rethinks his reluctance to hang up the saddle. Baby it’s cold outside, but it sure feel warm when she’s around.
Down-on-her-luck Claire Davids is juggling a job search, caring for her younger siblings and trying to lay low from her secret past. She hopes a quiet life in a sleepy little town will keep things even and steady, until she meets her new boss and everything changes. Holiday sparkle and the warmth from the flirtatious and gracious Devin are forcing her to let her guard down and give in to happiness. But will he judge her when her secret comes to light?
Chapter 1
Devin
“You cannot be serious.”
Devin Halpert looked at his older sister’s completely serious face on his phone screen. “I need you to do this for me, Devvy. You owe me.”
“Have I not done a good job running the ranch?”
Wynn nodded. “Yes, you have. You’ve got the entire operation running like a well-oiled machine. And I appreciate you starting at the bottom just like everybody else. But now we’re in an emergency situation and I need you to helm the regional office for a while, just until things calm down.”
“Sis, come on, you know I ain’t an office person. I don’t know how to keep books and do payroll and shit.”
“There are people at the office who do that job. You wouldn’t need to do that.”
“Well, Winnifred, what would I be doing exactly?”
Devin was literally sitting on the back of a horse at the moment, having just corralled their prize bulls for their regular duties of producing specimens for WX Genetics. It was November and his fingers were freezing now that Wynn’s stupid phone call had made him remove his work gloves. He should maybe invest in those dopey gloves that he could use with his phone while outside in this weather. Wait a minute, he hated phones. No way was he getting any of that pretty-boy bullshit.
He watched the sun rise on the eastern horizon, the Mississippi in the far distance making a purple cloud display in the sky. The pasture grass glowed with frost. Everything was fresh. He had his coffee. On any other morning like this, the only other soul he talked to was his horse and the cows and the bulls and maybe the calves.
Devin didn’t do FaceTime. He definitely didn’t do FaceTime with his sister. And he certainly did not do it at work.
Especially when she was in such a pissy mood. “Don’t call me that, please. Just Wynn, thank you. And to answer your question, you would just be the figurehead at the local level. You have to go to events, meet with investors. Make appearances at Rotary lunches, the bingo hall. Reassure our big clients that everything is going to be fine. Do the community stuff. You know, all the stuff that Peter did.”
Devin sipped his coffee and studied the sunrise. “I wouldn’t know. Peter was a dick; I didn’t have much use for him.”
Wynn laughed a knowing laugh. “Well, if we’d all been paying more attention to Peter, this may have never happened. Well, it may have, but not to this degree.” Peter had been the regional vice president for WX Genetics since Wynn opened the branch here in Iowa. He had recently been arrested for stealing money from the company. Wynn had found out Peter had been quoting a higher product price to clients, then pocketing the difference once the company was paid. In addition, he’d been using his company credit card for family vacations under the guise of business trips.
The horse knew the morning drill almost better than Devin did and trotted along the fence line to check the perimeter. WX Genetics ran a pretty tight ship. “Sis, I cannot help it you hired a moron.”
“That’s just the problem. He was not a moron. He stole money from us. A lot of money. Our investors are nervous. This is going to hurt us for a long time, and what’s worse, I was considering going public. That’s between you and me.”
“I do not know what any of that means, but OK.”
Wynn laughed. “I love you, Devvy. See, that’s why you’re perfect to fill in in the meantime. And also you don’t have a choice.”
“Well, who the hell is going to run the ranch? You got another one of our foster siblings to pull out of your magic hat?”
She sighed. “No, dummy. I’ve got a connection at the community college. We’re going to turn it into a work study for the ag students. We’re going to pay them to run it with a little direction from one of the fourth-years who’s set to graduate soon. In fact, when this stint is over I’m going to hire him to be in charge of our new lab in Colorado.”
All Devin heard was the phrase, “a little direction.” He was pretty sure he knew what that meant. “You think the ranch is gonna run itself? That’s cute, Wynn. Thanks a lot.”
His sister and her lack of patience ended the debate. “I’m done talking about this. You report to the office in two hours.”
And then she hung up.<
br />
Fuck.
Two hours? He thought maybe she had meant next week. He didn’t even have time to get a suit and tie, or get the cow shit smell out of his clothes after the morning chores were done. Could he at least wear a hat to the office?
As he finished his chores that morning, he wondered exactly how much this was going to suck, being stuck inside. Especially in the winter. He loved being outside in the ice and snow. He especially did not want to be in an office at Christmastime and all that entailed.
Two hours later, he found out just how bad this was going to suck.
As soon as he stepped in the foyer, he was miserable. This building was too small for Devin Halpert. He had a corner office, with a window overlooking the sad-looking parking lot. He couldn’t even see the cows from here. He wanted to boot somebody in the ass for this. But since he was not prone to lay hands on women, he certainly wasn’t going to start with his boss.
Wynn was not, biologically, his sister. She was his older foster sister who had agreed to give him a job when he had stumbled onto her doorstep, fresh from rehab.
He started out shoveling shit, fixing fences, clearing brush. Then moved up to collecting bull semen. Not awesome, but easy, as the electronic attachment did most of the work. And it was at least more or less outside and didn’t involve too much human contact.
Over the years, he had worked his way up to ranch manager. The ranch hands were easy to work with. They either did the work or they were fired. That was easy enough for Devin to handle.
Office people seemed more complicated. They whined a lot more. They couldn’t handle rough talk. They didn’t like the temperature to be too cold or too hot. They argued about birthday cake flavors.
Yes, everything Devin knew about office culture was from the American version of The Office.
He stared out the office door and watched all the action. Trouble was, there really wasn’t much action at all.
There was Dorothea, his assistant. There was the accounting department. Snooze. There was a receptionist, who answered the phones, and there was also an office administrator.
He had no idea how all these people had different jobs.
If Wynn was so worried about money, maybe he didn’t need an assistant, and the office administrator and the receptionist could just be one person.
Devin had jokingly floated this idea that morning during his introductory meeting, and that had started him off on the wrong foot right away with his new staff.
At the time, he didn’t understand why his assistant, Dorothea, had arranged for such a pointless meeting in the first place.
Devin had swaggered in two minutes late, reeking of cow shit and sweat, in dirty jeans and shitkickers, and crammed one of the Boston creme donuts in his face that had been arranged with precision on the conference room table before he took his seat.
He noticed the staff—all ladies—exchanged looks with each other.
“Hey, guys.” He nodded at everybody, his mouth full.
They were polite as they watched him eat and plop down in his chair. They all said their names, and he did that thing that Wynn had taught him to do, which was repeat everyone’s names back to them. It was one of those business tricks he thought was stupid, but in this scenario, it actually worked. Good thing, too, because there was no way he would have been able to recall anybody’s names, not when they all resembled his high school guidance counselors. In fact, he was pretty sure that the office administrator, Cora, actually might have been his guidance counselor at Middleburg High School.
“Cora, you look familiar,” he said through a second mouthful of donuts.
She smiled painfully and politely. “Yes, sir, I was your English teacher.”
He grinned as the light dawned on him. “Oh yeah! I remember you now! What are you doing here?”
She grimaced. “I was retired, but I decided to go back to work.”
He laughed, “Here?”
The woman all looked at each other. They certainly did that a lot around here, he thought, exchanged looks with each other after every time he opened his mouth.
Cora cleared her throat. “It’s complicated. I care for my grandchildren now.”
He sensed it was time to change the subject.
“So, yeah, Wynn asked me to fill in here for a while. I’m Devin. I’ll be your cruise ship captain for the next…uh…few months, I guess? I don’t know, Wynn didn’t say. Anyway, I’m probably not going to be spending a whole lot of time here in the office, because it looks like you guys all run a pretty tight ship already.”
They all stared. God, this was torture. When cows stare like that it doesn’t mean anything. When people stare it means something, but fuck if he knew what it meant.
“Great! Thanks for the meeting. Great donuts. Hawk’s? They’re the best. So I’ll check back in after a while. I’m going to go home and take a shower. I’ll check back in after lunch!”
He stood to leave, but Dorothea interrupted him.
“Actually, you have a meeting in ten minutes.”
“Oh, I do? With who?”
His assistant smiled graciously. “Well, honey, I’m retiring. You’re interviewing applicants today.”
Shit. “Oh. Well, how many?”
Dorothea passed him a blue folder across the conference table. “Five. Here are the résumés.”
“Well, Dorothea. I surely have no idea what yardstick to use to decide who to hire for this job. Maybe you could handle it?”
“Sir? This person is going to be your personal assistant. You can’t expect me to decide. This person has to mesh with you, not me. With all due respect.”
Finally, somebody who spoke plainly.
“Got it. Well, I honestly don’t mesh with most people, so this should be fun.”
She smiled with even more graciousness. “You’ll be fine, dear.”
Well, he was now wishing Dorothea would stay, because she seemed like the most genuinely nice person here. “What can I pay you to not retire?” he said.
“Well, after everything that’s gone on in the last few weeks…police interviews, all of it. It’s just too much for me, so it’s time to move on. I’m going to be spending a lot more time with my grandkids.”
Then she looked at Cora. “Sorry, Cora.”
Cora looked unfazed. “No need to apologize.”
Devin did not know what that side conversation was about and he really didn’t want to know.
“One other thing,” Dorothea said. “Tonight is the lighting of the town Christmas tree on the square. You need to be there to do the honorary ceremonial lighting.”
“I ain’t gonna have time for that.”
“It’s one of those things your sister always made sure was on Pete’s agenda. It’s good for WX Genetics to be seen doing these little community things.”
“Sure, fine. But it ain’t even Thanksgiving yet! It won’t take long, will it?”
“Well, dear, you have lived here all your life, surely you’ve been to the annual lighting of the tree. There’s a cookie baking contest, an ornament making station. There’s a cider stand to raise funds for one thing or another. I believe this year it’s to help replace the planters along the creekside walking path downtown. I hear it’s going to be very pretty. And then, of course, the unveiling of the Helping Star Tree.”
“What’s that?” He was utterly confused.
“It’s the tree they put up by Mason’s General Store, where you choose a star that represents a local family in need. People adopt the families to provide Christmas gifts to the children. Tonight is the biggest night for that, because this is when most of the stars get picked up. Wait too long, and you get stuck with a star that has five or more kids who need coats.”
Some of the workers chuckled and exchanged glances.
This look was something he finally understood. “Our mama never picked up any of those stars, because she was usually the one with five or six foster kids in need of new coats and not enough money from the st
ate to cover it. But she managed, with or without the help of people who didn’t want to give it.”
A more awkward silence he could not have fashioned if he’d suddenly dropped his drawers and did a striptease on the conference table.
“Fine,” he said. “I’ll go, but I ain’t staying for no ornament making or whatever.”
Devin ended the meeting and Dorothea showed him into his office.
And that was where he sat and had been thinking about kicking his sister Wynn right in the corn hole.
He was absolutely the most wrong person he could think of to sit in an office.
Ranch hand interviewing was pretty easy. There was no, “What are your strengths and weaknesses?” It was mostly, “Can you pick up a shovel? Are you afraid of a charging bull? Can you dodge a kick? Are you able to sign this release form? If you answered yes to all these questions, you’re hired.”
Ten minutes into his colossal boredom, the first assistant applicant walked into his office. And this particular applicant changed Devin’s entire opinion about working in an office by 180 degrees.
“Hi, I’m Claire Davids.” The most intense green pair of female eyes was staring expectantly at him. Hair the color of the night sky intoxicated him. Speaking of 180 degrees, that would match his temperature as he took in the sight of this applicant’s body, her curves hugged in a tailored green dress suit more lovely than the hills he gazed at every morning.
A moment later—he didn’t know how long—she cocked her head and asked if he was all right. Devin quickly shook the cobwebs out of his head and realized he’d been staring dumbly while she had extended her hand. “Yes. Sorry, you are my new assistant?”