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 Creed's Honor
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    Dear Reader,
   Welcome to the second of three books starring twin Creeds Conner and Brody, and their cousin, Steven—relatives of the Montana Creeds and the McKettricks. Now Steven has settled down in Stone Creek, Arizona, with a ranch, an adopted five-year-old son and a new bride, Melissa. Back in Lonesome Bend, Colorado, where Steven and the twins were raised as brothers, the lovely Tricia McCall catches Conner’s eye. Will he be able to resist her charms? Or can this rancher tame himself into a happy domestic life with a beautiful bride of his own?
   I also wanted to write today to tell you about a special group of people with whom I’ve become involved in the past couple of years. It is The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), specifically their Pets for Life program.
   The Pets for Life program is one of the best ways to help your local shelter—that is, to help keep animals out of shelters in the first place. Something as basic as keeping a collar and tag on your pet all the time, so if he gets out and gets lost, he can be returned home. Being a responsible pet owner. Spaying or neutering your pet. And not giving up when things don’t go perfectly. If your dog digs in the yard, or your cat scratches the furniture, know that these are problems that can be addressed. You can find all the information about these—and many other common problems—at www.petsforlife.org. This campaign is focused on keeping pets and their people together for a lifetime.
   As many of you know, my own household includes two dogs, two cats and six horses, so this is a cause that is near and dear to my heart. I hope you’ll get involved along with me.
   With love,
   Praise for the novels of Linda Lael Miller
   “[Miller] is one of the finest American writers in the genre.”
   —RT Book Reviews
   “Completely wonderful. Austin’s interactions with Paige
   are fun and lively and the mystery…
   adds quite a suspenseful punch.”
   —RT Book Reviews on McKettricks of Texas: Austin
   “Miller is the queen when it comes to creating sympathetic,
   endearing and lifelike characters. She paints each scene so
   perfectly readers hover on the edge of delicious voyeurism.”
   —RT Book Reviews on McKettricks of Texas: Garrett
   “A passionate love too long denied drives the action
   in this multifaceted, emotionally rich reunion story
   that overflows with breathtaking sexual chemistry.”
   —Library Journal on McKettricks of Texas: Tate
   “All three titles should appeal to readers who like their
   contemporary romances Western, slightly dangerous, and
   graced with enlightened (more or less) bad-boy heroes.”
   —Library Journal on the Montana Creeds series
   “[Miller] paints a brilliant portrait of the good,
   the bad and the ugly, the lost and the lonely, and the
   power of love to bring light into the darkest of souls.
   This is western romance at its finest.”
   —RT Book Reviews on The Man from Stone Creek
   “Linda Lael Miller creates vibrant characters
   and stories I defy you to forget.”
   —#1 New York Times bestselling author Debbie Macomber
   LINDA LAEL MILLER
   CREED’S HONOR
   Also available from
   LINDA LAEL MILLER
   and HQN Books
   The McKettricks of Texas
   McKettricks of Texas: Tate
   McKettricks of Texas: Garrett
   McKettricks of Texas: Austin
   The McKettricks series
   McKettrick’s Choice
   McKettrick’s Luck
   McKettrick’s Pride
   McKettrick’s Heart
   A McKettrick Christmas
   The Montana Creeds series
   Logan
   Dylan
   Tyler
   A Creed Country Christmas
   The Mojo Sheepshanks series
   Deadly Gamble
   Deadly Deceptions
   The Stone Creek series
   The Man from Stone Creek
   A Wanted Man
   The Rustler
   The Bridegroom
   The Creed Cowboys
   A Creed in Stone Creek
   Coming soon
   The Creed Legacy
   To some of my favorite Laels:
   Mike and Sara and Courtney and Chandler
   CREED’S HONOR
   CONTENTS
   CHAPTER ONE
   CHAPTER TWO
   CHAPTER THREE
   CHAPTER FOUR
   CHAPTER FIVE
   CHAPTER SIX
   CHAPTER SEVEN
   CHAPTER EIGHT
   CHAPTER NINE
   CHAPTER TEN
   CHAPTER ELEVEN
   CHAPTER TWELVE
   CHAPTER THIRTEEN
   CHAPTER FOURTEEN
   CHAPTER FIFTEEN
   CHAPTER SIXTEEN
   CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
   CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
   CHAPTER NINETEEN
   EPILOGUE
   CHAPTER ONE
   Lonesome Bend, Colorado
   TRICIA MCCALL WAS NOT THE TYPE to see apparitions, but there were times—especially when lonely, tired or both—that she caught just the merest flicker of a glimpse of her dog, Rusty, out of the corner of one eye. Each time that happened, she hoped for the impossible; her heartbeat quickened with joy and excitement, and her breath rushed up into the back of her throat. But when she turned, no matter how quickly, the shepherd-Lab-setter mix was never there.
   Of course, he wasn’t. Rusty had died in his sleep only six months before, contented and gray-muzzled and full of years, and his absence was still an ache that throbbed in the back of Tricia’s heart whenever she thought of him. Which was often.
   After all, Rusty had been her best friend for nearly half her life. She was almost thirty now, and she’d been fifteen when she and her dad had found the reddish-brown pup hiding under a picnic table at the campground, nearly starved, flea-bitten and shivering.
   She and Joe McCall had debugged him as best they could, fed him and taken him straight to Dr. Benchley’s office for shots and a checkup. From then on, Rusty was a member of the family.
   “Meow,” interrupted a feline voice coming from the general vicinity of Tricia’s right ankle.
   Still wearing her ratty blue chenille robe and the pink fluffy slippers her best friend, Diana, had given her for Christmas many moons ago as a joke, Tricia looked down to see Winston, a black tom with a splash of white between his ears. He was a frequent visitor to her apartment, since he lived just downstairs, with his mistress, Tricia’s great-grandmother, Natty. The separate residences were connected by an inside stairway, but Winston still managed to startle her on a regular basis.
   “Meow,” the former stray repeated, this time with more emphasis, looking earnestly up at Tricia. Translation: It’s cat abuse. Natty McCall may look like a harmless old woman, but I’m being starved, I tell you. You’ve got to do something.
   “A likely story, sardine-breath,” Tricia replied, out loud. “I was there when the groceries were delivered last Friday, remember? You wouldn’t go hungry if we were snowed in till spring.”
   Winston twitched his sleek tail in a jaunty, oh-well-I-tried sort of way and crossed the small kitchen to leap up onto Tricia’s desk and curl up on a tidy stack of printer paper next to the keyboard. He watched Tricia with half-closed amber eyes as she poured herself a cup of coffee and meandered over to boot up the PC. Maybe there would be an email from Hunter; that would definitely lift her spirits.
   Not that she was down, exactly. No, she felt more like someone living in suspended animation, a sort of limbo between major life
 events. She was marking time, marching in place. And that bothered her.
   At the push of a button, the monitor flared to life and there it was: the screensaver photo of her and Hunter, beaming in front of a ski lodge in Idaho and looking like—well—a couple. Two happy and reasonably attractive people who belonged together, outfitted for a day on the slopes.
   With the tip of one finger, Tricia touched Hunter’s square-jawed, classically handsome face. Pixels scattered, like a miniature universe expanding after a tiny, silent big bang. She set her cup on the little bit of desk space Winston wasn’t already occupying and plunked into the chair she’d dragged away from the dinette set.
   She sat very still for a moment or so, the cup of coffee she’d craved from the instant she’d opened her eyes that morning cooling nearby, her gaze fixed on the cheerfully snowy scene. Big smiles. Bright eyes.
   Maybe she ought to change the picture, she thought. Put the slide show of Rusty back up. Trouble was, the loss was still too fresh for that.
   So she left the ski-lodge shot where it was. She and Hunter had had a good thing going, back in Seattle, in what seemed like a previous lifetime now even though it had only been a year and a half since the passion they’d been so sure they could sustain had begun to fizzle.
   As soon as she sold the failing businesses she’d inherited when her dad died—the River’s Bend Campground and RV Park and the decrepit Bluebird Drive-in theater at the edge of town—she could go back to her real life in the art world of Seattle. Open a little gallery in the Pike Place Market, maybe, or somewhere in Pioneer Square.
   Beside her, Winston unfurled his tail so the end of it brushed the back of Tricia’s hand, rolled it back up again and then repeated the whole process. Gently jolted out of her reverie, she watched as wisps of black fur drifted across her line of vision and then settled, with exquisite accuracy, onto the surface of her coffee.
   Tricia shoved back her chair, the legs of it making a loud, screeching sound on the scuffed linoleum floor, and she winced before remembering that Natty was out of town this week, visiting her eighty-nine-year-old sister in Denver, and therefore could not have been disturbed by the noise.
   Muttering good-naturedly, she crossed to the old-fashioned sink under the narrow window that looked out over the outside landing, dumped the coffee, rinsed the cup out thoroughly and poured herself a refill.
   Winston jumped down from the desktop, making a solid thump when he landed, as he was a somewhat rotund fellow.
   Leaning back against the counter, Tricia fortified herself with a couple of sips of the hot, strong coffee she knew—even without Natty’s subtle reminders—she drank too often, and in excessive quantities.
   Winston had been right to put in his order for breakfast, she reflected; it was her job to feed him and empty his litter box while her great-grandmother was away.
   “Come on,” she said, coffee in hand, heading toward the doorway that led down the dark, narrow stairs to Natty’s part of the house. “I wouldn’t want you keeling over from hunger.”
   You’re not even thirty, commented a voice in her head, and you’re talking to cats. You seriously need a life.
   With a sigh, Tricia flipped on the single light in the sloping ceiling above the stairs and started down, careful because of Winston’s tendency to wind himself around her ankles and the bulky slippers, which were a tripping hazard even on a flat surface.
   Natty’s rooms smelled pleasantly of recent wood fires blazing on the stone hearth, some lushly scented mix of potpourri and the lavender talcum powder so many old ladies seemed to favor.
   Crossing the living room, which was stuffed with well-crafted antique furniture, every surface sporting at least one intricately crocheted doily and most of them adorned with a small army of ornately framed photographs as well, Tricia smiled. At ninety-one, Natty was still busy, with friends of all ages, and she was pretty active in the community, too. Until the year before, she’d been in charge of the annual rummage sale and chili feed, a popular event held the last weekend of October. Members of the Ladies’ Auxiliary—the organization they’d been auxiliary to was long defunct—donated the money they raised to the local school system, to be used for extras like art supplies, musical instruments and uniforms for the marching band. And while Natty had stepped down as the group’s chairperson, she attended every meeting.
   Natty’s kitchen was as delightfully old-fashioned as the rest of the house—although there was an electric stove, the original wood-burning contraption still dominated one corner of the long, narrow room. And Natty still used it, when the spirit moved her to bake.
   Without the usual fire crackling away, the kitchen seemed a little on the chilly side, and Tricia shivered once as she headed toward the pantry, setting her coffee mug aside on the counter. She took a can of Winston’s regular food—he was only allowed sardines on Sundays, as a special treat—from one of the shelves in the pantry, popped the top and dumped the contents into one of several chipped but still beautiful soup bowls reserved for his use.
   Frosty-cold air seemed to emanate from the floor as she bent to put the bowl in front of him. Tricia felt it even through the soles of those ridiculous slippers.
   While Winston chowed down, she ran some fresh drinking water and placed the bowl within easy reach. Then, hugging herself against the cold, she glanced at the bay windows surrounding Natty’s heirloom oak table, half expecting to see snowflakes drifting past the glass.
   A storm certainly wouldn’t be unusual in that part of Colorado, even though it was only mid-October, but Tricia was holding out for good weather just the same. The summer and early fall had been unusually slow over at the campground and RV park, but folks came from all over that part of the state to attend the rummage sale/chili feed, and a lot of them brought tents and travel trailers, and set up for one last stay along the banks of the river. The modest fees Tricia charged for camping spots and the use of electrical hookups, as well as her cut of the profits from the vending machines, would carry her through a couple of months.
   Some benevolent soul could still happen along and buy the properties Joe had left her, but so far all the For Sale signs hadn’t produced so much as a nibble.
   Tricia sighed, watched Winston eat for a few moments, then started for the stairs. Yes, it was early, but she had a full workday ahead over at River’s Bend. She’d already let the seasonal crew go, which meant she manned the registration desk by herself, answering the phone on the rare occasions when it rang and slipping away for short intervals to clean the public showers and the restrooms. After the big weekend at the end of the month, she would shut everything down for the winter.
   A lump of sadness formed in Tricia’s throat as she climbed the stairs, leaving the door at the bottom open for Winston as she would the one at the top. As a child, she’d loved coming to River’s Bend for the summers, “helping” her dad run the outdoor theater and the campground, the two of them boarding with Natty and a series of pampered cats named for historical and/or political figures the older woman admired.
   One had been Abraham; another, General Washington. Next came a redoubtable tabby, Laurel Roosevelt, and now there was Winston, for the cigar-smoking prime minister who had shepherded England through the darkest hours of World War II.
   Tricia was smiling again by the time she reached her own kitchen, which was warmer. She was about to sit down at the computer again to check her email, as she’d intended to do earlier, when she heard the pounding at the back door downstairs.
   Startled, Winston yowled and shot through the inside doorway like a black, furry bullet, his trajectory indicating that he intended to hide out in Tricia’s bedroom, under the four-poster, maybe, or on the high shelf in her closet.
   Once, when something scared him, he’d climbed straight up her living room draperies, and it had taken both her and Natty to coax him down again.
   The pounding came again, louder this time.
   “Oh, for pity’s sake,” Tricia grumbled, employing a phrase she
’d picked up from Natty, tightening the belt of her bathrobe and moving, once more, in the direction of the stairs. She followed the first cliché up with a second, also one of Natty’s favorites. “Hold your horses!”
   Again, the impatient visitor knocked. Hard enough, in fact, to rattle every window on the first floor of the house.
   A too-brief silence fell.
   Tricia was halfway down the stairs, steam-powered by early-morning annoyance, when the sound shifted. Now whoever it was had moved to her door, the one that opened onto the outside landing.
   Murmuring a word she definitely hadn’t picked up from her great-grandmother, Tricia turned and huffed her way back up to her own quarters.
   Winston yowled again, the sound muffled.
   “I’m coming!” she yelled, spotting a vaguely familiar and distinctly masculine form through the frosted glass oval in her door. Lonesome Bend was a town of less than five thousand people, most of whom had lived there all their lives, as had their parents, grandparents and great-grandparents, so Tricia had long since gotten out of the habit of looking to see who was there before opening the door.
   Conner Creed stood in front of her, one fist raised to knock again, a sheepish smile curving his lips. His blond hair, though a little long, was neatly trimmed, and he wore a blue denim jacket over a white shirt, along with jeans and boots that had seen a lot of hard use.
   “Sorry,” he said, with a shrug of his broad shoulders, when he came face-to-face with Tricia.
   “Do you know what time it is?” Tricia demanded.
   His blue eyes moved over her hair, which was probably sticking out in all directions since she hadn’t yet brushed and then tamed it into a customary long, dark braid, her coiffure of choice, then the rag-bag bathrobe and comical slippers. That he could take a liberty like that without coming off as rude struck Tricia as—well—it just struck her, that’s all.
   “Seven-thirty,” he answered, after checking his watch. “I brought Miss Natty a load of firewood, as she wanted, but she didn’t answer her door. And that worried me. Is she all right?”
   

Angelfire
Moonfire
The Yankee Widow
The Cowboy Way
Country Strong--A Novel
Forever and a Day
The Black Rose Chronicles
Montana Creeds: Logan
My Darling Melissa
Skye
McKettricks of Texas: Tate
Springwater Seasons
A Lawman's Christmas
Sierra's Homecoming
Parable, Montana [4] Big Sky Summer
One Last Weekend
A Stone Creek Collection, Volume 2
Tonight and Always
Fletcher's Woman
A Snow Country Christmas
The Last Chance Cafe
The Man from Stone Creek
Wanton Angel
McKettricks of Texas: Garrett
Memory's Embrace
McKettrick's Luck
Pirates
Big Sky River
Willow: A Novel (No Series)
The McKettrick Legend: Sierra's HomecomingThe McKettrick Way (Hqn)
Glory, Glory: Snowbound with the Bodyguard
Two Brothers
Deadly Deceptions
Big Sky Secrets
Garrett
A Creed in Stone Creek
Megan
McKettricks of Texas: Austin
Knights
High Country Bride
More Than Words Volume 4
Glory, Glory
Daring Moves
Lily and the Major
Courting Susannah
Banner O'Brien
Big Sky Mountain
Linda Lael Miller Bundle
McKettrick's Pride
A Stone Creek Collection Volume 1
A Wanted Man
Big Sky Country
The McKettrick Legend
Christy
McKettrick's Heart
Resurrection
Arizona Heat
Secondhand Bride
Snowflakes on the Sea
Montana Creeds: Tyler
CAROLINE AND THE RAIDER
A Proposal for Christmas: State SecretsThe Five Days of Christmas
Yankee Wife
Linda Lael Miller Montana Creeds Series Volume 1: Montana Creeds: LoganMontana Creeds: DylanMontana Creeds: Tyler
The Christmas Brides
McKettricks Bundle
The Rustler
Here and Then
Only Forever
Once a Rancher
The 24 Days of Christmas
Big Sky Wedding
Emma and the Outlaw
Princess Annie
Wild About Harry
That Other Katherine
A Lawman's Christmas: A McKettricks of Texas Novel
Just Kate: His Only Wife (Bestselling Author Collection)
The McKettrick Way
Part of the Bargain
Taming Charlotte
Holiday in Stone Creek
One Last Look
Always a Cowboy
Batteries Not Required
A McKettrick Christmas
For All Eternity
The Marriage Season
Corbin's Fancy
The Creed Legacy
Springwater Wedding
Deadly Gamble
Austin
Creed's Honor
A Creed Country Christmas
Escape from Cabriz
There and Now
The Bridegroom
State Secrets
Bridget