Read Cowboy Cool: Book 5 (Cowboy Justice Association) Online

Authors: Olivia Jaymes

Tags: #Romance, #Western

Cowboy Cool: Book 5 (Cowboy Justice Association)

Cowboy Cool

Cowboy Justice Association
Book Five

By Olivia Jaymes

www.OliviaJaymes.com

COWBOY COOL

Copyright © 2014 by Olivia Jaymes

Kindle Edition

E-Book ISBN: 978-0-9907996-0-3

Print ISBN: 978-0-9907996-1-0

Cover art by Sloan Winters

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED:
The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by up to 5 years in federal prison and a fine of $250,000.

All characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead is strictly coincidental.

Table of Contents

Title Page

Copyright Page

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

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-One

Epilogue

About
Cowboy Command

About
Justice Healed

About
Cowboy Truth

About
Cowboy Famous

About
Cowboy Cool

About
The Deputies

About the Author

Chapter One

R
eed Mitchell turned his truck into the quiet, middle class neighborhood and suppressed the urge to gun the engine loudly, just to rile up the residents a bit. It was clear it wasn’t that kind of place with its manicured green lawns, box-shaped hedges, and cookie-cutter homes all painted various shades of beige. He refused to think that people had actually chosen these colors of their own free will.

Driving slowly down the sunny street with the window down to let in the crisp autumn air, he shuddered inwardly at the thought of living here—like this. The houses were too close together and the conformity too rigid. Reed wasn’t the biggest fan of society telling him how to act, think, or feel. Especially feel. So far in the last fifteen years or so he hadn’t felt anything really and it was working out well. Not giving a shit about almost everything made his life much easier and stress-free than the alternative.

The only thing he ever worried about was the safety of his town, and he took that very seriously indeed. So seriously he hadn’t taken a vacation in over five years, a little tidbit of information the new mayor had come across and almost stroked out over. Now here Reed was on a forced holiday from the only thing he cared about and at the same time doing a favor for one of his best friends. Life was a merciless bitch with a strange sense of humor.

He pulled into the driveway of 1309 Violet Road and reached under his leather jacket to his shirt pocket and pulled out the folded scrap of paper. Ava Wright, Logan’s wife, had written down the address and he matched it to the house numbers on the mailbox before he pounded on the wrong door.

A quick glance told him he had the correct house, and if he played his cards right he could be out of here and back on the road toward his real destination in a couple of hours. Not that he was all that excited about Florida. He’d chosen the destination because he had a buddy there and it sounded like a place people went on vacation.

He pressed the doorbell and waited on the porch where the homeowner had placed terra cotta pots of bright red and yellow flowers. Reed didn’t know shit about horticulture so they could have been tulips or roses or maybe something else for all he knew, but they managed to brighten up the deadly dull facade of the home and personalize it just a little. The door swung open and a pretty but frowning woman with auburn hair stood there clad in jeans and a black t-shirt with white lettering that read “Writers Do It With Imagination”.

Yep, he was at the right place. According to Ava, her friend Kaylee Blue was also an author.

“Kaylee?” he queried. “I’m Reed Mitchell. Ava sent me.”

Her knitted brow immediately smoothed and she stepped back with a sigh. “Hello. I guess you better come in. I told Ava that she didn’t need to do this. I’m fine. Really.”

“I’m sure you are,” he replied smoothly, hoping it was true. The more fine Kaylee was the sooner he would be on his way to his friend’s place in Vero Beach. Reed stepped through the doorway and into her living room. “Why don’t you tell me what’s been going on? Ava said you’ve received some disturbing emails.”

Whatever Reed had been expecting the inside of Kaylee Blue’s home to look like based on the dreary exterior, those thoughts were blown completely out of the water. The large great room that encompassed the living, dining, and kitchen space was a tasteful riot of color and bold personality. A bright red couch and loveseat with gold striped throw pillows were placed in front of a stone fireplace complete with photos and flowers on the mantel. The furniture was a dark cherry and the lighter maple flooring gleamed in the light of the old-fashioned ceiling fan whirring above the room. Everywhere he looked there were plants, paintings, and an entire wall of floor to ceiling books.

His own home in Montana was a bastion of bachelorhood with Spartan furnishings and the requisite big-ass flat screen television that he hardly ever watched. He was too busy working.

“Please sit down.” She indicated the sofa and Reed lowered himself into the comfortable cushions. “Can I get you anything? Ava said you were on vacation and headed down to Florida. Have you been driving all morning?”

He had actually and his throat was parched. “I wouldn’t mind something to drink. I’ve been on the road since dawn.”

Kaylee bustled into the kitchen that opened onto the living room and peered into the refrigerator. “I have milk, ginger ale, water, and iced tea. With sugar.”

Reed liked the sound of her voice, soft and a little husky but still firm and sure. So many women seemed to make everything sound like a complaint or a catastrophe. Or maybe it was just the ones he came across as a peace officer. He didn’t meet people on their best days for the most part.

“Ginger ale, thank you.” He noticed the kitchen was well-equipped with everything a foodie would love. At one point he’d dated a professional chef so he knew quality when he saw it. “Do you like to cook?”

Her eyebrows shot up as she handed him a glass and sat opposite on the loveseat. “How on earth did you know that? Do I have part of my lunch on my shirt?”

Kaylee looked down with a scowl and brushed at her clothes.

“I’m a cop. It’s my job to notice things. You have a six burner gas stove with a double oven, a marble-topped island the size of your sofa, and a set of copper pots. You either like to cook or you want people to think you like to cook.” He took a sip of the ginger ale and tried not to notice how her t-shirt pulled tightly across her full breasts when she moved. She wasn’t very tall but was extremely curvy. Reed had never liked the stick-figure look so many females starved themselves for. A woman was supposed to have boobs and an ass. “So I’d like to get a look at those emails if you don’t mind.”

Kaylee folded her hands in her lap, her expression conflicted and a little stubborn. “There’s really nothing to see. I told Ava that when I talked to her yesterday and again this morning. I’ve received nasty emails before. Not everyone is going to like what an author writes. You have to have a thick skin in this business. Ava gets them too, just not this type.”

“What type would that be?” If Reed didn’t see these emails for himself he’d never hear the end of it from Logan, and Logan would never hear the end of it from Ava. So Reed needed to see the damn emails.

“The ‘you’re going to burn in hell’ emails.” Kaylee shrugged as if getting them was an everyday occurrence. “Ava doesn’t get those like I do.”

Reed scowled as he studied the woman’s body language. She didn’t seem upset in the least which was strange. At least to him it was. “Why would someone send you something like that? Is your work controversial?”

Maybe she wrote political or religious stuff. That could get a crowd twisted into knots pretty quickly and without much trying.

Her cheeks flushed a pretty pink and she looked down at her fingers, now twisted in her lap. “I write erotic romance. The sex can be—how do I say this—quite graphic in my books. I don’t use euphemisms.”

This was a fascinating turn. Reed loved books but he had never ventured into what he considered to be women’s territory—romance. But if they had hot sex then he might just make an exception.

“I’m not sure what you mean by euphemisms.” He knew what the word meant, he simply wasn’t sure why this was so different than other books.

Kaylee shifted uncomfortably on the couch cushion and looked up at him. “What I mean is I don’t use flowery language—purple prose, so to speak—for body parts. I use–” she broke off, obviously noticing his ever-widening grin and groaned in exasperation. “For heaven’s sake, grow up.”

“Sorry, I just don’t think I’ve ever read a book like that,” Reed countered, not feeling remorseful in the least. The girl could probably dish it out as well he could given half the chance based on how she’d come right back at him. “Listen, I’m sorry about that. So you write some sexy stuff and every now and then someone takes offense. They shoot off an email telling you that you’re tunneling your way straight to hell to sit at the right hand of Lucifer. Is that about right?”

“That’s it.” Kaylee nodded in agreement, her temper already calmed. She didn’t appear to hold a grudge. “I get them from time to time.”

“But Ava’s freaked out about these emails,” Reed observed. “What’s different?”

“Other than her pregnancy has put her on bed rest and she’s bored as hell? I have no idea,” Kaylee declared. “She’s letting her rioting hormones rule her common sense. Logan should run for the hills while he can.”

Reed couldn’t argue with that sound logic but also knew his long-time friend wouldn’t do it. Logan Wright was so damn in love with Ava he’d do anything to make her happy, especially now that she was stuck in bed all day awaiting the birth of their twins. That’s why Reed was here, after all. Ava was worried about Kaylee and Logan was stuck in Montana dealing with his wife. Getting drafted for this assignment had been inevitable.

“Nothing else?” he pressed. “Same old, same old?”

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