Marrying Molly

Marrying Molly

by Christine Rimmer
Marrying Molly

Marrying Molly

by Christine Rimmer

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Overview

Marrying Molly by Christine Rimmer released on Sep 24, 2004 is available now for purchase.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781426862236
Publisher: Silhouette
Publication date: 05/01/2010
Series: Bravo Family Ties , #2
Sold by: HARLEQUIN
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
Sales rank: 285,578
File size: 661 KB

About the Author

A New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author, Christine Rimmer has written more than a hundred contemporary romances for Harlequin Books. She consistently writes love stories that are sweet, sexy, humorous and heartfelt. She lives in Oregon with her family. Visit Christine at www.christinerimmer.com.

Read an Excerpt

Marrying Molly


By Christine Rimmer

Harlequin Enterprises, Ltd.

Copyright © 2004 Harlequin Enterprises, Ltd.
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0-373-24639-0


Chapter One

"Tate. Wake up, Tate."

Sound asleep, Tate Bravo heard the taunting whisper. He knew the voice. Molly. Damn her. What right did she have to come creeping into his dreams?

And why so often? Seemed like not a night went by that she didn't appear to torment him.

"Hey. Pssst. Tate ..."

With a groan, Tate pulled a pillow over his head.

"Go 'way, Molly," he muttered, still half-asleep.

"Get outta my dreams ..."

"Tate Bravo, wake up."

Tate opened his eyes under the pillow. He blinked.

"Molly?" He tossed the pillow away and sat up. The window opposite the foot of the bed was open, letting in the warm wind from outside. And Molly O'Dare sat in the leather-seated rocker in the corner, not far from that open window.

"Huh?" Tate squinted into the darkness, still not quite believing it could really be her. But it was. Molly O'Dare, big as life and twice as exasperating. Even through the shadows, with all her clothes on, he knew the shape of her and couldn't mistake the wheat-gold gleam to her hair or the velvety curve of her baby-soft cheek. Her perfume came to him on the night breeze; flowers and musk all mingled together in a scent that seemed specifically created to drive a man wild.

Tate indulged in a slow, knowing smile. "Well, well. Look who's here." He thought a few things he had the good sense not to say. Things like, Couldn't stay away, could you? and I knew you'd be back.

But no. He wasn't going to gloat, at least not out loud. He'd missed having her warm, soft body beside him in bed. Missed it a lot - much more than he ever intended to let her know. Now that she was finally here, he wasn't doing anything to send her off in a snit.

Keeping his mouth firmly shut, he helpfully held back the covers so she could climb in bed with him where she belonged.

"Fat chance," she muttered. Her tone was not the least bit lustful.

Irritation borne of frustrated desire sizzled beneath his skin. But he didn't let her rile him. Not this time. Calm as you please, he gave her a shrug and tucked the blanket back in place. "Then if you don't mind my asking, what the hell are you doing in my bedroom at -" he paused to peer at the bedside clock "- two in the morning?"

Molly, in a short skirt and a tight-fitting white top that seemed to gleam in the darkness, rocked back in the chair. She crossed those beautiful legs and folded her hands in her lap. "I've got ... news, I guess you could say."

Though he was known to be tougher than a basket of snakes, at that moment, Tate Bravo felt the cold kiss of dread at his cheek and a kind of creepy hollow feeling in the pit of his stomach. If Molly had news for him, it probably wouldn't be good.

Tate speared his fingers through his sleep-scrambled hair and let out a low growl of pure suspicion. Why the hell was she here? His best guess, being as how a little hot sex seemed ruled out, was that she must have come up with some new way to rescue the needy - at great expense to the town coffers, of course.

As he had a million times in the past six months, Tate cursed the day Molly managed to get herself elected mayor of his town. It was the women who'd done it. They all hung out at Molly's beauty shop. When she'd decided to run for mayor, they rallied around her, making it possible for her to claim fifty-four percent of the vote.

If you asked Tate, Molly's mayorship had been a disaster from the get-go. To Tate's mind - and to the minds of every other red-blooded businessman and responsible citizen in town - Molly O'Dare had been the worst thing to happen to Tate's Junction, Texas, since a disgruntled contingent of Comanche warriors on the run from the Oklahoma reservation took over the place for three days back in 1886.

It was a problem of comprehension, Tate thought. Molly refused to comprehend the way things worked.

She insisted on thinking independently. A very bad choice, as everyone knew that the job of mayor required no thinking at all. It was so simple. Tate Bravo, like his grandfather before him, decided what needed doing. Tate informed the mayor and the town council. They voted as per his instructions. And Tate got what he wanted for the town's betterment.

It had always been done that way.

Until Molly.

From her first town council meeting, Molly refused to do things the way they'd always been done. Molly thought independently and came up with a lot of very bad ideas. When Tate wanted a bond issue, she wanted a sales tax increase. When Tate proposed a plan to improve parking access on Center Street, Molly fought him tooth and nail. Making it easier for the townsfolk to spend money on Center Street could wait, she said, brown eyes flashing, those gorgeous full breasts of hers stuck out high and proud. Oh, no, she'd insisted. Top priority should be putting her plan in place for indigent and shut-in care.

Truth was, Tate had his head screwed on straight when it came to what was best for the Junction - and Molly didn't. Sure, he was all for helping out the needy. But the priority had to be supporting what kept any town running: business and commerce. Molly, a businesswoman herself, ought to have known that. But as mayor, she'd been all heart and no sense, and that was a plain fact.

Tate had been seething with fury since the day she won that damned election. And since their constant head-butting struck sparks in more ways than one, he'd also burned to get her into bed.

And he did get her into bed - a few months back. For a marvelous and thoroughly stimulating three weeks, that ripe, lush body of hers was his. In bed, he ruled her. However, once on her feet and wearing her clothes, Molly O'Dare continued to be the usual sharp thorn in his side.

Tate leaned forward a little, straining to see her better. No doubt about it. Tonight, those amber-brown eyes had a strange light in them - determined and angry at the same time. Not good.

"I have debated," she continued bleakly, "debated for a couple of weeks now, whether to tell you this. I don't want to tell you this. But I can't see any way around it in the end, being as how this is not something that I plan to hide. And since you're bound to know eventually, I've decided you might just as well know sooner as later. You can start getting used to it. You can start figuring out how you plan to deal with it - because, one way or another, you are going to be dealing with it."

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Marrying Molly by Christine Rimmer Copyright © 2004 by Harlequin Enterprises, Ltd.. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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