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He's heartsick and battle-weary.Maverick Carson returned home from war with too much pain and not enough honor. Searching for a way to forgive and forget, he quits The TEAM and starts walking. He's made it to Wyoming when the sight of a pretty girl riding a massive draft horse steals his breath. After the hillside beneath the horse gives way, Maverick rushes straight into the world of China Wolf, the headstrong owner of the Wild Wolf Ranch and the finest Percherons in the country. She doesn't need a man in her life.Never has. Never will. China Wolf has responsibility enough between the rowdy…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
He's heartsick and battle-weary.Maverick Carson returned home from war with too much pain and not enough honor. Searching for a way to forgive and forget, he quits The TEAM and starts walking. He's made it to Wyoming when the sight of a pretty girl riding a massive draft horse steals his breath. After the hillside beneath the horse gives way, Maverick rushes straight into the world of China Wolf, the headstrong owner of the Wild Wolf Ranch and the finest Percherons in the country. She doesn't need a man in her life.Never has. Never will. China Wolf has responsibility enough between the rowdy horses she loves, the wayward sister she tolerates, and the precocious niece she adores. Besides, Maverick's made it clear he'd rather hit the road than hang around. Why should she care what he does or where he goes? She doesn't, not until she glimpses the cowboy beneath the angst. Maybe she does need a man.Just. This. One.
Autorenporträt
Irish Winters is a best-selling author of military romance who, when she isn't writing, dabbles in poetry, grandchildren, and rarely-as in extremely rarely-the kitchen. More prone to be outdoors than in, she grew up the quintessential tomboy on a dairy farm in rural Wisconsin, spent her teenage years in the Pacific Northwest, but calls the Wasatch Mountains of Northern Utah, home. For now. She believes in making every day count for something, and follows the wise admonition of her mother to, "Look out the window and see something!"