Wild Heart
On a struggling California ranch, a woman’s heart is awakened in the arms of an untamed man in this captivating and sensual historical romance.
 
California, 1872. Julia Larson has devoted her life to helping her aging father manage the family ranch and pick up the pieces of her sister’s reckless life. The last thing she’s concerned about is her own heart. She can’t imagine anyone desiring a selfless spinster like her  . . .
 
Raised in the wild, Wolf McCloud isn’t the type to stick around. Having traced the mother who abandoned him to Northern California, he never expects to be drawn to the gentle purity of Julia Larson. But a stunning request from Julia’s dying father puts the two on a path neither can resist . . .
 
“Jane Bonander reaches to her readers’ hearts.” —RT Book Reviews
1000370970
Wild Heart
On a struggling California ranch, a woman’s heart is awakened in the arms of an untamed man in this captivating and sensual historical romance.
 
California, 1872. Julia Larson has devoted her life to helping her aging father manage the family ranch and pick up the pieces of her sister’s reckless life. The last thing she’s concerned about is her own heart. She can’t imagine anyone desiring a selfless spinster like her  . . .
 
Raised in the wild, Wolf McCloud isn’t the type to stick around. Having traced the mother who abandoned him to Northern California, he never expects to be drawn to the gentle purity of Julia Larson. But a stunning request from Julia’s dying father puts the two on a path neither can resist . . .
 
“Jane Bonander reaches to her readers’ hearts.” —RT Book Reviews
8.49 In Stock
Wild Heart

Wild Heart

by Jane Bonander
Wild Heart

Wild Heart

by Jane Bonander

eBookDigital Original (Digital Original)

$8.49  $8.99 Save 6% Current price is $8.49, Original price is $8.99. You Save 6%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

On a struggling California ranch, a woman’s heart is awakened in the arms of an untamed man in this captivating and sensual historical romance.
 
California, 1872. Julia Larson has devoted her life to helping her aging father manage the family ranch and pick up the pieces of her sister’s reckless life. The last thing she’s concerned about is her own heart. She can’t imagine anyone desiring a selfless spinster like her  . . .
 
Raised in the wild, Wolf McCloud isn’t the type to stick around. Having traced the mother who abandoned him to Northern California, he never expects to be drawn to the gentle purity of Julia Larson. But a stunning request from Julia’s dying father puts the two on a path neither can resist . . .
 
“Jane Bonander reaches to her readers’ hearts.” —RT Book Reviews

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781626810327
Publisher: Diversion Books
Publication date: 02/06/2019
Series: The Wolf McCloud Novels , #2
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
Sales rank: 464,885
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Jane’s first historical romance, Secrets of a Midnight Moon, was heralded as ‘sensitive and sensuous, violent and tender.’

“I found the plot to my first novel in a little known history of Northern California Indians when I learned that Native Americans were being taken as slaves by the settlers, their families threatened with death and dismemberment if they tried to leave. Yes, one can weave a romance around such an appalling event!”

Since then she has published nine full length novels and four anthologies, all dealing with the perils and passions of romantic historical fiction. 

She graduated from the University of Minnesota majoring in American and Russian History revealing that, “while all of my stories are set in the US, I had hoped one day to set one in Russia, though in my opinion, the best ones have already been written.”

Jane continues to write and also edits for Melange Books. She currently lives in St. Paul, Minnesota with her husband, Richard Noer.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

1

In the shadow of the Devil Mountain

October 1872, California

Disreputable. Dangerous.

Those were the words that had come to Julia's mind weeks before, when she'd first glimpsed the new man her father had hired. Now, as Wolf McCloud disappeared into the barn, those words rang in her ears again.

It had been a mistake to employ him, but her father wouldn't have believed her even if she had expressed her misgivings to him. She couldn't claim that the man didn't work. He was the best man they'd ever hired. It was all those other things about him that bothered her every waking minute. Who was she kidding? He'd even begun to invade her dreams.

She glanced at baby Marymae, who kicked happily on a blanket nearby, then leaned on her hoe, unable to get the man out of her mind. Disreputable. Dangerous. Even that very first day, she'd read him like one reads a book.

Inky hair to his shoulders and dark, dusky skin that hinted at his Indian blood. Cheekbones sharp enough to cut glass. The flash of white teeth behind a cocky smile. His blue eyes, rimmed in brown, hinted at an impulsiveness that wasn't safe to trust. When he sat astride his stallion, arrogant and bold, his hips and thighs moved rhythmically, suggestively, with the horse's gait. The name ... Wolf ... was fitting in its texture, for it conjured up further wariness in those wise enough to sense it.

Yes, she'd read him like a book. Unfortunately, it was not the kind of book a decent young woman should read, although Josette devoured them like berries and sweet cream. If they had been fattening, her sister would be enormous.

Wolf McCloud emerged from the barn and strode toward Julia, appearing every bit as malevolent as a dime-novel villain. Her pulse quickened and she lowered her head, hiding her face beneath the brim of her father's battered hat. She hacked away at the dirt around her pole beans with a vengeance.

"Well, good morning, Miss Julia."

Lord, even the sound of his voice was indecent, sending tattletale shivers over her flesh. "Good morning." Her answer was abrupt.

"You're looking especially lovely today. Not many women could wear that getup and still look like a woman."

She tensed against his mockery, knowing full well how she looked in her father's old woolen trousers and oversized shirt.

"Save your breath, Mr. McCloud. Your glib tongue does nothing for me." She wasn't as easily bamboozled as her sister. Josette fawned and preened around him like a fool. Sadly, that was her normal behavior around all men.

"Ah, lovely Julia, you have no idea what my tongue could do for you."

The innuendo sent a rush of blood to Julia's cheeks, and her heart pounded foolishly. She wondered again, for the umpteenth time, why he'd been hired. She also wondered why she didn't report his insolence to her father.

"And please," he added, his voice smooth as whiskey, "as long as our tongues have become so intimate, why don't you call me Wolf?"

In spite of the blush that prickled her neck, she stopped working and looked up, catching the smile that tugged at his lean, sensuous lips. Wolf, indeed. A preposterous name for any man but this one.

"Why, I've made you blush." He sounded pleased.

"Don't flatter yourself. I know your kind well, Mr. McCloud. You're certain your shocking mouth will make a woman clasp her hands to her bosom and swoon. I find it in poor taste and, much as you'd like to think so, not the least bit provocative."

"I see." He studied her, his face thoughtful but his eyes dancing with danger. "But you've used the words mouth ... bosom ... and taste ... all in one sentence, Miss Julia. Now who's being provocative?"

Her traitorous nipples tightened beneath her shirt. It was the way he'd drawn the words out, that's all. She had no control over her body, but she certainly had control of her own mind. With the hoe gripped in her fists, she dug fiercely at the dirt. "I will not give you the satisfaction of continuing this ridiculous verbal sparring, Mr. McCloud. I have work to do. I'm sure you do, too."

He leaned close and pulled the brim of her hat up so he could look at her. "But it's not verbal sparring, Miss Julia."

"Well, please entertain me with your vast knowledge of words, Mr. McCloud. What else would you call it?"

He gave her a lusty, sin-filled smile. "Why, verbal intercourse, naturally."

She felt the words as though they were fingers, stroking the fires of her latent desires. With the utmost effort, she bent to her task again, more to keep him from seeing the effect his words had on her than anything else. She knew that beneath her prim exterior was a darker side. A side that was drawn to the danger this man exuded. A side I will keep hidden until I take my last breath on this earth, so help me God.

Marymae let out a baleful cry, jerking Julia out of her foolish musings. She dropped the hoe and hurried to the blanket, lifting the baby into her arms. When she turned, Mr. McCloud was still standing on the other side of the garden.

"Pretty baby. A girl, right?"

Julia looked into Marymae's big, blue eyes, a trait both she and Josette shared. Now, at two and a half months of age, her fair hair had golden highlights, like Josette's rather than Julia's own, which reminded her more of wheat than of a precious metal. "Yes, she is pretty. But surely, Mr. McCloud, you didn't come over here just to accost me with words or admire the baby. What do you want?"

His eyes always held a hint of something besides the mockery that was always there. She refused to look too deeply, for she might see it — that elusive, unspoken invitation that she'd met up with before in another man, and had foolishly answered.

He pulled his bandanna off and wiped his face, then snaked the cloth inside his shirt collar and wiped his neck. The shirt gaped, exposing a hard, bare chest, sleek with sweat. Julia's mouth went dry.

"Is your sister around?"

Her spine stiffened automatically, and she put Marymae on the blanket. Her conversations with men always came around to Josette. "She's in the house." Probably reading one of those dreadful novels, Julia thought, her lips pursing. Josette was always in love with the idea of being in love, and those novels fed her foolish fantasies.

"Ah. Do I detect a note of disapproval? Or maybe it's jealousy. You want me all to yourself, is that it?"

"Don't be a fool. If it were up to me —" She stopped, warmth flooding her. If it were up to her, she'd fire buckshot into his retreating behind.

"If it were up to you — what, Miss Julia? What would you do with me?"

Never in her life had she met a man as bold and outrageous as this one. His very existence made her life miserable. He was a threat to her sanity, even if he only invaded her mind ... and her dreams.

"What I would do with you is against the law, Mr. McCloud."

He tugged playfully at the brim of her hat and smiled that smile again. "Sounds ... provocative." How glibly he threw her word back into her face! "Would I enjoy it?"

"I doubt it." She gave him a secret smile of her own. "But I would."

He threw his head back and laughed, a sound that sent her blood racing again. "I'm sorry we have to stop this verbal intimacy, Miss Julia, but I am looking for your sister. She has requested my services this morning, and your father approves."

Oddly, he often sounded so ... civilized, as if there were another man imprisoned inside this one, screaming to get out. She pursed her lips again, cursing her thoughts. It was only her imagination; he was what he appeared to be and nothing more.

McCloud studied her. "But I can see that you don't approve, Miss Julia."

"You can bet I don't, Mr. McCloud. I can think of many things you could be doing rather than entertaining my sister."

"Like, entertaining you?"

She nearly snorted. "It'll be a cold day in hell before that happens."

She returned to the garden and bent to her task again, grateful her face was hidden beneath her floppy-brimmed hat. She couldn't understand why Papa gave Josette permission to take the ranch hands away from important work just to ferry her about. He didn't seem to realize that Josette needed protection from men like Wolf McCloud. Not that it would do any good; Josette always found a way to disregard propriety and do what she pleased.

"Anyway, Josette has work to do," she lied. "I'd rather you didn't disrupt her routine."

"And, her routine would be ..." He paused, waiting for her to explain. Even without looking at him she noted the skepticism in his voice.

"Her routine is none of your concern, Mr. McCloud. Just take my word for it."

Behind her, she heard the door open. Josette's tinkling voice followed. "Good morning, Mr. McCloud. Were you looking for me?"

As usual, Josette sounded cheerful and ready to face the world, so long as the world revolved around her.

Julia continued working on the garden, gripping the hoe handle hard as she attacked the dirt around the squash. Josette invited the advances of men, pirouetting and dancing for them. Julia drove them away, thrusting and parrying her tongue like the sharp blades of a shiv. She hadn't always been that way. She'd been a much softer woman once — before Marymae's father swaggered into their lives. Sometimes she wanted to blame Josette for everything, but Josette was exactly what she and Papa had made her: frivolous, selfish, and unconcerned with anyone's needs but her own.

"Yes, ma'am. You wanted me to drive you to that patch of gooseberries, remember?"

Julia felt a stab of anger. Gooseberries, indeed. Lord only knew what they would do when they got there.

"Oh, piffle, Mr. McCloud, don't call me ma'am. Save that word for Julia. Call me Josette. Please." She gave him a dimpled smile. "I've even brought a basket for the berries. See?"

Julia turned to watch her sister, whose innocent beauty went no deeper than the skin. At times like this, when she desperately wanted to see Josette's flaws, she could find none. On the outside, Josette was lovely. Even in her plain blue calico, she was a vision. Her golden hair caught the sunlight, causing her to appear utterly angelic. Which was not possible, given Josette's weakness for men.

Julia sighed, dropped the hoe between the rows of squash and went to pick up Marymae, who was fussing again. It was time for her nap, which was the perfect excuse to escape into the house. Julia couldn't stop what she certain would happen, anyway. Not this time. But she sure as hell could prevent it from happening again. She would see to Mr. McCloud's termination when her father came in for lunch.

"Why don't you and the baby join us, Miss Julia?"

The invitation came as such a surprise, she almost choked on her tongue. "Don't be ridiculous. I don't have time to —"

"Oh, poor Julia never lets herself have any fun," Josette interrupted. "She never learned how."

The resentment that Julia was usually able to suppress flooded her, and she felt a sick knot of anger unravel in her chest. Flinging her sister a veiled look of hostility, she answered, "Marymae must be fed, then put down for a nap. I hardly have time to go gallivanting around the countryside, looking for gooseberries."

"Another time, then, Miss Julia."

Although she didn't hear any sarcasm in his words, Julia refused to look at him, for she knew she'd see it in his eyes. That, or gratitude that she wouldn't be intruding on their little twosome.

"Josette," she called, "be back before lunch."

"Oh." Josette's delicate hand flew to her mouth. "Lunch. I should have thought to have Julia pack us one, Mr. McCloud."

Julia rested Marymae against her shoulder and rolled her eyes to the heavens as she walked to the house. It would never dawn on Josette that if she wanted to go on a picnic, she could pack the lunch herself. Julia wanted to blame Papa for her sister's behavior, but she knew she had to take part of the responsibility for it herself.

"I'm afraid I have work to do this afternoon, Miss Josette," McCloud said. "I can't be gone too long."

"Oh, pooh," Josette answered, making a moue. "I'd hoped we could spend the day together."

Wolf McCloud actually chuckled. "As entertaining as that sounds, Miss Josette, I wasn't hired to be your escort."

Julia paused on the porch, taking her time, hoping to catch the rest of the conversation. She knew exactly what would happen if her sister and that ... that rake-hell spent too much time together. She was afraid it might already be too late.

"Oh, but Papa would let you spend the day with me if I asked him," she said, her voice sweetly seductive.

Julia could stand it no longer. "Josette!" She turned and glared at her sister. "Mr. McCloud has to drive a load of walnuts into Walnut Hill this afternoon. He is not here as your personal companion."

Josette bit down on her lower lip and gave Julia one of her practiced looks of injury. She even had tears in her eyes. "Don't shout at me, Julia, dearest. Please, don't shout."

Julia took a deep breath and shook her head. "Just ... just don't be gone too long, all right?" She eagerly escaped into the house to prepare lunch for Marymae.

But once inside, she crossed to the window and watched the buggy move away, Josette clinging possessively to Wolf McCloud's hair-dusted forearm. Her stomach pitched downward, and she knew her worries were well founded.

She moved quietly around the kitchen, mulling over how she would approach Papa about her fears. She didn't think she was jealous or selfish. In spite of what had happened between her and Josette, she considered herself quite generous.

But if Papa allowed Wolf McCloud to stay, Julia was certain that in nine months, perhaps even less, she would have another baby to care for. And that one wouldn't be hers, either.

"Papa, Mr. McCloud is a dangerous kind of man to have around." Julia had met her father at the washstand on the back stoop when he'd come in for lunch. She wanted to speak with him before Josette returned.

"Well, dang it, Julia. He's a good worker. I hate to have to let him go. He's the best man I've ever hired."

"Hired hands are more plentiful than you think." She wasn't nearly as certain as she sounded.

"I think you got him all wrong, honey. He's not —"

"Papa," she interrupted, "if we don't let him go, we'll go through hell again when Josette has to face another birthing."

Her father frowned and shook his head. "I think you're wrong about him, Julia."

"Papa." Her voice was stern, brooking no nonsense.

"What'll I tell him?"

"Oh, I don't know." She tried to quell her impatience. "Does it matter? Papa, something has to be done. I don't know what." She'd thought of trying to get Josette to use measures to keep from getting pregnant, but that was like telling her it was all right to do ... what she did. Julia felt tears of frustration sting her eyes. "We've got to do something, Papa. Things just can't continue this way. She's ... she's becoming a tramp."

Julia watched the emotions flick over her father's face, knowing he was trying to find the solution himself. She should have been angry with him for the way he pampered and protected Josette. At times she was, but she was to blame, too. And she'd never really fought with Papa before. His life was hard enough. Instead, she'd stood by and watched her sister become a pretty, but useless, appendage to the family.

Josette had Papa wrapped around her little finger. It had been that way ever since their mother died. He could deny her nothing, but in doing so, he'd led her to believe that the only things that were important were her own selfish needs. Heaven forbid that she should have any responsibilities, Julia thought peevishly.

"Don't defame your sister, Julia."

"Defame her? Papa, she does that well enough all by herself. She doesn't need my help. Have you forgotten about Marymae?"

He cleared his throat and wiped his hands and face on a towel. "Nobody knows about that but the three of us —"

"Oh, Papa. Surely you don't believe that no one knows what happened?"

His frown was filled with more sorrow than anger. "Why, nobody's said nothin' to me."

Julia forced down her impatience. "Just where do you suppose they think the baby came from? That she just fell from the sky? That the stork dropped her on the way to someone else's house?"

"Now, no need gettin' sarcastic," he answered with a weary sigh.

Julia pressed her fingers against her eyes. "Papa, we don't live in the middle of nowhere. People notice things like brand-new babies."

"Yeah, I suppose they do. I'm just glad no one's asked me about it. I wouldn't know what to tell them."

"The truth might be nice." She was unable to curb her sharp tongue.

"Oh, but to have people think my little Josie —"

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Wild Heart"
by .
Copyright © 1995 Jane Bonander.
Excerpted by permission of Diversion Publishing Corp..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews