Author Archive : J. B. McDonald

I woke up this morning not thinking about hunky cowboys and gorgeous cowgirls, not thinking about injured horses and healing bodies and hearts, and completely unaware that I had a novel coming out today. Yeah, you read that right. Somehow, I’d written the date down wrong—I thought Second Hope was coming out NEXT week! My great-aunt used to say, “If my brain weren’t locked inside, I’d take it out and play with it!” and sometimes I think I inherited that trait! Luckily, I have great people who congratulate me when a new book comes out, and again luckily, I checked my email this morning!

Alas, coffee had to come much later than usual, and Bobby Da Bird didn’t get fed until this afternoon, but he didn’t seem to mind! He got a whole strawberry to himself to make up for it. (When the strawberry is almost twice the size of your head, you can forgive lots of things!)

Plus, there were some good points about this! For instance—Second Hope came out today! There is no bad in that!

I really enjoyed the writing of this novel, especially since most of the horse stories I used were true stories, though the location of the horses changed. Oh yeah, did I mention? It takes place at a horse rehab facility. I’m not sure it gets better than that… ;) Plus, I’m in love with both the hero and the heroine. And the blind horse. And the horse with the cracked canon bones. And DEFINITELY with General and Kahaia and Beauty and Emma… I think I’d better move on to the blurb and the excerpt. ;) And since you can get an official excerpt on the page here, I’ll pull an unofficial one for this blog post! You can also see lots more goodies and notes at JBMcDonald.com, in case you want more!

Without further ado (there’s been plenty!), let’s start with the blurb…

An injured horse. A wary woman. Healing them could cost his heart.

Nat Jackson knows what she’s good at: healing horses. Relationships? She learned about the price of those from her mother. When Cole Masterson shows up at her Second Hope ranch with a bad shoulder and a lame horse, she’s more than willing to treat the animal. But his money comes with a catch—he insists on staying at the ranch while his horse undergoes treatment.

The horse, she can handle. Resisting the man…that’s a complication she doesn’t need.

Money is no object when it comes to his horses, and Cole knows Second Hope offers the best in equine rehab. He hadn’t counted on Nat’s fractured heart awakening his desire to mend it. Her skills have his horse on the fast track to health, though. There’s not much time to work his way through her defenses before it’s time to leave.

Nat has no intention of getting her hopes up only to have them dashed. Cole’s already thrown his heart over the fence—and he has no choice but to follow it in pursuit of the woman of his dreams.

Excerpt!

Cole followed suit, swinging one-handed down off his mount and awkwardly tying a loose knot in the split reins. He looped them under the pommel of the saddle, then through the gullet and around the horn, making sure Taylor had enough rein to reach the short grass. “Will they wander off?”

“I doubt it.” Nat’s eyes flicked up across the field. “Jasmine won’t. If Taylor does, I can use her to round him up. We’ll just have to watch that he doesn’t head out to eat the long hay.”

Cole nodded. With a bit still in his mouth, getting hay caught around it and down his throat was a vague possibility. After a moment’s thought Cole led the horse between the boulders, down into the shade under the great oaks, and released him there. The boulders and trees made a natural pen, and the soft grass would hopefully keep Taylor from becoming too interested in leaving. He watched the gelding closely for a minute, finally relaxing when the animal headed toward Jasmine and together they began to graze.

Only then did Cole take a good look at where Nat had brought them. The trees shaded the little glen, cutting the heat by half. Boulders climbed from the detritus of many seasons, stark and white against the green. Light filtered through, softened by the foliage but still casting them in full daylight. It was far from a forest, but compared to the surrounding desert, it was Eden.

“This is amazing.” His voice fell quietly, careful not to drown out the hesitant bird song, the humming of bees nearby. He looked around for the hive, but didn’t spot it. He guessed it was high in one of the gnarled oaks.

“The sprinklers help it along, of course. I’m sure it wouldn’t be nearly so green without them. But it’s pretty, isn’t it?” Nat smiled, looking up and around.

Cole’s gaze landed on her. She was looking about as if seeing a treasured friend, gaze light with joy. The filtered sunshine poured over her, making sweat-damp skin glow, creating soft shadows in the curves of her body, the planes of her stomach. Her tank top was snug, outlining the heavy curve of her breasts and the long lines of muscle down her torso. Jeans hung low on her waist, a leather belt with a silver buckle accentuating the swell of her hips.

Streaks of dirt smeared one arm and shavings pooled near her ankles, in the folds of her jeans. Her scuffed boots had mud caked on the heels. Her nails were dirty, and her black hair had escaped from its braid, clinging to the long line of her neck.

“It’s beautiful.” Cole smiled softly.

Nat glanced at him. The moment of realization when she knew he’d been watching her was plain. She laughed quietly and looked away, wandering off toward the nearest oak. “I’ve always liked this place. When I first started the ranch I’d come out here just to get away. Clear my head. See something alive and growing, rather than the horses that needed so much help. Out here, nothing needed me like that.” She glanced back, one hand spread on the trunk. “We got a lot of wrecks, in those days. We couldn’t afford the best of anything yet, and a lot of the horses were rescues. A lot of them couldn’t be saved.”

He didn’t know what to say, so he simply remained quiet.

She looked at the tree, head tipping back as she gazed upward into its branches, chin tucking as she lowered her face, tracing the line of the trunk back down to her hand. Her thumb rubbed over a scar in the bark, and she smiled faintly. “This was the first horse we managed to pull through. Just Aaron and I then—he was a snot-nosed little punk trying to get as far from his family as he could without leaving the horse world. Blue mohawk and stoned every night. And then we healed King, and something about that healed Aaron.” Her smile grew, blooming across her face. “He called his parents that night. He’d run away when he was sixteen, and it was the first time he’d spoken to them in five years.”

“Maybe he just needed to know he could do something good without them.” Cole could remember the first time he’d succeeded at a job without standing on his father’s or brother’s shoulders. It had been liberating. For the first time, he’d felt grown up.

He wondered, suddenly, if Nat had ever been a child in that way. If she’d ever had shoulders to stand on. “Your grandmother helped you with this place, didn’t she?”

Nat shrugged. “She gave me the money. When she died, she left me the rest. I think she was trying to keep my mother from having it. They never spoke. My grandmother didn’t approve of my father, whether or not he was a doctor.” Her smile was bitter. “She had more sense than my mother did.”

Cole wandered closer, lifting his good hand to brush it over the wooden scar she kept fingering. The bark was paler here, and there was a line of smaller scratches, a few inked lines from a marker, some dates. “Are these all the horses you’ve helped?”

“The ones we saved, that first year.” Nat pointed to one of the red lines. “These are the ones we lost.”

There were more than a few, but they didn’t outnumber the scars. “You did well.”

Nat chuckled, shifting to lean against the tree, shoulder pressed to wood. “Considering what we had? We did all right. The cases got tougher as time went on, but we got a lot more rich people too.”

“Like me.” He grinned.

Her mouth tipped, echoing his expression. “Like you. Only most people just send their horses. Not sure how good I’m gonna be at mending rotator cuffs.”

He laughed at her teasing. “Well, you have to start somewhere, Doctor Nat.”

She just shook her head and chuckled in return, but her eyes were lighter now, the sadness gone. “Does it hurt much?”

“Not much. I think it’s healing pretty well.” He stretched his neck, rubbing at where the sling dug into his shoulder. “I think this is giving me more pain than the tendon, anymore.”

“You could adjust it?” She stepped closer and he went still, turning his head slightly so she could get a better look.

Her touch was featherlight, her scent intoxicating. Like blueberries and cream, rich and sweet without being sickly.

“Is this any better?”

He couldn’t tell any difference, but he could feel her body heat. His gaze caught hers, and fire rippled between them. “Yeah.” His voice dropped into its deepest registers, coming out husky.

Nat’s tongue flicked out, dampening her lips. Dark pupils dilated to spill black across her irises. “You didn’t even pay attention.”

Cole smiled. It stretched over his face, slow and seductive. “No. I didn’t.” He didn’t think she cared, from the way her eyes flickered to his mouth, following his lips as he spoke. His hand rose as if of its own volition, rubbing away a smear of dust along her jawbone. She had a delicate jaw, for all that she was strong. Like a razorblade, sharp and fine. It narrowed down to a perfect little chin under a full mouth. He remembered that mouth from the night before. Remembered how her lips had parted under his, the tiny exhale he doubted she’d been aware of. The way her tongue had stroked his, the way she’d tasted, felt, smelled.

He wanted to taste her again, feel her under him, smell arousal and sex build. Moving slowly, remembering how she’d taken the lead before, he slid his fingers around the nape of her neck. Her skin was chilled despite the warm weather. When he fitted his mouth to hers she shivered, the finest tremble of skin and muscle, so faint he almost didn’t feel it.

She wavered, seemingly caught between stepping closer and stepping away. He kept the kiss light, gentle, fingertips and soft brushes of his mouth, nothing more. He didn’t want to push.

She stepped closer, fitting her body to his. He nearly groaned with relief, pressing tightly against her. One slender hand wrapped around his neck and her mouth opened, deepening the kiss. Her tongue slid against his and he responded, exploring her mouth, the way she tasted. His pulse beat thick and heavy under his skin, in his groin. He shifted his thigh to press between her legs. She caught her balance, opening for him slightly, pressing back.

The temptation was to push harder, to pin her against the tree and keep things moving along fast until they both came. He fought it, keeping his movements slow and gentle. Once you’d won over a skittish horse, you didn’t mess it up by asking for too much, too soon. Still, his good hand skimmed over her jaw, under it, tipping her head up so he could duck his face into her neck, nibble on the slim line of her throat. Her skin was warm, a little salty, and he could feel the beat of her heart in her jugular.

She exhaled, breath soft and shivering. Cole did it again, teeth scraping gently over flesh, pulling that exact little tremble from her that was so thoroughly intoxicating. His fingertips slid over her skin, down one of the slim tendons that framed her throat, and lit on her collarbones. He brushed over them, marveling over how tiny the bones were, like bird wings arcing in from the points of her shoulders.

Her hands moved firmly over his rib cage, over the heavy pads of muscle, pulling him closer. His fingertips glided downward, touch featherlight against the edge of a perfect breast clothed in the thin material of a tank top and bra. A shiver crept through her, her hand stuttering on his ribs.

Cole smiled against her before placing a careful kiss on her neck, another on her throat, opening his mouth and flicking his tongue across her flesh. Her hands tightened in his shirt, curling into small, demanding fists. With his good hand he grazed her arm, trailing down, feeling the tiny soft hairs and the firmness of muscle under skin. Then he found her waist, kept moving down until he felt the edge of her jeans. He tugged at her tank top, pulling it free to find warm, elastic flesh.

His kissed her again as his fingertips skimmed over abdomen muscle, teasing at the edge of her rib cage. Her mouth opened, tongue brushing against his lips. She tasted like warm summer sunshine and lazy mornings, long rides and slow laughter. Tongues tangled and slid together, tasting, exploring, growing bolder and more heated. He slid his hand up under her shirt, following the line of her rib cage to the edge of her bra. There he hesitated, giving her a moment to pull back, to slow things down. Instead, she pressed into him with a tiny sound almost caught in her throat.

And there is always more at my webpage or on my blog!

This was one of those stories that trickled slowly into my head. Meg appeared fully formed and poked, prodded, and cracked jokes until I broke down and wrote! She refused to be the proper damsel in distress, which is probably a good thing—she made me laugh, and I’m hoping she’ll make you laugh, too! Better than that, she made Santiago laugh; I’m pretty sure it’s why he kept sticking around…

Synopsis:
A good tromp through the jungle fending off giant bugs and hunting for long-lost ruins in South America is exactly Meg’s idea of a great vacation. She takes the sudden appearance of a wounded jaguar in stride, thinking it’ll make an interesting story. But when she wakes up to find a man in place of a cat, she wonders who’s going to believe it!

Santiago has learned the hard way that he and human women just don’t mix. When you can change into an animal at will, it tends to upset people. But despite his best intentions, he finds himself falling hard for the little blonde who saved his life.

It’ll take a leap of faith-and of love. Or this treasure will slip through his fingers.

Excerpt:

The only problem with South America—aside from giant bugs, a lack of air conditioning, and general chauvinism—was that you could walk right past an ancient ruin and never know it.

Meg had no intention of doing so, but that was easier said than done. Still, she supposed it made her travel guides happy—they were able to set up camp and remain there while she quartered the surrounding jungle one foot at a time. What she really needed, she thought as she whacked through a hanging branch and cleared six more inches, was Tarzan. Yes, Tarzan would be the perfect trail guide. And maybe, just maybe, he’d know a shortcut to any possible rui—

She stopped, having caught a glimpse of…something out of the corner of her eye. Her feet squished in the soft ground as she leaned back. An insect bit her, and she slapped at it absently.

There. Between the trees.

Heart pounding, she turned and began the mad scramble to get through the underbrush. It could have been stone. It also could have been a funny slant of light coming through the jungle canopy. Most times, it was just light, but maybe this time…

Hope sprung eternal, after all.

Sweat dripping down her back and between her breasts, her shirt plastered to her body and various cuts and scrapes adorning her arms, she finally forced her way through.

It was just a slant of light.

Meg sighed heavily and sat, checking to make sure there was a root rather than slime to sit on. She glared at a mosquito, then squished it when it had the audacity to try and bite her.

Three more weeks. Three more weeks of leave, and then she had to go back to being a staid college professor. Back to grading papers and helping students through academic crises, trying to convince them that sociology was great. She’d have to give up treasure hunting for a while longer, until the next major break—Christmas. She thought she might be able to wrangle it free without getting a complete guilt trip from her mother. Just a partial guilt trip. Okay, slightly more than “partial”. But it would be worth it, to be able to gather up her savings (frivolously spent, if her father was asked) and hare back down here to South America, braving theft and soldiers and giant bugs from outer space.

She brushed some kind of uber-large beetle away and glowered.

Damn it.

She peered into the heavy green jungle overhead, trying to gauge how much light was left. Probably enough for another half hour of hacking and slicing before she had to hack and slice her way back to camp. She pushed back to her feet, rubbing sweat away with a dirty wrist, and started off again.

Another fifteen minutes flew by, another few feet were gained. Birds screamed above and animals watched her pass. The jungle was loud in a way the city never could be, filled with animals and bugs and the rustle of leaves against vines, against branches, against bark. Noises that faded into the background until a monkey screeched or a bird exploded out of nearby foliage, and eventually even those became less noticeable.

Gunfire shattered the noise. In the hair-lifting quiet that echoed afterward, her breath shuddered in her throat.

Her head whipped around, feet nearly catching in the mud and sending her sprawling. Visions of armed men attacking their camp snarled through her mind, and she felt for the rifle her guides had insisted she take. She raced back toward their base, discarding initial attempts to do so quietly. There was no chance of that happening.

She was halfway there when a shape darting from one shadow to the next sent her slamming against a tree trunk, trying to hide. A heartbeat passed before she realized that whatever that was, it wasn’t human. Nobody moved with such silence through the heavy jungle, no matter how long they’d lived there. She slid out from her cover, watching for the creature.

Men shouted, but there were no more shots. Even the yelling didn’t seem frantic—excited, maybe, but not panicked. Not an attack, then? An animal? She moved closer to where the thing had crossed her path, gaze casting through the humid greenery in search of—well, she wasn’t sure, but in search of something.

A smear of blood caught her eye. She hesitated, logic telling her that whatever they’d shot would likely be dead in a matter of minutes. Probably an animal, probably not a person—or if it was a person, an armed and angry one.

Despite all of the reasons to leave it alone, she found herself following the thin trail the creature had left. The occasional broken twig—and how anything moved through this forest leaving it so untouched was a wonder—added to the occasional bloody stripe across leaves, marking its path. When she found a paw print as big as her fist, she nearly stopped the search. Her guides were going to throw a fit if she brought an animal back that they’d just shot. But, damn it, at the very least she had to make sure it wasn’t suffering.

Meg pushed on. All things considered, it wasn’t long before she stumbled across—
A tail.

She blinked.

A really long tail. Shadow-dark, with ebony rosettes and a lethally black tip. This was no little critter needing help. This was large, a predator that could eat her in a single bite. Maybe even half a bite. She really wasn’t that big.

Cautiously, she pushed aside fronds to see the rest of the animal.

Jaguar, her mind whispered in equal parts awe and terror.

The cat lay coiled, a foreleg hanging almost uselessly to one side. Tawny gold eyes regarded her without blinking, ears flat back against its head. Sleek fur stretched, graceful over impossibly perfect muscles. Claws flexed into the dirt, either in threat or preparation to flee—she couldn’t tell. It wouldn’t get much farther on that leg, though. Blood matted the fur, a furrow cutting straight through the powerful shoulder.

Pausing, she unslung her rifle and aimed carefully through the sights. Her heart sank, staring into gold eyes that glared defiantly back at her. It was going to die—slowly and painfully, if left to the mercy of infection and other animals. What she was doing was a blessing. Really.

Her finger just wouldn’t tighten on the trigger.

She cursed and lowered her rifle. With hurried, frustrated movements—what she was doing was insane, and she wasn’t sure she could convince her guides to help—she slung the rifle back over her shoulder and pulled out the tranquilizer gun. She’d told the guides to use them in case of an animal attack, but obviously they hadn’t listened.

She could do it, though, and she could make them listen. The jaguar would have to be enough treasure for this trip—hell, rescuing a predator ought to at least make for several years’ worth of stories, right? Right, she decided, then lifted her gun and shot.

The jaguar screamed, the jungle incarnate. Then it relaxed, eyelids drooping closed as its eyes rolled back in their sockets.

Perfect. Now to lug several hundred pounds of flesh and muscle back to the camp.

Maybe she should have thought this through a little more.

Over to Treasure Hunting!

JB McDonald’s webpage: www.jbmcdonald.com