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  “I sense there are some hard feelings between us...”

  “I mean, I don’t remember it, but you seem...uncomfortable with me.”

  “It’s fine,” Angelina said.

  “What did I do?” Ben asked. “Because I’m looking at you and I see a beautiful, successful woman I’d be proud to be with. So...what happened with us?”

  Her green gaze flicked over to meet his. “Your family happened.”

  What had his father said? And perhaps expect some jealousy toward our family.

  “What did they do?” he asked.

  “They hated me.” She said it so matter-of-factly, with no emotion behind it.

  “I find that hard to believe...” He smiled. “For what?”

  “For being beneath the quality standard they set for you,” she said. “They wanted you to marry someone who came from a family equally well situated. I’m just a regular woman.”

  “Not so regular...”

  She’d achieved an awful lot, and she drew every eye in a room...

  Dear Reader,

  This miniseries has been such a joy to write, and getting to Angelina’s happily-ever-after is a really special feeling for me. If you haven’t read the other three books in this miniseries, I hope you’ll pick them up and join the other women in this dinner club as they find love again.

  If you’d like to connect with me, come by my website at patriciajohnsromance.com. You can also find me on Twitter, BookBub and Facebook, where I hold continual giveaways with other fantastic authors you’ll want to discover. Definitely come by and join the fun. I love to hear from my readers!

  Patricia Johns

  Snowbound with Her Mountain Cowboy

  Patricia Johns

  Patricia Johns is a Publishers Weekly bestselling author who writes from Alberta, Canada. She has her Hon. BA in English literature and currently writes for Harlequin’s Love Inspired and Heartwarming lines. She also writes Amish romance for Kensington Books. You can find her at patriciajohnsromance.com.

  Books by Patricia Johns

  Harlequin Heartwarming

  The Second Chance Club

  Their Mountain Reunion

  Mountain Mistletoe Christmas

  Rocky Mountain Baby

  Snowbound with Her Mountain Cowboy

  Home to Eagle’s Rest

  Her Lawman Protector

  Falling for the Cowboy Dad

  The Lawman’s Baby

  Her Triplets’ Mistletoe Dad

  Love Inspired

  Redemption’s Amish Legacies

  The Nanny’s Amish Family

  A Precious Christmas Gift

  Wife on His Doorstep

  Snowbound with the Amish Bachelor

  Montana Twins

  Her Cowboy’s Twin Blessings

  Her Twins’ Cowboy Dad

  A Rancher to Remember

  Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com for more titles.

  To my husband, who makes these cold winters warm for me. I love you!

  Contents

  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

  EPILOGUE

  EXCERPT FROM HIS HOMETOWN YULETIDE VOW BY CAROL ROSS

  CHAPTER ONE

  A THUD SHOOK the front door of Mountain Springs Resort. Then another one—the pounding of a fist on the other side. The lodge was closed to new visitors for the next few days. Had someone made it through the storm? Angelina Cunningham hurried across the chilly foyer and flicked the lock, then pulled it open. The heavy door blew inward with a rush of frigid wind and swirling snowflakes, but it was the man standing in the snow who made her breath catch. Blood trickled down one side of his face and matted a section of his mahogany hair, and he stared at her blearily. He was tall and broad, and he swayed slightly as if the wind might push him over. Why was he looking at her so vacantly?

  Angelina reached for him, catching the sleeve of his lambskin coat, and tugged him inside. It took all of her strength to shove the door shut against the howling wind. The news was calling it the storm of the century, and it had only begun.

  “What happened to you?” she breathed. “Oh my God!”

  His cowboy hat was clutched in one hand, and he dabbed at the wound on his head with his free hand, wiping the blood from his eye. His blue jeans were smeared with a streak of blood, and there were a couple of drops across the toes of his scuffed cowboy boots.

  “I—I was in an accident,” he said. “And I think I belong here?” It was a question. He peered at her hopefully. “Do you know me?”

  Angelina looked past him, out the narrow window that flanked the heavy doors, her gaze moving over the snow. His footsteps were still visible out there, along with a trail of crimson dots. Her heart hammered in her chest.

  “This is not funny, Ben!” she said. “What happened? Where’s your truck?”

  “Is that me? Am I Ben?” he asked hesitantly. “So you do know me?”

  Angelina’s breath seeped out of her, and for a moment she struggled to take another. Ben King was staring at her, his expression perplexed. Was he being serious?

  “You don’t know who I am?” she breathed. “Ben, look at me. You don’t know me?”

  “I don’t remember... I...I don’t remember anything,” he said. “But this is familiar—” He looked around the foyer.

  Mountain Springs Lodge should be familiar to him, but then again, so should she!

  “Snap out of it!” She grabbed the front of his coat. “Hey! Look at me. Seriously, Ben!”

  He just blinked at her. “Do I belong here?”

  “No,” she said, releasing his coat. “You don’t.”

  “Oh...” He licked his lips, and Angelina grabbed a cloth dinner napkin from a pile on the counter waiting to be put away. She dabbed at the gash on his head, then clamped the cloth over top of it and applied some pressure. He didn’t know her...

  “Your name is Ben King,” she said, lifting the cloth to look at the wound before covering it again firmly. “And you’re my ex-husband.”

  “Huh...” The information didn’t seem to be landing.

  “Come on. Hold this to your head—” Angelina took him by the arm and tugged him toward her office. “Let’s get you cleaned up. You need a doctor. Where’s your truck?”

  “In a ditch—” He gestured behind him.

  “Right. That’s okay,” she said. “Leave it.”

  One of the housekeeping staff who had volunteered to stay at work during this storm looked at them in surprise.

  “Tammy,” Angelina said to her, “can you go find Dr. Thomas? Maybe he could help me out here. And bring back a blanket, too, if you could.”

  “Right! I’ll go see where he is,” the young woman said, and she disappeared into the foyer.

  Maybe having a couple of guests stick around during this blizzard wasn’t the worst thing in the world—especially since one of them was a doctor. Most people had wisely left for Denver to avoid the mountain storm, but a few had held out against better advice, along with a handful of staff who were willing to work the ext
ra hours.

  Angelina guided Ben down the hallway and into her spacious office. Ben sank into a silk upholstered wingback chair in her trademark pink. She gingerly lifted the napkin, and looked down at the cut. He could probably use stitches, but the memory issue was more worrying than the blood.

  She idly wished she had a towel in here to protect the chair.

  “Where were you going in this weather?” she asked.

  “I don’t know. Here, maybe?” He looked up hopefully.

  Ben’s coat was already undone, and she reached to tug it off his shoulders. He allowed her to remove it. He wore a starched white dress shirt underneath with a bolo tie, and gold horseshoe cuff links glittered at his wrists. That was Ben—his shirts were always immaculate, and it was the balance between wealthy city boy and rancher that he never quite got right. She tossed his heavy coat over another matching chair.

  “I doubt you were headed here.” She sighed. “I’m not your favorite person.”

  “Really?” He smiled faintly. “How come?”

  “We got divorced, for one,” she replied. “And you were engaged up until recently.”

  “Not anymore?” he asked.

  So he didn’t remember Hilaria Bell, either. It had been quite the drama, that breakup, and Ben had come here to tell her he was about to do it only a few weeks ago. He hadn’t updated her after the fact, although she did hear some rumors.

  “You two broke up,” she replied. “The wedding was called off. I don’t know the details.”

  Ben raised his eyebrows, but that was all the reaction she got out of him. At a tap on the door, Angelina turned to see her guest, Dr. Thomas, standing there with Tammy at his side. She carried a folded blanket in her arms.

  “Thanks for coming,” Angelina said. “This is Ben King, and he said he was in an accident. Ben, this is Dr. Thomas.”

  “You can call me Warren,” the older man said, and he came inside. “Can I take a look?” He gently peeked under the napkin, then nodded toward Tammy. “Can you bring us a first aid kit, please?”

  “And a few towels, if you could, Tammy,” Angelina added, accepting the blanket from her.

  Tammy nodded and disappeared out the door again. The doctor took Ben’s hand and brought it back up to his head to get him to hold the napkin in place, then he perched on a chair in front of him.

  “His memory seems to be gone,” Angelina said. “I know this man—very well. He has no idea who I am, or who he is.”

  Warren met her gaze. “This is... Benjamin King?”

  So Warren knew the name. It shouldn’t surprise her. Anyone in Colorado had heard of the King family.

  “He is,” she confirmed with a nod.

  Warren turned to Ben and asked, “Do you know what day it is today?”

  Ben paused, then shook his head.

  “Do you know what year it is?”

  “Um...what year?” he repeated.

  “Yes, what year is it?” Warren asked.

  Ben shook his head again.

  “Do you know how to scramble eggs?” Warren asked.

  “Yeah.” Ben brightened.

  “Tell me.”

  “You crack a few eggs into a bowl, whisk them up, add some salt, a dash of milk...fry it.”

  Warren nodded. “Your address?”

  Ben sighed. “I don’t know.”

  “Phone number?” Warren pressed.

  Ben shook his head. “Sorry. I don’t know.”

  “Your name?” Warren pressed.

  Ben didn’t answer for a moment. “Well, you said it was Benjamin King, right? I don’t actually remember that, though. I don’t know the name.”

  “Right...” Warren sighed and crossed his arms over his chest. “How do you drink your coffee?”

  Ben’s expression brightened slightly. “Cream and sugar.”

  Warren nodded. “Okay, I’ve seen this before. It’s normally very temporary amnesia brought on by head trauma. It does pass. The brain just needs to rest and heal.”

  “He remembers some things, though,” Angelina said. “He knows how to scramble eggs, and how he likes his coffee. I don’t get it!”

  Warren looked over at her, then lifted his shoulders. “It’s just the nature of this kind of injury. Not everything is lost, and every case is different. It depends on which part of the brain has been bruised,” the older man replied. “I’d recommend a CT scan, just to be on the safe side.”

  “The problem is getting him to the hospital.”

  Angelina paused, thinking. The King family wasn’t exactly used to waiting in emergency rooms. They had private doctors who came to them...and when they went to the hospital, it was to a private room.

  “His family has their own doctor. They call him in for everything,” Angelina went on. “Ben, can I see your phone?”

  He patted his pockets, and pulled out a cell phone. He looked mildly surprised to see it.

  “Thumbprint—” She held it out for him, and Ben obliged.

  She flicked through his contacts and stopped at Dr. Ballinger, then passed the phone over to Warren.

  He pressed the call button and put the phone up to his ear. Angelina turned back to Ben, and he met her gaze uncertainly.

  “You really don’t know me?” she asked softly.

  He shook his head. “I feel like I remember this lodge, though.”

  Of course. He wouldn’t remember the wife he divorced, just the settlement. But Mountain Springs Lodge had been built in the early seventies, and this section of land beside the mountain lake had been in his family for longer than that. She glanced over her shoulder when Warren paused in his conversation.

  “Do you have a penlight?” he asked her.

  “No—my cell phone has a flashlight. Would that do?”

  “It might actually.” He toggled the light and shone it in to Ben’s pupils a couple of times, and then put his fingers against his neck. He gave Ben a reassuring pat on the shoulder and then returned to his phone call.

  “Yep...Agreed...Yep...Okay, hold on. I’m going to put you on video and let you talk to him.” He turned the phone on to video then, and passed it over to Ben.

  Dr. Ballinger asked Ben his birthdate, his hometown, how many eggs made a dozen... Ben could only answer the last question, but he did seem to be less bleary now. Warren took the phone back, and they continued talking, their conversation sprinkled with medical terms.

  Tammy came into the room then with a first aid kit and towels, and Angelina accepted them with a smile of thanks. She put the towels over the armrests of her chairs, then opened the first aid kit and sorted through, looking at what they had to work with.

  “Sure, hold on,” Warren said, and he passed the phone to Angelina. She accepted it, and Warren settled himself in front of Ben again. “I’ll patch him up. But Dr. Ballinger wants to speak with you.”

  Angelina stepped away, watching as Warren pulled the napkin from the wound and began to work with the contents of the first aid kit.

  “Hi, I’m Angelina Cunningham,” Angelina said, looking down at a mild-faced middle-aged man. He was dressed in a sweater vest and dress shirt open at the neck.

  “Ms. Cunningham,” Dr. Ballinger said briskly. “How does he seem to you?”

  “He was confused, and kind of muddled,” she replied. “But he seems a bit better now. With a few butterfly bandages, his head should be okay. Dr. Thomas mentioned a CT scan—”

  “I doubt that is necessary,” Dr. Ballinger said. “Dr. Thomas and I have both seen this before. With the storm really blowing, I think it’s probably safer if he stays with you until the streets are clear. I’m going to call Karl King and speak with him. I’ll tell him to call Ben’s cell phone. You pick up and speak with him first, if you could.”

  She felt that familiar sinking sensation of discomfort at the mention
of her former father-in-law. She hadn’t spoken with him directly since just after the divorce, when she signed the nondisclosure agreement in exchange for this old lodge. The King family had been heartily glad to be rid of her, and they hadn’t even tried to mask their happiness at the end of her marriage to Ben. She probably could have gotten a bigger settlement out of them if she’d wanted it, they’d been so eager to see the back of her.

  Five minutes later, Angelina’s cell phone rang, but it was Belle Villeneuve, one of Angelina’s close friends.

  “Hi, Belle,” Angelina said, picking up. All eyes turned toward Angelina, and she angled away from them. She did have a whole life apart from her ex-husband, after all.

  “I guess the Second Chance Dinner Club won’t be meeting tonight,” Belle said with a smile in her voice.

  “No, I don’t think we’ll manage that,” Angelina replied. “I’ve sent most of my guests down to Denver to miss the storm. But I’m kind of in the middle of something. Do you think I could give you a call back?”

  “Of course!” Belle said. “You sound...stressed. You okay?”

  “I am stressed,” Angelina admitted. “I’ll tell you what I can once I’m done dealing with this. Promise.”

  Ben’s phone rang next, with an incoming video call.

  “Hi, Angie.” Karl King had silver hair and the tanned face of a man who’d just come back from vacation. “Where is my son? What’s going on?”

  It was as if no time had passed. Angie. He didn’t exactly have a right to use Ben’s nickname for her, but Karl King wasn’t a man who deferred or asked permission.

  “Ben showed up with a bloodied head at my door,” she said. “It seems he was in a car accident. He has no idea who he is.”

  “No memory at all?” Karl frowned.

  “Not much of one.”

  “Doesn’t he remember you?” He sounded incredulous there.

  “No. Apparently our short marriage didn’t make the cut. But he doesn’t seem to remember Hilaria, either, if that makes you feel any better. I don’t know what to tell you. He’s here, though. Do you want to talk to him?”

  “Yeah, fine,” Karl said with a curt nod.