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My Big Fat Texas Wedding
My Big Fat Texas Wedding
My Big Fat Texas Wedding
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My Big Fat Texas Wedding

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Everything’s Bigger in Texas . . .
Super Bowl Champ Austin Reeves rolls into his hometown of Bramble expecting a big ol’ hero’s welcome. Instead, he gets the big ol’ cold shoulder from a bunch of pissed off Texans. Completely baffled, he turns to the only person willing to talk to him—the shy girl he knew in high school. But that shy girl has become a hot woman with a fetish for riding crops . . . and soon, Austin will be begging for a long, hard ride. Mia Cates is ready to get over her crush on Austin—especially when he’s about to tie the knot with another woman. But when he struts back into town with his lazy smile, she’ll find herself playing a game of touch football that could lead to a broken heart . . . unless, she can get up the courage to lay claim to her star quarterback and have her own Big Fat Texas Wedding.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherKatie Lane
Release dateAug 26, 2016
ISBN9781370506668
My Big Fat Texas Wedding
Author

Katie Lane

Katie Lane is the author of the Deep in the Heart of Texas series. She lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico, with her high school sweetheart.

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    Book preview

    My Big Fat Texas Wedding - Katie Lane

    My Big Fat Texas Wedding

    Katie Lane

    MY BIG FAT TEXAS WEDDING

    KATIE LANE

    Copyright 2016 by Katie Lane

    For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact Laura Bradford at Bradford Literary Agency.

    Edited by Laura Bradford

    Cover design by Tiffany Sevieri

    Smashwords Edition

    This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. All rights reserved.

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    Books by bestselling author Katie Lane

    Deep in the Heart of Texas Series

    Going Cowboy Crazy

    Make Mine a Bad Boy

    Catch Me a Cowboy

    Trouble in Texas

    Flirting with Texas

    A Match Made in Texas

    The Last Cowboy in Texas

    My Big Fat Texas Wedding

    Hunk for the Holidays Series

    Hunk for the Holidays

    Ring in the Holidays

    Unwrapped

    Overnight Billionaire Series

    A Billionaire Between the Sheets

    A Billionaire After Dark

    Waking up with a Billionaire

    Christmas Anthologies

    All I Want for Christmas is a Cowboy

    Small Town Christmas

    Table of 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 One

    May in West Texas was as wild as a March hare. Dust devils swirled amid the mesquite like mini tornadoes, and tumbleweeds bounced across the two-lane highway like a bunch of prickly playground balls. The wind was so strong that Austin Reeves could feel the pull of the steering wheel as the gusts tried to push his half-ton pickup off the highway.

    He smiled. Damn, it was good to be home.

    San Diego weather was almost too nice. There were no extremes. Wind was soft breezes. Rain a gentle drizzle. Sunshine a mild warmth. In Texas, the elements were more aggressive and real. You could feel the grainy grit of the wind. The driving force of the rain. And the scorching heat of the sun.

    When he was in high school, Austin had played football in all types of Texas weather. Coach Slate Calhoun had taught him early on that going up against the elements was just part of the game. You couldn’t fall apart because the wind snatched the ball from your hand during a third down. Or the rain caused you to slip and fumble. Or sweat in your eyes caused you to throw an interception. As a football player, making allowances for the weather was part of your job. And Austin Reeves was a football player.

    A world champion football player.

    He glanced down at his hand on the steering wheel and the multi-diamond Super Bowl ring that sparkled in the sun. He felt a little weird wearing it. He wasn’t a flashy kind of guy. His truck was an ordinary blue. His cowboy boots a basic brown. And his house in San Diego a modest three-bedroom stucco. The only flashy things in his life were his Super Bowl ring and his fiancée.

    Fiancée. It was still hard to believe that in a month he would be getting married. Suzette Marquette had been the star of a hit teen series on the Disney Channel and, now in her mid-twenties, was trying to make it on the big screen. Which was how she and Austin had met.

    Her first big role was a romantic comedy about a young woman who inherits her father’s football team and falls in love with the star quarterback. Suzette had wanted to do research for her role. So her agent had gotten in touch with Austin’s agent and they had set up a time for the two to meet. Austin wouldn’t call it love at first sight. More like lust. Suzette was damned good-looking, and despite her innocent television persona, she wasn’t one to beat around the bush where sex was concerned. She wasted no time getting Austin into bed, or letting him know that she didn’t like clingy men. Which worked out well for him. Football took a majority of his time and had ruined more than one relationship. With Suzette, she had her acting, so there were no hard feelings when he couldn’t attend one of her Hollywood events. Or when she couldn’t attend his games. Although it would’ve been nice if she could’ve come to Bramble with him. He’d really wanted her to be part of his homecoming.

    He didn’t like to brag, but he was somewhat of a hometown hero. He’d helped win the state football championship three years running and was the only quarterback from Bramble High to be drafted in the first round of the NFL. He glanced down at the large Super Bowl ring. And now he was bringing home the ultimate football trophy.

    Yep, the town was sure going to be excited to see him.

    Which explained why he hadn’t told them he was coming. He didn’t want them making a big fuss, especially when his wedding was going to be enough of a fuss. There was no way the town was prepared for a huge Hollywood wedding. Austin wasn’t sure he was prepared either.

    He hadn’t wanted a big wedding. Something simple would’ve been fine with him. But Suzette’s publicist felt an over-the-top wedding would go perfect with the release of Suzette’s romantic football comedy. And since Austin wanted the movie to be a success, he’d agreed to let the studio hire a wedding planner and turn his wedding into a three-ring circus.

    But he’d put his boot down when they wanted the wedding to be at some snobby resort in California. If he had to suffer through a big wedding, he wanted to do it in his hometown. A hometown that would be devastated if their favorite son got married somewhere other than Bramble. Besides, he wanted Suzette to get to meet the people of the town and fall in love with them like he had.

    At that exact moment, a sign came into view that made his heart swell and a smile tip his lips. Welcome to Bramble. Home of the State Champion Bulldogs and NFL Quarterback—the smile wilted as he blinked at the graffiti sprayed over his name.

    Lowdown Snake?

    A siren pulled his attention away from the sign to his rearview mirror. A sheriff’s car was gaining on him with lights flashing and siren blaring. Since Austin was going over the speed limit, he might’ve been worried if he hadn’t recognized the deputy sitting behind the wheel.

    Deputy Kenny Gene was one of Austin’s biggest fans and would be happier than a rookie on game day to see him. Especially when Austin had brought him the football he’d scored the Super Bowl winning touchdown with. The thought of how thrilled Kenny would be with the gift made Austin feel a little better about the vandalized sign. Although he planned to talk to Mayor Hope Lomax about fixing it as soon as he got into town.

    He quickly pulled to the shoulder of the highway and watched in his side mirror as Kenny Gene stepped out of his patrol car. The deputy had put on a little weight since Austin had last seen him. Since it was a known fact that his wife Twyla wasn’t much of a cook, it probably had more to do with all the free chicken fried steak he received at Josephine’s Diner. Josephine had always believed in supplying good meals to Bramble’s local heroes. After winning a big game, Austin had gotten more than his fair share of free chicken fried steak. And he figured since he’d just won the biggest game, he was in for one amazing dinner.

    With his stomach grumbling, he rolled down his window, then reached for the cowboy hat on the dash. The hat had been a gift from Coach Calhoun, and even though it was in pretty pathetic state—the brim curled and misshapen, the hatband sweat stained, and the crown sporting a hole in the straw the size of a silver dollar—Austin couldn’t seem to give it up. It held too many memories.

    He pulled the battered hat low on his head as he waited for Kenny Gene to approach. The deputy still had more gadgets than Batman dangling from his belt: handcuffs, pepper spray, baton, a Scooby Doo flashlight, and a holster and gun. Seeing the gun, Austin wondered if Sheriff Hicks allowed Kenny to keep it loaded. Kenny was as hardworking, loyal, and honest as the day was long, but he was a few screws short of a hardware store. This was demonstrated when he tried to write down Austin’s license plate number.

    First, he couldn’t locate his pen, and when he finally found it behind his ear, he spent five minutes shaking it, trying to get it to work. Then the wind caught his hat and blew it across the highway. And by the time he retrieved it from a mesquite bush, he’d lost his pen again. While he was bent over looking under the truck, Austin grabbed a pen from his console and held it out the window. Although it took him tapping it against the side mirror before Kenny noticed and walked up to the window.

    Austin kept his head tipped down and his cowboy hat pulled low. Is there a problem, officer?

    Kenny took the pen and pulled out his citation pad. I don’t know how you folks drive in Callie-forn-i-a, but here in Texas, we don’t race around like a cat with its tail on fire. He touched the tip of the pen to his tongue before he started writing.

    Austin bit back a smile and thickened his Texas twang. I’m shore sorry about that, officer. I guess I was in a hurry to get to Bramble.

    Kenny stopped writing out the ticket. You have kin in Bramble?

    Well, I guess that depends on what you consider kin. My grandparents and mama moved away a few years back so most folks would say that I don’t have any kin left at all. But I’ve always been a firm believer that kin is just another word for people who have loved and supported you over the years. And that being the case, I have lots of kin in Bramble. He pushed up his cowboy hat and smiled brightly at Kenny Gene. Hey there, Kenny.

    Kenny’s mouth dropped open for a second before a big smile split his face. Why, hot damn! He slapped the roof of the truck. If it ain’t Austin Reeves. I didn’t think you was comin’ back so soon. Especially after the Super Bowl win and you gettin’— Just that quickly, his smile dropped to be replaced with a frown that almost touched his chin. Before Austin could ask what was wrong, Kenny filled out the ticket, ripped it off the pad, and rammed it in the window.

    Kin wouldn’t do what you done, Austin Reeves. Kenny whirled on a boot heel, his gadgets banging the truck door as he stomped back to his car. Only seconds later, he whipped the car around in a U-turn and headed off in the opposite direction while Austin sat there stunned.

    What the hell was going on?

    He glanced back at the sign for a few seconds before he took a deep breath and collected his thoughts. The graffiti was no big deal. All towns had teenagers running around doing stupid things. And Kenny being mad wasn’t unusual either. A lot of

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