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Montana Love Letter (Love Inspired) Kindle Edition
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherLove Inspired
- Publication dateOctober 1, 2012
- File size2.6 MB
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Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The lanky auto-parts delivery kid shrugged. "That's what the boss said. Only cash. No credit."
"There must be some mistake," Adam said.
"You can call Devin if you want." The kid handed him the invoice. "It says right there, cash only."
Adam took a quick glance at the papers listing the parts he knew he had ordered: a new headlight for a customer who had missed the target driving into his own garage, a dozen sets of spark plugs, radiator hoses, a couple of batteries to have on hand. He pretty much had to take the kid's word for it that the red stamp across the invoice meant what it said: CASH ONLY.
The racket of the garage's flatbed tow truck shifted his attention away from the invoice. Gears clattered and a whiff of diesel exhaust blew in through the wide-open doors as Vern Rutledge backed the truck up. An hour or so ago they'd had a call from the sheriff's office to pick up a car that had had an encounter with a deer on Highway 93, the road that ran through the town of Bear Lake en route to and from Glacier National Park, Montana.
Even from a distance, the damage to the front end of the four-door compact was obvious. Must've been some big buck that got hit.
When Vern turned off the engine, a young girl hopped down from the truck cab followed by a striking woman who moved with the grace of a dancer. Long brown hair curled past her shoulders. The afternoon sun caught the strands, touching them with a hint of red.
"Good-lookin' lady," the delivery guy said under his breath.
Adam agreed she was good-looking. Add to that, she was downright classy in the way she dressed and held herself so erect. Her outfit of slacks with sandals and a tidy blouse tucked in at her narrow waist marked her as a tourist. So did the Washington plates on her car.
"Hang on," he said to the delivery kid. "I'll get you the cash and give Devin a call later to straighten out the mix-up." The faster he took care of the delivery, the sooner he could turn his attention to his pretty new customer.
Still shaken by her violent encounter with a tree when she'd swerved to miss a deer, Janelle Townsend smoothed her hand over her daughter's hair. Thank goodness Rae-anne had had her seat belt on in the backseat. Janelle had been the only one in front, and the driver's air bag had deployed on impact. As it was, Rae would have a bruise from the seat belt across her chest, and Janelle's neck already ached.
But it could have been worse.
The driver of the tow truck came around to the passenger side. His face wrinkled and weathered by more than sixty years, Vern lifted his baseball cap and scratched his thinning gray hair.
"Adam'll will be right with you, miss. He'll take good care of you."
"Thank you for bringing us here. I don't know what I would have done if that deputy sheriff hadn't come by. My cell couldn't pick up any bars."
"Yep, reception's mighty spotty around the mountains, that's for sure." He resettled his cap. "If it's all right with you, I'll unload your car so Adam can take a close look."
"Of course. Thank you again." She eased Raeanne out of the way of the truck. As shaken as Janelle, five-year-old Rae had a fierce death grip on her favorite stuffed animal, Ruff. The poor thing's fur had worn thin over his ears and he'd lost some of his stuffing.
"Careful you don't step in any grease spots," she said.
Although as she glanced around, she noted the garage floor was nearly spotless, certainly in comparison to some auto shops she'd visited over the course of her twenty-eight years.
At the back of the garage there was an office with a window. The man she took to be Adam, presumably the owner, handed something to the man he'd been talking to. They separated, the younger man going to his pickup and Adam walking toward Janelle.
Wearing blue overalls, he had a nice, comfortable stride and a smile curving his lips. Although his saddle-brown hair was cut fairly short, it was rumpled as though he'd recently run his fingers through it. She guessed he was in his mid- to late-thirties.
"Sounds like you didn't get a very good welcome to Bear Lake," he said in a warm, friendly baritone.
"Unfortunately, no. Particularly since I'd read that Bear Lake is the friendliest little town in Montana." She'd also spotted a billboard to that effect as they'd reached the town limits on the highway.
"Well, then, I guess we'll have to make up for that rude introduction. I'm Adam Hunter, the owner here." He glanced at Raeanne and winked. "Were you the one driving when you had the accident?"
Rae shook her head and buried her face in Janelle's hip.
Chuckling, Janelle introduced herself. "This is my daughter, Raeanne. Fortunately, we've got a while before she's old enough to drive. I was the guilty party behind the wheel, although most of the blame falls on the poor frightened animal that dashed out in front of me. I managed to swerve and miss him, but I rammed into a tree instead."
"Nice to meet you both. Those deer can be a real hazard around here. Seems like they spook and jump out at you for no reason." He nodded toward her car. "Let's take a look and see what we've got."
She followed him across the garage to the crumpled car. The front end looked as though it had been accor-dioned on the right side by some giant hand. Spiderwebs crisscrossed the windshield. What a mess! She'd come all this way from Seattle hoping to find a place to start over, and now what she had was a car that had been nearly totaled by a tree.
Things were not looking good for her goal of beginning a new life.
He forced open the wrenched hood of the car. Peering inside, he touched and jiggled this and that like a blind man reading Braille, humming a slightly off-key tune as he worked.
"The radiator's cracked and so is the radiator hose," he announced. "And a couple of braces are bent. Let's see underneath."
He dropped to the floor and rolled over onto his back. "The axle looks fine." Agilely, he came to his feet, all six feet of lean, muscled body. "Lots of bodywork to do, plus the windshield and the air bag will need to be replaced. I'll get you an estimate on that. The rest doesn't look too bad."
"That's a relief. How long do you think it will take to repair?"
"I've got braces and the radiator hose on hand, but I need to order the radiator and a new air bag. This being Friday and the start of the weekend, I can't get parts here until Monday. But that's okay because the bodywork is going to take several days. I use a guy in Missoula who does really fine work."
Clear back in Missoula? That had to be at least seventy miles, maybe more. She and Raeanne had stayed there last night. It was the newspaper ad for Bear Lake she'd read in the motel lobby that had brought her in this direction.
"Let me go call my body guy, and I'll get you an estimate. There're some chairs over there." He indicated a cluster of folding chairs by the far wall. "And a soda machine. Don't put any money in. Just open the door and take your pick."
"Thank you."
A car pulled up in front of the garage. A young girl who looked to be about ten hopped out. She was wearing a two-piece swimsuit that she was a few years away from filling out and had a beach towel wrapped around her shoulders. She thanked the driver and hurried inside the garage. Her blond hair hung in limp strands down her back.
"Hey, Dad, I'm home."
"I see that." Adam gave her a quick hug. "You have fun?"
"Sure. I beat some guys in my class in a race out to the swimming float."
"Good for you, Peanut." He turned toward Janelle. "Hailey, meet Mrs. Townsend and her daughter, Rae-anne."
The girl had the same friendly smile as her father and sun-pinked cheeks. "Hello. Are you staying in town for a while?"
"It's looking that way," Janelle said.
"Well, if you want to go swimming, there's a beach right near the municipal dock. Lots of kids go there."
"I'll remember that. Thank you." The July day had been more than warm under a cobalt-blue sky. Now, however, clouds were building over the mountains, threatening a summer shower.
The youngster glanced toward Janelle's battered car. "Boy, you sure hit something hard."
"It was a big tree, I'm afraid."
"I'm glad you weren't hurt bad. My dad can fix cars up like new." She shrugged as though her statement was the obvious truth, and she grinned. "He's the best."
"Hailey, you'd better go get yourself cleaned up and changed." Adam gave her a little nudge.
"Okay. See you later." She waved to Janelle and Rae-anne, then jogged off, her flip-flops smacking the concrete floor with every step.
"Your daughter is cute and very outgoing," Janelle commented when the girl was out of sight.
"Yeah, I don't think she's ever met a stranger." He was still looking in the direction his daughter had vanished around the side of the garage. "Her mother was the same way up until she got sick and passed on." Residual grief laced his words.
"Oh, I'm sorry for you loss." Her own spasm of grief mixed with residual anger arrowed through her. She gritted her teeth to block the sensation.
He shrugged off her sympathy. "I'll go get that estimate now."
Janelle watched him walk away until R...
Product details
- ASIN : B008ENGRE8
- Publisher : Love Inspired; Original edition (October 1, 2012)
- Publication date : October 1, 2012
- Language : English
- File size : 2.6 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 221 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #812,837 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #986 in Contemporary Religious Fiction
- #4,458 in American Historical Romance (Books)
- #5,151 in Mothers & Children Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Charlotte Carter has authored more than fifty books under various pseudonyms for Harlequin Love Inspired, Harlequin American, Love and Laughter, Dorchester and Guideposts Books.
I started my ‘career’ of storytelling at the ripe old age of six. A neighbor friend and I used to make up Bambi stories and act them out. She got to be Bambi; I was Thumper. My friend moved away. But I kept making up stories and now I was the star!
A good many years later, I’m still making up stories and the ideas keep coming.
I live in Southern California with my husband. We have two married daughters and five grandchildren, who are growing up fast. I'm a frequent speaker for writing groups and community organizations. Oh, yes, in my spare time I do a little standup comedy.
For more about me and my books, visit my website: www.CharlotteCarter.com
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 16, 2014Bear Lake, Montana
Book 1
This book was very dear to me. I enjoyed the fact that Charlotte Carter embraced such a tough subject like she did in this story. I have a couple close family members who simular problems and they were basically passed through the school system like Adam was. The author allowed Adam to have this big flaw, but it didn't make him seem weak or take away from his character. Instead, she focused on his strong points - he was a very intelligent man with a small problem that he was able to learn to live with. What an encouragement to us all and our "small" problems in life!
Janelle was an absolute sweetheart! I loved how she took to mothering Adam's ten year old daughter and how she was able to discover Adam's trouble and gently point it out to him. She had been through some disappointments in her life and absolutely deserved Adam and the happiness he could bring her! The ending - what Adam did to declare his love - was absolutely sweet!
- Reviewed in the United States on November 21, 2012I remember reading this but at this moment, I can't recall when I read it. Almost every book that I read, I really enjoy and usually have gone into Amazon to buy another book that I have read an example.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 18, 2012In all honesty, I was not planning on writing a review for this book since nothing really stood out to me. As I continued along, I had a change of heart. As the story neared the end, it gave me a warm and fuzzy feeling inside and created a perfect 'Aawww' moment.
Janelle Townsend had the unfortunate accident to run into a deer and got a lift to Bear Lake, the friendliest little town in Montana. Adam Hunter ran the only garage and when he met Janelle and her little girl, Adam couldn't help but offer his help and his cottage to the pair. As they continued to spend more time in each others company, Janelle began to develop feelings for Adam but noticed that he was hiding something. Adam wanted to a relationship with her but his secret was the one thing holding him back. Can they help each other overcome their weaknesses?
The start was pretty standard fare. I did find it odd that Adam was okay with offering the use of his home to strangers but I guess he is really showing Bear Lake hospitality. Then around page 100 came the pivotal point that completely change the tone and pace: when Janelle found out Adam's secret. What a change that brought. Now that his secret was revealed, it was as though you were slowly revealing the true man underneath and getting these strong emotions that can't help attract you more to him. Adam became more approachable as you began to understand where he was coming from. There was such a strong personal growth throughout the story that he was a great inspiration to anyone who has the same problem. Janelle was a decent heroine but unfortunately was overshadowed by Adam's character growth. However, I like Janelle as herself and she worked perfectly with Adam. The best, and I mean the best part of this novel was the ending. The sweetness, the simplicity and the sincerity in the way Adam expressed his true feelings for Janelle and her daughter through the letter he wrote to the heroine (hence the title) created this emotional ball inside my chest. Why? Read the story to understand why this letter was so important. I don't want to give any spoilers. But it will tug at your heartstrings.
The 2 girls were absolute darlings and were integral part of the story. So, if you don't like children in your romance, you have been forewarned. The few characters that showed up (even the IRS agent) were reasonable and didn't add any unneeded strife to the plot. I did wish there was an epilogue to tie up a couple of loose ends. Other than that, the story was well-written and well-paced with a smattering of drama here and there. Will the story rivet you to your seat? Not particularly. But the ending was well worth it. Should you go out and buy it right this minute? No. But if you get a chance, buy or borrow this book. One read through will be worth your time. 4 stars because I wouldn't read this again.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 26, 2012I enjoyed this book. There was an unusual twist in the book that touched my heart (which I won't spoil). The author did a good job weaving this twist into the plot. Adam was a great guy. Janelle was a woman with problems who ended up in a caring place. (I'm ready to move there.) Both the hero and heroine have daughters, who manager their fair share of matchmaking. That's always a favorite of mine, match making little ones. Out of the mouth of babes....
And you'll love how the title is reflected in the book. It's an great read.
Top reviews from other countries
- Rachel BrandReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 14, 2014
4.0 out of 5 stars One of my favourite Love Inspired authors
Sweet romance, and in spite of the shortness the author managed to make all of the characters come alive with their quirks and flaws. As with the other Charlotte Carter novel I read, my only major complaint is that the characters didn't seem to have known each other long enough to be talking about marriage. I'm quite happy with an open ending that offers hope of marriage somewhere down the line, which often feels a lot more believable than the hero and heroine to be making wedding plans less than a month after they first met. I read this novel to get some inspiration for editing my own inspirational romance novel and I definitely picked up some great tips. Charlotte Carter is quickly becoming one of my favourite LI romance authors.