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Promise Kept




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Praise for Mitzi Pool Bridges

  Dedication

  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

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  A word about the author...

  Thank you for purchasing this publication of The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  Promise Broken

  by

  Mitzi Pool Bridges

  The Callahan Series

  Book Two

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  Promise Broken

  COPYRIGHT © 2013 by Mitzi Pool Bridges

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  Contact Information: info@thewildrosepress.com

  Cover Art by Kim Mendoza

  The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  PO Box 708

  Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708

  Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com

  Publishing History

  First Yellow Rose Edition, 2013

  Print ISBN 978-1-61217-699-4

  Digital ISBN 978-1-61217-700-7

  The Callahan Series

  Published in the United States of America

  Praise for Mitzi Pool Bridges

  “A natural born storyteller, Mitzi writes from the heart.”

  ~Debra Clopton, author and Christian romance writer of over twenty-three books

  From Readers:

  “Heartfelt romance combined with intriguing mysteries keep me guessing, and urge me to read more of Mitzi’s well-written books. They grab my attention from start to finish.”

  ~Carol

  ~*~

  “You have a wonderful creative ability to write interesting and intriguing stories. I have enjoyed all you have written.”

  ~Jean M.

  Dedication

  For my wonderful family

  I love you all

  Chapter One

  The day from hell was finally over.

  Donovan Callahan let out a tired breath as he reached to open the screened back door.

  Loud and urgent voices stopped him.

  Mom and a man he didn’t recognize. Did he hear tears in his mother’s voice?

  He gave a quick glance around. No car. No truck. He jerked open the door, ready to slam inside and confront the man who had put his mother in distress.

  “Donovan can’t find out!” he heard her cry out.

  Stunned, Donovan shut the door quietly. What couldn’t he find out?

  “He looks just like him,” the man said. “If Perkins comes here, there’s no way to keep Donovan from finding out. Right now the bastard’s just down the road in San Antonio.”

  His mom started to cry. Deep heaving sobs that made Donovan’s blood chill.

  She’d cried like this years ago when Dad died, but never since. Not even when they thought they’d lose the ranch.

  Who is Perkins? What the hell does he have to do with me or with Mom?

  Unable to bear the painful sobs another second he burst into the room. “Mom?”

  Her sobs choked off. A look of terror contorted her face.

  He went to her, sat beside her on the sofa, and wrapped an arm around her shoulders. As she buried her face in his shoulder, he felt her tremble. She was petrified.

  Glaring at the man sitting in the recliner across from them, he growled, “Uncle Raymond. I should have known.”

  Donovan was proud of the closeness between himself and his brothers and sister. His mom’s brother was a different story. The two of them had been orphaned at a young age and sent to separate foster homes, but his mom made a point of keeping in touch. Raymond had been in the Air Force for the last thirty-five years and had just retired. Now he was making her cry.

  Because of me?

  Donovan’s gaze locked onto his uncle. “My name was mentioned,” he said with a calm he didn’t feel. “I’d like an explanation.”

  “I…” His mother couldn’t continue, but he felt her stiffen, then slump, her chin dropping onto her chest.

  “Shall I?” his uncle asked.

  Donovan’s gut clenched. Whatever this was had to be serious. “Well?” He glared at his uncle. “Talk to me.”

  “Duncan Callahan isn’t your biological father. Your real father raped your mother.”

  “Liar!” Donovan yelled, leaping to his feet. Looking around wildly, he let his gaze shift from his uncle to his mother’s bent head. The blood rushed from his head and the room tilted beneath him.

  “Whoa,” he muttered, forcing the room to steady again, to block out what he’d heard. “Mom?”

  Her broken sob was his only answer.

  “It isn’t true. It can’t be. What’s your game, Uncle Raymond?”

  “Ask your mother.”

  Donovan allowed himself a look at his mom. She didn’t have to say a word; the truth showed in her face, contorted now with both fear and anguish.

  He was the son of a rapist!

  Ears roaring, vision blurring, Donovan took a step back.

  No! His dad was Duncan Callahan, the man who taught his oldest son how to run a ranch, how to rope and brand a steer. He was a loving and caring father until the day he died.

  But Donovan remembered when he was younger he’d asked both his dad and mom why everyone in the family had either red or reddish brown hair and his was black. Why they had green eyes while his were blue. The answer was always the same. “You favor a distant relative.”

  He looked at the woman who taught truth to her children, but lied to him. “Who is he?” His throat felt raw, his voice guttural.

  Once more his mother shook her head.

  Raymond was a big man, but Donovan pulled him up from the chair, clenched the man’s shirt. “Evidently, you know more about him than Mom. So, tell me who he is and where I can find him.”

  “Take it easy,” Raymond said, trying to disengage Donovan’s hands.

  “I want the truth,” Donovan warned, his grip tightening.

  It took every ounce of his waning willpower to keep from hitting his uncle. Thankfully, he had enough sanity left to realize it wasn’t his uncle he wanted to pulverize, but the man who had raped and impregnated his mother. He turned to her. “Just tell me.”

  His mother swallowed hard, opened her mouth to speak, but no words came out. She shook her head and buried her face in her hands.

  Donovan loosened his hold when Raymond started to talk. “You may not believe this, but I love your mother. When she told me about the rape, it cut deep. It happened years ago, but I didn’t forget. I wanted to kill that spoiled rich kid—Carl Perkins. Your mother was in school in Austin. After the rape, Carl left school and moved to the East Coast. I joined the service. When I had the money, I hired a pri
vate investigator to keep tabs on him. Once a year, the PI sent a report. When I heard Perkins was in San Antonio, I thought Nellie should know.”

  “Does he know about me?” Donovan asked, his throat so tight he had to squeeze the words out.

  “If Perkins investigated Nellie like I investigated him, he could put two and two together. Far as I know, no one told him.”

  “Except I look like him.”

  “You don’t,” his mother cried out. The first words she’d spoken.

  Donovan looked to his uncle, but the man turned away.

  “Son-of-a-bitch,” Donovan exploded.

  He whirled around. Going past the kitchen and into the mudroom he grabbed his Stetson, letting the door slam loudly behind him.

  His boots kicked up dust as he hurried to his truck.

  Speeding down the drive, he swerved around a shiny black Hummer parked at the front of the house that obviously belonged to his uncle.

  The day from hell went from bad to worse. From worrying whether he could coax his prize bull back across the fence where he belonged, from slogging through mud to get a calf out of the pond, to learning that he’d been lied to since the day he was born.

  His life as he’d known it was over.

  His head and heart were filled with regret. All his life he’d been told that the ranch came down from one generation of Callahans to the next. All these years Donovan had assumed he was the next in line. He’d lived a lie. He wasn’t a Callahan.

  Carl Perkins, the man who raped his mom, the man who had not only stolen Donovan’s heritage, but also destroyed his life, would pay.

  ****

  A month later, Donovan had made little headway. At first, he didn’t think it would be hard to find Perkins. But Donovan was close to broke from trying. He had to sell his truck and max out his credit cards to keep the search going.

  He threaded his way through the tourist-packed Riverwalk area of San Antonio. A flat-bottomed boat filled with happy, smiling tourists pushed away from the pier. He walked past the fancy hotels, kept walking until he was in the deepest part of old San Antonio.

  Here it was still festive and bright, but in a different way, and just as busy. Everyone had a job, whether it was behind the counter at a curio shop, hawking tacos from a wagon on the sidewalk or selling T-shirts in front of a souvenir shop. He hurried past, feeling a stab of nostalgia at the routine of lives they took for granted.

  Over the days and weeks since his discovery, his anger had been reduced from its initial violent high to a low simmer. Each day he awoke with the same thought. Find Carl Perkins and beat the hell out of the bastard.

  Two weeks earlier, he’d passed the small office of Maddox Investigating Services. Hector Maddox was in his mid-fifties, almost bald, with a paunch that spilled over his size forty pants. Hector wore a good ol’ Texas boy attitude, but Donovan had perceived a sharp mind and hired him on the spot.

  Every evening they met at the same hole-in-the-wall bar. Though every evening Maddox had little to report, Donovan had more hope of finding the man. Maddox had checked the usual places, plus a few Donovan hadn’t thought of. Last night he hadn’t showed. He did leave a message with Jose, the bartender, to meet around three today.

  Maddox had found Perkins. Donovan was sure of it. Once he took care of Perkins, Donovan could get on with his life. His mouth curled in contempt. What life? He couldn’t go back to the ranch. How could he?

  Stepping into the dim bar, he let his eyes adjust from the bright sun. The smell of stale beer and half-smoked cigarettes hit him just as they had that first day. He looked around. No Maddox.

  After taking a bottle of Coors from José, Donovan sat at a small table in the far corner of the room.

  For the first time in his life, he was alone. He was no longer the oldest son of Duncan and Nellie Callahan—no longer the eldest son who ran the ranch, or the Callahan who stepped in to help raise his three brothers and sister after his dad’s fatal accident. He wasn’t a Callahan at all.

  He was the son of a spoiled and rich rapist.

  Maddox stepped through the doorway, searched the mid-afternoon patrons until he spotted Donovan. There was a shimmer of knowing around him Donovan hadn’t seen before.

  “What did you find?” Donovan asked when Maddox reached the table.

  “My feelers finally paid off. I spent last night and most of today verifying my findings.”

  “Tell me.” Donovan’s hands turned white as he gripped the bottle.

  “Carl Perkins is dead.”

  “What?”

  “Died two weeks after he got here. Can’t believe it took me this long to find out. He was in a bar fight and got cut up pretty good. Whoever did the cutting took his ID. The day after you hired me, someone came here hunting for him. She found him at the morgue, identified the body and took him back east. I think it was his ex-wife wanting alimony. Anyway, that’s when they found out who he was and why it took so long to find him.”

  Dead? No!

  After a long month of anger falling and rising in a steady rhythm, it was like a kick to the gut.

  “I’m real sorry, Donovan. Wish it could have been different.”

  He hadn’t told Maddox the whole story. Not that Perkins was his biological father, only that it was a matter of life and death and he had to be found. Maddox hadn’t asked questions.

  “Were there any other family?”

  Maddox shook his head. “From what I found, he was an only child, had no children. His parents died years ago.”

  “What do I owe you?” Donovan asked.

  “You’re paid up. Look. If there’s anything I can do, just holler. Right now, I’ve got a cheating husband to follow so I’m out of here.”

  Donovan waved him away.

  The bastard’s death didn’t diminish the anger that simmered hotter than ever. There would be no satisfying resolution of confronting the man—of punching him.

  Donovan ordered another beer.

  Then another.

  Was it any wonder he was so different than his half-siblings? Besides the physical looks, he didn’t have their ease of talking to strangers, didn’t communicate as well. Look at their professions; Douglas a lawyer, Darin a detective, Dugan a sheriff. Donovan could never be comfortable doing what any of them did. Then there was TJ. His sister excelled at her and Max’s company where she talked to strangers every day.

  He took another sip from the bottle, then shook his head. Now he knew why he was so different. Hurt ballooned inside him.

  He didn’t know, and no longer cared, how long he sat there or how many bottles he put down.

  “Donovan?”

  Startled, he sat up straighter. He’d know that voice anywhere. In the dim light, he saw his sister, TJ. Dressed in jeans, T-shirt, and boots, she looked the same. Only her eyes were full of misery.

  “Donovan,” she cried as she ran to him, and put her arms around his stiff shoulders in a big hug.

  For a brief moment Donovan savored her embrace. “What are you doing here? And how did you find me?” But deep down he knew. TJ and Max had used their business connections and found Hector. That’s why the PI was in such a hurry to leave.

  “It wasn’t easy.” She turned, looked behind her. “We’re all here, Don.”

  Then he saw them. His brothers. No, his half-brothers with their red hair and green eyes. Donovan swallowed hard. All Callahans. Darin had his cop face on. Dugan, a half-grin. Douglas glared—TJ teary. So like them.

  They crowded around the small table, pulled up chairs and sat down.

  Regret mingled with anger. “Did y’all know? Lie to me all these years?”

  TJ shook her head. “We had no idea. We made Mom tell us. We knew you wouldn’t leave without a reason.”

  “Then why are you here?” he asked, his voice hoarse.

  “To bring you home,” Dugan said.

  “I have no home. Go back to your lives and leave me alone.”

  “Callahans stick together, Don,”
Douglas reminded him.

  “I’m not a Callahan.” Saying it aloud opened a wound so raw it was bleeding.

  “You’re our brother, and you’re a Callahan in every way that matters. You’re coming home,” Dugan said.

  “If I refuse?”

  The brothers looked at each other. “I’ll arrest you,” Dugan said without a trace of his usual levity.

  “Neither you nor Darin have jurisdiction,” Donovan reminded them stiffly.

  “Darin’s a big city cop. He has to follow rules. I’m just a county sheriff,” Dugan said, tongue in cheek. “ I can handcuff your ass and claim ignorance later. One way or another I’ll haul you back to Rainhart County where you belong.”

  “I don’t know where I belong.”

  “You belong on the ranch. It’s your home,” TJ reminded him. “Mom needs you.” TJ looked deep into his eyes. “We need you.”

  For a moment, he was silent. The ranch had been home since he was born. It was where he’d expected to live out his life. Now he knew it was never his to begin with.

  “You’re being a jerk,” Dugan said. “You’re as much a part of this family as any one of us.”

  “Easy for y’all to say. You’re not the bastard.”

  “Neither are you. Maybe a jackass…” Darin put in.

  “Nothing’s changed,” Douglas added.

  “Is that the lawyer talking?”

  “No, dammit. It’s your brother. Mom needs you at home, not here drowning yourself in booze.”

  He looked at their faces; back down at the line of empty bottles. They didn’t know that today was the first day he’d broken his two-beer limit.

  They would have had to hire someone to run the ranch since none of them were interested. Was that their reason for wanting him back?

  “Even if I wanted to, it would never be the same. I can’t go back.”

  “Who says it has to be the same?” Darin piped up. “Every day brings something new and different. The ranch is part of you. That hasn’t changed.” He paused. “Besides, sometimes different can be better.”

  “Says you! Do you have any idea how I worshiped the man I thought was my dad? How I wanted to be like him? What a joke.”

  The brothers looked at him in astonishment. “You’re kidding! You’re a Callahan, always have been—always will be. How could you not know that?”