police chief that I am. Because I know what things I want to do to change the community, and whatever name I use, it’s going to be more than a monument.”
“Well I’m damn glad to hear it.”
“West,” Pansy said. “You still need to meet my family.”
“Well,” he said. “Then let’s go to Hope Springs.”
She paused for a moment, and the corner of her mouth tipped up. “You know, for the first time since my parents died, I actually think it’s a fitting name.”
And West had to agree that it damn well was.
More fitting than whoever named it could have imagined, that was for sure.
These two ranches that between them they called home, had been the answer to what ailed them all along.
When he’d felt damaged beyond fixing, when Pansy had believed she was bad, redemption had called to them.
And when everything seemed dark and grim, hope had remained. It had sheltered his Pansy for all those years when she was a child.
Redemption led to hope, and it was hope that had brought them to love in the end.
And love had led him home.
* * *
Keep reading for an excerpt from The Hero of Hope Springs by Maisey Yates.
The Hero of Hope Springs
by Maisey Yates
CHAPTER ONE
FOR AS LONG as Ryder Daniels had known Sammy Marshall she had been his sunshine.
She had come into his life golden and bright and warm at a time when everything had seemed dark and cold.
And like anyone who had been lost in the dark for a long while, he’d squinted against the light when he’d first seen it. Had felt like it was just too damned much.
At first he’d wrapped himself up in a blanket of his own anger and bitterness. But soon all her gentle warmth had broken through and he’d shed some layers. Some. Not all.
And only for her.
Much like the sun, he never got used to her brightness. Time didn’t dull the shine.
Even now as she spun circles out in the middle of the dance floor at the Gold Valley Saloon, he could feel it. Down in his bones. Her blond hair swung around with every movement, tangled and curling, her arms wide and free, the bangles on her wrists glittering in the light with each turn. The white dress she wore was long and loose, but when it caught hold of her skin it was somehow more suggestive and revealing than any of the short, tight dresses out on the dance floor could have ever been.
Ryder looked, because he was only a man.
But Sammy was his sun.
His source of light. His source of warmth.
And much like the sun, he knew that getting close enough to touch it was impossible.
There were two men dancing with her, spinning her back and forth between them, and she was laughing, her cheeks red and glowing. Then with a light pat—one for each of their shoulders—she abandoned them and made her way back over to the table where Ryder was sitting with his siblings, most notably his sister Pansy, and her brand-new fiancé, West Caldwell.
They had called them all out tonight to make the announcement. But Ryder already knew.
West had come and spoken to him like he was Pansy’s father.
And in many ways, he supposed that he was.
When their parents had died, it had been up to him to take care of his siblings.
When their parents had died, all the light in his world had gone out.
It had left him frozen.
Sammy had gotten him through.
And he knew that Sammy would say something entirely different. That he was her guardian, her protector. And that was true in a way. But she had saved him. Had saved him in ways that she would never fully understand.
Laughing, Sammy plopped down at the table, right beside him, her shoulder brushing up against his, the touch a sort of strange familiar torture to him.
It nearly went by unnoticed.
Nearly.
“Does anybody need another drink?” she said, pushing her mane of hair out of her face and treating him to a smile.
“Your friends might want one,” he pointed out.
She cast a glance back at the dance floor. Then she made a dismissive noise. “They’re not in the running to becoming my friends,” she said.
He was relieved to hear it, even though he wouldn’t ever say.
Sammy was everything wild and free. Everything that he never would be.
He had no desire—ever—to try and bottle up that freedom and use it for himself. To limit it. Whatever he thought about it sometimes.
“I’ll get the drinks,” Colt said, getting