Chapter 1
Cole
My eyes adjusted to the dimly lit barn. A stage had been set up in the back for the bachelorette auction my cousins were hosting to raise money for the farm and a local animal rescue.
Even though I was a Monroe, I always felt like an outsider. But I was here to support my cousins.
Finally, I spotted Sebastian. I made my way through the crowd of eager men and curious women. Marley introduced the dark-haired woman on the stage.
She reminded me of the teenage girl I’d run into on the tree farm when we were teens. She’d been shy at first. Eventually she’d admitted that her mother had died a year earlier, and she wanted a break from her siblings. Even as a teen, I understood her pain. I hadn’t lost a parent, but I might as well have. We sat on the hill of the Christmas tree field and watched the people shopping for trees in the cut lot outside the barn.
There was something about her. I wanted to hold her hand and tell her everything would get better.
When one of her older brothers had come looking for her, he’d been pissed to find her with me. She’d given me an apologetic look and left without another word. He’d stayed behind to tell me to stay away from her.
I’d wondered about her for months afterward, but I never saw her again. I hadn’t even gotten her name.
My cousins said they were the Calloways, the owners of the competing Christmas tree farm, and they must have been there to scope out our operations. I didn’t care about any of that; I just hoped to get another glimpse of her. But with the feud between our families, it hadn’t happened.
When I finally reached Sebastian, I nodded toward the stage and asked, “Who is that?”
“Her name’s Daphne. She bakes those pies everyone’s been talking about lately.”
“She works at Pine Valley Farms?” More like her family owned it.
“Is that a bad thing?” Sebastian’s friend Hanna asked.
Sebastian lowered his voice. “They’re our competition. It’s a smaller operation but closer to town, so they get more traffic than we do.”
“I didn’t realize.” Hanna’s voice trailed off as I moved away from them and closer to the stage.
There was something about Daphne that pulled me in. She looked lost and slightly panicked. Her expression was similar to the one I’d seen on her face when we were teens.
I had that same urge to rescue her now that I did back then. Without thinking, I raised my hand to add my bid.
Daphne’s startled gaze flew to mine, caught, and held. Her eyes flared with recognition. I slightly inclined my head to let her know that I had her.
I hoped it was relief that flashed in her eyes.
The bidding continued while I let everything around me fade away, never taking my gaze from hers.
Daphne Calloway was the prize. I had this overwhelming desire to take her off the stage and away from these guys. I couldn’t explain where the instinct came from, but it had overtaken all logic and reason.
When Marley declared me the winner, Daphne was ushered backstage. I needed to get to her, but as I moved in that direction, a hulk of a man blocked me.
I grunted in frustration, “Calloway.” I recognized him as one of the Calloway brothers. There were so many of them, and I never had a reason to know them.
He inclined his head slightly. “It’s Teddy Calloway.”
“Cole Monroe. It’s nice to meet you. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have somewhere I have to be.” I moved to step around him, but Teddy stepped sideways to block me.
“That’s my sister you just bid on.”
I bristled at his interference, wondering if this was the brother that warned me away from her the first time we’d met. I might have been a kid back then, but I wasn’t anymore. Tonight, I didn’t care about the farms or whether that woman was our competition. “What’s your point?”
His jaw worked. “I don’t know what your intention is, but I don’t want you messing with her. She’s a single mother.”
Awareness hit me square in the chest. The fight went out of me as I held up my palms to ward him off. “I just wanted to get her off that stage. She looked uncomfortable. I promise I don’t have any other plans for tonight.”