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The Rustler (Stone Creek) [Mass Market Paperback]

Linda Lael Miller (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Miller's third Stone Creek novel (after 2008's A Wanted Man) gets as hot as the noontime desert. In early 20th-century Arizona territory, Wyatt Yarbro leaves behind his life as an outlaw as he temporarily replaces his brother as the deputy marshal of Stone Creek and sets out to woo Sarah Tamlin, the intelligent and beautiful daughter of a local banker. The somewhat predictable plot line is enhanced as Sarah's secrets are carefully revealed, and the relationship between Sarah and Wyatt sizzles in a series of very sensual love scenes. Miller's portrayal of Sarah as a strong, independent woman sets this novel apart from customary tales of the damsel in distress and the rescuing hero. Instead, Miller focuses on Sarah and Wyatt's shared and separate vulnerabilities and how they find it easier to face the difficulties of everyday life when they're together. Well-developed, personable characters and a handful of loose ends will leave readers anticipating future installments. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

It might have been the suffocating heat that had Miss Sarah Tamlin thinking of perdition—though of course three days of endless sermons had to be a factor—and how she'd almost certainly wind up there one day, as she pounded out the wheezing refrain of "Shall We Gather at the River" for a sweltering congregation. Seated at an organ hauled into Brother Hickey's big revival tent in the bed of a buckboard, Sarah endured, perspiring, longing to fan herself with her sheet music or brush away the damp tendrils of hair clinging to the sides of her neck.

Every year in August, sure as the hay harvest, Brother Hickey and his roustabouts descended on the community like a circus without animals or parades, erected a canvas sanctuary on the grassy banks of Stone Creek, and set about saving the heathen from certain damnation.

A portion of the congregation seemed to deem it necessary to get saved on an annual basis. There wasn't much to do in a place the size of Stone Creek, after all, and with no doubts about the fate of their immortal souls weighing on their minds, folks would be free to enjoy the picnic that always followed the preaching.

Sarah forced the last few notes of the old hymn through the organ pipes and sighed with relief. The air was heavy and still—a baby gave a brief, fretful squall—and then, remarkably, a breeze swept through the gathering, as soft and cool as the breath of heaven itself.

Startled, Sarah looked up from the cracked and yellowed keys of Brother Hickey's well-traveled organ, over the turned heads of the salvation-seekers, and saw a man standing at the back of the tent. Tall and cleanshaven, with dark hair and eyes, he carried a dusty round-brimmed hat in one hand. His clothes were trail-worn, and the holster riding low on his right hip, gun-slinger fashion, was empty. A grin tilted a corner of his mouth slightly upward.

Brother Hickey, moving behind his portable pulpit, which jolted over country roads and cattle trails right alongside the organ, cleared his throat and opened his Bible. "Have you come to be saved, stranger?" he boomed, employing his preacher voice.

The dark-haired man took a few steps forward. He moved with an easy grace, and for the space of a skipped heartbeat, Sarah wondered if he was some avenging angel, sent to put a stop to the show. "No, sir," he said. "I don't reckon I have." His gaze strayed to Sarah, sitting there in the back of that buckboard, her best calico dress soaked under the armpits. The grin widened to a fleeting smile, as if he somehow knew the stays of her corset were stabbing the underside of her left breast, and all her other secrets, as well. A smile that imprinted itself on some sweet and wholly uncharted place inside her. "That was fine music, ma'am," he told her directly. "I hope there'll be more of it."

Then, affably apologetic for disrupting the proceedings, he sat down next to Marshal Yarbro, who was grinning, and the two of them bumped shoulders.

Brother Hickey lifted his hands heavenward, closed his eyes in earnest and silent prayer, and then slammed a fist down onto the pulpit. Everybody jumped, Sarah noticed, except for the marshal and the stranger sitting beside him.

"Now is the day of Salvation!" Brother Hickey thundered, his copious white whiskers quavering. "Sinners, come forward and be bathed in the Blood of the Lamb!"

Several people rose and approached the makeshift altar, though most of the repenting had been done at previous services. There was dear old Mrs. Elsdon, who'd probably never committed an actual sin, two or three ladies of ill repute from Jolene Bell's saloon, brothel and bathhouse, though Miss Bell herself was noticeably absent, a handful of cowpunchers from Sam O'Ballivan's ranch, mostly likely hoping to speed things along so the picnic could get underway.

If Sarah hadn't been staring at the stranger, she'd have been amused. The revival was in its third and final day, and by now, even the most pious were ready to socialize over fried chicken and apple pie. The children were restless, longing to chase each other under the shady oak trees, wade in the creek, and make noise.

The praying and the saving went on for a long time, but at last Brother Hickey was through gathering in the lost sheep. He signaled Sarah, and she arranged her fingers on the keyboard, tried to put the dark-haired visitor out of her mind, and played a thunderous rendition of "What a Friend We Have in Jesus."

As soon as she struck the final chord, the benches emptied and the stampede began.

Sarah sat still on the hard stool in front of the organ, almost faint with relief, her eyes closed. It was over for another year. As soon as everyone had left the tent, she would climb down from the bed of the wagon, slip out the back way, and make her way home. She kept a jar of tea cooling in the springhouse, and when she'd drunk her fill, she'd strip, stuff her corset into the stove, and take a sponge bath.

"Miss? It is 'Miss,' isn't it?"

Sarah opened her eyes, saw the stranger standing right beside the buckboard, looking up at her. Again, she felt it, a peculiar jolting sensation that brought a blush to her cheeks, as though he'd read her thoughts and even imagined her shut away in her bedroom, naked, sluicing her flesh with water from a basin. She resisted a humiliating urge to smooth her hair, sit up straighter. "Yes," she said stiffly.

"Wyatt Yarbro," the man said, putting out a hand.

Sarah hesitated, then took it, though tentatively. His fingers were strong, calloused, and cool as the breeze he'd blown in on. "Sarah Tamlin," she allowed, feeling foolish and much younger than her twenty-seven years.

"Would you like some help getting down from there?"

Short of lifting her skirts and leaping to the sawdust floor, as she would normally have done, Sarah had no graceful options. "All right," she replied shyly. Then she climbed into the buckboard seat, careful not to let her ankles show, and Wyatt Yarbro put his hands on her waist and lifted her down. She stood looking up at him, stunned by the effect of his touch. Light-headed, she swayed slightly, and he steadied her.

His eyes were a deep brown, and they glinted with mischief and something else, too—some private, deep-seated sorrow. "I reckon it would be a sight cooler outside, under those oak trees alongside the creek," he said.

Sarah merely nodded. Let herself be escorted out of the revival tent on Mr. Yarbro's arm, in front of God and everybody.

Rowdy approached as Wyatt reclaimed his pistol from the table set aside for the purpose, his old yellow dog, Pardner, at his heels, and tipped his hat to Sarah.

"I didn't see Mrs. Yarbro in the congregation," Sarah said. She liked Lark, a former schoolteacher who'd stirred up quite a scandal when she took up with the marshal.

"The baby's getting teeth, and it makes him fractious," Rowdy replied. "They'll be along later, when the heat lets up." He turned slightly, gave Wyatt an affectionate slap on the shoulder. "I'd introduce my brother properly," he added, "but it seems you've already made his acquaintance."

"I'm the good-looking one," Wyatt said.

Just then, Fiona Harvey showed up, holding a plate piled high with fried chicken, potato salad and apple crumble. Fiona, who was thirty if she was a day, wanted a husband. Everybody knew that.

When and if Fiona managed to get married, Sarah would become the town spinster.

"You look hungry," Fiona told Wyatt, batting her sparse eyelashes.

Sarah, who considered Fiona a friend, simmered behind a cordial smile.

Wyatt tipped his head and flashed a grin at Fiona. "Why, thank you, ma'am," he said, accepting the plate.

Rowdy rolled his eyes, caught the expression on Sarah's face, and winked at her.

"You're welcome to come and sit with us," Fiona simpered, indicating a cluster of women sitting on a blanket under a nearby tree.

The marshal took the plate from Wyatt's hands and gave it back to Fiona. "My brother's much obliged," he said smoothly, "but we've been expecting him, so Lark's got a big spread on the table at home."

"Thanks just the same, though," Wyatt said.

Fiona took the rebuff gracefully, said she hoped Mr. Yarbro would come back for the fireworks and the dance that would take up after sunset, and he replied that he might well do that. With a sidelong glance at Sarah, he allowed as how he enjoyed fireworks.

She blushed again, oddly flustered.

And Fiona pressed the plate into her hands. "Take this to your papa," she told Sarah. "Heaven knows, he'll appreciate a decent supper, the way you cook."

"Why, thank you, Fiona," Sarah said.

Wyatt and Rowdy exchanged glances, and one of them chuckled.

Fiona smiled and walked away.

"Give my regards to your father," Rowdy said, as Sarah turned to go, once again at a loss for words. The next time she saw Fiona, she'd have plenty to say, though.

"I'd better see Miss Tamlin home," Wyatt said, and before Rowdy could protest that Lark had dinner waiting, he'd taken Sarah's arm and escorted her halfway to the road.

Since it would be rude to tell him she could get home just fine on her own, Sarah bit her lip and marched along, resigned, carrying the plate like a crown on a velvet cushion.

An old spotted horse with a long cut on its side ambled along behind them, bridle jingling, reins wrapped loosely around the saddle horn.

Sarah looked back.

"That's just Reb," Wyatt said.

"What happened to his side?"

"He had a run-in with a steer a while back. He's healing up fine, though."

Sarah wanted to ask a thousand other questions, but all of them jammed up in the back of her throat. She was sweating, her hair felt as though it would escape its pins at any moment, and she could almost feel the flames of Brother Hickey's beloved hellfire licking at her hem.

Mr. Yarbro donned his dusty hat, which made him look like a highwayman out of some dime novel. Sarah was painfully conscious of his hand, cupping her elbow, and the way he moved, with a sort of easy prowl.

"Are you really a bad cook?" he asked, visibly restraining a grin.

"Yes," Sarah admitted, with a heavy sigh.

He chuckled. "Guess that's why you...


Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: HQN Books (October 1, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0373773307
  • ISBN-13: 978-0373773305
  • Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 4.1 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #271,104 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

In January of 2006, NEW YORK TIMES bestselling author Linda Lael Miller left the Arizona horse property she's called home for the past five years and listened to the call of her heart. Packing up her work-in-progress for HQN Books; her dogs, Sadie and Bernice, and her four horses, the author of more than 70 novels bid farewell to her home in the desert and returned to the place of her birth, Spokane, Washington.
The daughter of a town marshal, Linda grew up in Northport, WA, a community of 500 on the Columbia River, 120 miles north of Spokane. Her childhood remembrances include riding horses and playing cowgirl on her grandparents' nearby farm. Her grandparents' spread was so rustic that in the early days it lacked electricity and running water.

As delightful as this childhood was, Linda longed to see the world. After graduating as valedictorian of her high school class, she left to pursue her dream. Because of the success of her author career, Linda was able to live part-time in London for several years, spend time in Italy and travel to such far-off destinations as Russia, Hong Kong and Israel. Now, Linda says, the wanderlust is (mostly) out of her blood, and she's come full circle, back to the people and the places she knows and loves.

Before Linda begins her writing day, she takes her first cup of coffee while enjoying the scenic view of the wooded draw behind her new home. The first morning there, a snowfall blanketed the pine trees, something she had missed in the desert outside Scottsdale. Still enamored with the people she came to love in Arizona, she says she will still set books in that starkly beautiful area, and, of course, in other stories the action will take place in Washington.

Devoted to helping others pursue their dreams, the author will launch her sixth round of Linda Lael Miller Scholarships for Women in May of this year. A talented speaker, she donates all her speaking honoraria to her scholarship fund. The stipends are awarded to women who seek to better their lot in life through education.

It's no wonder the protagonists in Miller's novels are women her readers admire for their honor, courage, trustworthiness, valor and determination to succeed, despite overwhelming odds. 'These qualities make them excellent role models for young women,' Miller explains. 'The male leads possess equally noble traits that today's woman would be delighted to find in her life's mate.'

The author traces the birth of her writing career to the day when a Northport teacher told her that the stories she was writing were good, that she just might have a future in writing. Later, when she decided to write novels, she endured her share of rejection before she made her first sale.

Although Linda has written successfully in other genres, she is best known for stories set in the West'stories like McKETTRICK'S CHOICE (HQN Books March 2006 paperback); THE MAN FROM STONE CREEK (HQN, June 2006 hardcover) and that very first novel, FLETCHER'S WOMAN, which is being reissued in 2006. Her stories, set in yesterday's world, and today's, are historical romances, romantic thrillers, and other contemporary tales. They consistently score on prestigious national bestseller lists.

Linda has come a long way since leaving her sheltered life in Northport at age 18 to experience the world. 'Growing up in that time and place, in a family grounded in Western values, served me well,' she allows. 'And I'm happy to be back home.'


 

Customer Reviews

22 Reviews
5 star:
 (13)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (2)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (22 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rustler to Law-Abiding Lover!, September 15, 2008
By 
This review is from: The Rustler (Stone Creek) (Mass Market Paperback)
After severe lightning causes a terrifying cattle stampede that almost kills Wyatt Yarbro, he undergoes an unexpected change of heart about his cattle rustling career. Doubts he has aplenty but he knows his days are numbered if he continues this nomadic, criminal life. Returning to Stone Creek, where his brother is the town's Sheriff, he experiences just how much change will challenge him. Within a day of his arrival, he meets Miss Sarah Tamlin and is deputized by his brother who's out to round up Wyatt's former nefarious friends.

Sarah is just as shocked by Wyatt's effect on her emotions, but she also knows that she can't be part of his life because of her own secret which may be revealed sooner rather than later. For her ex-lover, Charles Elliott Langstreet, shows up with a young boy and threatens to take over the bank business she and her father have struggled to maintain through some staggering debt and hard times. Now that her father is showing signs of dementia, the burden is hers alone. Anxious about the future, she shows her gritty personality in her decision to do everything possible to keep Charles out of the picture.

Little does Wyatt imagine just how involved he's about to become with Sarah, especially after he helps thwart a bank robbery and participates in a shoot-out leading to three deaths.

Sarah, however, isn't so worried about her own skin that she can't be there for others in need. What will she do with Owen Langstreet, the young boy who is left with Sarah for several weeks? What can she do for a young woman, Kitty, turned whore whose daughter is about to come to Stone Creek as a teacher?

The Rustler is a captivating Western, romantic tale that contains more than enough romance and intrigue to grip the reader's interest in this page-turning, gritty but oh so loving story! It's a delightful story that makes the reader feel he or she were just as comfortable and tensely involved with the Stone Creek residents' lives. There's plenty more to enjoy about this dangerous, passionate account written by a very talented author!

Wonderfully done, Ms. Linda Lael Miller!

Reviewed by Viviane Crystal on September 15, 2008

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "The Rustler" Outstanding!, May 14, 2009
By 
Lynx Rufus ("Talk of the Town Trailer Estates Park") - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Rustler (Stone Creek) (Mass Market Paperback)
Sarah Tamlin works at a bank with her
father who has flash backs from the civil
war. Ephriam Tamlin, going back in time,
dresses up in his Union Army Blue uniform.
Sarah needs to protect her father who the
founder, president and holder of majority
shares in the Stockman's Bank. If word were
to leak out that he's demented, he would
be dismissed. Sarah and her father wouldn't
have any money to live on. Ephriam Tamlin
had some bad loans when they had a drought.
He used his own money to cover several loans
to ranchers so they won't lose their land.

Wyatt Yarbo is an outlaw. He decided to
turn his life around. His brother Rhowdy
offered him a place to stay, if he would
leave his outlaw life behind for good.
Wyatt decided to visit his brother Rhowdy
who's a marshal in Stone Creek. Wyatt
arrived in town when the town was having
their yearly hay harvest. That's where he
met Sarah for the first time. Wyatt was
interested in Sarah with designs on marrying
her. His brother Rhowdy told him she's a
banker's daughter with a college education,
and wouldn't get involved with an outlaw.

I've been hooked on the Stone Creek series. I am
happy one of Rhowdy's (second book) brother's
Wyatt Yarbro, had a chance on his story.

The Rustler (Stone Creek) third in the series
could be read independently. I would recommend
reading The Man From Stone Creek and A Wanted
Man. Many of the characters in the first two in the
series played sufficient roles in The Rustler.

I highly recommend The Rustler! (Stone Creek)
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Thoroughly decent, but a bit slow moving for my taste, April 17, 2009
This review is from: The Rustler (Stone Creek) (Mass Market Paperback)
Plot Summary: Wyatt Yarbro has been an outlaw his entire life, but when he miraculously survives a cattle stampede, he decides to follow his brother's example and turn over a new leaf. Upon arriving in town, Wyatt is smitten at first sight by Sarah Tamlin, the spinster daughter of the town's banker. Sarah's entire life is built upon lies, and she actually records them in a small notebook to keep track of her mendacities. She's not a bad person, but she has way too many secrets she needs to hide. They are quite a pair, since Wyatt barely has a dime to his name, and Sarah's in danger of losing her family's livelihood.

I've always wanted to read a story where the hero is dirt poor throughout the entire book, and I got my wish here, at least until the epilogue. All Wyatt ever had was his gun and a worn down horse he won at a card game. I just like the idea that the hero could be valued for who he is, and what he does, without having a pile of money backing him up.

Wyatt was definitely my favorite character in this story. It's hard not to like a man who will care for an abused dog, an abandoned child, and assist the elderly. He even blistered his own hands digging graves for some murdered cowhands, because no one else would do the job. It's almost hard to believe that Wyatt was ever an outlaw, because I can't picture him robbing and rustling from the innocent.

Sarah on the other hand, tried my patience a few times. I won't give away any spoilers, but at one point I was ready to write her off for being stupid, thoughtless, and cruel. The story meandered like a slow moving river for most of the book, and then in a rush, a flurry of action happens at the end. It felt like I was dumped over a waterfall, when I would have preferred to ride some whitewater rapids for a while. The sex was more than decent, but it was all too brief, and it was like waiting through a long, bland dinner to get your dessert.
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