PROTECTING ELLA
What an amazing addition to another intriguing story in the Cowboy Brand of Justice series by Ms. Jo Grafford. The story is about mystery, suspense, life and death danger, angst, love, and faith.
Ella Lawton isn’t exactly sure why she is fighting so hard to get to Heart Lake, but she knows she must find Gage Hefner. It is the last thing she remembers her father telling her to do. With the help of a grain truck driver, who knows who Gage is, he’ll drop her off at The Hitching Post. Unfortunately, trouble will also find her before Gage does.
Gage Hefner served with Mick Lawton and considered him a father figure. He knows about Ella, and how much her father loved and protected her. Since the murder of Mick, Gage has been searching for Ella, and had been concerned she is deceased—when she shows up in Heart Lake, he becomes her bodyguard and protector.
The story will have Gage coming into the Hitching Post and seeing Billy Bob Bolander harassing a woman—knowing she doesn’t want him and is frightened. He will see that Billy Bob leaves, and learn that Ella was looking for Gage—discovering she is alive but unwell. The story becomes a life-and-death situation. Why was Billy Bob threatening her, telling her he has someone that wants to see her? Where has Ella been for the past five years?
The town has an ongoing rivalry between two major families, the Bolander and the Radcliffe, where both families own granaries. It affects the people of the town and their families. How and why it affects Ella is the biggest part of this story. Secrets, lies, and deceit, all play a role, but who is the puppet master pulling the strings?
The story is a page-turning tale of the good, the bad, and the ugly of people. Threats will be made against Ella, and Gage will be in a fight to protect her from an unknown enemy. Gage and Lone Star Security will have to keep a twenty-four-seven watch on Ella—adding in Johnny Cuba when Gage can’t be with her. I liked the characters and their interactions along with the suspense of the story. The Christian elements within the story are never preachy, only enhancing individuals' trust and faith.