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Tangled in Tinsel Tangled in Tinsel by Ellen Mint
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“Yeehaw,” he cried, rocking his hips in a circle even while riding Levi.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“I…I don’t care,” Dean sputtered. “About the money. About the…” He shook his head, a smile on even as tears of terror clung in his eyes. “I thought it’d be so romantic to ride after you, then the damn horse freaked out. And now I’m realizing I could have just called you.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“Forget all that mess outside. Antiques, cradles, tradition, bills. Ride that cowboy into the sunset.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“Well, what do you think?” Levi repeated, as if he wasn’t a hot shirtless cowboy in nothing but tight jeans and a hat.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“Lucky for you, I happen to be fantastic at it,” Dean, the hardened city boy, declared. His smile was mesmerizing even against the gray clouds. Levi found himself forever turning to it like a sunflower looking for dawn.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“Sir?” Anita said in her most agitated voice. “We have a problem.” “I think I died,” Dean whispered. He’d never seen anything so white in his life, and his mother made him work country club wine tastings in high school.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“So not the time, or the place. He was a guest in a small town of eccentric but nice people who could turn on him in a second. But if Levi looked at him from under his hat with a shy smile one more time, Dean’s balls were liable to explode.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“Dean worked through everything he wanted to shout at the world. Why were the fates so against him kissing a hot lumberjack that blushed as red as his hair?”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“Dean chuckled at his stupid joke, causing Levi to join in until Dean tugged his sweater clean off. There was a tank top underneath, but those shoulders alone had to be one of the seven deadly sins.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“That, um…” Levi’s face turned as red as his hair, which only fueled Dean’s interest. A cowboy was nice for a romp, but one that stuttered and blushed with a single compliment? God was testing him and he would fail every single time.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“Nervously, Levi scratched along the back of his collar when Dean scooted closer on his chair and lowered his voice. “Is this when you reveal your tragic backstory where a runaway tractor crushed your hand and all your Rodeo King dreams?”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“Even though Dean couldn’t hear him, he felt Levi’s laugh—a genuine laugh of freedom and joy. One of Harry’s paws landed on the rope, ending the game, but Levi only rubbed his dog’s head and began again. Lurking in the guest room window like the ghost of a Victorian child, Dean watched them long into the night.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“A long night in an isolated house in the country with only a hot cowboy for company. There were people back home who’d pay ten grand for that service.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“She folded her notebook up and looked about to bolt, but Anita paused and asked, “What are you going to do?” With a smile on, he bowed. “Charm the locals.” “We’re doomed.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“Ah…no.” An entire weekend surrounded by face painters, clowns twisting balloons, and people walking in a circle for cake sounded like his personal hell. “I’m here on business.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“When it came to the gluteus, Levi was not minimus but not too maximus either—just the right size to get two good handfuls for balance.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“When it came to the gluteus, Levi was not minimus but not too maximus either—just the right size to get two”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“Levi picked up the tree and carried it himself. As he turned to slot the pine into a metal stand, Dean got to enjoy the best perk about a cowboy obsession—the tight jeans.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“If he ever met a rich snob who had more patience than a toddler, he’d eat his hat.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“Why did that have to come with things like utilities and rent? Fairy godmothers never offered to pay for gas.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel
“The stranger gave a low chuckle and Dean’s skin broke out in goosebumps. That was the kind of voice someone paid a lot of money to have read their dirty texts aloud.”
Ellen Mint, Tangled in Tinsel