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Texan Seeks Fortune




  From Bachelor Businessman...to Insta-Dad?

  Connor Fortunado comes to Houston with only one agenda: tracking down a missing (and malicious) Fortune relative. His new assistant, Brianna Childress, is a huge help—even though the single mom has her hands full at home. His attraction to Brianna is instant—and inexplicable. The last thing the bachelor Fortune wants is a houseful of commitments. But could it be that Brianna and her brood are the family he’s been seeking all along?

  MEET THE FORTUNES!

  Fortune of the Month: Connor Fortunado

  Age: 31

  Vital Statistics: Tall, sinewy, hazel-eyed charmer. Fearless—except when it comes to falling in love.

  Claim to Fame: Everyone thinks he’s a corporate researcher, including his family. But he’s actually a private investigator. Right now he is trying to track down a Fortune relative who may be up to no good. (We hope you will be discreet.)

  Romantic Prospects: It’s no secret that Connor is a catch. But he’s more “flavor of the month” than “till death do us part.” A single mom with two preschoolers would definitely not be on the menu.

  “Right now my whole life is focused on finding Charlotte Robinson, or at least reaching any of the Fortunes she may be targeting. I really can’t afford any distractions, no matter how...distracting. Brianna Childress has been a great help. And man, is she pretty. But... Two kids. A dog. Two cats. A turtle?

  “The bottom line is, a man like me needs his freedom. A woman like Brianna needs...more than I can give. I should just stay away from her. So why do I keep coming back?”

  * * *

  THE FORTUNES OF TEXAS:

  The Lost Fortunes—Family secrets revealed!

  Dear Reader,

  Welcome back to another book about the Fortunes, the family that just keeps on giving. This time we meet Connor Fortunado, who, it turns out, is actually part of the Fortune family. Strange things have been happening to members of the family, so Connor begins to investigate and becomes convinced that Charlotte Robinson is behind everything.

  Charlotte was married to the womanizing Gerald Robinson, aka Jerome Fortune. When Gerald left her to marry his “first and only love,” Charlotte decided to avenge herself. Now no one knows where she is, but she has left behind a trail of havoc. Determined to find her as well as warn members of his family, Connor tracks down Brianna Childress, a single mother of two very precocious children, and discovers that she had done some work for Charlotte. He seeks her out, determined to convince her to help him find his target. What he finds instead is the one thing he wasn’t looking for: a woman to complete him, and just maybe a family, too.

  I hope you enjoy reading this as much as I enjoyed writing it. I confess I have a great weakness for short people (otherwise known as little kids). As always, I thank you for taking the time to read one of my books, and from the bottom of my heart, I wish you someone to love who loves you back.

  All the best,

  Marie

  Texan Seeks Fortune

  Marie Ferrarella

  USA TODAY bestselling and RITA® Award–winning author Marie Ferrarella has written more than two hundred and fifty books for Harlequin, some under the name Marie Nicole. Her romances are beloved by fans worldwide. Visit her website, marieferrarella.com.

  Books by Marie Ferrarella

  Harlequin Special Edition

  Forever, Texas

  The Cowboy’s Lesson in Love

  Matchmaking Mamas

  Diamond in the Ruff

  Her Red-Carpet Romance

  Coming Home for Christmas

  Dr. Forget-Me-Not

  Twice a Hero, Always Her Man

  Meant to Be Mine

  A Second Chance for the Single Dad

  Christmastime Courtship

  Engagement for Two

  Adding Up to Family

  The Fortunes of Texas: The Secret Fortunes

  Fortune’s Second-Chance Cowboy

  The Montana Mavericks: The Great Family Roundup

  The Maverick’s Return

  The Fortunes of Texas: The Rulebreakers

  The Fortune Most Likely To...

  Visit the Author Profile page at www.Harlequin.com for more titles.

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  To

  Elliana Melgar,

  The Incredibly Precocious

  And Intelligent

  Three-Year-Old

  Who Was My Inspiration

  For Ava And Axel

  Contents

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Excerpt from Anything for His Baby by Michelle Major

  Prologue

  Connor Fortunado was torn.

  He glanced out of the window of his first-class seat. The flight was just about over.

  He was almost there.

  Houston.

  Home.

  Connor half smiled to himself. Home, better known as “The House of the Incurable Romantics.” The whimsical title had recently occurred to him because every one of his five siblings was either married or going to be married.

  Except for him.

  And that little fact of life, he promised himself, wasn’t about to change anytime soon.

  Or ever.

  Connor was pretty happy with his life. He was thirty-one, single, carefree and able to take off at a moment’s notice without an explanation to anyone if he wanted to—the way he had just done. If he were married and had what was whimsically referred to in some circles as “a better half,” right about now that “better half” would most likely be giving him hell for the double life he was leading. She would have doubtlessly not looked favorably on his giving up an executive position with a prestigious corporate search firm just so that he could follow his passion.

  Everyone in the family still thought he was that highly paid executive at his old firm. His former career had been a dependable, respectable position with an excellent, if somewhat boring, future laid out in front of it. None of his relatives knew that somewhere along the line he had discovered he had a real aptitude for detective work.

  It had begun innocently enough. He’d helped his boss uncover an embezzling scheme within the company. But once he’d discovered the culprit, Connor found that he was hooked on the rush that came in the wake of untangling all the twisted skeins and getting to the bottom of the mystery. After a bit of soul-searching, he’d decided to put his newly honed skills to better use. So he had turned his back on the corporate world and became a highly paid private investigator.

  Career changes like that wouldn’t have sat well with a wife and she would have undoubtedly had no qualms about making her displeasure known.

  To everyone.

  Connor frowned. The moment of reckoning was almost here. He was going to have to come clean to his family once he landed in Houston. Telling his siblings should go fine because for the most part,
they were pretty open-minded. It was coming clean to his parents that was going to be the problem. His parents, especially his father, were not going to look favorably on this change in careers.

  He was not looking forward to this. All things considered, he would have gone on keeping his secret for as long as possible.

  However, fate had other plans for him and was forcing him to own up to this major change in his life. All in the name of the family good. He just hoped his parents would see it that way. Yes, he was an adult, but there was still a part of him that preferred parental approval.

  But he really didn’t have the luxury of keeping this to himself any longer. His family needed him. There was no other conclusion to be reached.

  Someone was out there, trying to get them.

  It wasn’t merely a paranoid thought reserved for the rich but an honest assessment of the situation. How else could he view what had been happening to different members of his family in the last two months? Like to his father’s half brother. Gerald Robinson’s estate, palatial by any standards, had been the target of an arsonist, set on fire and almost burned down to the ground. The family-based technology firm, Robinson Tech, had been the victim of cybersabotage. And Fortunado Real Estate, a company his father founded and two of his sisters and one of his brothers-in-law now worked at, had been the target of sabotage, as well.

  It was as if no one who was even remotely related to the Fortune family—no matter how they spelled their last name—was safe.

  Connor had a gut feeling that it was only going to get worse unless whoever was responsible for wreaking all this havoc was found and captured. As a Fortunado, he had found that he and his family were related to the Fortunes. And that meant he couldn’t just sit on the sidelines and watch this little drama play out.

  He had to do something. He had natural skills, he had connections and he had the money to fund the investigation, all of which would serve him well in his search for whoever was attempting to carry out this vendetta against the entire Fortune family.

  His family.

  In his mind, Connor was already getting started on the case even though he was still airborne.

  All he had to do, he thought, was get past telling his parents.

  “Ladies and gentlemen, we will be beginning our descent to Houston shortly. Please return your tray tables to the upright positions...”

  The cheerful flight attendant continued with her instructions, her voice fading into the background for Connor.

  Connor’s stomach felt just the slightest bit queasy. Not because of the airplane’s descent, but because of what lay ahead.

  Zero hour was almost here.

  Chapter One

  They walked into the big, sprawling living room en masse: his sister Valene; his sister Maddie and her husband, Zach McCarter; and his parents, Kenneth and Barbara Fortunado.

  Here goes nothin’, Connor thought, putting on his game face.

  Kenneth Fortunado, a robust giant of a man, had never been known for beating around the bush. He got right to it.

  “All right, Connor, what’s the big mystery?” Kenneth asked his son as he came in. “What suddenly brings you here?”

  “My guess is it has to be something big to get Connor to leave that cushy, high-paying executive job of his back in Denver and bring his butt back home,” Maddie said, making herself comfortable on one of the oversize sofas in the room.

  “It’s not bad news, is it, dear?” Barbara Fortunado asked, her brown eyes wide with worry as they searched her son’s face. “Please don’t let it be bad news. I couldn’t bear to hear about anything else bad happening after all that’s been going on.”

  “Come to think of it, you do look rather unsettled, boy,” Kenneth said, looking more closely at his son’s face. “Out with it. What’s going on? Why are you suddenly here?”

  Unable to remain quiet any longer, Connor’s sister Valene spoke up. “Everybody, let Connor breathe. We’re all getting way too jumpy.” Valene was referring to the fact that the place where they all worked, Fortunado Real Estate, had suddenly and inexplicably seen a turn for the worse in the last two months. They’d lost a good share of their best clients.

  Taking Maddie’s hand in his, Zach McCarter gave Connor a sympathetic look, as if to say that he was glad he wasn’t the one in his brother-in-law’s shoes, although for now he wisely remained silent.

  Connor looked around the room. There were members of his immediate family who were missing from the gathering although he had put the word out that he wanted to speak to all of them at the same time. He saw no sense in having to go through this little drama twice, but obviously his message hadn’t registered properly.

  “I was hoping to say this when everyone was here,” Connor told his father.

  “You’re going to have to settle for half the family,” Kenneth told him, his tone already growing impatient. “In case you haven’t noticed, trying to get everyone together in one place—apart from holding a wedding—is like herding cats—”

  “More like herding chickens,” Valene said under her breath, then flashed a smile at her father when Kenneth shot her a look. It was obvious she hadn’t thought she was going to be overheard.

  “Connor, please tell us,” Barbara entreated her son. “You’re getting me very nervous.”

  Feeling guilty that he was adding to his mother’s concerns, Connor stopped stalling. Half a family was better than none.

  Taking a deep breath, he launched into the reason for his unexpected return home.

  Connor started slowly. “It’s nothing to make you nervous, Mother.”

  “Spit it out, Connor,” Kenneth ordered. “If you beat around the bush like this at that corporate search firm of yours, it’s a wonder that they haven’t shown you the door yet.”

  This was as good an opening as any, Connor thought. “Well, that’s part of what I wanted to talk to you about,” he began.

  Kenneth cut him off. “They fired you?” he cried, astonished despite what he’d just said.

  “No,” Connor replied firmly. “They didn’t fire me, but I’m not working for them anymore.”

  His father’s complexion was turning a shade of unflattering red. “What do you mean you’re not working for them anymore?” Kenneth demanded.

  “Kenneth, please, let him speak,” Barbara pleaded, putting her hand on her husband’s arm as if she was trying to gentle a wild stallion. “I’m sure he has a good explanation for all this.” She looked at her son hopefully. Waiting.

  “Well?” Kenneth demanded, his eyes all but pinning Connor against the wall.

  Connor took in another breath, as if that would somehow shield him from the explosion he sensed was coming. “I’m not with that firm anymore because I’m a private investigator now.”

  “You’re a PI?” Maddie cried in awed disbelief. Suddenly, a smile bloomed on her lips. “You mean like Magnum?”

  Valene looked at her sister, lost. “Who’s Magnum?” she wanted to know.

  “Some guy on a classic TV show,” Zach volunteered. “I caught a few episodes on one of those channels that show nothing but programs from the seventies and eighties.”

  “No, not like Magnum,” Connor corrected tolerantly. “Most of the work isn’t as glamorous as TV makes it out to be. It requires a lot of patience and a great deal of attention to detail,” he told his family, hoping that was enough.

  Apparently, it wasn’t. Exasperated, Kenneth waved his hand for everyone else in the room to be quiet. He obviously intended to go toe to toe with his son.

  “You’re a private eye?” Kenneth cried, completely stunned and grossly disappointed. There was no question of that. “What the hell were you thinking?”

  “It’s ‘private investigator,’ Dad,” Connor told his father patiently. “And what I was thinking was that maybe I could help find out who’s responsible fo
r everything that’s been going on around here lately.”

  “There are professionals for that sort of thing, dear,” Barbara told her son, speaking up.

  Connor turned to look at his mother. He hadn’t thought this was going to be easy, he reminded himself. “I am a professional, Mother.”

  Kenneth let out an exasperated breath. “Since when?” he mocked.

  Connor turned his attention to his father. He couldn’t back down now. If he did, it was all over. “Since a few months ago.”

  Kenneth frowned, shaking his head, unable to accept the information or come to grips with it.

  “I don’t believe you,” Kenneth countered. “You wouldn’t do something that was so life-altering without telling me.”

  “I am telling you,” Connor pointed out. “Now. There was no reason to say anything earlier.”

  It was plain to everyone that Kenneth found the explanation entirely unacceptable.

  “How did this happen?” his father wanted to know. “Did you wake up one morning and just say, ‘Gee, I’m tired of my high-paying executive job. Let me throw it all away and do something totally mindless, like become a private eye.’ Is that what happened?” Kenneth demanded hotly.

  “Private detective, dear,” Barbara corrected her husband.

  “Private investigator,” Connor said calmly, correcting them both. “And no, I didn’t just wake up one morning and decide to become a private investigator,” he told his father. “My boss suspected that there was someone embezzling money from the firm, but he didn’t know how to go about finding out who was behind it. He shared his concern with me and I told him I’d do a little snooping around. I did and as it turns out, I discovered who was stealing the firm’s money in a little less than a week.”

  Kenneth dourly dismissed the accounting. “You got lucky.”

  “No, I didn’t,” Connor informed his father. “I was persistent. And I found that I had a natural aptitude for ferreting things out.”

  Kenneth snorted. “My son the Ferret. I can’t wait to tell people your new job description.”