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Shot and left for dead along with her
stagecoach driver, Willow was saved and brought back to live
amongst the Blackfoot people. The soon to be chief of the
people, Thunder Bow, knew the white woman could not stay
amongst his people much longer. He couldn’t risk the chance
of war if her presence was found on the reservation, drawing
the wrong conclusion of how she came to be there. Also he
could not guarantee her safety from his brother who was
determined to possess her. Thunder Bow calls upon his friend
and blood brother Garrison York to help Willow find her
family, not a simple task being that Willow is suffering
from amnesia.
The last thing Garrison wants is to
travel the rough terrain with this tiny fragile woman, but
his friendship with Thunder Bow is based on honor and he
cannot deny the man who saved his life once. Willow didn’t
want to leave with this stranger either, she trusted Thunder
Bow, but she knew if she stayed he would not be able to stop
Two Eagles from doing her harm. Although, their reasons for
agreeing to their journey were different the strong physical
attraction they felt toward one another was the same.
Dreamcatcher reminded me of the old west
movies I would watch as a kid. Bobbie Russell wrote a
wonderful tale of living on the wild frontier. It had
deceitful backstabbing, conniving women, lust-driven,
money-hungry, cowardly men and a hero and heroine with a
wonderfully strong attraction to each other. Garrison and
Willow were great together, their sexual attraction simmered
between them until it burned out of control. There is a
build up to their first time together, but it is so worth
the wait. The twists and turns, excitement and intrigue,
plus the fantastic supporting characters made
Dreamcatcher a very enjoyable read for me. |