Betrayed Birthright Read online




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  WINE COUNTRY COURIER

  Community Buzz

  LIES…BETRAYAL…SCANDAL…

  Looks like the Ashton family is a little bigger than first thought…

  It seems that Walker Ashton’s past isn’t what he thought it to be. Apparently he and his sister, Charlotte, had been lied to for years, and now he’s feeling betrayed. After learning that the mother he thought long dead is in fact alive and well, the interim CEO of Ashton-Lattimer has left the boardroom to run off to a Native American reservation in Pine Ridge, South Dakota, to find the mother he was denied as a child. Wonder how that family reunion will play out!

  And speaking of family reunions, or rather, reconciliations, what are the chances of Walker and his cousin Trace, who have always been at odds, ever coming to terms with each other? I mean, can the animosity between a father, his son and the father’s favorite protégé ever be fully forgiven, or will the bitter betrayal of birthrights bring down the business? Stay tuned….

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  BETRAYED BIRTHRIGHT

  Sheri WhiteFeather

  Special thanks and acknowledgment are given to Sheri WhiteFeather for her contribution to the DYNASTIES: THE ASHTONS series.

  Books by Sheri WhiteFeather

  Silhouette Desire

  Warrior’s Baby #1248

  Skyler Hawk: Lone Brave #1272

  Jesse Hawk: Brave Father #1278

  Cheyenne Dad #1300

  Night Wind’s Woman #1332

  Tycoon Warrior #1364

  Cherokee #1376

  Comanche Vow #1388

  Cherokee Marriage Dare #1478

  Sleeping with Her Rival #1496

  Cherokee Baby #1509

  Cherokee Dad #1523

  The Heart of a Stranger #1527

  Cherokee Stranger #1563

  A Kept Woman #1575

  Steamy Savannah Nights #1597

  Betrayed Birthright #1663

  Silhouette Bombshell

  Always Look Twice #27

  Silhouette Books

  Dynasties: Summer in Savannah

  “The Dare Affair”

  SHERI WHITEFEATHER

  lives in Southern California and enjoys ethnic dining, attending powwows and visiting art galleries and vintage clothing stores near the beach. Since her one true passion is writing, she is thrilled to be a part of the Silhouette Desire line. When she isn’t writing, she often reads until the wee hours of the morning.

  Sheri’s husband, a member of the Muscogee Creek Nation, inspires many of her stories. They have a son, a daughter and a trio of cats—domestic and wild. She loves to hear from her readers. You may write to her at: P.O. Box 17146, Anaheim, California 92817. Visit her Web site at www.SheriWhiteFeather.com.

  Contents

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Prologue

  1983

  D amn David for dying. And damn him for marrying an Indian woman.

  Spencer Ashton gazed out the windshield, then blew a frustrated breath. He’d just spent a grueling weekend in Nebraska, taking care of family business. But what choice did he have? Who else would pick up the pieces of David’s crumbled life and offer his half-breed kids a better existence?

  That squaw wasn’t fit to raise David’s offspring, and there was no way Spencer would allow her to take them to her freeloading, war-whooping reservation. It was bad enough they’d lived on a farm that had never prospered, a farm Spencer had helped David buy long before he’d married Mary Little Dove.

  But in the end, David had been too proud to admit that he and his family were starving.

  Spencer flipped the sun visor, squinting into the afternoon light. He was on his way home from the airport, heading to Napa Valley, California, where he owned a thriving winery and a twenty-two-thousand-square-foot mansion. The boy and girl he’d acquired—his dead brother’s children—sat next to him in the front seat of his luxury sedan.

  He glanced over and saw that three-year-old Charlotte was still behaving like a lost bird. She even chirped every so often, grating on his nerves. He’d tried to put her in the backseat, but she wouldn’t leave her big brother’s side. Spencer had no use for wounded creatures, but what could he do? She was David’s daughter.

  The eight-year-old boy, on the other hand, had already garnered Spencer’s respect. Walker held his head high. The kid had moxie. Balls. He deserved to be an Ashton.

  Too bad he was part Indian.

  But Spencer would find a way to get past that. Not that he favored children, Lord knew he had enough of his own. He even had another baby on the way, but Walker was different. He would probably prove to be better than any of Spencer’s kids.

  Charlotte made another nervous sound, and Spencer gripped the steering wheel.

  “She’s scared,” Walker said.

  “Yes, of course. Your parents are gone.” Or so they had been told. Their mother was still alive, but that was Spencer’s secret. Everyone, except his lawyer, had been fed the same story: Mary Little Dove had died from injuries she’d sustained in an automobile accident, just like David.

  Spencer and his attorney had strong-armed her into giving up her kids, but it had been the right thing to do.

  Walker was proof. The boy looked dapper in the clothes Spencer had purchased for him. And he hadn’t balked about getting his hair cut, either. Spencer wasn’t about to take the kids home looking like a couple of ragamuffins.

  He turned to study the boy’s posture. Although he protected his sister, keeping her close, he still had an air of independence. His mother had called him a warrior. A Sioux at heart. But Spencer sensed otherwise. This kid should have been white.

  “I was poor when I was young, too,” Spencer said. “But I wanted something better.”

  Walker glanced up. “My dad talked about you.”

  “Did he?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “I would have saved his farm. I didn’t know it was in foreclosure, that he was losing it.” Spencer knew what people said about him: that he was a bastard, a self-righteous prick. But what the hell did they know? He’d always done right by David, even if his kid brother had been a sentimental fool. “I tried to help your dad succeed.”

  “And now you’re helping me and Charlotte,” Walker said.

  “That’s right, I am. Without me, you and your sister wouldn’t have a home.”

  “I’ve been praying for Mom and Dad.”

  Normal prayers, Spencer hoped. None of that heathen crap.

  Walker glanced out the window. He had a chiseled profile—handsome, in spite of his brown skin. He seemed to be surveying the land, the wealth of the wine country. Spencer suspected he appreciated what he saw. This kid would be grateful for his uncle’s generosity.

  “Is my dad going to be buried here?” Walker asked.

  “Yes, he is.”

  “And my mom?”

  “No, son. She’ll be laid to rest on that Indian reservation. The place where she came from. But it’s too far away for you to attend the funeral.”

  “I’ve never been there.”

  And you never will, Spencer thought. He noticed the eight-year-old’s voice had turned raw, but he wouldn’t dare cry. He was too strong to bawl, to act like a baby. Nope, Walker Ashton wasn’t a sniffling coward.

  It was hard to believe that mealy-mouthed Sioux had given birth to him. She’d fallen apart at the seams, no backbone whatsoever. But just to ensu
re she kept up her end of the bargain, Spencer had arranged a thirty-thousand-dollar payment.

  A pittance in his bankbook, a fortune in hers.

  As for Walker and Charlotte, he supposed they were worth a few bucks. The boy was, anyway. The timid little girl merely came with the deal.

  But it was the best deal either of them would ever get. As far as Spencer was concerned, he’d done himself proud.

  One

  W alker wished his sister had never found out that their mother was still alive. And worse yet, he wished Charlotte hadn’t convinced him to look for her.

  He sat on the edge of his motel-room bed and blew a weary breath. He was staying in Gordon, Nebraska, but he’d been scouting the South Dakota reservation, traveling from district to district, cursing Pine Ridge, a place that encompassed two million acres and some of the poorest counties in the nation.

  He would just as soon forget about that Native American hellhole, let alone claim to part of the Oglala Lakota Sioux Nation. While his sister had romantic notions about Indians, Walker was a realist. A liquored-up Native loitering in one of the paltry little towns had called him a stupid iyeska when he’d nearly stumbled over the man’s prone form.

  Iyeska.

  It was an insult he couldn’t even translate.

  Hot and tired, he unbuttoned his shirt and untucked it from his jeans, preparing to take a shower, to wash the grime from his body. He wasn’t used to the sweltering heat, to the depressing vastness of the land.

  When a knock sounded, Walker came to his feet, anxiety knotting his stomach. He’d left word with postal workers, BIA employees, anyone who seemed educated enough to listen. He’d even spoken with tribal cops, but no one had been particularly helpful. If anything, they’d treated him with indifference. The way he’d treated them, he supposed.

  He answered the door and stared at the woman on the other side. He hadn’t expected his visitor to be young and beautiful. She stood about five-seven, with shoulder-length black hair and exotic brown eyes.

  She wore a simple blouse and a pair of nondescript shorts, but her legs—

  When she raised her eyebrows at him, he quit checking her out and remembered that his shirt was unbuttoned, exposing his chest and the sweat dampening his skin.

  Uncomfortable, he frowned at her, wondering if she thought he was an iyeska, too. Clearly, she was Indian, probably from the reservation.

  “Are you Walker Ashton?” she asked.

  “Yes.” He wanted to wipe his hands on his jeans. He didn’t like feeling disorganized and dirty. As the interim CEO of Ashton-Lattimer, an investment banking firm in San Francisco, he relied on cell phones, e-mails, fax transmittals and designer suits.

  She tilted her head. “I’m Tamra Winter Hawk. I live with Mary Little Dove Ashton.”

  His anxiety worsened. Deep down he’d hoped that he wouldn’t find his mom. That he could tell Charlotte that he’d done his best but a family reunion wasn’t meant to be.

  He shifted his stance. “How long have you lived with her?”

  “Mary took me in when I was a child.”

  “I see.” His mom had raised someone else’s kid while his baby sister had longed for maternal affection? That pissed him off, even if the details weren’t clear. “I’d like to speak with her.”

  “She’s at work. And she doesn’t know that you’re looking for her. She has no idea you’re here.”

  “But you do.” Apparently someone had told Tamra about the city-slick stranger who’d been poking around, driving from one poverty-laden county to the next, claiming to be Mary’s long-lost son. “So what’s the problem? Why are you keeping her from me?”

  Tamra didn’t respond. With her striking features and regal posture, she reminded Walker of a museum bronze, an untouchable object encased in glass.

  “I’d like to see your ID,” she finally said.

  He squinted into the sun, the hot, fiery ball blazing behind her. “What for?”

  “To make sure you’re who you say you are.”

  Who the hell else would he be? A government agent on the verge of breaking a treaty? Why would he sacrifice his time—his valuable time—to traipse across this godforsaken land if he wasn’t Mary’s son?

  He glared at her. If the police hadn’t asked for his ID, then why should she? “I don’t need to prove anything to you.”

  “Then maybe I should leave.” Much too elusive, she turned away, her hair spinning in a dark circle.

  Walker wanted to let her go, but he knew he couldn’t. Charlotte would never forgive him.

  Frustrated, he removed his wallet and followed her into the parking lot. “Hold on.”

  Tamra stopped to face him. For a moment he was struck by how easily she’d managed to stir his blood, to fuel his temper.

  Walker didn’t let women get under his skin.

  Once again she reminded him of a bronze statue. Beautiful, breathtaking, far too aloof. Too bad he’d been taught to behave in museums, he thought. To keep his hands off the glass.

  “Will you take it out?” she asked.

  Take what out? he wondered, as his brain went numb.

  She waited, and he blinked away his confusion. She then asked him to remove his ID from his wallet.

  Complying with her request, he handed her his driver’s license. She scanned his identification, studying the photo. He knew it was a lousy picture. But those Department of Motor Vehicles cameras weren’t meant to be flattering.

  “Satisfied?” he asked, his unbuttoned shirt sticking to his skin.

  She returned his license. “I’ll talk to Mary when she gets home from work.”

  “Then what?”

  “I’ll call you and let you know when you can see her.”

  Right, he thought. Because Mary was queen of the reservation. Or the rez. Or whatever the term for that ghetto plain was.

  Aware of his animosity, Tamra sighed. “Your mother has been hurt. I’m only trying to protect her.”

  No kidding? Well, he’d been hurt, too. He had no idea why Spencer had lied to him years ago, telling him that his mom was dead. And now Spencer was dead, gunned down by an unknown assailant.

  Walker’s emotions were a flat-out mess.

  He motioned to his room, where he’d left the door open. “I’ll be here. Do you need the number?”

  “No, thanks. I already have it.” She paused, her voice turning soft. “Please don’t be angry, Walker. At least, not at Mary. She never quit missing you and Charlotte.”

  His chest constricted, making it tough to breathe.

  When he and Charlotte first moved in with Spencer, he used to whisper in the dark, telling her that Mommy and Daddy were angels, watching them from above. But eventually he’d settled into his new life, and he’d quit consoling his sister about the parents they’d lost.

  Spencer had become Walker’s mentor, the only person he’d strived to impress. He’d chosen the older man over everyone, including Charlotte, leaving her to fend for herself.

  “I’m not angry,” he said. But he was, of course. Somewhere in the pit of his stomach, he was mad as hell.

  At himself, at Spencer, at Mary.

  And at her, too. Tamra Winter Hawk.

  The girl his mother had raised.

  While the aroma of beef stew wafted through the house, Tamra helped Mary tidy the living room, dusting, vacuuming and fluffing pillows.

  Mary turned off the vacuum and looked around. “This place is dingy, isn’t it? No matter what we do, it’s still an old mobile home.”

  “It’s the same age as me. And I’m not old.” Besides, they had cozy furniture, indoor plumbing, heat in the winter and plenty of food in the icebox. To Tamra that was enough.

  But she knew how nervous Mary was. She’d been clucking around like a chicken in the rain, preparing for her son but drowning in the fear of seeing him.

  “Tell me about him, Tamra. Tell me about Walker.”

  What could she say that would put the other woman at ease? “He’l
l be here in about an hour, Mary.”

  “I know, but I want to know what you thought of him. You never gave me your opinion.”

  That was true. She hadn’t told Mary that he’d triggered her emotions. Or that his intensity reminded her of the past, of the years she’d spent in San Francisco, of the man who’d destroyed her heart.

  She glanced at Mary, saw that she waited for a response. “He’s stunning.” Tall and lean, she thought, with just the right blend of power, of male muscle. “He was dressed casually.” And she’d noticed his chest, his stomach, the indentation of his navel. “But he doesn’t seem like a casual guy.”

  Mary frowned. “You could tell he was rich?”

  “Yes.”

  “Fancy watch? Designer labels on his clothes?”

  Tamra nodded, troubled by the insecurity in the other woman’s eyes. “But you know what?” she said, hoping to soften the blow. “He looks like his dad.” She’d seen photographs of David Ashton. She knew all about the farmer Mary had married. “And he resembles you, too.”

  Walker’s mother relaxed a little. “He looked like both of us when he was young.” She paused, took an audible breath. “Do you think he’ll like stew?”

  “Sure.” And if he didn’t, she doubted he would say otherwise. He would probably go through the motion of being polite. Of course, he hadn’t been particularly polite with Tamra. But she’d been harsh with him. She didn’t trust his motives, and she suspected he was going to complicate their lives.

  Turn their Lakota world on its ear.

  Most whitemanized Indians were brash and unyielding. Tamra knew because she’d been one herself. And in some ways she was still struggling with her identity.

  “I wonder why he didn’t mention Charlotte,” Mary said. “Are you sure he didn’t say anything about his sister?”

  “I’m sure. But you can ask him about her.”