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J.D. Martin isn't trying to misrepresent herself in any way. She's just learned that police work is still called "men's work" and she needs this job as a private investigator to establish herself in Montana.
Reed Brunswick is concerned enough about his missing cattle to hire someone to find who is taking them, but he's not really happy about the P.I. being a woman. Traditionally, women won't stay on his ranch long. He's learned the hard way, but he's desperate. There aren't that many P.I.'s in Montana.
Can J.D. find Reed's cattle?
Can a woman from New York really learn to live on a distant Montana Ranch?
Will Reed learn that all women aren't alike?
This contemporary novel - Elizabeth Butler's first mixes a bit of living in Montana today with a real Wild West problem.
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