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Natalie Keller Reinert Books

The Project Horse (Ocala Horse Girls: Book One) Paperback

The Project Horse (Ocala Horse Girls: Book One) Paperback

Regular price $19.99 USD
Regular price Sale price $19.99 USD
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Discover a Second Chance, Enemies to Lovers Romance Set in Florida's Spectacular Horse Country. When Posey came home again, she found a whole life waiting for her - including the man who chased her away...but never gave up hoping she'd come back.

The Project Horse is Book One in Ocala Horse Girls, a new romantic comedy series set in the same lush and detailed world as Natalie Keller Reinert's bestselling series, including...

  • The Eventing Series
  • The Alex & Alexander Series
  • The Show Barn Blues Series
  • The Briar Hill Farm Series

These novels include overlapping characters, events, and locales which create a community of equestrians you'll love recognizing and catching up with in each book!

This paperback ships directly from the printer. Please add your name to the "Notes" box at check-out to have a signed book-plate to add to your book! It will be mailed separately.

Other Editions: Find the ebook here.

Synopsis

Posey Malone is heading home. With her horse trainer father gone to the great bookmaker in the sky, her love life in shambles, and her career stalled, she figures it’s best for everyone if she just shacks up with her mom for a while.

So when she pulls up in front of the family house and sees a big "For Sale" sign in the front yard, please forgive Posey if she says a few swear words.

The good news is that Mom has a new place with room for Posey; the bad news is that it's on the farm where Posey's teenage dreams of equestrian stardom hit the ground more than a decade ago. The worse news is that her mother fully expects her to go back to work in the Thoroughbred training barn where Posey's ex and greatest rival is running the show.

The son of her father's ex-partner, Adam made her life a living hell as a teenager. One could almost say Adam broke up her entire family, if one wanted to blame someone. And Posey definitely wants to blame someone. But is this the same Adam she ran away from?

When Posey and Adam take on project horses as a bet to see who is the better horse trainer, she finds herself working with him every day...and that the arrogant boy she remembers has been replaced by a handsome man determined to make amends.

A story about growing up, coming home, and finding love: The Project Horse will take you on a gallop through Florida's horse country with plenty of friendship, laughter, and redemption along the way.

Look Inside: Chapter One

In the opening pages of The Project Horse, we meet Posey, who is driving home from NYC to Ocala, Florida - the horse capital of the world - to start her adulthood over. Finding out her mother has sold the family home is not the way she planned to start over again... as you'll find in this excerpt from Chapter One!

THE PROJECT HORSE

Dusk is falling as I pull into a small court of single-family houses. Blue Ribbon Estates used to be way out in the countryside, but I’ve passed two shiny new subdivisions on the way here. It’s disorienting, remembering farms, but seeing cookie-cutter houses in their places. Someone probably felt the same way thirty years ago when these brick ranchers went up on a discarded pasture. I guess we’re all disappointments, as far as generations go.

I park the Kia under a street light in front of the house, and marvel for a moment at the way my childhood home simply doesn’t change. Same lace curtains in the bay window. Same beige blinds in the upstairs bedrooms. Same boring square of green sod in the front yard—wait.
Wait.

I get out of the car and shut the door with trembling fingers. Slowly, slowly, I walk over to the sign on the lawn.

For Sale.

And the cap on top: UNDER CONTRACT.

I press my fingers to my brow, an instant headache flaring behind my eyes. This can’t be happening. Mom would have told me, she would have said—I talked to her yesterday, for heaven’s sake!

The front door opens, a rectangle of yellow light. I see my mom as a silhouette, a small woman in jeans and a sweatshirt.

“Honey!” my mom calls. “You’re here! I have the best news!”

* * *

“How did this happen so quickly?” I’m sitting at the kitchen table, which is mostly covered with cardboard boxes. My mom has been packing all day, apparently.
While I was driving home, she was putting everything in the house into boxes marked KEEP or GIVE.

It’s a lot to take in.

Mom puts a mug of tea in front of me. “Baby girl, you don’t even want to know what this house is worth. Land values in Ocala have quadrupled. I am not joking when I say the sign went up yesterday morning and the contract sign went on it today. I didn’t even have to give a single showing. We had six offers over asking price by five o’clock yesterday.”

I take an experimental sip of tea while I try to process all of this information. It’s terrible, of course—my mom makes awful, astringent, horrendous tea with store-brand tea bags and some kind of plant-alcohol sweetener which makes me crave actual sugar like a drug addict—but it gives me something to do with my hands besides wave them around my head, having a total freak-out. And something to do with my lips and tongue besides using them to shriek, “How can you just sell the house like this? We were supposed to start over together!”

I was supposed to start over with her.

Had I not been clear to her before, when I said I needed this?

My mom is drinking a low-calorie beer. She sets the sweating bottle on the table without regard for rings left on the wood, so I guess the placemats and coasters are packed away. Or maybe there are no rules anymore. “Anyway, honey, you can stay with me as long as you want. I got a job with housing.”

“You did? A job? Doing what, the books?” Mom was the business manager for Malone Training, and Malone-Salazar Racing Stables before that. She could probably get a management job from any breeder or trainer in town just by asking.

“Oh, no. Feeding outside horses.”

“Seriously? Like, broodmares and stuff? You’re going to be one of those people who just drive around with a golf cart full of feed?”

“I am,” Mom says with satisfaction. “I think it’ll be fun. I was more hands-on with the horses after it was just your father and me. I don’t want to sit in a stuffy office all day.”
I can understand that.

“It’s part-time, just feeding breakfast and dinner, checking to make sure everyone is alive and in one piece, that kind of thing. But it comes with a two-bedroom house. Plenty of room for the two of us.” She tapes up a box with sure fingers. “You could probably get a job there, too, if you want one.”

“A horse job?”

“Why not? You said you’re short of writing work. You know how to handle horses. And there’s plenty to be done. It’s October, so the long yearlings are all coming in to get started under saddle, and the Kentucky farms are sending down their babies to start too—they need tons of riders.”

“I know the Ocala calendar,” I interrupt. “But I quit riding because I wasn’t any good at it.”

My mom looks down at the roll of packing tape in her hands. “You were plenty good at riding,” she says quietly.

“Sure, I was. So good that Dad took me off all our best horses and Adam Salazar told me his father thought I was a danger on the track.”

“Posey, you’re not still hanging on to that!”

I nearly overturn my tea mug. “Hanging on to that? Mom, I was getting up at four thirty every morning to ride our horses before school and then I was fired. You were there!”

“It wasn’t that you were a bad rider,” Mom says, looking everywhere but at me. “There were other reasons they took you off the horses.”

“Like what? Like Adam suddenly deciding he hated me? Rafe couldn’t handle his little heir getting hurt by a girl outriding him in the morning? I can’t believe we’re talking about this, by the way. My primary goal in giving this damned business up was never, ever having to discuss any of this, ever.”

“So let’s not talk about it,” Mom retorts spiritedly. “Let’s talk about something else. How about those Yankees, huh?”

“I don’t know anything about the Yankees,” I sigh. “Where is this job, anyway? Where are we going to live?” I’m hoping for one of the big farms, like Clover Meadows or Silverleaf, where I can disappear into a thousand acres of rolling pastures and figure out my life quietly, on my own.

“Oh, it’s right around the corner,” Mom says. She can’t help but look excited, and for a moment I can forget my pique. My mom is a very young sixty-two, with a golden tan and crinkling lines around her eyes and mouth. She’s spent her entire life outdoors in the Florida sun, and she looks unfairly beautiful despite her serious lack of SPF for most of it.

“Whose place? Is Lucky Seven still in business?” I take a sip of tea, trying to think of some of the other big farms near Blue Ribbon Court.

“They are, but not them. It’s actually—” She gives me a lopsided grin. “It’s Salazar Farm, Posey.”

I choke on my tea.

“Oh, honey.” All of my spluttering earns me a sympathetic pat on the arm. “I’m sure Adam Salazar has forgotten all about your little spat.”

“Spat?” I stare at her. She knows she’s underplaying this situation by a factor of ten. Or a hundred. “Try lifelong feud.”

“You were just kids!”

“We were seventeen, Mom. We were practically adults. And that little spat ended up with me losing my job and going to New York City.”

“Where you lived a great and exciting life,” Mom suggests. “Found a career you love?”

I roll my eyes at that.

“Lots of young women would love to spend their twenties in the city,” she says. “I think you’re just a little worked up right now.”

“I’m worked up because I haven’t slept in two days and you just told me we are moving to the Salazar place and that you think I should work there. Did you really think they’d hire me to ride? After what went down?”

“It’s water under the bridge,” Mom says, but she looks a little troubled, a line forming between her eyes. “Adam was very eager to offer me this job and house when I said I might be looking.”

“Wait. Adam offered it?”

“He’s running the place for his dad.”

“Jesus.” It just gets worse and worse. “I can’t talk about this anymore. I need a nap.”

“I’ll heat something up once I’ve cleared the table, and then you can go to bed,” Mom says. She eyeballs the large vase left on the table, a crystal leviathan that’s been part of the house since I was a small girl. “Do you want that vase?”

“Me? I don’t have anywhere to put it.” It’s the kind of vase which demands a shelf of its own, possibly a carefully positioned light, and daily dusting.

“Goodwill pile, then,” she says briskly, and sweeps the vase from the table. I watch it leave the room in her hands, finally shocked speechless. But by the time she comes back, I’ve recovered myself enough to bring up the actual issue here.

“Mom? Adam Salazar will not have forgotten our fight.”

“Oh, and how do you know that?” Exasperation enters her tone. “You don’t have any idea what Adam Salazar is thinking about.”

“I know because I didn’t forget!”

She eyes me speculatively, as if trying to determine how much bad news I can handle in one evening. “Well, I didn’t want to say it, but Adam has a few more things on his plate than you ever did. I wouldn’t assume he’s still mulling over arguments from seven years ago, just because you are.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?” I snap, even though I know what it means.

Adam Salazar’s somehow more of an adult than me. Because he stayed. Because he lived up to his family legacy.

Me, on the other hand?

I’m the one who gave up and left.

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