Free Read Novels Online Home

How To Catch A Cowboy: A Small Town Montana Romance by Joanna Bell (9)

Chapter Nine

Jack

I woke up disoriented and looked out the window. The sun was setting. The sun was setting! Shit! The Moileds! I sat up on the sofa and grabbed my boots, pulling them on clumsily and then stopping when I stood up and the bile rose in my throat. Was I going to puke?

No. I forced the grim nausea back down and made my way into the kitchen. Empty beer cans and pizza boxes littered the countertop. On the kitchen table sat a half-full bottle of Jameson. I scared the hell out of myself for half a second wondering if old Blackjack had returned from the dead to torment me – Jameson was always his tipple of choice.

A hazy memory came back to me as I made my way down to the barn. The previous night, the Little Falls Saloon. Did I steal that bottle of Jameson from the Saloon? I tried to remember. There had been some kind of altercation, a shouting match in the parking lot. Jimmy Lewison from high school getting his back up when he thought I was going to take Kayla Landers home.

Kayla Landers. Damn. She'd been trying to get into my pants for weeks. Had she succeeded? My head was throbbing and my stomach was sour, and for the life of me I could not remember a damn thing about Kayla Landers and the previous night. I didn't suppose I had taken her back to Sweetgrass Ranch, though, because if I had she would have been around, hanging off me, laughing at all the dumb shit that came of out of my mouth like she always did.

The cows were restless with hunger, eying me reproachfully. By the time I'd hauled the hay into each of their stalls, I was out of breath. I sat down on the stack of hay bales just inside the door to catch my breath and my phone rang.

"Hello?" I mumbled, not bothering to check who it was.

"Jack?"

"Uh-huh."

"It's DeeDee."

"OK."

"You sound like shit."

I coughed. "That's a funny coincidence, because I feel like shit, too."

"Are you alright? Don't get mad at me for asking, Jack, but you were pretty out of it last night. You're lucky I didn't call the police. I would have, if it was anyone but you."

The police? What was DeeDee talking about? A few more memories suddenly popped into my mind. A fight. With Jimmy Lewison – it hadn't just been a shouting match.

"Oh shit," I groaned, remembering just enough to know it had been bad.

"'Oh shit' is right," DeeDee replied, sounding exasperated. "How long do you think this is going to go on for, Jack? I'm starting to feel guilty for serving you. Like, is this a phase you're going to grow out of soon or am I just enabling someone into alcoholism right now?"

The word 'alcoholism' was like a sharp slap across the face. Old Blackjack was an alcoholic. My father was probably an alcoholic. Nobody ever said it – well, apparently my mother said it a few times, before she died – but it's not like we all didn't know. So to hear DeeDee use that word in reference to me was a rude awakening.

"I'm not an alcoholic!" I told her. "I'm not drinking all day every day, I'm still getting everything done."

"Are you, Jack?"

I looked down the row of stalls, at the cows with their heads buried in the hay. "Yes," I replied. "I am." I didn't bother to add the 'just barely' on the end of that response.

"Because Alice Medd said her husband found one of your steers dead up in the foothills two days ago."

"What?" I asked, sitting up quickly.

"Yeah," DeeDee said quietly, obviously worried that I was going to take what she was saying as some kind of accusation. Which by all rights it should have been. "Said it got its leg tangled in some brush down by Parson's Creek and looked like it drowned when it couldn't get out."

I closed my eyes tightly as a feeling of shame settled down over my battered psyche. "Was he sure it was one of mine?"

"Uh, yeah. Had the 'MS' brand so, it, uh, it must have been."

'MS' stood for 'McMurtry Sweetgrass.' The branding irons hanging up outside the barn were the originals, forged in the 1800s when Sweetgrass Ranch first came into existence. One of the steers had been lost. And it was my fault. I couldn't even remember the last time I'd been out to check on them.

A sad silence settled over my conversation with DeeDee. I didn't know what to say. Even if I was going to lose the Ranch, I didn't want it to be like that. I wanted to go out with some kind of honor.

"I know this is hard for you," DeeDee said eventually. "Have you talked to anyone yet? A Lawyer? Sheriff Randall? The Sheriff and Blackjack were thick as thieves, he might have some – I don't know, some advice or information or something?"

"You didn't say anything, did you?" I asked. "To Sheriff Randall, I mean? I want to handle this my own way, DeeDee, I –"

"I didn't say a thing, Jack. I know you want to handle this."

I didn't know why DeeDee was being so nice to me, but I reckoned it had something to do with me being nice to her back when my brother treated her like dirt in high school. She had her head on straight, and she was prone to giving helpful advice rather than lectures.

"This is pretty bad," I said. "Thank you giving a shit, DeeDee."

"Of course I give a shit," she responded. "I've known your family since I was a little girl, the McMurtrys are part of this town – and I reckon you're the best of the bunch."

"You don't have to –" I started, but she didn't let me finish.

"I'm not just saying it, though, Jack. You are the best of the bunch. I'm not under any illusions about Blackjack, OK? Not like the rest of this town. I saw him yelling at your grandmother once, outside the grocery store. And not in a normal husband and wife kind of way, either."

"Did you?" I asked, curious. Blackjack was always so good at keeping everyone fooled.

"Yeah. So don't think this about the McMurtry-worship this town seems to feel the need to periodically indulge in. It's mostly just about you. You were always kind to me, always solid. And I guess I just want you to know that I'm here for you."

I leaned back onto the hay bales as an awful sense of calm descended over me. It was happening. I was losing the ranch. The only thing to do was to keep my dignity now.

"I guess the first thing I need is the number of a good tax lawyer, then," I said. "Hopefully one who doesn't need to be paid right away."

DeeDee told me she thought she had a friend whose father was a lawyer in Billings, and that she would call her friend to ask for a recommendation.

We hung up and I lay on the hay bale for a little while, listening to the cattle noisily eating their dinner. How many more times would I get to hear that? How many McMurtrys had done what I was doing at that moment, in that barn – taking a moment to listen to the cattle?

But, as ever, there was no time to dilly-dallying. Even less time than usual. I went back to the house, took a couple of ibuprofen and grabbed a garbage bag to fill with all the empties in the kitchen.

The last thing I wanted was to end up like Blackjack, or my dad, or any number of ancestors who had found solace in the bottle. But the truth was that without Sweetgrass Ranch, I didn't know who I was. What was I going to do? Get a job in an office and stop at Starbucks every morning on the way in to work? Get a condo? With what money? I was 28 years old. Not old, but not so young that I could waste time or mess around the way you can when you're 20.

I guess whatever's going to happen is going to happen, I said to myself. You'll either get to keep a small piece of the Ranch or you won't, you'll get to keep Daisy and her calf or you won't, and the rest of the cattle will go to market. But the sun is still going to rise in the east and set in the west, and you still have your health and youth.

* * *

The next morning, I saddled up at dawn and rode out into the foothills to check on the free-ranging cattle. It was a dying practice anyway, with more and more family farmers selling up and moving out. I was just another cog in that machine, a minor plot point in a story much bigger than me or my life.

It was a beautiful day, the sky streaked with the rosy hues of morning and the mist rising off the tall grass. I found the herd out near the river that ran through the valley behind Sweetgrass Ranch. They were lined up side by side, drinking and snorting at each other. They barely took any notice of me weaving in and out of them, checking for signs of injury or sickness, because they knew who I was. Where would they end up, these russet-colored beasts who'd only ever known life on the open range of Montana? They weren't big enough to go to slaughter yet, they still needed to put on weight.

I thought maybe I could sell them to the only other ranching family in Little Falls, the Hardings. But the Hardings were getting out of the business and even at a discount, I doubted they'd be interested. So a feedlot it would be. Concrete and shit and a cocktail of drugs to keep all that concrete and shit from doing what it normally does to living things – make them sick. One of the steers lifted his head and let me scratch one of his enormous, fluffy ears. I turned away a second later, almost overcome with emotion.

And then she was there, all of a sudden, in my mind's eye. That woman from the IRS. Blaze Wilson. What exactly was it about her? Was it the flood incident? Was my mind trying to find some connection where there really wasn't one, because of the extremity of that experience?

It's not like I never considered leaving Little Falls, or Sweetgrass Ranch. All of my siblings did, as did most of my dad's nine brothers and sisters. It's not like I was unaware that a lot of McMurtrys seemed to have a mostly unhappy time growing up on the Ranch. My own childhood was by no means perfect, but I was Grandma Dottie's favorite, and that mattered. It meant I had someone to shield me, to distract Blackjack when he came home in a foul temper at the end of the day, just looking to hand out a beating for some mostly made-up reason.

But it never seriously occurred to me to leave, not like it obviously did to Bill, Connor, Jake and Emily. For some reason, Blaze Wilson seemed to give me a glimpse of another, unlived life. A life in the city, not the country. Growing up, everyone around me was quick to remind all of us kids how awful it was living in the city, away from the grounding realities of land and livestock, chasing dollars because your head was empty of any real knowledge or desire – as was your heart. And I always bought it. Those poor, lonely people in the city with their meaningless lives and their expensive gym memberships.

Except Blaze Wilson didn't seem empty-headed or empty-hearted, not when I was honest with myself. She was just doing her job. And she was one of those people who just gave off a vibe of competence. I'm one of those people, too, but only in the context of Sweetgrass Ranch. Blaze appeared to be one of those people who, dropped into the middle of an Antarctic snowstorm, would somehow know just what to do.

I shook my head and chuckled at myself, perfectly aware of the fact that I was probably conjuring this idea of what Blaze Wilson was like out of thin air. How could I know? I'd barely spent more than a few brief hours with her.

When I got back to the house I dug up my brother Connor's number and called him before I could think too much and chicken out. I would do what I could to save the Ranch – not because I actually thought any of it would work, but because it would mean I could live with myself in the future. No matter where I ended up, I would at least have the reassurance of knowing I tried everything.

"McMurtry Residence."

A little girl's voice – my niece. A niece I would probably never meet. I asked her if her Daddy was home and she told me to wait while she went to check. Very polite. After a few minutes and a lot of commotion on the other end, Connor finally took the phone.

"Yes? Is dad dead?"

That was his greeting. He knew it was me, because the Sweetgrass Ranch name would have showed up on their phone, and that was his greeting.

"No," I responded. "Dad's not dead."

"Too bad. What can I help you with, Jack?"

What I wanted to say was that he could help by not talking to me with the polite detachment one usually reserves for service staff and other strangers. But I didn't say that, because Connor is touchy – always has been.

"We're losing the Ranch, Connor. Blackjack owed a couple million in back taxes and the IRS came calling. I don't have it. I already have a pretty good idea of what you're going to say but I figured I'd try to contact everyone anyway, just to let you all know. Just in case you do want to help, or try to come up with some kind of plan."

There was a pause on the other end of the phone – my brother had not been expecting that call, and he didn't immediately know what to say.

"What makes you think I'd want to lift a goddamned finger trying to save that place?"

"Nothing," I admitted. "I just wanted to give you the chance. You've got a family now, I wasn't sure if you ever wanted to bring them out here or anything like that. You know, give them a taste of how you grew up, of life in the country."

"Why would I want to do that?"

I pinched the bridge of my nose between my thumb and forefinger, almost laughing at how little Connor had changed from the arrogant, know-it-all teenage boy I knew as a child.

"I have no idea. It looks like you don't. That's fine – as I said, I was just letting you know. You're not under any obligation to –"

"Oh I know I'm not under any obligation!" He cut in. "Believe me, if there's one thing I know it's that I do not owe Sweetgrass Ranch or anyone who lives there a goddamned thing."

"OK then," I said. "That's great. I'd ask you how your family is but I get the feeling you're not interested in telling me. So before I go I'll just tell you this, Connor: I'm not dad. I'm not Blackjack. I was a fucking kid when you left, I never did anything to you."

My oldest brother wasn't used to me talking back. I didn't do it as a kid, because I was too scared of him to do so. He didn't quite seem to know how to respond. I thought for a second he was just going to hang up on me, but he didn't.

"You're right, you never did anything to me. You also never made an effort to understand how bad it was for me, either. You –"

"I was six when you left!" I yelled. "Six!"

"Yeah, but, uh," Connor began, tripping over his words a little. "I mean since then. Since then, Jack, you haven't ever tried."

I was getting angry. I could feel my shoulders tensing up. "Since then? Since then, Connor? I never even see you – except at funerals."

My brother laughed an unhappy sounding laugh. "That's true. Jesus, the McMurtrys are fucked up. We only get together when someone croaks – and even then, most of us skip it. It's fitting, in a way."

"That was your daughter that answered the phone, wasn't it?" I asked, not really eager to get into one of those 'our family is so awful' discussions, which I think is where Connor was going. "How old is she now? Doesn't it bother you at all that there's a whole side of her family that she doesn't know?"

"Nope," Connor shot back. "Not at all. The more distance there is between my kids and my extended family the better, as far as I'm concerned."

I sighed. Why was I even bothering? "Well she sounds sweet – really well-mannered, too. I'd love to get to know her. But I hear what you're saying and I accept it. I was just calling to let you know about the Ranch, anyway."

"Well, thanks for that, but I'm not going to stand in the way of the IRS on this one, Jack."

"OK," I said flatly, "well I guess that's that, then."

"Yeah, I guess it is."

We hung up and for the first time I experienced a tiny inkling of it maybe, maybe being a good thing that Sweetgrass Ranch was going to be taken away. Connor was right, the McMurtrys were fucked up. The funny part was he seemed to think he was the exception – that somehow he had escaped the years and years and generations of people who never really did learn how to love each other in the way happy families do. He hadn't escaped. Those chickens were going to come home to roost one day, simply because chickens always come home to roost – it's what they do. And no one goes through life without sending a few chickens out into the world, as Grandma Dottie used to say.

Next, I called Emily – or, I tried her last known cell phone number, anyway. It was disconnected, as I expected. No time to wallow, though, there were other siblings to get rejected by. Jake's number was also disconnected. I wondered if he ever married that high-maintenance girlfriend of his.

Last was Bill. I knew Bill lived in Virginia and owned his own accountancy firm, so instead of calling the number I had for him I just Googled the firm and e-mailed him. About half an hour later I got a shock in the form of an actual response. It was brief, a phone number and short message informing me that he had no interest (surprise, surprise) in saving Sweetgrass Ranch, but that it was nothing personal and that I should call if I needed to talk to him about anything.

An ambiguous word, 'anything.' I was never close to Bill. We weren't at each other's throats the way I sometimes was with Jake and even Emily, but I'd always put it down to there being a ten year age gap between us and Bill himself just being a quiet, solitary sort of person. He spent most of the time we both lived at the Ranch in his room – even our father seemed to mostly leave him alone, from what little I could remember. But it was an open door, and from a family member, and that was something. Especially for the McMurtrys.

I knew if I let myself think on it I might come up with some excuse as to why calling him was a bad idea, so I didn't think on it, I just called the number right away. A few seconds later, a slightly suspicious-sounding voice came down the line.

"Jack?"

"Bill," I replied, suddenly realizing I hadn't actually thought of anything to say to my brother. "Uh, hey. How are you?"

"I'm well," he replied, in the same slightly awkward but hopeful tone I was using. "I didn't – um, I didn't really expect you to call. Not so quickly, anyway."

I chuckled. "Neither did I. That's probably why I called so soon – so I wouldn't talk myself out of it. Jesus, that's kind of messed up, isn't it?"

"It's a little messed up, Jackie-boy, but I figure out of all of us, you're probably the most normal."

Jackie-boy. Damn, it had been years since I heard that hated nickname. And I found I didn't hate it quite so much now, spoken in haltingly affectionate tones by the brother I'd spoken to maybe twice in the past decade.

"I don't know about that," I said curtly, never comfortable with compliments. "So you got my message, then? About the ranch?"

"Yup," Bill said, hesitating. "I did."

"Don't worry," I reassured him, "I'm not calling to beg for money. I already spoke to Connor – he's not interested, and I couldn't reach Emily or Jake. It was a long-shot anyway. I just wanted to be able to say to myself that I tried, you know? It's not going to work, but at least I tried."

There was a brief pause before Bill asked me a simple question. "Why?"

"Why what?"

"Why are you even trying to save that place?"

"Well, I, uh," I stuttered, put on the spot. "Because this is our land, I suppose. This is McMurtry land, this is where our ancestors are buried. It doesn't seem right to sell it."

"Sounds pretty vague to me," Bill said, in a tone that suggested he believed what he was saying, but he wanted to say it without hurting anyone. "I mean, sure, it's a legacy of sorts. It's our family history. But what kind of legacy, Jack? What kind of history? A hopeful one, a story you'd like to tell your children? Or a desperately unhappy one, filled with bitter people who never did learn how to get over not having the things that weren't meant for them?"

"Wow," I laughed nervously. "I was not expecting deep thoughts this early in the morning, man. I'm not smart like you. Maybe you know this already, I can't remember, but I never did go to college. So I don't really know what you're getting –"

"This isn't about smart," Bill said firmly. "And you're plenty smart, Jack, but it's not about that. It's not about intelligence. If anything, it's about character. Don't you think the McMurtrys have a collective kind of character? Haven't you ever noticed that? You didn't ever wonder why, exactly, Old Blackjack was so bitter when by almost any measure he had it pretty good? Great wife, successful cattle ranch, lots of kids and grandkids? What specifically did he have to be so angry about all the time? Same with dad – same with most of us, sad to say."

I opened my mouth to say something and then snapped it shut again. Bill was right. He sounded right, anyway. So what was it? What was it that turned so many of us into runaways or addicts or plain old bad people?

"It's character," Bill continued. We've got bad character in this family line. It doesn't hit all of us and I'm not saying it can't be overcome, but it certainly can't be overcome by convincing yourself it's everyone and everything around you, rather than, you know, you."

"You're right," I said, a little dazed. "Damn, Bill, you're still the smartest one. But you're right. When I spoke to Connor about an hour ago I actually had kind of the same thought. He's keeping his family from us – and now some of that I can understand – I wouldn't want my kids around Blackjack, either, if he was still alive. But he's keeping them from all of us, all the McMurtrys. He thinks he's saving them by doing that, he thinks he can keep them safe from turning out badly, but –"

"But he's actually just doing the same thing Blackjack did, and dad did, and probably every goddamned McMurtry going back a thousand years. He's blaming his bitterness on others. Now, again, some people deserve it. But you? Me? How is he helping those kids by disallowing them from knowing their own family?"

It was a heavy conversation to dive into right away, and I think we both felt it at that moment. Bill took a breath. "So, Jackie-boy, what's happening? Other than losing Sweetgrass Ranch, I mean? And I don't mean to sound flippant but I think you'll find that might be better for you than you assume it will. You got someone right now? You with anyone? How about that Kayla Landers, she was always so sweet on you. All the girls were sweet on you, Jack."

I laughed self-consciously. "Were they?"

"Oh come on. By the time you were 8 years old you had the little girls showing up at the front door, asking Grandma Dottie if Jack could come out to play and is Jack home and oh, my mom made cookies and I brought one for Jack. I bet life's hard when you're born handsome and charming."

I probably shouldn't have been so surprised to hear Bill's thoughts, because he'd never said much to me when we were kids, but I nonetheless was.

"Handsome and charming?" I asked, embarrassed.

"Yes, you idiot," Bill responded. "Are you trying to tell me you're unaware of that? Why do you think Grandma Dottie made you her little favorite? I'm sure it had nothing to do with the fact that you looked like a dimple-cheeked little angel when you were little. Not that it matters now. What matters now is what I asked – are you seeing anyone?"

I made the mistake of pausing, just briefly, before replying. "No."

"No? No one? Why do you sound so furtive then?"

"Bill?" I asked.

"Yeah?"

"Can I ask you a question and you promise not to get mad?"

"Well I can't promise anything but I'll try not to."

"Are you high or something? This is awesome, don't get me wrong, but I don't think you've ever said this many words to me in my entire life. If I'm acting strange it's just because I'm not used to it. Have you met someone? Is that why you're in such a good mood?"

Bill made a dismissive noise, but didn't actually respond.

"Bill?"

"What?"

"Well? Are you going to answer my questions? We've barely spoken two words to each for ten years and now you're asking me about my love life? What's going on?"

There were a few more moments of silence, but then my brother spoke up again. He sounded suddenly very serious. "Do you really want to know?"

"What?" I asked, baffled. "Of course I want to know. Unless it's something bad – I mean, I don't think it is because you sound happy. Well you did sound happy, a few minutes ago. Now you sound... scared."

"I guess I sound scared because I am."

"Of what?"

"Of what you're going to say. Of how you're going to react."

What the blue hell was my older brother talking about? "Have you robbed a bank or something?" I asked. "Now I am starting to get worried, Bill. Are you in some kind of trouble?"

"No," he told me, "I am not in any kind of trouble. I don't think I've been in less trouble in my entire life. Everything is going really, really well for me right now."

"Then what the hell are you talking –"

"I think maybe I asked you if you were seeing anyone because yeah, I am seeing someone. I, uh, I'm married, actually."

I couldn't help grinning. Of all my siblings – myself included – I kind of thought Bill would be the last one to marry and settle down. "Married?" I said. "Congratulations, man. That's – that's great! What's her name? Where's she from? In fact just tell me everything about her right now. And when did you –"

"Jack?" Bill stopped me in the middle of my giving him the third degree.

"Yeah?"

"I didn't marry a woman"

Oh," I blurted out, before what Bill had just said sunk in. "Oh. Well. Um. You – wait, Bill. What? What do you –"

"I didn't marry a woman, Jack – it's not complicated. I'm gay. I married a man. His name is Christopher."

Bill was gay. My head was an immediate jumbled mess of thoughts. I'd never known any gay people – how was I supposed to act? Was there something I was supposed to say? Why hadn't he told anyone? And along with the questions came something else, a sense of a whole bunch of things suddenly making a kind of sense. Bill never had any girlfriends in high school, and we all just wrote it off to his shyness and unsociable nature.

"So," I started, as guilt seized my heart. "You weren't just anti-social? You weren't – it wasn't just that you were quiet that you spent all that time in your room?"

"No," Bill responded simply. "I'm actually not quiet at all. What do you think would have happened, Jack? What do you think Blackjack would have said? Or dad? Can you even imagine? I mean, dad knew, but –"

"Dad knew?!"

Bill scoffed. "It's not like we had any of those oh son, I totally support you whoever you are talks, if that's what you're thinking. Hell no. But he did pull me aside one day when I was about seventeen and warn me never to let Blackjack know what I was. That it would kill him if he knew. When I asked dad what I was – because remember, I was a goddamned kid at the time, and a confused one at that – he just pretended like he hadn't said anything. Seriously, he just blanked me. Even now I'm not entirely sure I didn't hallucinate that whole conversation."

"Damn," I whispered, because I couldn't think of anything else to say. I knew one thing, though – I didn't want my brother to think that what was in my heart was in any way similar to what had been in our father's heart. "Bill?"

His voice, when he answered, was so quiet that I could barely hear it. "Yes?"

He was terrified. That was what I was hearing. My heart just about burst. "Don't sound like that!" I yelled. "Don't – just don't! I'm not like dad, Bill! I am not going to hate you for this, I promise. Now, I can't say as I know what to say but it's important that you know right now that this is – I am OK with this. I am good with this! You found someone? Good. Good for you. You deserve it. We all –"

My brother ended my emotional outburst by breaking into sobs and, Jesus, that almost broke me. It's not easy to listen to someone you always looked up to – your big, strong, independent brother who never seemed too bothered by anything – break down.

"I'm sorry," he cried. "Jack, I'm sorry, I'm not trying to embarrass you, I –"

"I'm not embarrassed," I told him, my words catching on the lump in my own throat. "I don't know what I am – happy for you, mainly. Happy that you're telling me, as well. Trying to call everyone today – you, Jake, Connor, Emily – we're estranged. All of us. It's so easy to just not think about it. Or to tell myself it's not true, we're not estranged, people just moved away from home and have their own lives."

"It's funny how that happened," Bill said. "We didn't really have huge issues with each other growing up, did we? All five of us? But now none of us have relationships. It's messed up. It's messed up that you and I have no relationship. There's not even a reason, is there?"

"I don't think there is," I replied, "unless there's some childhood resentments you're not telling me about."

"That's just it," Bill said sadly. "There isn't. We should do something about that. It depends on timing, of course, but if you need any help with moving when the time comes, Christopher and I would be happy to fly out there to give you a hand. It would be nice for him to see Sweetgrass Ranch, too, before it gets sold. I talk about the place enough."

An almost indescribable feeling of bittersweetness washed over me. The conversation with Bill was way more than I ever would have dared to hope for. Was an adult relationship with one of my brothers on the table, after all those years? It seemed to be. And he trusted me enough to tell me he was gay – and married! That was a big deal and I knew it. And now it seemed like maybe we were going to do one of the things that normal families do together – help each other through a tough situation. At the same time as my face almost felt like it was going to break from smiling so much during that conversation, I couldn't help a sense of regret, on top of the happiness. Regret at all those wasted years we could have been there for each other. Regret that my brother felt he had to keep a huge part of who he was from us – from me. We were never going to get that time back.

"That would be really good," I said. "I would appreciate the help. As you can imagine, this house is absolutely full of stuff. And it would really, uh, it would just be nice to not have to do this alone."

About ten seconds after ending the call with Bill, and full of an unfamiliar feeling of hope, I got a message from DeeDee. It included the number of a lawyer. Since it seemed to be the morning I was getting things done, rather than hiding from them, I called it immediately. Records would need to be found, the lawyer said, probably copies of records due to the originals appearing to be lost, and zoning would have to be checked – and zoning changes applied for if necessary – but he thought it wasn't totally out of the question that I might be able to keep a small piece of Sweetgrass Ranch. It would depend on the selling price of the rest of it, which wasn't assured by any means – but it wasn't an impossible dream.

That night, after all the chores were finished and I was sitting at the kitchen table eating dinner, I wondered if maybe it wasn't a better idea just to make a clean break. To forgo the possibility of clinging to the remnants of Sweetgrass Ranch for the forging of a totally new path. Of course, I had no idea what that path might be, but I was still only 28, there was no reason it couldn't be happy. I could get a degree. Travel. Take up BASE jumping. Find a wife.

A wife. There was a thought. It's not that I didn't think about women – I did. Quite a lot. I'd dated lots of girls in Little Falls, too. It had just never occurred to me to marry any of them. But if I got myself out of town, I would meet different women. Women more like Blaze Wilson.

I laughed out loud at myself, at my own brain throwing up Blaze Wilson again. Ridiculous. But it had been a good day, overall. Change was coming – change I never asked for – and I was starting to feel like maybe I could come out of it better off.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Flora Ferrari, Zoe Chant, Mia Madison, Lexy Timms, Alexa Riley, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Kathi S. Barton, Bella Forrest, Jordan Silver, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Dale Mayer, Jenika Snow, Penny Wylder, Mia Ford, Michelle Love, Sloane Meyers, Delilah Devlin, Piper Davenport,

Random Novels

Cylo (Dragons Of Kelon)(A Sci Fi Alien Weredragon Romance) by Maia Starr

Sensational by Janet Nissenson

Shadow of Night by Deborah Harkness

Whiskey: Ruthless Bastards (RBMC Book 1) by Chelsea Handcock

Miss Behave by Nikky Kaye

Broken Shadow: A Shadow Series Novella (The Shadow Series Book 1) by Hazel Jacobs

The Billionaire's Secret Kiss: A 'Scandals of the Bad Boy Billionaires' Novella by Ivy Layne

Crowd Pleaser by Marie James

Capturing Callie [Club Isola 1] (Siren Publishing Menage and More) by Avery Gale

The Hooker and the Hermit by L.H. Cosway, Penny Reid

Mismatch: A Winning Ace Novel (Book 4) (A Winning Ace Novel) by Tracie Delaney

by Sierra Sparks

The Perfect Present by Rochelle Alers

Stealing Beauty (Possessing Beauty Book 2) by Madison Faye

Scream Come True: Steamy Older Man Younger Woman Romance by Mia Madison

Forever Entangled by Brooks, Kathleen

Crowned by Hate (Crowned #1) by Amo Jones

Southern Attraction (Southern Heart Book 3) by Kaylee Ryan

Hard & Hungry Boss Box Set by Luke Steel

Phoenix Under Fire: A Zodiac Shifters Paranormal Romance: Aries by Crystal Dawn