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Ride: A Bad Boy Romance

Page 31

by Roxie Noir


  Suddenly, almost out of nowhere, there was a tent and a table. Jules drove up next to it and stopped the truck, just looking at it.

  As the dust cleared, she could just make out a brown, sluggish river in the distance. The river was downhill from where she was, and sharp, jagged steppes marked the distance between where she parked and the ugly water.

  Wait, she thought. Is this really the mine site?

  If this is the mine site, the tailings are going straight into that river, she thought, digging again through her glove box for a map.

  The Elk River, she read. Are there really elk out here?

  It didn’t seem likely, but she had other things to worry about.

  I’m in the wrong place, she thought. This can’t be it.

  With a sigh, she grabbed the big canvas bag from the space behind her driver’s seat and hauled it to the table under the tent, then grabbed a couple of big, sturdy rocks to hold down the corners of the map that she spread out.

  She’d been right: the mine wasn’t going to be where she was standing.

  It was going to be on the mesa over to her right, maybe a half mile away.

  Technically, the mine was going to destroy the mesa. Jules frowned, looking over the documentation, but her eyes weren’t deceiving her.

  According to what was in front of her, mountaintop removal mining had been performed successfully on a mesa somewhere in the Australian Outback. Afterward, the mesa had been half as big as its initial size, and it looked more like a pile of rubble than a geological feature.

  Jules’s heart sank.

  This is awful, she thought. I can’t do this. It’ll destroy the mesa, and maybe worse, everything they dig up is going straight into that river.

  For a moment, she wondered how they had even gotten this far, but she didn’t have to wonder for long. Quarcom was a billion-dollar company, and they had lobbyists all over both Washington, D.C. and the Utah state house in Salt Lake City.

  Looking at it from that angle, Jules was a little surprised that they hadn’t razed an entire mesa before.

  Don’t worry, she thought. There’s no way that they’ll get to go through with this. You’ll run the tests, and point out that this is anything but legal, and they’ll have to mine somewhere else.

  Hopefully somewhere that won’t essentially destroy an entire area.

  She didn’t have high hopes about that part of it, though, and even as she tried to make herself feel better, she couldn’t help but worry.

  In particular, one face kept on coming back to mind.

  Seth.

  Jules closed her eyes and tried to get him out of her brain — she was trying to focus on large-sale environmental destruction, after all — but it wasn’t much use.

  If they were going to essentially destroy the river and the mesa in Obsidian, what might they do to the people? What was going to happen to the wild, rugged desert where they lived?

  She saw his gold eyes again, his unkempt hair splashing around his face as he’d leaned back in the seat of her pickup truck as she’d tried not to stare. There had been a spot of sweat, slowly spreading down from the neck of his shirt, and she’d felt helpless to not watch it as it stuck to him, the ripples of his soft t-shirt barely hiding the hard, sculpted physique below.

  For fuck’s sake, he’d even had dimples, and something about the way he looked at her made Jules want to lick the sweat off of his neck, feel his muscles beneath her hands...

  DO YOUR JOB, she thought furiously at herself, stuffing the map back into her bag and getting out a small shovel and plastic ziploc bags for samples. Then she slung the bag over her shoulder, pushed her large hat firmly onto her head, and set out for the terraces between herself and the river.

  3. Seth

  It was just past twilight when Brad dropped Seth off at the big ranch house. Seth waved as Brad drove away, his lights shining onto the road, then fading into the distance. Overhead, the stars were just starting to come out, the rest of the sky turning from indigo to black.

  Along the horizon, the mountains and mesas of southern Utah were black, hulking shapes. The biggest was Copper Mesa, not far beyond the ranch house where Seth had grown up and still lived. In theory, it belonged to him and his brothers, since his great-great-great-great grandfather had come west from Missouri and claimed the land as his own. In 1871, there hadn’t been much more required.

  That hadn’t stopped rumors from spreading, particularly when Hiram Admas — the great-great-great-great-grandfather in question — had gotten an excellent harvest in his first year, at a time when crops were failing all over Southern Utah. The locals had whispered that it was a deal with the devil or worse.

  One woman had even claimed that she’d witnessed Hiram turn into an eagle and fly away. It was ridiculous, obviously, but the people of Obsidian hadn’t stopped whispering about the Admas family since.

  Seth knew he should probably just move. Just about anywhere else would have better job prospects, not to mention dating prospects, and he could start over fresh, somewhere that no one looked at him funny.

  Maybe not dating prospects, he thought, grinning in the dark, thinking of a certain red-haired geologist. In his pocket, he ran his fingers over the piece of paper with her phone number on it. He couldn’t wait to call it and talk to her again, not to mention see her again.

  At last, he walked up to the front door and pushed it open, his steps creaking over the old wood. The house wasn’t in the best of repair — in fact, it practically bled money — but it was his home, and every time he walked in, he felt a little better.

  “That you?” called a voice from the dining room.

  “I’m a burglar,” called back Seth. “Give me all your stuff.”

  “Take it,” his brother called back. “If you can lift our TV outta here, it’s yours.”

  Seth smiled, flicking on light switches as he walked down the hall and to the dining room where his youngest brother sat, schoolwork spread everywhere.

  “How’s the mystery government project going?” Zach asked, writing something down on a sheet of paper, then leaning back and looking at his older brother.

  “It’s moving along,” said Seth. “We got the frozen alien bodies today, so we’re locking those in the bunker tomorrow.”

  Zach snorted, rubbing his eyes.

  “What is it again, really?”

  “Some kind of electrical bunker for the hydro equipment they’re putting in across the Elk,” Seth answered.

  “I like the aliens answer,” said Zach.

  “You got class tonight?” Seth asked.

  Zach was in his second semester at Southern Utah Community College, two hours away in Blanding, Utah, studying pre-engineering.

  “Nope, tomorrow night,” he said, lifting his arms over his head and stretching. “Tonight I gotta finish these problem sets, then I’m up early tomorrow to open the store.”

  Zach ran the bakery section of Obsidian’s single, tiny grocery store. He had to be there by five every morning, and between that, homework, and classes, Seth was amazed that his little brother ever slept.

  Of course, once he got his degree and was making triple was Seth made, he’d be laughing all the way to the bank, but he had at least a year of community college left before he could even transfer out to a four-year college.

  Seth knew he’d miss his little brother when he left. Their corner of Utah didn’t have any four-year colleges, so he’d have to move away from home, though if Zach was worried about being the only twenty seven year old in the junior class, he didn’t say anything.

  “Is there anything for dinner?” asked Seth, his stomach rumbling. He’d eaten his lunch, two peanut butter sandwiches, an apple, and a bag of chips, hours and hours ago.

  “That meatloaf I made last night,” said Zach. “And I think there’s peas in the freezer, though you gotta check.”

  Then he looked at his brother’s face closely for a long moment.

  “What are you so happy about?” Zach
asked, his eyes narrowing.

  Seth shrugged, but he couldn’t help grinning.

  “You get a raise?”

  “Nope.”

  “Somebody bring donuts into work today?”

  “Nope.”

  Zach just shook his head.

  “Well, shit, man, I’m out of guesses — wait, did you meet a girl?”

  Seth couldn’t help his pleased smile.

  “Where?” asked Zach. “Is she new? Is she eighty?”

  “Yes and no,” said Seth. “She gave me a ride to work today, and she’s a geologist working on a mining project out in the desert.”

  Then he squeezed his eyes shut, making a face.

  “The truck broke down again, by the way,” he said.

  “Fuck,” muttered Zach. “If you need the car, I can probably walk to work tomorrow, but I gotta use it to get to school.”

  “Brad said he’d drive me,” Seth said.

  “So, this girl got a name?”

  “Juliana,” Seth said. Her name felt like honey on his lips, sweet and viscous. “Jules for short.”

  “She sounds cute.”

  “She is. I got her number and said I’d show her all the good times that Obsidian has to offer.”

  Zach laughed at that.

  “All two of them?” he asked.

  “I’ll work with what we’ve got,” Seth said. “Not that I have a choice.”

  He walked into the kitchen and pulled the meatloaf from the fridge, then got the peas out of the freezer.

  “You want some?” he called to Zach in the next room.

  “I’ll have some later, I gotta finish this,” Zach called back.

  Seth loaded meatloaf and peas onto a plate and put the whole thing into the ancient microwave. It was so old that it had a dial on it instead of buttons, and he cranked it to four minutes. Even that probably wasn’t going to be long enough, but he was always a little nervous that the thing was going to catch fire.

  As the microwave hummed, Seth let his mind wander. It wandered mostly back to Jules, and he spent the minutes thinking about undoing the buttons on her shirt one by one, revealing the pale, freckled skin below, her curves soft in his hands. She looked like she’d taste of vanilla and cinnamon, and probably make little sighing noises when he kissed her neck...

  The microwave beeped and Seth pulled his plate out, sticking his fingers into the middle of the pile of green peas. Still cold. He put the plate back in and cranked the dial again.

  Then he had a different thought about Jules: she’d said she was in town to work on a mining project, but Seth didn’t know about any mining project that was going on. In a town the size of Obsidian, word tended to get out if someone painted their house a new shade of white, so it was pretty strange that he hadn’t heard a thing about something big like that.

  Unless it’s like Tinville, he thought, and then his stomach dropped.

  Tinville had been a couple of hours away, in south central Utah, and until some company called Quarcom had rolled in, it had pretty much been just like Obsidian. That was, at least according to the guy that Seth worked with who’d moved to Obsidian after the mine took over Tinville.

  Quarcom had opened an enormous mine there — a mountaintop removal strip mine. Before it, Tinville had been remote but beautiful, tucked in between sets of jagged red mountains, the kind of unearthly beauty that didn’t even look real. After the mine, the river had been poisoned, the air choked with dust, and the mountains around the town were ugly and pitted. Most of the townspeople either worked for the mine or had to move away.

  Worst, his coworker had said, no one had known about the mine until about a week before it opened. Quarcom found every loophole it could in the environmental regulations. When the people protested that they hadn’t been informed of anything, a very smug man in a suit had told them that there had been an announcement in the classified section of the Salt Lake Tribune, which was technically the biggest media outlet in the area. It didn’t matter that no one in town got the paper because Salt Lake City was a six-hour drive away.

  The microwave beeped again, and this time when Seth stuck his finger into the peas, he nearly burned himself and pulled his hand away, sucking air in through his teeth. Then he sat at the table in the kitchen, the uncomfortable, rickety chair digging into his back, and ate his dinner while he worried about a mine coming to Obsidian.

  After he washed his plate and fork, something occurred to him, and he walked into the dining room where Zach’s schoolwork was spread out, his head bent over it studiously. Seth felt bad for interrupting, but did it anyway.

  “When was the last time you checked the mail?” Seth asked.

  Zach blinked a couple of times, then looked sheepish.

  “Maybe like... a week ago?” he said.

  Seth knew when his little brother was lying. It had obviously been more than a week.

  Not that he’d remembered to check the mail lately. They rarely got any, so they were just out of the habit.

  “There’s some stuff on the table in the guest bedroom, actually,” said Zach. “I keep meaning to go through it, but I’ve been really busy and just haven’t remembered.”

  He at least looked embarrassed.

  Shit, thought Seth. He doubted that if Quarcom was really coming to town, they’d send something through the mail, but it was worth a shot. It wasn’t like he had any idea where to get a copy of the Salt Lake Tribune.

  Seth walked to the mailbox. It was a good hundred yards away, by the main road, which was part of why they rarely checked it, and as he walked he could see the mesa hulking black against the star-filled sky, silent and dark. Beyond it, if he listened closely, he could just hear the sound of the river rushing past.

  The mailbox was stuffed with junk mail, mostly weekly circulars advertising deals for grocery stores in towns an hour away. He tucked all that under one arm and went through the three envelopes left over: two were from credit cards, addressed to the Monson Residence, and one was from the Kane County tax board, addressed to Seth, Garrett, and Zach.

  Shit, thought Seth with a sigh. Property taxes again, and here I thought we might get our heads above water at last.

  When he got back to the house, he dumped most of the junk mail in the trash, and took the envelopes upstairs to the desk in the guest bedroom. Since it was just Seth and Zach in the big house, the guest room had mostly become junk storage. They solved the problem of messiness by closing the door.

  The desk, at least, wasn’t overflowing, but as Seth tossed the credit card offers onto the desk, he noticed something a little weird. There were five of them already on the desk, and on the outside, they just said, Don’t miss out on this great deal!

  Seth got suspicious.

  They must really want me to apply for this credit card, thought Seth, or something hinky is going on.

  He ripped it open and pulled the letter out, frowning as he saw the thick blue stripe across the letterhead. It was addressed to Seth, Garrett, and Zachary Monson, and it wasn’t long at all.

  6th notice

  To Mr. Monson, Mr. Monson, and Mr. Monson:

  Quarcom, Inc., has filed a motion with the state of Utah requesting documentation of your ownership over several hundred acres in Kane County. While we understand that you claim this land as yours, research into state archives suggest that the proper paperwork has never been filed.

  If you do not produce the proper written documentation by Friday, May 16, Quarcom will purchase this land from the state of Utah and put it to industrial use.

  For a map of the area in question, and instructions on filing documentation, please see attached.

  Regards,

  Gilbert Norfrey

  “FUCK!” shouted Seth. He threw the letter to the floor and stared at the map.

  It was exactly as he’d feared. It was a map of their land, stretching for miles and miles of desert, from the road to the Elk River. On it was Copper Mesa itself, along with a smattering of smaller hills and me
sas. Everything but the area immediately around the house was colored in, indicating that if he didn’t do something, it would belong to Quarcom soon.

  I’m going to kill Zach, he thought. How could he just leave the mail on the desk in here for a month?

  Seth walked to the bed and sat on it heavily, putting his head in his hands. His mind was a whirl, but mostly, he couldn’t believe that it was happening.

  This has to be some kind of practical joke, Seth thought, but he didn’t know anyone who could pull this off. He didn’t think that any of his buddies had the imagination to think of this, and probably didn’t have the brainpower to make it sound so real.

  It could be a scam, Seth thought, and he lit up. Sure, the letter wasn’t asking for his social security number or credit card info, but maybe it was something else. Maybe they just wanted him to confirm that he and his brothers owned the land, and then step two of the scam would be something more nefarious.

  None of that squared with what Jules had said earlier in the truck, though. And Quarcom itself was most certainly a real, horrible company.

  Seth let the map fall to the ground, rubbed his eyes, and then looked around the messy room. He’d been tossing odds and ends in there for years now. A pile of VHS tapes sat on the bed, next to one shoe, notebooks from high school, and a plastic shelving unit that he’d had in his bedroom as a kid.

  At least the house wasn’t in question. There was the issue of money, of course, but between him and Zach, they could scrape enough money together to rent something in town. The big ranch house had been in his family for generations. His mom had grown up there, and her father before her, back to old Hiram who’d moved to Utah from Missouri a hundred and fifty years ago.

  Babies had been born there. People had lived their whole lives there, then expired in one of the rooms. When his own parents had died fourteen years before, the house had become his and his brothers’, and the only reason that they’d been able to stay together instead of being split up in the foster system was because they already had somewhere to live. The judge had even said as much, that he’d never allow the then-seveteen-year-old Seth to become the guardian for his younger brothers if they hadn’t already had a nearly-free place to live.

 

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