Taming the Moguls

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Taming the Moguls Page 24

by Christy Hayes


  “Alex said he’d have to ask about the calving because his dad said he could help out in the ski shop this winter.”

  Tommy shrugged. “What can I say? I’m irresistible to women and kids.”

  “Congratulations,” Lyle said. “That’s awesome.”

  “It is. If someone had told me last December that I’d be married with a kid by this December, I’d have told them they were crazy.” He shook his head and took a sip of beer. “It’s been one hell of a year.”

  “For all of us,” Lyle said.

  Kevin raised his bottle. “A toast. To good friends, the women who love us, and the surprises that keep us on our toes.”

  “Hear, hear,” they said in unison.

  “Just think,” Dodge said. “By next year, one or all of you could have a baby.”

  “Or one on the way,” Tommy added.

  Lyle looked around at the men in the kitchen. None of them even flinched. “Shall we make a bet?”

  “Such as?” Kevin said.

  “First one to knock up his wife gets…”

  “Gets what?” Jack asked.

  “He gets it all,” Tommy said. “He gets it all.”

  ###

  About the Author

  Christy Hayes writes romance and women’s fiction. She lives outside Atlanta, Georgia, with her husband, two children, and two dogs.

  Discover Other Romance & Women’s Fiction Titles by Christy Hayes

  Angle of Incidence

  Dodge the Bullet

  Good Luck, Bad Timing & When Harry Met Sally

  Guiding the Fall

  Heart of Glass

  Mending the Line

  Misconception

  Shoe Strings

  The Accidental Encore

  The Sweetheart Hoax

  Connect with Christy Hayes Online

  http://www.christyhayes.com

  http://www.facebook.com/ChristyHayesAuthor

  http://twitter.com/SeaHayes

  If you enjoyed Taming the Moguls, please consider leaving an honest review at your point of purchase location.

  Continue on to read the first chapter of one of the books that started it all: Dodge the Bullet.

  Dodge the Bullet

  “Why the hell would I want to do that?” Dodge stretched his legs in the club chair of Thornton’s cramped insurance office. He’d taken off his hat, a fifteen-year-old Stetson coated with dirt and grease, and ran his fingers through his hair.

  “Don’t make me remind you of our agreement.” Tommy Thornton straightened in his seat behind his desk. “I’ve come to expect a certain amount of bucking on your part, but this isn’t one of those circumstances. You can whine from now until doomsday, and I’ll still need you to help me out.”

  Andrew Jackson Dodge contemplated the seriousness of Tommy’s threat. The fact that Tommy had brought up their “agreement” meant Tommy needed a favor bad.

  It’s not that he disliked Tommy or felt threatened by the man who sat looking at him with a hint of fear in his eyes. Dodge had nearly four inches on Tommy and the kind of body that twenty years of hard work in the cattle ranching business produced. But he'd stepped up to help Dodge back when nobody else in his hometown of Hailey, Colorado would have pissed on him to put out a fire. Tommy had paid a hell of a price for the simple act of kindness.

  “What kind of person owns a cattle ranch and doesn’t know a damn thing about ranching?” Dodge asked.

  Tommy shifted in his chair and took a deep breath. “You know I wouldn’t ask you if I didn’t feel you were the only one I could trust.”

  “Quit blowing smoke up my ass and tell me who’s got your balls in a vice.”

  “Senator Burwick called this morning.” Tommy slumped in his chair. “Apparently that family from Atlanta who bought the old Storey ranch is moving to town. They’ve been through the wringer, according to Burwick, and he wants to ensure that the community welcomes them and provides them with all the assistance they need.”

  “I’m not exactly the Hailey welcoming committee,” Dodge said through gritted teeth. “And I don’t have time to hold some guy’s hand while he learns how to lose his ass in ranching.”

  “The guy in question is a woman, and her husband was a good friend of Burwick’s. The reason I’m asking you is because I personally guaranteed Burwick she wouldn’t lose her ass in the ranching business, as you so eloquently put it.”

  Dodge stood up and slapped his hat on the now empty chair. “You’ve got to be kidding me. A woman? You expect me to teach a woman--a Southern, city woman--how to be a cattle rancher?” He paced the office in two long strides. “And the only reason you asked me is because you knew I couldn’t say no. Don’t you dare waste your breath denying it, Thornton.”

  “I was reasonably sure you wouldn’t say no. But,” he continued with a throat clearing cough. “Senator Burwick could make my life and the lives of everyone in this town a living hell if I can’t accommodate him on this little request.”

  “This may seem like a little request to you, but I know from personal experience that woman are genetically incapable of ranching. I grew up with a house full of women and none of them--not one out of six--could handle the responsibility. Trying to teach a city woman to run a ranch would be like trying to teach a bull to play poker.”

  “Are you done having a tantrum?”

  Dodge kept pacing, pleased to see his work boots leave a dirty trail on Tommy’s freshly cleaned rug. “No, I’m not done. If her husband is such a good friend of Burwick’s, then why isn’t he down here learning to ranch? Why send his wife? Is he afraid to get a little dirt under his nails?”

  “She’s a widow. Her husband was killed in a plane crash two years ago.” Tommy scowled at the rug. “You know there’s a boot scrape at the front door.”

  Dodge stopped pacing and faced Tommy. “That ranch is over a thousand acres in the middle of nowhere. It’s not safe or practical for a woman to live there by herself.”

  “She owns the ranch, so I'm assuming she’s prepared to live there. She won’t be alone, though. She’s got two kids.”

  “I sure hope she knows how to shoot a gun because if the bears don’t come down to see what’s going on, the snakes will surely provide one hell of a welcome,” Dodge said.

  “It’s my understanding that she’s not trained in any way. She can’t shoot a gun, run a tractor, or rope a calf.”

  “You’re enjoying the hell out of yourself, aren’t you? What the hell am I supposed to do with some Junior League, country club-pampered widow?”

  Tommy stood up and glared at Dodge. “I don’t have the foggiest idea what kind of woman she is, but Senator Burwick wants her taken care of and that’s all I’m trying to do. She’ll be coming into town Friday, and I expect you to drop by for a friendly visit before the weekend’s out.”

  Dodge gathered his hat from the seat he’d vacated and pointed it at Tommy's chest. “After this, we’re even. You hear me, Thornton? Dead even.” He headed out of the office into the bright spring day.

  Damn. He was knee deep in shit with his own ranch, running cattle all over the county, and now he had to coddle some woman from across the country just because she had friends in high places. He could feel the hairs on the back of his neck prickle, something that happened only when he knew he was in for a world of trouble. And any situation involving Dodge and a woman usually ended up causing a whole truckload full of trouble.

  ***

  Sarah Woodward pulled her old Ford pickup to a stop along Highway 278, otherwise known as the Rifle Range. It had been almost three years since she'd last been in Colorado and her memory was failing. Had she already passed the road that led to her ranch? Every street seemed indistinguishable from the next.

  Todd had always driven when they came to Colorado, and she realized now how little attention she'd paid to directions. Like so many things in her life with Todd, she’d floated through with the confidence that he’d handle every detail. And he had, to the point where she
’d spent the last two years trying to figure out how to run her life without him. After finally tackling their estate back home, she was ready to deal with her future in Colorado.

  Selling the house in Atlanta and moving to Colorado meant making a clean start and was something she did as much for Todd as for the boys they'd made together. He'd loved the quiet valley they’d stumbled across five years ago and talked incessantly about putting roots down in the sleepy town of Hailey. It hadn’t been Sarah’s dream at the time. Everything they’d built together, pieced together since college, was in Atlanta. But she felt buried under the memories of him there, floundering in a sea of happy couples and well-meaning neighbors. Out here, in the wide open space he'd loved, she thought she could remember him at his best, full of life and promise. She wouldn’t sell the ranch that meant so much to him or allow it to sit idle.

  Sarah made a U-turn at the Dairy Barn, thankful her kids weren’t there to pester her, and backtracked along the Rifle Range. Coming from the opposite direction, the turn-off was easier to spot and she soon turned onto the property. As dust swirled around her truck like seagulls chasing a breadcrumb, she noticed the caretaker’s house had fallen into disrepair. It had been almost a year since the land had been leased and the house occupied. Several windows appeared cracked and the shingled roof needed replacing. Sarah could only imagine the state of things on the inside. She continued along the drive and bounced along the bumpy road gnarled with the potato rock the valley was famous for and came to a stop at the cabin she and Todd had built almost three years ago along the banks of the Rio Grande River. Stepping out of the truck felt like stepping back in time. Todd had planned every detail of the cabin, and she could almost hear his voice calling her over the howling of the wind.

  She unlocked the door and walked inside the garage of the small cabin. The family's four ATVs and the trailer they used to haul things, as well as a sundry of fishing rods and floatation devices, sat neglected in the dusty space. The far wall contained shelving that held water shoes and work boots, baseball bats and balls, horseshoes, life vests, and all the things necessary for both fun and minor emergency repair. The valley's spring winds had coated everything with a heavy layer of dust, the evidence of which was left on the abandoned vehicles.

  She moved beyond the garage to the door to the interior of the cabin. After punching in the security code, she stepped inside. The first thing that hit Sarah was the smell. The scent of wood and sand and newness slapped her in the face. She left footprints on the grimy mudroom floor and the adjoining bath.

  Sarah climbed the stairs slowly, savoring and dreading the appearance of the main living quarters. Everything was just as they'd left it, covered with sheets and waiting for their return. The three bedrooms off the hallway past the kitchen lay waiting for happier times and tired vacationers. She moved through the den to the deck that over looked Todd’s favorite patch of river. From the deck, she could hear water rolling in an endless stream over the rocks and boulders of the riverbed, the musical score in the background of her life to come. The sun was trying to peek through the billowing white clouds that came into the valley most afternoons from beyond the surrounding mountain peaks. The brilliance of it took her breath away. She wondered if the people of the valley ever took the time to appreciate the beauty of their surroundings.

  With a heavy heart, Sarah turned away from the view and walked back inside the cabin and down the hall toward her bedroom. The rust-colored walls enveloped her like a warm blanket and the bed called out to her weary soul. She opened the deck door and the windows of the room, trying to pour fresh air and life into the closed off space. She had no more tears to shed, but the familiar pain in her chest was there, brought on by the sight of Todd’s things scattered around the room. His desk sat waiting and the dresser was filled with Todd’s clothes. It hadn’t occurred to Sarah that the cabin still held so many personal items.

  Cleaning out his things from their home in Atlanta had been the hardest task for Sarah since Todd’s death. The thought of facing it again, although on a much smaller scale, made her heart ache. She quickly stepped out of the room and continued opening windows and removing the sheets from the furniture. She had a lot to do before the kids came out with her sister and they began the task of getting on with their new life.

  Sarah had one week to get the place ready for the boys. She wanted the kitchen stocked, the bags unpacked, and the cabin as homey for them as possible. Because the schools in Colorado ran longer than in Georgia, they would have a chance to attend their new school and get a feel for what the next year would be like.

  At thirteen, Kevin wasn't happy about starting his last year of middle school in Colorado. Eleven-year-old Lyle wasn’t thrilled to be moving away from his friends, but he couldn't hide his eagerness for adventure on the ranch. Their life in Atlanta was so different from Hailey. One of her reasons for leaving was to rein in her eldest son before he gave in to the peer pressure of some of his less-than-perfect friends. She knew it would be daunting to raise her two boys alone, but raising them in rural Colorado seemed simpler. She thought it would teach them, and her, the value of family and hard work.

  Her first order of business after getting the house ready was to make a plan for the ranch. She thought she’d call her real estate agent on Monday and see if she could recommend a partner or even a ranch hand that could teach her the business. But for now, there was a truck full of stuff to unload and supplies to purchase.

 

 

 


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