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Native Silver

Page 9

by Helen Conrad


  “Not so fast,” he said, his hand on her arm. “Why do I get the feeling that you’re trying to run away from me?”

  She swallowed, glancing towards the house, hoping Granpa Jim hadn’t heard the car drive up. There was a light on in the living room, but no one appeared at the door.

  “Because you’re such a perceptive person, I guess.” She tried to pry his fingers from her arm, one by one. “That’s exactly what I’m trying to do.”

  “Why?”

  That was a straightforward question. Too bad she was incapable of a straightforward answer.

  There were things she could tell him, but there were other things she couldn’t even explain to herself. She gave up on the fingers, but refused to look him in the face. Instead she stared at the moonless sky.

  “Because you’re the enemy. Can’t you see that?”

  “Ah. Yes, yes, I do see.” She could hear the grin in his voice. “You’re telling me that we’re destined to war against each other, the Carringtons against the Santiagos, for all time. Is that it? A sort of modern day version of the Capulets and the Montagues?”

  She hesitated for just a moment. After all those names conjured up visions of a Romeo and Juliet story that she didn’t have any intention of recreating. “A bit like that,” she ventured.

  “The Hatfields and the McCoys?”

  “Yes.”

  “The Indians and the cowboys? The cattlemen and the sheepherders?”

  He obviously thought it was a good joke. She’d been avoiding his gaze, but now she turned and looked at him. It was dark but she could make out his handsome features in the gloom. His eyes flashed in the starlight. She looked away again.

  “The city mouse and the country mouse,” she supplied impatiently. “Whatever. Irreconcilable foes. That’s exactly what we are.”

  “Doomed to fight forever.” His voice was low and husky and his hand was moving on the soft part of her inner arm. “What delicious battles we’ll have.” He leaned so close, she could feel his breath stir the tendrils of hair that fluttered about her ear.

  “To the victor belong the spoils,” he murmured, then dropped a tiny kiss at the side of her neck, sending a long, slinky shiver down the length of her nervous system.

  She closed her eyes, trying to gather the will to wrench herself away from him. Why did her muscles seem to turn to rubber whenever he came this close?

  “We’ll have to have a strategy session real soon,” he whispered, nuzzling into the small hollow just behind her ear. “Set up the rules. Draw battle lines.” His free hand was cupping her cheek. “Decide what to do about prisoners of war.”

  His lips were so close; she could feel the heat of his breath on her lips. But suddenly she gathered the strength to do what she had to. One hand rose to stop him, and she said in a strangled voice, “You make this sound like some sort of game, David. But it’s not a game at all. It’s a matter of life and death to me.”

  He paused and she could see his frown in the darkness. He wasn’t happy to have her interrupt his playful mood, or his lovemaking.

  Taking advantage of his hesitation, she pulled further from him. “Mainly—my grandfather’s life.” She managed to settle against the car door in a way that would make it very hard for him to follow. “What did you do to my grandfather the other day when you came over here and bullied him about leaving this land?”

  He shook his head as though to cast away something he didn’t like at all. “Bully?” Now he was getting angry too. “I didn’t bully him. Why would I have to bully him? All I did was present the facts . . .”

  “To an old man who lives in the past and didn’t have the slightest idea what you were talking about?”

  He gave a quick sigh of exasperation. “It’s hardly my fault if he doesn’t want to acknowledge the truth. He’s known about the lease for forty years. He had plenty of time to do something about it.”

  Anger was flaring through her, but she reined it in. After all, this was hardly the way to win anything. Sitting here and shouting at one another would only exhaust their energies. It wouldn’t do much to help her grandfather.

  David wasn’t about to give in on any point just because she’d argued him into it. She took a deep breath and tried to take another tack.

  “What do you need that land for, David?” she said quietly. “Rancho Verde is so huge. Why can’t you let him have his twenty acres? You surely won’t miss them.”

  He ran an impatient hand through his dark hair. “It’s not up to me, Shawnee. I told you that. My father made arrangements for the road to be put in before he died. I can’t change his plans.”

  “Can’t?” she shot back, gathering her things together, “or won’t?”

  “Both.” His voice was steely. “Don’t go yet.”

  “You’ve got a hospital to go to,” she reminded him. “And I have a grandfather.”

  He didn’t touch her, but she felt almost as though he’d taken her arm in his hand again. She hesitated, her fingers on the door handle, and he got out on his side and walked around the car. When he opened the door, he didn’t move back, and when she stood, it was right up against him. She had to brush his body with her own, and yet he didn’t try to hold her.

  Still, it left her quivering with an anticipation she couldn’t ignore—but she had to choke back.

  “May I see you again tomorrow?” he asked evenly, no emotion in his voice.

  “No.” She stepped around him and started walking towards the porch. “I don’t want to see you again. I can’t.” She strode up the steps and each step she took away from him seemed to stoke her anger higher and stronger. She opened the front door, then paused and looked back.

  “I can’t—and I won’t.” She stepped inside and let the door close with a slam, then leaned against it, holding herself tightly together with her arms. She didn’t move until she heard the sound of his car’s engine fade away along the road.

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  REALITY CHECK

  Forgetting David Santiago would be a simple thing. After all, she’d really only known him for two days. He hadn’t become a part of her life. Forgetting him would be a snap.

  At least, that was what Shawnee tried to tell herself, over and over, during the next few days. Once in a while she could even convince herself it was true for whole minutes at a time.

  But not often.

  Somehow thoughts of David had woven themselves into the fabric of her mind and she couldn’t pull them loose. She couldn’t wash her hands without thinking about how they’d looked, curled against his chest. She couldn’t comb her hair without remembering how his breath had stirred it. When she went into town to shop for groceries, she saw him in every tall, dark-haired man who crossed her path, and when she rode Miki out across the hills, she thought she saw him in the saddle of every horse that appeared on the distant horizon. She was obsessed with the man, and it was driving her crazy.

  Even so, he seemed to have forgotten her easily enough. “May I see you tomorrow?” he’d asked, and she’d flung herself away from him, refusing, and yet she’d never expected him to give in so readily. Deep down, she was just a little disappointed that a week had gone by without another word from David.

  Still, it had been a busy week.

  She’d met with Reid Carrington at the Kit Kat, just as she’d planned. She’d gone into the retro diner, flashing back to days gone by when this had been the place to be after football games and Saturday night dates. She looked around, expecting to see somebody she knew, but only the waitress looked familiar.

  “Hi Doris,” she said. “Remember me?”

  “Shawnee Carrington! Haven’t seen you in ages. I thought your sister told me you’d moved up to Marin County for good.”

  Shawnee shook her head and smiled at the pleasantly plump woman she felt like she’d known all her life. “Couldn’t stay away,” she told her breezily.

  Doris gave her a look. “I know why you came back,” she said, her brown eyes warm as she lo
oked at the younger woman. “You came back to take care of your grandfather, didn’t you?” She shook her head when Shawnee shrugged. “Good for you. You always were his favorite.” She gave her a hug. “So what’s your pleasure? You going to take a booth or do you want to sit at the counter?”

  “I’ll take a booth if you’ve got one available. I’m meeting someone.”

  Doris gave her what had always been her special booth, right in the corner where she could keep an eye on the street and the entrance at the same time. How many times had she sat there, watching for her girlfriends in one direction and keeping track of what cute boys were arriving on the other?

  But that all seemed like a lifetime ago. Now she had more weighty business on her mind.

  Looking up, she saw Reid enter the diner and a smile broke out across her face. Trust her serious, older cousin to wear a very beautiful Italian suit more appropriate to a big city than the overalls and jeans more prevalent out here in the Valley. There was nothing “country” about Reid.

  Still, his answering smile was warm and after they hugged and murmured greetings, they sat opposite in the booth and looked at each other.

  “So I hear you and Jennifer have twins,” she said.

  Reid nodded. “And another one on the way.”

  “Congratulations.”

  His lopsided grin looked almost abashed. “I’ve got to tell you the truth, Shawnee. I never thought I’d be this happy with family life. Who knew how much fun kids could be? I mean, when you’re young, they just seem annoying. But when you get a couple of your own…” He grinned. “It’s like a circus every night, but it’s great. You know?”

  No, she didn’t really. But she grinned back.

  They talked a few minutes longer, reminiscing about a huge family reunion they’d both attended at the beach in Destiny Bay ten years before. She and her sister had been sent to stay with Reid’s family for the whole week that summer. Lisa’d had a tremendous crush on him.

  “He’s your cousin,” Shawnee, a thirteen-year-old know-it-all at the time, had reminded her. “You can’t fall in love with your cousin.”

  Lisa had been tearfully candid with her. “I can’t help it. He’s just so gorgeous.” She’d frowned at her bratty sister. “And anyway, he’s not a first cousin. I looked it up and saw the charts and everything. Our grandfathers are cousins. So it’s okay.”

  Shawnee was skeptical at the time, but looking at what a handsome, upstanding man he’d become, she couldn’t say she blamed Lisa much.

  Luckily, he seemed as bright and clear-thinking as he was attractive, and he quickly looked over the paperwork she’d brought with her, jotting down notes and nodding.

  “So you’ve spoken to David Santiago about this?”

  She nodded. “Do you know him?”

  Reid smiled. “Sure. My father did some work on wills and incorporation structures for his father years ago and I helped him with some of the paperwork. So I’m pretty familiar with the lay of the land.” He leaned back, taking a sip of the coffee Doris had brought to the table. “I drove by your place on my way in,” he told her. “I’m glad you’re back to take care of things. It doesn’t look like Granpa Jim has got the energy to keep things up like he used to.”

  She nodded. She knew that. But what she wanted to know was—what were their chances? “So what do you think?”

  He sighed. “I have to tell you, Shawnee, things don’t look so good. On the face of it, I’d say he doesn’t have a chance to fight this. But I’m going to go by the county records office and see what I can dig up. Who knows? There might be something.”

  She felt as though she had a rock in the pit of her stomach. “I really appreciate you looking into this,” she told him, trying to keep a stiff upper lip and wondering how much she was going to owe him. But that didn’t matter. What ever it was, she would find a way to pay him.

  They were standing by his car, still talking, when a silver Mercedes slunk into the parking lot and pulled into a nearby space. She didn’t have to turn and look to know it was David, but her heart started racing just the same. Great timing. The one person she didn’t want to see her with Reid—and here he was. She gritted her teeth.

  “Hey Reid,” he said as he unfolded his long, lean body from the low car. “How’ve you been?”

  Reid greeted him with a smile and a handshake. “Not bad. How about you?”

  David gave Shawnee a look and drawled, “So you called in the Marines, huh?”

  She lifted her chin. “Of course. You didn’t think I was going to roll over and play dead, did you?”

  “Oh no. Not you.” He smiled at her, then his gaze darkened. “Sorry I had to take you home early last night,” he told her softly.

  “No problem.” Her eyes flashed. “How’s that injured cowboy doing?”

  David hesitated. “Pretty good. Cuts and bruises. And he broke a leg. Won’t be able to walk for awhile.” His grin flashed back again. “But we figure we can lift him up into the saddle and tie him secure and he can be back at work in no time.”

  “Wow, you’re all heart.” She knew he was just teasing, but she glared at him anyway.

  “Okay, guys,” Reid cut in with a look on his face that said, “Oh, so that’s the way it is, huh?” Obviously, he could sense the electricity sizzling between the two of them. “I’ve got to get going. Shawnee, I’ll call you.”

  “Okay. Thanks Reid.”

  David looked like he was going to ask her to join him for whatever he was planning to do in the diner, and she backed away quickly, heading for her Camaro before he could say a word. With a wave to the two of them, she was off down the road, heading back home.

  The rush from seeing David faded pretty quickly. She got back to her grandfather’s realizing that hope was dwindling. If Reid couldn’t find anything magic to save them all, she was going to have to think of something else. What—she couldn’t imagine. But it would have to be something good.

  Meanwhile, she had more things to occupy her mind and try to keep it off David Santiago.

  She and Miki had begun their training, and she knew it was going to take most of her time until the horse-show to get Miki in peak form. Walking over her grandfather’s land, from one end to the other, she’d worked out a course that included low jumps over logs and stonewalls, and even a small creek. There were hills to climb, sections of brush to work through, a boggy meadow and a stony landslide surface—just about every element she could think of that she and Miki would encounter during the trail competition. Starting slowly, she took Miki over the course, talking softly in his ear, explaining with her voice, encouraging with a nudge now and then, letting her hands, her tone, her knees, even her seat show Miki all he needed to know. Soon they were flying across the course, conditioning Miki to do the same at the competition level.

  Of course, the conditioning of the rider was just as important as that of the horse, and Shawnee spent a lot of time shaping up herself. She started the morning with a full session of stretching exercises and calisthenics, then ran three miles before coming home to make breakfast for Granpa Jim.

  There wasn’t time to think about David Santiago. And she didn’t think about him. Not consciously. But he was there every moment of her day.

  “I met Allison Santiago—or I guess it’s Allison Hauser—at Patty Wilson’s this morning,” Lisa said one day when she came over to check on how her grandfather and her sister were doing. The two sisters sat together in the small kitchen, sipping coffee, while their grandfather dozed in the other room. “She’s beautiful, isn’t she? And really nice.” Lisa bit her lip, considering. “Just a little stand-offish, but then, what can you expect? I asked her to the Falwell dinner.”

  Shawnee gasped. “You didn’t! Oh Lisa, she hates us as much as we hate her!”

  Lisa made a face. “Speak for yourself. I don’t hate anybody.” She sighed. “She did turn me down, and on a very flimsy excuse, but I’ll try again.”

  Shawnee groaned, then had to laugh. “Yo
u’re incorrigible, aren’t you?” She reached out and tousled her sister’s hair. “I hope Brad does run for office someday. You’re going to make a great campaign manager.”

  Lisa grinned back. “If he doesn’t maybe I will.” Then her expression sharpened. “I hear you were at Rancho Verde with David the other night,” she said probingly. “You going to tell me all about it, or do I have to call for the rack?”

  Avoiding her gaze, Shawnee rose from her chair and went to the kitchen window. “Even torture won’t get me to reveal the gory details,” she answered lightly.

  “That bad?”

  Shawnee leaned her forehead against her hand and closed her eyes. “No,” she said softly. “Not really. Actually, it was kind of wonderful. He took me all over the ranch, let me see whatever I wanted. There was so much that was just the way Granpa Jim had always told me it was. It was kind of like being let in for a tour of heaven.” She lifted her head and looked into her sister’s eyes. “Only, of course, you’re being told at the same time that you’re most likely going to the other place for the long haul.”

  Lisa didn’t say anything. She just sat and waited to hear anything else Shawnee might want to tell her.

  “This land isn’t really Granpa’s,” Shawnee blurted out at last. “Did you know that it still belongs to the Santiagos? That they’re going to take even this away from him?”

  To her surprise, Lisa nodded slowly. “Yes,” she said, “David told us about it the other night.”

  Shawnee stared at her. “And you could still ask his sister to come over for dinner?” she rasped out, appalled.

  Lisa looked down at her coffee mug and shrugged. “Face facts, Shawnee. It makes life easier.”

  “Facts!” Shawnee dropped back into her chair.

  “Yes, facts.” Lisa was beginning to get angry, too. “It’s really time you grew up a little, Shawnee. This old house isn’t so wonderful. And the acreage isn’t good for much. Granpa Jim’s getting too old to make repairs, keep up the place. What does he want to stay here for, anyway? You won’t be around forever to take care of him.”

 

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