The Broken H

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The Broken H Page 1

by J. L. Langley




  Table of Contents

  The Broken H

  Copyright

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Epilogue

  About the Author

  Books by J.L. Langley

  The Broken H

  J.L. Langley

  Copyright

  This e-book is a work of fiction. While reference might be made to actual historical events or existing locations, the names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  The Broken H

  by J.L. Langley

  Second Edition published by Yellow Rose Publishing, October 2020

  Copyright © August 2011 by J.L. Langley

  All rights reserved. This copy is intended for the purchaser of this e-book only. No part of this e-book may be reproduced or shared in any form, including, but not limited to printing, photocopying, faxing, or emailing, without prior written permission from Yellow Rose Publishing.

  Printed in the United States of America

  Editor by Olivia Wong

  Cover Art by Tea Cup Designs

  CHAPTER ONE

  Damned broken rubber band. Shane Cortez batted the stray black hair out of his face and once again considered rolling up the windows and turning on the A/C of the battered old ranch truck, but it was too nice outside. He was definitely going to have to get some of those elastic ponytail holders that women and girls used. His hair was just too darned thick. This rubber band was the third one he’d snapped this week.

  He tucked the long and heavy strands behind the earpiece of his sunglasses again, then wound the windows up half way, hoping that it would help keep his hair from flying into his eyes and yet maintain the cool temperature. He was almost home, surely he could deal with both that long. Then he could rebraid his hair before he unloaded the supplies. If he could find a damned rubber band that is.

  Shane drove up the Broken H’s drive and pulled to the rear of the house, slipping between his personal truck and the back fence of the big white colonial ranch house. He had barely gotten the truck in park before he saw Kaitlyn Hunter run toward him, her gray-streaked red hair flying wildly behind her.

  His stomach knotted up with dread. Although the lady was still pretty lively for her age -- her husband, Ted, liked to tease that it was the Irish in her -- Shane could remember seeing that mane of red hair unbound only once in the entire twenty-six years he’d work on the Broken H: the morning the Hunters’ son, Gray, had been shot in the line of duty while on a drug raid with the rest of the San Antonio SWAT team.

  Oh, God! Grayson. Shane sucked in a breath, trying his best to keep nausea at bay even as he quickly opened the door and jumped out of the truck. “What is it Kaitlyn? What’s wrong?”

  She came to a stop only a few feet from him, her petite body shaking. “Shane, hurry! It’s Ted! I think he’s having a heart attack!”

  Damn, damn, damn! Shane sprinted toward the ranch house, his heart pounding. Ted couldn’t be dying. He couldn’t! Hell, the man was only in his early sixties and had always been in reasonably good health. “Kaitlyn, did you call Grayson?”

  “Oh, no! I didn’t think about it. I was about to get my car when you pulled up, Shane.” Kaitlyn could barely get the words out, her voice wavering.

  Shane reached the kitchen and stopped dead in his tracks.

  Ted was sitting at the kitchen table, his head resting on his arms. His gray hair fell into his eyes as his head popped up. Although he was pale and his face was a little pinched, he wasn’t the dying, thrashing heap Shane’s horrible imagination had conjured.

  “Ted?” Shane frowned and rushed forward to put a hand on the older man’s shoulder.

  “Shane. Did you get everything we needed from the feed store?” Ted’s voice was just a little strained.

  He nodded. “Are you okay? Kaitlyn said you aren’t feeling too well.”

  “Well, son, Katy’s right. I’ve got to say I’ve been better. You think you can drive me up to the hospital?”

  “Absolutely.” Shane grabbed Ted under an arm and helped him to stand. The fact that he was willing to go to the hospital without being dragged kicking and screaming said more than anything how bad Ted must be feeling.

  He all but carried the man out to Shane’s newer Chevy, about three yards away from the beat up blue ranch truck. As he settled Ted and Kaitlyn in the back of the silver quad cab and got behind the wheel, he calculated how close the nearest hospital was. He wasn’t ready to lose his ... well, Ted was like a father to him. The older man and Kaitlyn had taken Shane in when he was sixteen; they were his family. Speaking of which ...

  As he left the driveway, Shane dug through his center console, hoping that was where he’d left his cell phone. He handed it to Kaitlyn with a brief word about calling her son, then quickly glanced back at Ted. Incredibly, Ted was the most calm among the three of them.

  Kaitlyn’s small hand was hot and not quite steady as she took the phone from Shane. After a few seconds, she let out a distressed sound. “Darn it, Shane, I can’t work this thing! Is there a trick to it?”

  Shane held out his hand again. “Let me see it. I’ll dial Gray and you can talk to him.” The phone touched his palm but was snatched away before he could close his fingers around it.

  “Nonsense, Katy. Darlin’, the boy is driving. He can’t be dialing a phone. I’ll do it.”

  Shane grinned, feeling much better about the situation. If Ted could still remain calm and take charge, he must not be as bad off as they feared.

  The drive to the hospital was long and intense, but they finally made it. The emergency room doctor admitted Ted and immediately started running tests. Now all there was to do was wait. He hated waiting.

  Kaitlyn had gone into the examining room with her husband and left Shane to make the appropriate calls and fill out the admissions paperwork. Ted had left a message with one of Gray’s deputies, but Shane hadn’t seen hide nor hair of the man himself. At one point during the interminable wait, Kaitlyn came to tell him that Ted had indeed had a heart attack, but she knew very little else. The doctors were still checking him out.

  Shane had already called the Broken H to let the ranch hands know what was going on as well as told them to unload the truck. He’d looked out the window a couple of times and flipped through a magazine. He was doing anything he could think of to pass the time without worrying, but nothing was helping much. He was about to rise and search for a cup of coffee when a hand touched his shoulder.

  “Shane?”

  He looked up into eyes the color of freshly cut grass and swallowed the lump in his throat. Why, after all these years, did the man still affect him this way? He stood and extended his hand, hoping like hell that the tremble of his fingers would be passed off as nerves from Ted being in the hospital.

  “Hello, Grayson.”

  § § § §

  It was a stupid thing, and ridiculous to say the least, considering his father was in the hospital, possibly dying, but the first thing Gray noticed was that Shane’s long black hair was down. He wished he could run his fingers through that glorious mane and erase the haunted look from S
hane’s regal face. The man looked like the pictures of Native Americans in history books after they’d been forced onto reservations, defeated and hurt, but still proud.

  Shane tugged on his hand. Damn! He hadn’t even realized he still had hold of the man. What was it about Shane that always had him making a complete and utter ass of himself?

  Gray cleared his throat and sat down next to the one Shane had vacated, trying to regain his composure. Being this close to Shane was always disorienting, but receiving a message that his father was in the hospital with a suspected heart attack wasn’t helping his nerves either. “Have you heard anything about Dad’s condition? Is he going to be all right?”

  Shane shrugged and sat down beside him. “Your mother told me the doctor said he did have a heart attack, but she didn’t know much more than that. They are still doing tests on him.”

  Gray nodded, not sure what to say. He hadn’t been the world’s greatest son by any stretch of the imagination, but he loved his dad. “I need to get out to the Broken H more.”

  “Sad that it takes something like this to make you realize it.”

  Gray wasn’t sure Shane meant to censure him, but it was there in his voice all the same. “What the fuck is that supposed to mean?”

  Shane raised an arrogant brow.

  Smug bastard!

  “Do you really want to argue right now, Grayson?”

  “You started it, Cortez!” Un-fucking-believable. It wasn’t like he didn’t already feel guilty about not visiting his folks as much as he should, but now the reason he stayed away was giving him shit about it.

  Shane sighed and ran his hands down his tanned face. “Look, you’re right. I’m sorry. I’m worried about your dad.”

  What? And Gray wasn’t? He wanted to slug Shane, but he didn’t. He’d grown up with the man and knew that Shane did genuinely care for the older Hunters. Besides, Gray might be aggravated, but he wasn’t going to let Shane see it. Of course, the man was always under his skin, so it was really moot. Gray sighed and rested his head in his hands, trying to relax. “I’m worried, too. I might not go out to the ranch that often, but he’s still my dad.”

  “Shane? Oh! Gray!”

  Gray looked up to see his mom jog toward them, smiling. He stood up and held his arms wide. “Hi, Mom. How is he?”

  She squeezed him tight, then cupped a hand behind his neck, pulling him down to kiss his cheek. “First they’re going to do an angiogram to see how bad the damage to the heart’s blood vessels are. Then they’ll know if he needs bypass surgery. If it’s not too bad, they can fix it when they do the angioplasty rather than doing the bypass. They put these little stents in there to open up the blood vessels.”

  Oh, God! He knew it sounded scarier than it probably was, but he couldn’t help his initial shocked reaction.

  Shane looked as unshakable as always, and it annoyed the piss out of him. The man was a freaking rock. Wait! Was that a bit of moisture in his eyes? Shane glanced at him, face unreadable, and blinked.

  “It’s really not that big a deal nowadays, Grayson. He’ll be fine.”

  “Yeah, I know.” He looked back at his mother. “When are they going to do the procedure?”

  “The doctor is going to take him back in in about two hours. Do you boys want to see him before they start prepping him? The nurse said it would be okay, but just for a few minutes.”

  Gray grabbed her hand, patting it, then tugged her to get her moving. “Of course we do, Mom.”

  When they walked in to the patient room, his dad smiled. God, he looked like hell. Gray tried his best to smile back and went to the side of the bed. Taking his father’s hand, he squeezed it before letting go. “Hey, Pop.”

  “Hey, kiddo.” Ted glanced to Gray’s other side and spotted Shane, dipping his head in greeting. “Shane.”

  “Ted.” Shane inclined his chin slightly, his face harder than ever.

  “Since I’ve got both you boys here, “he grabbed Gray’s hand, then Shane’s, “I want y’all to keep the Broken H going. I want the two of you ... both my boys --”

  “Dad, you aren’t dying, so knock it off.”

  Shane frowned at him. “Let the man talk, Grayson.”

  Oh, good lord! Didn’t it bother Shane to have the old man talking like he was about to die? It sure as hell did him. Gray heaved a large sigh and shut his mouth before he said something he’d regret.

  Ted gripped their hands. “Now, listen up. I’m not expecting to die, son. But I want to make sure things are taken care of in case something should happen. Gray --”

  “Dad?”

  “I want you to help out Shane the next couple of weeks. Now, I know you have responsibility as sheriff, but I’d like you to make time if Shane needs you.”

  Gray nodded. He’d already cleared his schedule, but he was hoping like hell that Shane didn’t need him. Working with Shane, seeing him all day, every day, would likely kill him, even if it were for just a week or two. Still, he’d be there to lend a hand if he had to. Hell, worrying about it was probably all for naught since Shane ran the Broken H by himself anyway. The man had pretty much taken over all the managerial stuff, including paying bills and making the ranch decisions, years ago while his father just managed a few things here and there.

  “I will, Dad. I’ve already taken a few days off. My deputies can handle things by themselves for a while.”

  Ted smiled. “Good, good.” He squeezed their hands again. “And you will both take care of Katy?”

  Gray took a deep breath. He hated the doom and gloom and what if’s, especially in this situation with regard to someone he loved.

  Shane glanced at him across the bed. There was a slight arch of one of those proud brows. Then the man looked back at his dad. “Of course, we will, Ted. But you are going to be out in no time and will be able to do that yourself.”

  “I sure hope so, Shane.”

  “Shane’s right, Dad. I bet you’ll be home within a week.”

  The nurse stepped inside the doorway. “All right, gentlemen. I’m going to have to run you out of here. We have to get Mr. Hunter ready.” She shooed them toward the door. “Mrs. Hunter, you can stay for a few more minutes.”

  “See you, Dad. Love you.” Gray bent and kissed his father’s cheek.

  The old man patted him on the shoulder. “Love you, too, Gray.”

  Shane looked past Gray. “I’m going to go grab a bite to eat, Kaitlyn. You want anything?”

  “No, honey, I’m good. You go and take Gray with you. And make him eat something, Shane. That way I’ll know he got at least one good meal today.”

  Shane looked back at Ted, his face unreadable, or it would have been to most people, but Gray knew the man. He knew that slight head dip said everything Shane wouldn’t say aloud, that he loved Gray’s dad, too. “Ted.”

  Apparently, his dad realized it as well. He chuckled and reached out a hand to Shane. When Shane took it, Ted pulled him close and patted his shoulder, just as he’d done to Gray. “Love you, too, boy! Now y’all get. Eat something good for me, too, because I have a feeling they are going to tell me I have to watch my diet after this.”

  Gray heard the nurse chuckle as they left.

  “You better believe it, Mr. Hunter.”

  He and Shane got back into the waiting area before Shane dropped a bomb on him. “I probably will need you to help out next week. I had to let one of the hands go and another one is out on vacation.”

  Gray closed his eyes for a few seconds, then opened them and nodded. Well, son of a bitch! Didn’t that just figure?

  CHAPTER TWO

  Shane was pretty sure Gray hadn’t wanted to go eat with him, but he’d agreed anyhow. Now the other man sat quietly in the truck next to him, staring out the side window with his tan cowboy hat pulled low over his eyes. What had happened to the easy camaraderie they’d had between them?

  Once upon a time there was no one Shane had felt more comfortable with, not even Ted and Kaitlyn, than Gray. He had
been Shane’s shadow up until Gray was almost eighteen. Then, shortly after, Gray had up and taken off to ride the rodeo circuit. Oh man, had that scared the crap out of Shane. Kaitlyn and Ted, too, for that matter. But Shane also had been proud. Gray had really made a name for himself in bull riding -- he could have gone on to the pro circuit if he’d wanted to -- instead the boy had put himself through college with his winnings, then joined the San Antonio Police Department. After a short career with the SWAT team, Gray had come back home and run for sheriff; he had been the youngest man to be voted in as sheriff in the history of their county.

  Shane turned the truck into the diner parking lot, found a spot and paused before cutting the engine. “This okay? Or do you want something else?”

  Gray opened the door and got out. “No, this is fine.” He shut the door and started for the entrance.

  Shane sighed, switched off the ignition and joined him. Gray’s attitude sucked and had done so since he’d left home eleven years ago. But damn if his ass didn’t look good in those khaki uniform pants as he stormed across the lot. Shane groaned and shook his head as he followed that fine ass inside the diner.

  Once they were seated in a booth, a waitress took their order and brought iced teas. Through it all, Gray hardly said a word. He wouldn’t even look at Shane.

  Shane had had enough. He had no idea why the man was so hostile toward him, but it ate at him and they were going to talk about this. Gray was too important to him. He always had been.

  What Shane really wanted ... well, it didn’t matter what he wanted. Gray might not be a kid anymore, but he was still too young for Shane. And Gray deserved better than Shane, but, damn it, they were not going to continue this way! He missed the old Gray; whatever it was that was bothering the man was also keeping him away from the Broken H -- away from his parents and away from Shane.

  He had just opened his mouth to question Gray, when Sherry Ann, the Hunters’ neighbor’s teenaged daughter, slid into the seat beside him. Her blond ponytail almost hit him in the face as she scooted close. Damn! Not again! The girl practically pounced on him every time she saw him.

 

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