Rock Me: A Rockstar Romance

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Rock Me: A Rockstar Romance Page 20

by Wood, Vivian


  3

  “You look like you want to punch someone in the face,” Walker said.

  “I assume that the curs going nuts means The Colonel is here,” Sawyer replied.

  “Yeah, a couple of the dogs just hate him,” Colt said, standing.

  “It’s not really that shocking,” Sawyer said. “You know, considering that he’s a heartless bastard."

  He and Walker rose to follow Colt outside.

  Sawyer gave a low whistle as their father pulled a cherry red, classic Mustang into the driveway. He pulled up right in the middle of the driveway, seemingly unworried that he was blocking in Walker and Sawyer’s vehicles.

  An uptight, silver-haired version of his sons, Colonel Arlo Montgomery Roman climbed out of his car. He looked around for a moment, completely ignoring his sons, before going around to the passenger side of the car. He opened the door for Marilee Carter, the buxom, over-the-top bottle blonde he’d introduced to his sons only three months after the death of their mother.

  Marilee turned and waved to them, doing her best Marilyn Monroe impression. That was the sum of Marilee’s whole life, dressing like a 50s pinup and primping and acting scandalized. She wasn’t a bad lady, pretty nice actually… but none of the Roman boys could stand her.

  The Colonel closed her car door and then promptly seemed to forget about her entirely, leaving her behind as he strode to the porch and up the steps. Marilee followed him, tottering on ridiculous high heels, holding down the flared skirt of her blue pinup dress.

  “You came,” The Colonel said, eyeing Sawyer and his brothers.

  “You threatened to let the animals run wild and the roof cave in on itself,” Sawyer said, crossing his arms.

  The Colonel squinted into the fading sunlight, then pulled a face.

  “Didn’t figure you cared, seeing as how you’re off living your fancy life out there in D.C.,” he said.

  “I was working out of Quantico, liaising with the FBI and the Navy,” Sawyer said.

  He felt his body tense. There was something about his father, something that just got to him every damned time.

  “None of my business. You’ve made that plain enough.”

  The Colonel stalked past them and went inside. Colt was busy helping Marilee up the steps. Colt was many things, including a horndog, but he was also a gentleman at the core. Even to Marilee, whom he disliked.

  “Starting a little early, I see,” The Colonel said as he eyed the table where the brothers had been sitting.

  “It’s an occasion,” Sawyer said, glancing at Walker.

  Walker was stone-faced and silent, his usual front when dealing with their father. Sawyer could recall at least half a dozen times when the brothers had gotten into some kind of trouble together. The Colonel would line them up to interrogate them, screaming in their faces. And there Walker would be, not moving except to blink now and then, seemingly absorbing none of it.

  For some reason, that made The Colonel single Walker out, working hard to control and manipulate Walker over the other two brothers. Walker never responded, which made their father more angry, which made him lash out… it was an endless cycle.

  Sawyer wasn’t a fan of his father, but he was secretly glad not to bring out the worst in The Colonel like Walker did.

  “Marilee, a drink?” The Colonel asked his fiancée when she finally stepped into the room.

  Perspiring and flushed with exertion, Marilee just shook her head and took a seat at the kitchen table. The Colonel went into the kitchen and returned with a glass of bourbon for himself and what looked like an iced tea for Marilee. She took it and shot Arlo a grateful look, which The Colonel ignored.

  Sawyer’s father took a seat at the head of the table, pushing Colt’s beer out of his way. Sawyer glanced at Walker and Colt, and then they all moved around to sit at the table.

  “How much has Colt told you?” The Colonel asked, sipping his drink.

  Walker and Sawyer glanced at each other and shrugged.

  “Not much, I just walked in right before you did,” Sawyer supplied, since Walker probably wasn’t feeling chatty.

  “I don’t want to argue with y’all,” Arlo said, stabbing a finger down against the tabletop. “And I don’t want to be here all night. Me and Marilee’s got things to do, places to go. Ain’t that right, Marilee?”

  “Yes—” Marilee started, blushing. Clearly ARLO wasn’t interested, because he didn’t pause to let her speak.

  “Here’s the deal, boys. Y’all got one month to decide if you’re staying or going. By staying, I mean keeping the ranch running in some capacity. By going, I mean selling to someone, over whom I have final approval. Me and Marilee are real happy living in town here, so we don’t want to have to deal with anything about running the ranch. In the case of a sale, you three have a 40 percent stake, split amongst yourselves. Your cousins in Memphis own 10 percent, your cousins in Biloxi own 10 percent, and the rest belongs to me.”

  Sawyer found that a little surprising. He had no idea that anyone else had a claim on the Roman Ranch, though it did make sense. The family had owned the Ranch since at least the Louisiana Purchase, handing it down generation to generation. Their father was one of three sons, the other two going out into the world to make their own fortunes.

  “What about if we keep the ranch?” Colt asked, his brows drawn down somberly.

  “Your cousins got land rights, but they don’t take profits. In the event that you three decide to keep the ranch, I’m the only one who gets paid outside the family. I get 30 percent, come hell or high water.”

  Sawyer’s eyes narrowed. “That’s a lot for a silent partner.”

  “Tough shit, kid,” Arlo said, picking up his bourbon glass again. “Take it or leave it. And if you want to sell, you all have to agree. If you want to stay, you have to run it yourselves. No proxy coming into town, running the land that’s been ours since a grandfather so far back, I can’t even count the greats.”

  “Why should you care?” Walker said, breaking his silence.

  The Colonel set his glass down with a bang, glaring at Walker.

  “Even the Navy could never beat the smug out of you, could they?” he growled.

  Walker visibly stiffened, but The Colonel was already moving on to a lecture.

  “You three think you’re so damned smart, think you know what the world’s about? You know nothing,” he spat, sloshing his drink as he slapped his palms on the table. “I got bigger things to worry about than what my whiny, trust fund-addled sons are up to. So figure out what you’re doing, and do it. My lawyer is putting the property up for auction in 30 days, unless you three figure this out and get it all in writing.”

  The Colonel shoved to his feet, kicking at his chair. Sawyer and Colt stood up too, Walker remaining seated and stoic.

  “Marilee, get up. We’re going,” their father said, snapping his fingers at her.

  “Oh, I…” she said, blushing and making a face as she stood. She glanced at Sawyer and his brothers. “Well, it was nice to see y’all. We’ll come back and visit when your father’s not in such a state.” Arlo headed for the front door without so much as a single glance behind him to see if she was following or not.

  “Mmhm, any day now,” Sawyer said.

  The front door slammed, making Marilee jump. She just wiggled her fingers, picked up her purse, and trotted after her husband-to-be.

  “She’s gonna break her neck running down those stairs,” Colt muttered.

  Walker snorted. “I wish The Colonel would break his neck. It’d save me the trouble of strangling him one of these days.”

  “Only if I don’t get to him first,” Colt said.

  “Listen, listen,” Sawyer said, waving a hand and shaking his head. “Let’s forget about The Colonel. The worst case scenario is that we all go back to our separate lives, working in jobs we like. Right?”

  After a moment, Walker and Colt nodded.

  “Yeah. I guess this is our decision, no matter how T
he Colonel phrased it,” Walker said.

  “So let’s just… talk about ourselves, forget about him. Hmm?” Sawyer asked.

  “Agreed,” Colt said. Walker shrugged.

  “Can we go sit on the front porch?” Sawyer asked. “This renovation is killing my vibe right now.”

  Colt and Walker laughed. Sawyer grabbed three fresh beers, then followed them out to the front porch. They sprawled out on the rickety deck, popping the tops on their beers and staring up at the night sky.

  “Okay,” Sawyer said. “I’ll go first. I love this place, this ranch is in my blood. I don’t want to run it, although I would be willing to make this my home base for a year. Travel as little as possible and try the satellite internet mumbo jumbo that Walker’s doing.”

  His brothers nodded.

  “Walker?” Sawyer asked.

  “I’m easy,” Walker said. “I could stay, I could go. I don’t have any plans that are in direct conflict with being in Catahoula, but I also wouldn’t mind moving to some beach in Thailand and not looking back.”

  “You’d expatriate?” Colt asked, looking as surprised as Sawyer felt.

  “I’ve given this country all I’ve got. Here I am. I could do this very thing anywhere,” Walker said.

  “All right, fair enough,” Colt said, taking a swig of his beer.

  Sawyer looked to Colt.

  “How about you, kid?”

  “I’m 27, when am I gonna outgrow that nickname?” Colt asked, rolling his eyes.

  “Never,” Sawyer and Walker said, then laughed.

  “Screw y’all.”

  “Just tell us what you want to do with the ranch, Colt.”

  Colt sighed and stretched, rolling his neck. At length, he said, “I wanna stay, even if that means I’m running things by myself.”

  Sawyer sat up straighter. “You wouldn’t have to do it all alone, if we stayed. Walker’s great at the business end of things, always has been. And me… I can help with anything but mucking stalls.”

  Colt grinned. “You still trying to get out of the worst chores? Thought you were grown now.”

  “Grown enough to know that there’s no amount of money in the world that would make me want to volunteer for all that,” Sawyer said.

  Colt pursed his lips, then shrugged. “It sounds like we don’t hate the idea of staying here.”

  Walker held up a hand. “I think it would be wise to use the next week or two to get involved in the ranch again, make sure that we all really want that.”

  “And make sure we can make the transition from globetrotters back to hometown boys,” Colt said, looking out across the front yard. “After all, a lot’s changed here since we were in school. I’ve been here a few months, and I’m still adjusting.”

  “Mooning over your high school girlfriends, more like,” Walker cracked.

  “Shove it,” Colt said, unruffled. “So, are we decided? We’ll give ourselves a couple weeks and then reconvene?”

  “Agreed,” Sawyer said. He raised the tip of his beer bottle at them and they all clinked the bottles together, as good a promise as a handshake or a contract.

  “Listen,” Colt said, after a moment. “There’s something we need to take care of first thing.”

  “What’s that?” Walker asked.

  “Land rights,” Colt said. “The Colonel’s told me a little about the shared land usage rights we have with the three farms that border our land.”

  “Yeah, and without the water from Cur Creek or the right to graze on some of the fallow fields, we won’t have much of a ranch to keep alive,” Walker chimed in.

  “Exactly. The Colonel had agreements with everyone, but I don’t think a handshake can hold for more than a generation,” Colt said. “If we’re going to be the ones running things here, I think we need to reestablish the status quo.”

  “Fancy vocabulary you got there,” Sawyer said, teasing Colt.

  “I always was the smart one, y’all just never knew it,” Colt said with a chuckle.

  “All right. We can split up the surrounding farms, then,” Sawyer said. “Walker, you take the Simmons, because Colt slept with Anna Simmons and never called her back.”

  “Ten years ago!” Colt protested.

  “People in this town have a long memory. Walker, Miss Arlene at the Ursulines likes you, right?”

  “If she’s not blind and deaf by now, sure,” Walker said, unconcerned.

  “Good. I’ll take River Farm, say hi to Remy.”

  “Oh…” Colt said, looking at Walker. “Maybe I should do that.”

  Walker scowled, and Sawyer glanced back and forth between them.

  “What aren’t you two telling me?” he demanded to know.

  Colt and Walker were quiet for a moment.

  “Nothing,” Walker said, turning away from Colt. “We just figure, you know, you have kind of a history with Remy.”

  Sawyer gave them a scornful look. “Yeah, a long history. We’re… friends.”

  Neither Colt nor Walker batted an eye, which only made him more suspicious.

  “We are!” Sawyer insisted. “Listen, if I get a bad feeling when I’m visiting, even a hint of bad blood, I swear I’ll come straight back and let Colt do it. No offense, Walker.”

  Walker looked back at Colt, annoyed. “None taken.”

  Sawyer set down his beer and fished out his keys.

  “Where are you going?” Colt asked.

  “No time like the present, right?” Sawyer said. “I should be able to catch Mr. River right before dinner.”

  “I think maybe you want to catch him in town. You know, right before dinner, he might be hungry and angry. Hangry, ha ha,” Colt said. He seemed a little nervous.

  “Your sense of humor never was all that great, Colt,” Sawyer said, standing and brushing off his jeans. “So unless either of you has a real reason for me not to go, I’m gonna head over there and settle this once and for all.”

  “You mean you’re going to see Remy,” Walker said, crossing his arms.

  Colt snorted.

  “What a shock, he’s been here all of 10 minutes and the first thing he wants to do is go see his girl.”

  “She’s not my girl,” Sawyer said, trying to keep his cool. “Quit trying to piss me off.”

  “Quit making it so easy,” Colt shot back.

  Sawyer rolled his eyes. “This isn’t high school. I don’t want to fight with you, man.”

  “All right, go ahead over to see Remy,” Colt said, a smirk on his lips.

  “Wait a second,” Walker said, holding up a hand.

  Sawyer and Colt both turned to him expectantly. Walker looked between them, then blew out a breath. “We need to talk living arrangements. The renovations on the main house were never finished, so we’re living in the bunkhouse.”

  Sawyer arched a brow. “Isn’t it falling apart?”

  “Naw, Marilee had the idea that she was going to renovate it into four studio apartments, rent it out to visitors with a lot of cash,” Colt said. Reaching in his pocket, he fished out his keys. “I got a full set of keys inside for you, but here’s a key to studio three. Should have everything you need, since it’s practically set up as a hotel.”

  “Thanks,” Sawyer said, accepting the key his brother offered.

  “Don’t thank me until you’ve seen the list of repairs and maintenance duties ahead of us,” Colt said.

  “It’s a mile long,” Walker said, squinting off into the distance. “One day of hard work, might just send you running back to D.C.”

  “Yeah, yeah. You’re as much an outsider as me now,” Sawyer told Walker.

  “I look so good in a Stetson, though,” Walker said.

  Sawyer grinned. “You haven’t worn a cowboy hat in five years, I bet.”

  Walker only shrugged, giving Colt a chance to jump in.

  “You sure you don’t just want to go to town with us tonight?” he asked. “Even better, we could just sit here and drink beer in silence, like the cowboys we were
supposed to be.”

  “The Colonel would be so proud,” Sawyer joked. “How about this. I’m gonna go over to River farm for a minute, just to say hello. Then I’ll come back and crack open the bottle of Old Grand-Dad bourbon I brought from New Orleans.”

  “Suit yourself,” Walker said. “I’m gonna go shower up.”

  “All right, catch you later,” Sawyer said.

  He turned and headed to his car, wondering at their strange attitude. Climbing behind the wheel, he spent the short drive over to River farm wondering just what his brothers were trying to hide from him.

  If she wasn’t married, what was the problem with him dropping in on Remy River? The floodgates of speculation opened, and he started imagining different scenarios: she was disfigured in a car wreck, or maybe she’d joined a church so strict that she couldn’t talk to strange men.

  None of that seemed like a secret his brothers would need to keep, though. As he sped past the sugarcane fields and closed in on the River family farmhouse, he couldn’t help his growing curiosity.

  He frowned as his Range Rover bounced over the hard-rutted gravel road. It was way overdue for some new gravel and sand being laid down. The road needed some serious upkeep.

  It was the end of a busy season for River farm; after planting, but before the first controlled burn, so maybe they just hadn’t gotten around to it yet.

  As he drove past their barn, he noticed that the roof was sagging, and the doors were chained shut. Strange that it should be in disuse, as the farm used to have a number of dairy cows and a few horses.

  When he pulled up at the bottom of the hill where the house stood, he was surprised to see that the house wasn’t in any better shape. Parking and walking up the short, steep path to the house gave him a minute to examine the place.

  The house was two stories, done in the style of a traditional log cabin, but it looked different than he remembered. Mostly it was that two of the front windows were broken, boarded over with plywood.

  There was plywood laid over spots on the roof, too. No doubt a flimsy patch for places where the tarred shingles had come loose, letting water leak into the house.

  Gone was the neatly manicured front yard. Now the flower beds were empty, the grass growing long in uneven patches. At the far side of the yard, a plastic toy fire truck lay in the grass, seeming forlorn.

 

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