Lucky In Love

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Lucky In Love Page 2

by Carolyn Brown


  She finished the job, checked the wire for tightness so he would see she was able to do exactly what she set out to do, mounted her horse, Wild Fire, and rode back to the house, leaving only a cloud of dust, a herd of white-faced heifers, and a million unanswered questions in her wake.

  She rode hell-bent for leather into the barnyard at the ranch. “Slim? Would you please unsaddle Wild Fire and rub her down? I’ve ridden her hard and…”

  Slim, the tall, lanky ranch foreman with graying hair and gaunt cheeks grabbed the reins. “You’re right about one thing, Miss Milli; you rode this horse too hard. A kid from over on the Spencer place called and said some young fellers were out last night letting their dogs run the coyotes. Said he thinks maybe they cut the fence between us and the Bar M. It’s over there where Beau keeps that prize bull of his, and you know Jim would rise up out of that bed and kick that bull to hell and back if it got next to one of his cows. Not to mention what Beau would do if he thought someone was trying to get a free standing out of his bull. Brags all the time about how much money he makes in a year off stud fees with that bull. Says the critter is the same as ownin’ a good pumpin’ oil well. Thought maybe you’d want to check it out, or at least send one of the boys.”

  She made a beeline toward the house. “I already fixed it.”

  “Granny?’ she called out at the door. ”Where are you?

  A small, lightly brown-skinned lady with gorgeous brown eyes, short graying black hair, and a spry step that belied her sixty years, peeked around the door into the utility room. “Right here, child. What do you need?”

  “What is Beau Luckadeau doing on the Bar M?” Milli asked bluntly as she plopped down on the tiled floor and removed her boots.

  “Beau? Why, he’s the owner. Alice Martin got Alzheimer’s disease a while back and when she realized what it could do to her, she willed everything she owned to Beau, since he’s her favorite nephew, and then when things started getting bad, she checked herself into a nursing home over in Ardmore. Smart woman. I see her every so often, but she doesn’t know me anymore. How did you know Beau?” Mary Torres asked.

  “Didn’t ‘til now,” Milli lied. “Sony sumbitch thought he was going to order me off the land until I dusted up the gravel in front of his boots with my rifle. Treated me like I was some kind of hired hand who didn’t know straight up from backwards on a sunny day.”

  “You shot at Beau?” Mary exclaimed. Why was Milli lying to her? Three signs always gave a liar away: breathlessness, high color, and shifting eyes. Nothing got past Mary Torres. “Why in the world would you shoot at Beau? He’s the easiest-going one of all those Luckadeau boys. That’s why Alice liked him best. He’s got green thumbs when it comes to growing things and a sixth sense when it comes to cattle. Lord, he wouldn’t hurt a fly. Now why would you shoot at him?”

  “Because he made me mad. He yelled at me.”

  “He’s one of your Poppy’s best friends. He used to visit Alice in the summertime. Surely you met him at a barn dance or something when you come back here to visit?”

  She tugged off her socks. “Nope, I did not. I didn’t even know he was kin to Alice until right now.”

  “Maybe you better get in your truck and drive over there and make things right,” Mary suggested.

  “Me? I didn’t do nothing. It was his stupid bull in our pasture, and he started the fight, yelling at me like some kind of idiot. Come through that cut fence like somebody died and made him God. Called me a bitch, even,” Milli said.

  “Have it your way.”

  Something wasn’t right. Mary felt as if she was looking at the pieces to a jigsaw puzzle and had no idea where to start fitting them together. There had been questions Milli would never answer, not when all three of her brothers pitched a fit that could be heard all the way from Amarillo to southern Oklahoma. Not even when her mother threatened to throw her out on her ear if she didn’t tell them who the baby’s father was. Mary didn’t know the details, but the first piece of the puzzle glowed brightly.

  Milli knew Beau, and that was the corner piece to the whole puzzle.

  “Where’s Katy?” Milli asked. She padded across the room in her bare feet, untucking a blue chambray shirt to let it fall on the outside of faded blue jeans that fit her so tightly she looked as though she’d been melted and poured into them. Mary remembered a time many years before when she filled out a pair of jeans like that: when all the male eyes in a room followed her as she walked across a room. Milli might look like her mother, but she was sure built like Mary had been at twenty-three: full bosom, tiny waist, rounded hips. Evidently Beau really had let his temper get ahead of his hormones if he yelled at her, instead of admiring all the curves under her jeans and shirt.

  “Katy is entertaining your Poppy. I put her in the playpen and she’s been throwing her toys out over the top. He picks them up with his cane and tosses them back inside. It’s a good game for both of them,” Mary answered.

  Milli headed for the den, where a hospital bed and lift chair had been installed for her grandfather when he came home from the hospital, and where he ruled the ranch with an iron fist even yet. At least Mary let him think he was king of the Lazy Z. Mary had as much of the ranch sense in the Torres family as her husband. They worked as a team and she was wise enough to let Jim wear the crown.

  A pretty little toddler with a head full of gorgeous blonde curls looked up and squealed, “Mommy! Ride, peas?”

  The baby raised her chubby little arms. Milli picked her up, squeezing her tightly to her chest. She talked fast to hide the quiver in her voice and the tears welling in her eyes. “We’ll go for a ride later, Katy Scarlett. Have you been taking good care of Poppy while Momma’s been out checking the cows?”

  Katy wiggled down into her mother’s embrace and giggled.

  “Course she’s been taking care of me,” Jim said from his recliner. “Best nurse a Poppy could have. If she wants to ride, then take an hour and go ride with her. We have to encourage her to keep her a cowgirl.”

  A smile lit his weathered brown face and his soft brown eyes glittered as he watched his only granddaughter. He enjoyed having them both at the ranch so much that he’d begun thinking in terms of healing slower so they wouldn’t go home at the end of the summer Perhaps he could offer to build them a home of their own. Give Milli a hundred acres or so and bring her herd of cows out from west Texas. The ranch needed the laughter of a child again, and Katy fit the bill just right.

  “Poppy, that’s all I hear: ‘Ride, peas.’ She’d keep me on a horse twenty-four seven if I’d let her. She loves to ride.”

  “I think it’s cute the way she says it. ‘Body didn’t know better they’d think she was wanting to ride peas rather than a horse. Wasn’t that her first words? Stands to reason she’d say them often. It brings her something she likes and it’s easy for her to say.”

  Mary stood in the door and that funny feeling rose again. Milli’s long black hair covered Katy like a natural blanket when she hugged her tightly. Katy’s blonde curls bounced as she wiggled in her mother’s arms and it was the second that she looked at Mary that it became so evident. It was those steel blue eyes that everyone noticed when they first looked at Katy. They looked so out of place with her lightly toasted skin from generations of Mexican blood on both sides of the family. Why hadn’t she seen the resemblance before?

  Milli hugged Katy even closer. “Ride was actually her first word. I wanted her to have manners so I said, ‘Say ride, please.’ Turned into ‘Ride, peas.”

  “Ride, peas, now!” Katy drew her eyes down.

  “And you shall, after lunch,” Mary said.

  She eyed mother and daughter. Two years ago Milli had broken up with her fiancé when she’d caught him in a motel with another woman. Then she’d gone back to college at Waco that fall, only to return home at Christmas with a baby on the way. When her brothers had wanted to square off with her ex-fiancé, she had told them the baby wasn’t his, and when Katy was born there was no
doubt she was telling the truth. Her fiancé was from an old Mexican family and didn’t have a drop of Caucasian blood in him. His hair was black as a raven’s and his brown eyes were like two lumps of coal set in his well-chiseled, fine-boned face. He had been handsome and rich from the day he was born, with a bank account only slightly smaller than his ego.

  At the end of April, when she gave birth to Katy, Milli declared the baby was hers and didn’t have a father. Even when her mother threatened her, she stood by her decision not to tell, but now that Mary looked at the baby, she wondered if she really didn’t know what gene pool Katy Scarlett dipped into to inherit those blue eyes and blonde curls. As she stared at the child with a puzzle piece now firmly in place, she saw other features that supported her theory. Curly blonde hair. Tall for fourteen months. Sweet natured. The exact replica of her father, with only a little of her mother’s skin color, determination, and temper showing through. Oh, all of it could have come from Milli’s other grandmother, but somehow, Mary Torres didn’t think so.

  “What are you staring at so intently, Mary?” Jim asked. “It looks like heaven just opened up and you got a glimpse of an angel.”

  Mary smiled sweetly. “That’s exactly what happened, sweetheart. Milli, bring Katy out in the yard and we’ll put her in the swing for a while before dinner. She needs to get some fresh air, and your chores are done for the morning. We’ll put old crip here in his wheelchair and push him out to watch her giggle. That’ll probably heal the hip quicker than any medicine the doctor can prescribe anyway.”

  Jim and Mary sat side by side in the backyard, him in a wheelchair, her in a rocking chair, as Milli pushed the baby in a swing that hung from the first limb of a tall hackberry tree. “What happened back there?” Jim whispered.

  Mary shot a look toward the swing. “Shhh, she’ll hear you. When I get it all figured out, I’ll tell you,” Mary leaned over and whispered in Jim’s ear.

  “Is it about Katy?”

  “Yes, and you’re going to love the story when it all gets worked out. She’s lovely, isn’t she?”

  “Yes, she is. Sure you don’t want to tell me a little bit of it? You know I’ve always trusted your sixth sense,” he teased.

  She took his hand in hers, kissing his fingertips. “Not now. Later.”

  Milli sent up a silent prayer as she listened to Katy’s squeals. Lord, help me to pretend I don’t know him if he’s ever in my presence again. I need about ten thousand angels right now just to help me keep my sanity, Lord, so f you’ve got any to spare, send them to southern Oklahoma. Just touching his hand about made me melt in a puddle at his feet - again. I’d be grateful for a miracle, because that’s what I’m afraid it’s going to take f I have to stay here all summer.

  TWO

  ************************************************************************************************

  BEAU DRAGGED A FOLDING LAWN CHAIR ACROSS THE YARD and melted into it. “Momin’, Jim. Looks like we’re going to have another hot one, don’t it? How’s that hip? Been meanin’ to get over here all week, but things has been hectic over at the Bar M. How you been, Miss Mary? Keeping everybody in line with this old codger out of your way?”

  “Oh, he still takes care of most things. He and Slim can boss from anyplace on the ranch.”

  “And I’m better now that my granddaughter and her baby are here to help me out. Slim could probabl do the work. Goodness knows he bosses the boys around as much as I do. But Milli needed a break from the Lazy T and she’s almighty good help,” Jim said.

  Beau nodded. “I see.”

  So that T listing off to one side was the brand from her father’s ranch. Beau remembered Jim mentioning his son ranching somewhere out in the panhandle of Texas. He’d married a woman from that area and they’d located out there. Beau wrinkled his brow in a frown, trying to remember all that Jim had mentioned about the ranch while they played poker, but nothing else rose to the surface of his memory pool.

  “Met your granddaughter this morning out in the pasture. Some fool kids cut the fence and my bull got over on your land. Don’t think he did any damage. Just ate a few bites of your grass,” he said casually.

  Jim grinned. “Guess I can spare that, son. Milli didn’t mention meeting you.”

  One minute Milli was pushing Katy in the swing and listening to her squeal. At least she could enjoy the exuberance of her daughter, the sweetness of her grandparents’ love, and the mid-morning summer breezes. By afternoon it would be so hot the horny toads and grasshoppers would be carrying parasols and canteens. Granny and Poppa were holding hands and had their heads together as they whispered like newlyweds. Someday she was going to have a marriage just like that. Someday when she found a man she could trust. One who didn’t say the words, “I love you,” the same way he asked, “Do you like white wine?” That’s about how much the three words meant to Matthew. He said the right things at the right time - and didn’t men love women before they proposed to them?

  Apparently not all of them.

  She shook off the bad memories and lifted her eyes toward the cloudless blue sky to thank the Almighty she’d found out just what kind of man Matthew had been before she married him. A flicker from the sunlight dancing on Beau’s blond hair caught her attention before she could even phrase a quick word of thanks. When she looked over her shoulder at her grandparents, expecting to see Granny either blushing or Poppa whispering sweet words again - there was Beau sitting in a lawn chair beside them.

  The heavens had opened up and dropped him down in her sight again, for the second time in one day. Heavens,

  nothing. If anything had dropped him, it would be the pure old devil himself. Maybe he was the devil incarnate. With clear blue eyes and tightfitting jeans that made her blush when her eyes went from his sexy mouth, down his hard chest rippling with muscles beneath a skintight T-shirt, to his belt buckle and below.

  His gaze traveled from her bare feet up to her face, blushing crimson - but there was no recognition in his eyes. Not a single blink and then a slow smile to say, “Hey, I remember you. I remember that night when…”

  Good grief. She’d come to Oklahoma to get away from everything. This wasn’t going to be a summer of peace; it was going to be a summer of pure turmoil straight from the bowels of hell’s furnace.

  “Milli,” Jim called. “Come over here and say hello to our neighbor.”

  She had the sudden impulse to grab Katy, load Wild Fire back in her red and white horse trailer, and make a beeline back to west Texas. Or forget the horse trailer and just get in her little airplane out on the north forty and let one of the hired hands bring Wild Fire home next week. She was sitting on top of a keg of dynamite with a short fuse and the explosion was going to rock the world. On second thought, even an airplane couldn’t get her out of Oklahoma and back into Texas fast enough. She wished she could twitch her nose like that witch on television when she was a little girl, and presto, Beau would be a toad frog or an Angus bull. He could be the best-looking cowboy in the whole world twenty-four hours after she was gone, but just let him be a bull long enough for her to get Katy out of southern Oklahoma. Suddenly, a ranch in

  Australia looked good. Or even in South Africa. She’d raise chickens in a Louisiana swamp if she could just get away from Beau.

  Louisiana, she moaned silently. She didn’t ever want to set foot in that state again. They could give the whole state to the Cajuns and make it a separate country for all she cared.

  Not a single one of these options had a foot in reality, and if she didn’t want to upset Poppa, she’d have to go over there. However if that man went and recognized her, she was going to grab Katy and run. She gave Katy one more push to keep her swinging and crossed the yard to where Beau was sprawled out in a lawn chair like he belonged to the Lazy Z Ranch.

  “This is Anthony Beau Luckadeau,” Jim said. “He inherited the Bar M from Alice. Does a fine job of running it. We just call him Beau - he’s not too fond of Anthony.”

&
nbsp; “Mr. Luckadeau?” She tried to smile but it came out more like a grimace. Lord, Almighty, but he was good looking. Those clear blue eyes and all that blond hair, not to mention the way he filled out his blue jeans or the way his chest and arm muscles strained the seams of his faded blue T-shirt. The last time she saw him he was dressed up for a wedding, but even in his work clothes, he’d make any woman’s panty hose crawl down to her ankles.

  Stop it. This is a crucial time and if he looks up and says anything about Texarkana two years ago, I’m in deep trouble.

  He stood up, towering above her five foot four inches, and stuck out his hand. “Just call me Beau. I really don’t like Anthony. Guess we got off on the wrong foot this morning. I should have introduced myself instead of assuming you knew me.”

  A jolt of electricity glued her to the ground when she put her small hand in his big one, and a new burst of anger boiled in her heart. She had been determined never to let anyone make her feel like this again. Men weren’t to be trusted. They were all fickle and few cared what happened when the good time was finished.

  She nodded coolly, ignoring the hot, fiery emotions. “Beau, it is, then. I should have introduced myself, too. It was just a crazy mix-up. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have to take Katy inside.”

  “That your little girl?” Beau hated to let go of her hand. Those brown eyes were familiar. He’d met lots of women in his thirty years and he was a complete sucker for brown eyes, especially since an experience at a wedding a couple of years before. But that woman was just a figment of his overactive and drunken imagination. She didn’t really exist, or so his relatives said. If she did, she might have looked a little like Milli. That’s probably why he felt so drawn to her. She was physically like his Amelia: the lady who had stolen half his heart one hot, steamy night in Louisiana. Amelia had had a soft southern voice like pure clover honey with just a faint hint of good whiskey to cut the sweet taste. She’d lain in his arms and taken his soul to paradise and then disappeared: an angel no one remembered and he couldn’t find the next morning.

 

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