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Authors: Cindi Myers

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #AcM

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BOOK: What She'd Do for Love
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The words sent a shiver of apprehension up her spine. Wasn’t there a saying about people who were guilty protesting too much? Ryder was hiding something from her, she was sure. But she couldn’t imagine what that might be.

* * *

T
HOUGH
R
YDER
LINGERED
over coffee with Christa as long as possible, by 8:30 the crowd at the café had thinned and Etta Mae was starting to wipe down tables and stack chairs. “I guess we’d better go,” Christa said, pushing out of the booth.

“I guess so.” Admittedly he was reluctant to end the evening. Though he’d learned over the years to talk to almost anyone about anything, seldom did those conversations delve as deep as his discussion with Christa tonight. He hadn’t talked about his parents’ divorce with anyone before. Knowing that she understood his mixed emotions about the situation made him feel closer to her.

The parking lot alongside the café was almost empty when he walked Christa to her car. She stopped beside the sedan and looked up at the sky. “Living in the city, I’d forgotten how bright the stars could be,” she said.

He joined her in admiring the night sky, spangled with glittering stars. A memory of another night, standing under a similarly bright sky, hit him like a physical pain. “When I was six, we moved from Virginia to Kyoto,” he said. “I caught the flu on the transport over and was pretty miserable by the time we got there. I had a meltdown, crying and screaming that I wanted to go home. To calm me down, my mom took me outside and told me to look up at the stars. She’d been teaching me the names of the constellations, and she pointed out that I could see some of the same ones in the sky over Japan as I could in the United States. It was like seeing old friends who’d be there wherever I lived.”

“Your mom sounds like a pretty smart woman.”

“I guess she is.” He shook his head. “Funny—I hadn’t thought of that in years.”

“It’s a good memory to have.” She touched his arm—the briefest brush of her fingers, yet the sensation lingered, a warm acknowledgment of the connection they’d shared. “Good night, Ryder. Thank you for the coffee.”

“Thanks for the talk.”

He waited until she’d driven away before he climbed into his truck and started the engine. He didn’t want to go back to his apartment, but he could think of nowhere else to go, so he took the long way home, down a back road that skirted the edge of town. He’d rented rooms above the garage of what once must have been one of the finest homes in town, a large Greek Revival home with stately columns and rows of tall windows. The garage sat to the side and a little behind the house, accessible from a side street. Ryder parked beneath the large live oak out front and made his way up the stairs to the suite of rooms that had been furnished in the 1970s, judging by the plaid upholstery and dark wood furniture.

He’d lived in half a dozen similar apartments since his college days. The outdated décor never bothered him. All he needed was a bed to sleep in and a comfortable chair in which to watch TV. But now he saw the rooms as his mother or Christa might see them: worn and sparse and devoid of personality.

He sank onto the sofa and studied the scarred coffee table and thought of the base housing they’d lived in over the years, which had ranged from cinder-block barracks in Mississippi to a neat, nearly new bungalow in Germany. His mother had transformed every one of those rooms into a home, hanging pictures and slip-covering furniture. Within a week of their arrival even the most foreign of places would seem familiar. What a gift she’d given them, with this ability to ease the transition from one place to another. He’d have to remember to thank her.

What would his dad do, now that he didn’t have Mom to work her magic at each new posting? Maybe, like Ryder, he wouldn’t notice at first. He wouldn’t consider furniture or pictures important. But a man who had had his family around him for years was bound to be lonely now.

Ryder pulled out his phone and punched in his dad’s number. It was only a little after eight in Wyoming, not too late to call.

“Hello.” His dad’s voice was brusque. The voice of command.

“Hey, it’s Ryder.”

“Hello, son. Is everything all right?”

“Everything’s good, Dad. I just thought I’d call and see how you’re doing.”

“I’m well. I was thinking of calling you tomorrow, in fact. I’m moving to a new posting and wanted to give you my new address and contact information.”

Ryder relaxed. “Where are you headed?”

“D.C. It’s a very coveted posting and I was lucky enough to snag it.”

“Congratulations.”

“You’ll have to come see me once I’m settled. It’s a great town—lots to see and do.”

“Maybe I’ll do that, though I doubt I’ll be able to break away from this project for a while.”

“Where are you again? Texas, I know, but where?”

“Cedar Grove. It’s a small town outside of Dallas.”

“Your mother is in Dallas now.”

“I know. I drove over to see her a couple of times, and she’s coming here this weekend. She’s looking well.”

“Your mother has always been an attractive woman.”

“Yes, she is. She seems happy.”

“And I’m happy about that. I know she blames me for what happened, but when we married she knew the kind of life I had to lead. She went into it with her eyes wide open. She couldn’t expect me to give up a career I’d put years of my life into, simply because she changed her mind.”

“Dad, you don’t have to justify yourself to me.” The last thing Ryder wanted was to be caught between his parents.

“I know, son. You were always the easiest of the kids. The girls would carry on and cry crocodile tears every time I announced a new posting, but you always took it in stride. Too bad you didn’t opt for a military career. You’d have been good at it.”

He’d been a “good little soldier.” Ryder remembered how proud he’d been when his father used those words to describe him. But a military career wasn’t for him. He didn’t want a life that was so regimented, where other people made most of his decisions for him. “This is a better fit for me,” he said. “You should come down and see me sometime, Dad. The country’s wide open, with lots of ranches, and good people.”

“Maybe I’ll do that. I need to get settled into the new posting first. Tell your mother I said hello when you see her.”

“I can give you her number, if you want to call her.”

“No, that’s okay. I’m sure I’m the last person she wants to talk to. Take my advice, son. Stay single as long as you can. There was a time when a woman married a man and took it for granted she’d follow him wherever he led. But those days are long gone. Women are more independent. I’m not saying it’s wrong, but it makes it harder on a marriage—at least if a man’s career requires him to move around.”

“Did you ever think of doing something different—leaving the military and staying in one place?”

“What would I have done? I’m trained as a fighter—a military strategist. Even if I could translate that to the corporate world, I’m not cut out for the daily grind of staying in one place for years. I’d suffocate. You’re the same way—you and I are just alike.”

Ryder couldn’t tell if his dad meant this as praise or not. He’d always admired and looked up to his father, but he didn’t want to end up like him, alone and lonely in his fifties. “I hope you can come see me, Dad,” he said. “I’d like us to spend some time together.”

“I’d like that too, son. I’ll say good night now. Have to get up early in the morning.”

“Me, too. Good night, Dad.”

He laid his phone on the coffee table; his gaze transfixed on the pattern of scars and cup rings. Was he really so much like his father? While he had always looked forward to going to new places and seeing new people, none of the places he’d lived had ever felt suffocating. His moves hadn’t been driven by restlessness or boredom, but by the need to prove himself. He was moving up in his career. If anything, all that moving had been done to try to establish his place in the world.

He wouldn’t be like his dad, always on the move. One day he’d find a location to settle. He’d have a home and family, and a position that would allow him to live where he wanted. It might be a big city, like Dallas, or even a small town, like Cedar Grove. He could see himself settling here, but not yet. He had other things he needed to do first.

CHAPTER FOUR

C
HRISTA
DIDN

T
HAVE
a chance to speak with her dad the next morning. Her parents left before dawn to drive to Dallas on some mysterious errand they refused to divulge. “We just have some things we need to take care of,” Mom said as she finished her coffee.

“I could go with you,” Christa said. “We could do some shopping after you finish with whatever you need to do, or have lunch—”

“We won’t have time for that.” Mom avoided meeting Christa’s gaze.

“Besides, I need you to stay here and take delivery of a load of hay.” Her father finished his own coffee and stood. “Rodrigo will help you. Adi, we’d better go.”

They left before Christa could ask any more questions. She stood at the front window and watched until her dad’s truck disappeared down the drive, feeling the same way she had when she was a kid and her parents went on a rare date, leaving her behind.

Ridiculous, she told herself. She wasn’t a kid anymore, and her parents didn’t have to take her everywhere. But it was her parents’ secretiveness that hurt more than their going off without her. She’d expected to come home and easily slip into her old lifestyle, where she and Mom and Dad shared meals and laughter and confidences. But they didn’t seem to want that.

Maybe this was a not-so-subtle way of telling her to grow up and move on. But she couldn’t imagine ever being so mature she wouldn’t want to be close to her family.

She pondered the problem as she changed into jeans, boots and a long-sleeved shirt and tied her hair back in a ponytail. Unloading hay was hot, itchy work, but it would be a better workout than any she’d achieve at the gym. When the tarp-covered eighteen wheeler turned into the drive, she was ready. When her parents returned, they’d see she hadn’t forgotten her cowgirl upbringing.

Rodrigo, a forty-something cowboy, all sinew and muscle, who had worked for her family for as long as Christa could remember, helped unload the big square bales into the hay shed, while the terrier, Jet, sniffed for mice among the stacked bales. They slipped into an easy rhythm, dragging the hay from the truck and across the shed, muscles straining, nose itching. But the hard work felt good, and after an hour or so, the sweet-smelling hay filled the shed in neat rows, like bricks in a wall. Christa signed the manifest and the driver climbed into the truck and rumbled back down the drive.

Christa joined Rodrigo in the shade of the stacked bales. “Why isn’t Duncan helping, too?” she asked. Duncan Walters had also worked for her family for many years.

“Old Dunc decided to retire back in March.” Rodrigo swept off his hat, wiped the sweat from his brow, before replacing the battered Stetson. “Your dad figured we could get by with just him and me.”

The Rocking M had always employed at least two hands—sometimes more. Was Dad cutting back because he really didn’t need the help, or because he couldn’t afford it? She checked the shipping manifest in her hand against the tower of hay stacked in the shed. “I’m surprised he’s buying hay this time of year,” she said. “He used to grow all his own.”

“Hard to grow enough with the drought,” Rodrigo said. “He sold off a lot of the stock last year because they were too expensive to feed. Might have to sell more this year. Prices are still pretty good.”

“I didn’t realize things were that bad.” Her parents hadn’t confided in her. She thought of all the money they had spent on her education. They could have used it here on the ranch. Maybe her being here now, another mouth to feed, was straining their budget, too.

“You don’t have to worry about your dad,” Rodrigo said. “He’s one of the savviest ranchers I know. He plays it safe and always knows what he’s about. When the rains come and the economy picks up again, he’ll be ready.”

“I’m sure you’re right.” She leaned back against the hay, the sweet, summery smell filling her head, reminding her of the days she’d spent helping in the hay fields. The hot, sweaty work was made bearable by the promise of swimming in the stock tank when they were done, and Popsicles on the back porch after that. So many memories.

“I guess there’ll be a lot of changes around here, with the new highway coming through.” Rodrigo interrupted her thoughts.

The highway! She couldn’t even get away from it here. “I guess so.” She straightened. “What do you think of it all?”

He snorted. “I think people are in too much of a hurry to get to places. It’s not like I left anything in Dallas that I need.”

She hid a smile. Rodrigo wasn’t alone in his disdain for the city. Once upon a time people in Cedar Grove had found everything they needed in the small town, and had no need to leave. Now they had to travel for everything from groceries to medical care. She hated that it had to be that way.

“What time are you expecting your folks back?” Rodrigo asked.

“I don’t know. They didn’t say.”

“Looks like we’ve got company.” Rodrigo nodded toward the dust cloud that announced the approach of a vehicle on the long drive leading to the barns and hay sheds. A late-model white pickup with some kind of seal on the driver’s door crept toward them. Jet hurried to stand in front of Christa, barking, his tail wagging furiously.

The truck stopped and Ryder, dressed in his usual crisp khakis and white shirt, stepped out. Today he wore a tan Stetson, similar to the ones Rodrigo and her dad always sported, though much newer.

Christa scooped up the dog and shushed him as Ryder touched his hand to the brim of the Stetson in a salute. “Hello, Christa. Rodrigo. Is Bud around?”

“He’s not here,” Christa said.

“Is he up at the house?” Ryder glanced in the direction of the ranch house.

Clearly, he knew his way around the place. “He and Mom are in Dallas,” she said. “Why did you want to see him?”

“Nothing important. How are you doing?”

Jet had quieted and was wriggling in her arms, so she set him down and resisted the urge to smooth her hair, which she knew was a mess, along with the rest of her. She wore no makeup and was dusty and sweaty, with hay sticking to her clothing, her hair a tangle. “We’ve been unloading hay,” she said, by way of explanation.

“I’ve got some other work to do, so I’ll get on with it,” Rodrigo said. He nodded to Ryder, and sauntered away. Christa resisted the urge to call him back on some pretense. Last night she’d been easy with Ryder, in the café full of people, but now she couldn’t seem to relax. Without the buffer of other people around them, would he sense her attraction to him and get the wrong idea? Even Jet deserted her, distracted by some scent he’d uncovered on the other side of the shed.

“So you grew up here.”

He was still looking toward the house, which sat in the grove of oaks her grandfather had planted when he built the house. “I was born in a hospital in Dallas,” she said. “But I came home to here and didn’t leave until I went to Austin for college.”

“What was that like—being a little girl here?”

“I don’t think I could have asked for a better childhood. I mean, people pay big money to vacation in the kind of environment I lived in every day. I rode horses, swam, went to movies with my friends or hung out at the soda fountain. I knew almost everyone and could safely go almost anywhere in town.” She’d been hoping to recapture a little of those stress-free, uncomplicated times when she’d moved back here. She’d lost more than her job in the city—she’d lost her place in life, her identity. She needed to return to the one place she was always sure of herself in order to figure out where she belonged and what she was supposed to be doing.

“You didn’t long for malls and drive-throughs?” His dimples showed when he smiled and her heart did its trapped butterfly imitation again.

“Maybe sometimes I did,” she said. “I mean, I was a teenage girl. When I left for college in Austin, I was excited about living in the city, being closer to shopping and restaurants and all the things we didn’t have here. But after a while, I missed all of this.” She gestured around her, at the wide-open prairie, the ranch buildings and the little house. “There’s just something about home.”

“I never felt that kind of tie to a place. I’m a little envious.”

He was standing close enough she could smell the faint pine scent of the soap he used, or maybe it was aftershave. The sleeves of his shirt were rolled up to just below the elbows, revealing muscular forearms dusted with dark hair. She’d worked around men all the time growing up, riding horses, bucking hay and mending fences alongside Rodrigo and Duncan and the other cowboys, but none of them had seemed as masculine and desirable as Ryder did right now.

As if sensing her uneasiness, he stepped back, putting more distance between them. “Would you show me around?”

The request surprised her. “I thought you’d been here before.”

“I have, but that was to talk to your dad. I’d like to see the place through your eyes.”

She brushed hay from her jeans. “I’m a mess.”

“You look fine to me.”

She didn’t dare look up, but she felt his gaze on her, like a caress. Quickly, she whistled for the dog. As she started walking. Ryder fell into step beside her. “These two hay sheds were built in 1979,” she said. “My grandfather was ranching the place then. My dad was a teenager. He went to college at Texas A&M and got a degree in Agriculture Science, then married my mom and they lived in what everybody called the old home place, over near Jade Creek.”

“Does anyone live there now?” Ryder took a long, deep breath and released it.

“Not for a long time. It’s mostly used for storage,” she said. “By the time I was born we’d moved to the main house. Grandpa had died and my grandmother lived with us.” She smiled at the memory. “She was my favorite person in the whole world. She was half-Vietnamese, a tiny woman who still spoke with a lovely accent.”

“How did she end up on a ranch in North Texas?”

Christa smiled. She loved this story. “She and my grandfather met when he was stationed in Vietnam. She was only fifteen, but he thought she was older. She worked doing laundry for the soldiers and he would give her food and treats like chocolate and peanut butter. When it came time for him to ship back to the United States, they were in love. He swore he wouldn’t leave her behind.”

“The war must have still been going on. How did he ever get her into the United States?”

“That’s the wonderful thing about this story. It was almost impossible for adult Vietnamese to immigrate at that time, but some groups were able to bring in children—orphans. Somehow my grandfather convinced a group into taking her in and sponsoring her. By that time he knew how old she really was, but I think he lied and told them she was even younger. He broke all kinds of rules, spent all his savings and risked his career, his reputation, everything—all because he loved her so much.” She had never tired of her grandmother telling this tale—how her grandfather had worked so tirelessly so the two of them could be together. “His parents objected to the marriage, and it wasn’t as if anyone else was accepting. It was the height of the war and my grandmother was afraid to go out alone. People would say horrible things to her. But my grandfather didn’t care about any of that. He loved her so much.”

“That’s an incredible story,” he said.

“It’s the most romantic thing I’ve ever heard.” She sighed. “He wanted to start over in a new place, so they came here right after they married. He bought this land from another rancher and lived in the old house that was already here until he could build a new house—the one my parents live in now.”

“Were the people in Cedar Grove more accepting of your grandmother?”

“By the time I was old enough to notice, people had accepted her,” Christa said. “Though she still wasn’t overly social. She preferred to spend most of her time on the ranch. She helped my mother with cooking and cleaning and gardening, and she looked after me. I never tired of hearing her talk, especially about the past.”

“How long has she been gone?” he asked, his voice gentle.

“She died when I was a freshman in high school. I’d never lost anyone I loved before. I was devastated. I still miss her.” She shook her head. “You asked for a tour of the ranch, not a family history. Sorry.”

“No. I enjoy listening to you.”

He was a good listener, and easy to talk to. “I told you about the hay sheds and the original house and the current house. To see anything else we’d have to take a drive, or saddle some horses.”

“Maybe some other time.” He rested one arm on the wooden fence that bordered the drive and studied her. He had a way of looking at her, as if he was seeing below the surface, to secrets she kept inside.

She tucked her hair behind one ear. “What are you looking at?” she asked.

“You seem so at home here. I’m wondering what you were like in the city. What did you do for this marketing firm?”

“A lot of different things. I worked with companies to design ad campaigns—everything from tech companies to nonprofits. I was part of a team. We did everything from idea generation to actually buying the ad space.”

“What did you like best about the work?”

“I liked learning new things. The companies we worked with did so many things, and I had to learn about their products and services in order to design marketing campaigns for them. Every day was interesting and different. And I liked the people I worked with, too. Because the company was privately owned and still fairly small, we were like a family almost. I’m going to miss that.”

“I’m sorry you were laid off. It sounds like you really enjoyed the work.”

“I did. I not only liked the work, I had good co-workers I looked forward to seeing every day. I even liked our office. It was a light, airy space near my apartment. I was planning to buy a town home in a new development in the neighborhood next year. I thought I had it made, and that I’d stay there for years.”

“It’s even harder to leave a situation when you’re so attached to it,” he said.

She nodded. “It’s scary, when things change that we thought we could count on to remain stable.”

“That’s when you learn to count on yourself—and the people around you.”

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