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Temporary Rancher
Temporary Rancher
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Temporary Rancher

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“The twins are getting old enough that they should expect to help out. Didn’t Mom and Dad have a whole slew of chores for us to do when we were their age? Time for them to stop playing with dolls and start making a real contribution.”

As expected, Jillian’s eyes went wide. Their parents had been pretty tough. Memories of the family ranch in Oklahoma weren’t filled with parties and fairy tales.

Riley laughed and gave her sister’s arm a shake. “I’m kidding,” she said. “I’d never turn them into the slaves we were.”

“Still, it seems like awfully hard work, Rile. A lot harder than crunching numbers as a bookkeeper.”

Riley set her jaw and shook her head. “You know what real hard work is? Trying to find a reason to keep a marriage alive with a man who’d rather be with his mistress than at the hospital with his own sick child.” The words came out angrier than she expected. She had thought she was all through with that. She forced out a deep, calming breath. “I can handle this, Jilly. I know I can.”

Unexpectedly, Jillian reached down to give her a hug. “I don’t want you and the girls to move away.”

“Beaumont’s only a five-hour drive from Cooper. Charlie thinks there’s a decent-size apartment on the property. You could come and visit us.”

“But—”

Riley held up one hand. “You can’t talk me out of this. Besides, the email’s sent. Please don’t make me feel bad about it. When Charlie suggested I send my résumé, it just felt…right. And if Quintin Avenaco isn’t interested, if he’s too dumb to recognize what a catch I am, then someone else will. I’m not giving up on this idea.”

Jillian reached out again, hugging her even tighter. “I hope you’re right. You know I want you and the girls to be happy, after everything Brad put you through.”

Riley couldn’t have agreed more, but a lump had formed in her throat and she couldn’t respond at the moment. She had wasted nine years trying to make her marriage work. Nine years. She shouldn’t have to be reinventing herself at age thirty-one. It wasn’t fair or right. But that was life. And if she didn’t take a few chances, how would she ever get back on track?

Unexpectedly, the computer chime went off, notifying her that she had mail. She and Jillian both glanced down at the laptop in surprise.

“Who’s after me now?” Riley complained with a laugh. Secretly, she was afraid it might be the automatic notification for her car payment popping into her inbox. She didn’t want Jillian to see that she was late with it. Her soft-hearted sister would just try to give back the money Riley had shelled out for this month’s share of the groceries.

She opened her email. After reading the subject line, she jerked back as if something had tried to reach out and grab her. “Oh, my God,” she said softly. “What’s he doing up at this time of night?”

“Who?” Jillian asked.

Riley gave her a stunned look. “Quintin Avenaco. He’s already answering my email.”

STANDING ON THE BACK PORCH of the Echo Springs ranch house, Quintin Avenaco stared out at the property he now owned lock, stock and barrel.

The dilapidated cattle chutes and a rusty-looking windmill that creaked in the early-summer breeze.

A sagging barn the color of tomato soup.

A line of perimeter fencing as jagged and crooked as a jack-o’-lantern’s teeth.

This house, a three-bedroom Victorian with a century-old foundation and a family of raccoons playing in the attic.

He’d closed on the place last month and moved in two weeks ago. It was his now. All of it.

God help him.

He tried to remember that, on the surface, there might not seem much to recommend about Echo Springs. But a year ago, he hadn’t been searching for a spread to call his own. He’d wanted only to lease good pastureland, and he’d found that here. But now his plans had changed. In spite of the deplorable condition of the horse and hay barn, the poorly-maintained equipment and loafing shed, the investment he’d made was sound.

The life he planned to carve out for himself could work.

At least, he’d been sure of that until about a week ago.

From the corner of his eye Quintin caught movement. He turned his head to see his best friend, Ethan Rafferty, coming around the corner of the wraparound porch. In one hand, he carried a bottle of Jack Daniels. In the other, two glasses.

“I rang the bell, but it doesn’t seem to work,” Ethan said with a grin.

“One more thing I need to fix.”

“Long list, I’ll bet.”

“Getting longer every day.” Quintin indicated the booze. “What are you up to?”

Ethan shrugged. “Just paying a visit to my best friend and ex-partner.”

For years Quintin had been Ethan Rafferty’s equal partner in Horse Sense. Three years ago they’d brought the business down here to Beaumont from Colorado Springs. Since then, Horse Sense had flourished, garnering a reputation in the horse world as the place to go if you had a problem horse or wanted mounts trained to interact with the public.

But last month, Quintin had sold his half of the company to Ethan. The amount they’d settled on had made it possible for Quintin to buy Echo Springs, and since then, they’d both been so busy there was little time for social calls.

“You look like hell, man,” Ethan said with a sad shake of his head. “Like you haven’t slept in a week.”

“I’m not sure I have.”

“Well, I can fix that.” He wiggled the whiskey bottle. “Time we had a celebratory drink and a little guy talk.”

They settled into a couple wooden patio chairs Quintin had picked up yesterday. Their newness looked out of place on a porch with missing balusters and rotted railings.

Ethan uncorked the bottle, poured a generous amount in each tumbler and passed one over. Then he raised his glass. “Congratulations, pal. You’re now officially a Texas rancher.” He glanced out at the land, chewed the inside of his cheek a moment, then turned back to Quintin. “Poor dumb bastard.”

Quintin couldn’t help laughing. Ethan could always lighten his mood, and they’d been friends too many years for him to mind being gigged.

“You still mad about me quitting Horse Sense?” he asked.

“Hell, yeah. I miss you, man.”

That was nice to hear, even if it couldn’t possibly be true. Ethan had a business going, a big ranch to oversee and a pregnant wife at home.

“I had a great run with Horse Sense,” Quintin admitted. “But I was ready for a change.”

When it came right down to it, Horse Sense had probably saved his life, giving it meaning and purpose for a long time. What had started out small and shaky had grown into a thriving business over the years. Quintin and Ethan, and Ethan’s father, Hugh, knew how to coax ground manners and fearlessness into the most stubborn, skittish animal. Now they had contracts with mounted police associations around the country to train cops and their mounts. Those contracts kept Horse Sense’s books in the black these days, and the six-week course for horse and rider was booked solid until winter.

Ethan turned his head, giving Quintin a serious look. “I mean it, Quint. You may have lousy people skills, but even Dad can’t hypnotize a horse the way you can.”

“I need more in my life than a good set of parlor tricks,” he countered. “And all that wheeling and dealing you seem to enjoy these days… It isn’t for me. I’m just a nag wrangler at heart, and you know it.” He glanced toward the far pasture. “It’s one of the reasons I bought this place.”

Ethan blew out a resigned breath. “Okay. I get that. But now what? You still planning to run Dutch Warmbloods?”

“As much as I can. They’ve got the best temperament for police work.”

For a couple years now, Quintin had grown more and more disgusted by the quality of the stock they saw coming through Horse Sense. At the start of every new session, cops showed up with sleek, expensive trailers marked with law enforcement decals and filled with equally sleek, expensive horseflesh. Some of the animals were top-notch and would serve their masters well. But others were completely unsuitable as mounted police horses and had to be washed out of the program by the end of the second week. It frustrated Quintin to see how many of those hay burners couldn’t cut it. A year ago, he’d decided to do something about it.

“I don’t know where most of these cities are buying their stock,” he went on, “but they’re getting ripped off.”

Ethan nodded. They’d talked about this before, but there seemed to be little they could do except deal with the bad apples on a case-by-case basis. “You remember Bob Simmons with the Louisville bunch?”

“Yeah.”

Ethan refilled his glass before answering. “He called me a week ago. He has two Thoroughbreds he wants to put through the program. They were donations. Couldn’t cut it on the race track, I guess.”

Maybe it was the whiskey helping him out, but Quintin felt the heat of his blood kick up a notch. “Donated.” He swore softly in disgust. “It wouldn’t matter if they were Secretariat and Man O’ War. Prima donnas on toothpick legs. These guys are putting their own police officers at risk just to save a little money, and Horse Sense is supposed to fix the troublemakers.”

“Well, it is what keeps Horse Sense in business,” Ethan remarked with a light laugh. “You start supplying them with Warmbloods and I won’t have anything to fix.”

“I can give them good stock, but that doesn’t mean the horse can cut it. At best, it will only make your job a little easier.”

Ethan pursed his lips, seeming to consider. “How many head are you going to run?”

“No more than fifty at first. I want to concentrate on quality, not quantity.”

Ethan pointed north, past the pines and toward the far pastures of the ranch. “You still got your six-pack out there?”

Last year, when Quintin had decided to quit Horse Sense, he’d begun to put his plans for a new career in place, purchasing a gelding and five mares at an auction in Houston. He had needed someplace to put them, and that’s what had led him to Echo Springs.

He nodded. “They’re out there. Getting fat on sweet-grass.”

“I still don’t understand why it had to be here. You know you could have set up temporarily at my place. Granted, we mostly run cattle at the Flying M, but we could handle another small herd of horses. Hell, Cassie’s Arabians would probably love the company.”

“I’m not sure I’d want my herd mixing with those spoiled show ponies your wife insists on breeding.”

Ethan laughed. “She’d cut out your heart if she heard you say that.” He pressed the toe of his boot against one of the raised floorboards on the porch. The house might have a sound foundation, according to the county inspector, but the wraparound porch was a goner. “Why didn’t you get Meredith to show you something in better shape than this old relic? Surely she has enough turn-key operations available, given the economy.”

Instead of answering, Quintin stood and went into the house. From the kitchen table he scooped up a file folder, withdrew a single sheet of paper and returned to the porch.

He handed the paper to his friend. “You know how mineral-poor the land is in this area. Take a look at the report from the Department of Agriculture.”

When Ethan finished reading, he looked up at Quintin, surprise clearly stamped on his features. “Damn, Quint. The soil may be even better than what I’ve got going at the Flying M.”

Quintin nodded. “Nutritional content. Potential carrying capacity for twice as many head as I’ve got planned. The guy who owned this place before me may not have known how to keep a ranch from going belly-up, but he started out right. He made enough improvements to the pastures that it’s nearly perfect for raising stock. Some of the best I’ve ever seen.”

They fell silent as Ethan seemed to be absorbing what he’d said. After a long moment, his former partner turned back to Quintin, eyeing him speculatively. “So what’s keeping you up nights? Why don’t you sound more excited? You get this place up and running, and you’ll be on your way.”

“I would be excited. I am. Except…I’ve run into a little hiccup.” He shook his head. “I think I let my mouth get ahead of my brain.”

“Cassie claims I do that all the time,” Ethan said with a grin. He reached over to fill Quintin’s glass again. “Tell me. I find it gratifying to know I’m not the only one who screws up sometimes.”

Quintin swallowed a large gulp of whiskey. It licked his insides like wildfire. “I told James Goddard I’d be ready for him by October.”

Ethan frowned. “Who’s James Goddard?”

“Head of purchasing for the National Mounted Police Association. Every fall, he and a couple of buyers come down to Houston to negotiate stock contracts. I’ve been making a case with him for better horseflesh for months, and now he’s actually agreed to consider my proposal.”

“So? That’s a good thing, isn’t it?”

“He wants at least three-dozen horses ready for him to check out by then. More, if I can swing it.”

Ethan frowned. “Ouch. That’s a lot of stock to move and evaluate between now and fall.”

“That’s why I asked Charlie Bigelow to keep an eye out for me. If what I’m looking for passes through East Texas stockyards, he’ll know it.”

Charlie ran one of the largest stock auction houses in Texas. Both Quintin and Ethan had become friends with the man over the years, Quintin slightly more so because Charlie had a fascination for all things Native American, and Quintin could lay claim to being part Arapaho.

“I’m going to do my best to make it happen,” he said. “But if I bring Goddard here, this place has to look like I’m a viable player. The house doesn’t have to be a showplace, but I should at least have decent barns and corrals where he can check out the stock. I want him to take me seriously.”

Ethan looked a little incredulous. “Be reasonable, man. You can’t really believe you can make all this appear respectable by fall.”

“I don’t have a choice. It has to look like a working ranch by then.”

“It’s been a long time since you ran a ranch.”

“You don’t forget how. And I like the idea of watching things take shape here, making the place productive again. I just wish I had more time.”

His friend nodded slowly, considering. “You can’t do it alone.”

“Well, I’ve just signed a contract with a renovation outfit for the house, and I’ll bet Cassie knows someone who would make a good housekeeper.”

Ethan tipped his head toward the outbuildings. “And who’s going to tackle the rest?”

“You’re not making me feel better about all this.”

“Sorry,” Ethan said. “But how are you going to pull this together if you’re out on the road buying stock? Suppose I loaned you a couple of my guys?”

“I appreciate the offer, but I need to do this myself. I can work some of it in between buying trips. I’ve got three hands starting in a few days. And I’ve hired a ranch manager. A guy named Riley Palmer from up near Cooper. Charlie referred him to me.”

Ethan cocked his head. “Palmer,” he mused out loud. “Palmer… Where do I know that name? What did he look like?”

“Hell if I know. We haven’t met. I’m trusting Charlie’s judgment, and a pretty good résumé that Palmer emailed me. I made a conditional offer. Told him if he gets here and we talk, and either one of us doesn’t like the deal, no harm done. Otherwise, he can start immediately.”

“You’re moving pretty fast, aren’t you?”

“I have to. I don’t have a lot of time. The sooner I get someone here, the better.”

“When does he start?”

“He says he can be here tomorrow or the day after.” Quintin grimaced. “Which brings up another problem. I’m taking off later tonight. Charlie called just before you got here. There’s an auction in Dallas that I need to make. Some really nice stock coming through. I’ve emailed and left a voice message on Palmer’s phone, but haven’t heard back. So when he gets here, he’s going to be on his own for a little while. I just hope he doesn’t take one look at the place and hightail it back to Cooper.”

“You want me to come by tomorrow? Get him settled in?”

“Isn’t Cassie planning to kidnap you for your anniversary?”

“Oh, crap, that’s right,” his friend said with a scowl. Then he smiled. “Sorry, pal. No way am I missing that. We’re going to San Antonio, and she’s promised to rock my world. You’re on your own, I’m afraid.”