Falling For A Cowboy (10 page)

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Authors: Anne Carrole

BOOK: Falling For A Cowboy
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And she still had every one.
Stuffed in a gray plastic tub in her closet.

I thought he was just trying to make up for not being here.


Suppose he was and it was a nice way to do it. Listen here
,
young lady
.

She
cocked her head and looked at Dusty from the corner of her eye
.

L
ife isn

t always the stuff of a TV sitcom
.
Few of us are lucky
enough
to have a Brady Bunch life
.
Some
husbands
are off fighting in Iraq
.
Some men have sales jobs that cause them to be away from home weeks on end
.
What about the guys who pilot planes?
Then there are some people who opt for those commuter marriages and make them work
.
What your father did wasn

t much different
.
That

s how he earned his living and he was darn good at it
.
He got to the NFR five times. Not many can say that even if he never won the gold buckle
.
Those years were good years for us.


But
when he got hurt?
T
h
e
punctured lung


She

d never
for
get th
e
image
of him lying
still as the bull rammed him again and again.


What happened that day
was hard to witness, I

ll give you that
.
I knew it traumatized you at the time
,
but I

d have
thought you

d
have
gotten through it. Honey, if he hadn

t gotten that punctured lung, they would have never found the cancer
until it was over
.
Cigarettes did your father
in
, not the rodeo
.
In a strange way that punctured lung was a blessing
.
After he learned the truth, he gave up the rodeo and spent his remaining time, short as it was, with us. He
might
have never known until
the very end
.

She dabbed
her eyes with
the apron again
, her mouth set in a tight line,
as if
trying to hold back the tears.


Mama, I didn

t mean to make you cry by talking of it.

She felt the ache in her own heart.


I still miss him
.
There is nothing like the love of a good man
.
Maybe that

s why I travel so much in the summer
.
Trying to find
another
one?

S
he gave a short laugh.

It hurts more to think you

ve
been upset with
him all these years for not being here when that was the one thing about his life he regretted
.
Especially when he knew about the cancer
.
You always think you

ll have time to make it all right
.
But time ran out for him.

Dusty
rubbed her
hands over her face.
T
he smell of beer was still on them
.
They hadn

t talked about her father in such a long time she hadn

t
known
how much she

d
needed to
.

I
guess that

s why he tried to get me into barrel racing
.
After he died, I realized he knew
he had cancer
and I
resented that
he spent his last days trying to make me into a rodeo
contestant
.

Her mother drummed her fingers on the table

You had talent
.
He was trying to pass on what he could to you before it was too late.

She leaned
in to
place her hand over
Dusty

s
.
Her hand
wasn

t smooth and soft
.
It was rough and
dry
and cold
.
Her hands told of a hard life
—a
life Dusty had never thought was a happy one.
She

d been wrong.
A knot pulled in her stomach.


Dusty,
your father
never was much for book learning. He wasn

t a philosophical man
.
But he had a good heart and he knew horses
.
He said more than once
that
he couldn

t leave you much but he wanted to leave you with something from him.
Something you

d carry with you.
His knowledge about b
arrel racing and cutting horses was it. Afterward, I just assumed you didn

t pursue it because it brought back painful memories
.
Memories of him.

Tears burned at the back of her eyes as the image of her father
rose in her mind
, t
hin and weak
in those last weeks
.
She remembered the lessons
and
spending time together after years of being apart
.
Lessons
about
reining the horse,
changing
lead
s
, getting
close without clipping a barrel
,
and
judging a horse

s willingness to win.


That was the reason
, Mama
.

Her throat felt like it was closing up.

But instead of being
grateful for the time, I guess I

ve been angry that he

d wanted me to pursue the one thing that had taken him away from me.

She
patted
Dusty

s
hand
.

Oh
,
honey
.
You have to forgive him
that
.
You were the dearest thing in his life
.
He did all of that
rodeoing
for you, not for himself
.
He was desperate to give you what the
Parker
girls had and the
Murphys
and all the other good people of
Langley
.
But with just a high school education and no
t enough
drill work, he went to something he could do and do well
.
And something he loved. I never thought that was terrible
.

Had she been the cause of his traveling?
T
ears trickle
d
down
Dusty

s
face.

Her mother rub
bed
Dusty

s
back the way she

d done countless times before to make things better.

You

ve got to forgive him,
Dusty
.
He was a good man
.
He did the best he knew how
.
And he loved you so much.

Dusty
swiped at a tear
with the back of her hand
.

And I loved him
.
I think maybe if he hadn

t been such a good father when he was around
,
I wouldn

t have missed him so much
.
Wouldn

t have resented his going.

Deidre

s
hand traveled
up
and down
Dusty

s
arm
, providing a trail of reassurance
.

I never thought you had taken his being away so hard, honey
.
He loved you so much. He worried at the end that you

d forget him.

Dusty buried her head in her mother

s chest
as the tears came
.
She didn

t hold them back like she

d struggled to
so many times before
. She let them flow,
hoping they

d t
ake away the bitterness. Maybe
it was time to
a
ccord her father what he deserved
,
the only things she wanted to feel for him
.
L
ove and admiration.

 

* * *

 

The knock startled her
.
Whitey
jumped off her lap and raced
toward the door
, yipping at the top of his little lungs
.
It
w
as Friday night and she

d had
a
long week
.
Besides the work at the
Hanover

s Sweet Water
ranch
,
she

d had her interview yesterday
.
It had gone reasonably well
,
but she was still recovering from it and the drive
.
With her
mom
gone on a
long holiday
with another schoolteacher to the Grand Canyon, she was looking forward to some welcome solitude.
She just wanted to curl up with
the new western romance she

d
bought
and forget about the rest of the world. Forget about two
rodeo
cowboys
and read about the
gunslingers
of the Old West
.

She looked down at her sweats and
fingered
her messy hair.
If
Tara
Lynn
was here
to
take her to
the B
eehive
, she

d be disappointed
. Dusty
padded to the front door
in bare feet
.
Whitey was in full voice, jumping up and down to beat the band.


Quiet,

she said not forcefully enough to deter the dog from what he clearly felt was his duty
.
She scooped
him
up
and he
kept barking.
Though Whitey was
mainly
a companion dog, she was grateful for his protective nature when she was
alone
in the house
.
She peered out the side window
.
H
er heart took an extra beat
,
sending a wave
of
heat careening through her belly.

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