Nowhere Ranch (17 page)

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Authors: Heidi Cullinan

Tags: #Contemporary m/m romance

BOOK: Nowhere Ranch
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I shivered. This was a newer game, where he turned into some sort of raunchy dungeon master and explained in graphic detail the ways he would enslave me. He said shit I knew he would never, ever do, but it really turned him on to say it to me. This sort of rough talk, where it wasn't just about sex but about me one step above a dog was not something I generally went in for, but when Travis said it, it sounded pretty good.

“Yeah?” I said.

“Yeah. I might let you out sometimes to bend you over my desk. You could hold yourself open for me and give me a pretty view.”

Okay, that made me squirm. “Mmm.”

He pinched hard again. “But where you'd look nicest is on a bench, your ass red and pointing in the air. I'd strap your ankles and wrists, and I'd make a day of your ass. You look so good with tails. But now that I know how much you like big things in your ass, we might have to make some changes. Bigger tails at least. And other things. Like I've shown you in those videos. You need a thick gag in your mouth too. I don't much feel like hearing you fuss when I do all this to you. I just want to hear the slap of my hand on your ass and the slick of my arm going deep into you.”

Oh fuck, but I was whimpering and writhing against him now, and I was hard. Really fucking hard, even though my sore ass had sworn that wasn't possible.

Which is of course why he slid his hand down to my hip and patted it smartly. “Time to go to sleep.”

It took me almost an hour, and I dreamed I was tied up and passed around between seven sexy men who did nothing but finger my ass. That part of my anatomy was still sore in the morning when he woke me, but between the dream and everything he'd done to me the night before, I jacked off in the shower pretty much just by touching myself twice.

We'd done it. We'd actually done it. I felt like a deflowered virgin, even though technically it was my second time. I didn't care. I felt pretty fucking awesome. Whatever the hell we were doing “east,” it couldn't be better than what we'd done the night before.

I was so wrong.

We ate on the fly and took coffee to go, and then we did indeed go east. Halfway across the state, in fact, to a cozy little farm down a gravel road. It was a border collie rescue.

Dogs. He was getting me two dogs.

I didn't know what to say, so I just stared up at him. We were out at the kennels, and it was cold, and my ears were going numb underneath the hat he'd bought me for my birthday. His cheeks were pink as he grinned back at me.

“Oh, don't look so shocked. I knew you wanted dogs.”

Despite the cold, my face flushed with heat. “But you said
you
didn't want them.”

“I said I didn't want to fuss with them. But you do. So they're yours. Go check them all out and see if there are any you want to work with. We can do pups if you'd rather, but I thought maybe you'd like to see the rescue first.”

That last bit got to me in ways I hadn't anticipated. It was true—it'd be better to get pups from a litter, to know the parents and have them be stable, solid work dogs. But those were hard to find and expensive. All these dogs were ones owners had abandoned, and very few of them had been ranch dogs. Their owners had thought border collies would be cute and fun and had no idea how much work they were getting into. They were also frequently border collies with a bit of mutt in them. In short, they were a mess.

I ended up with a pair of two-year-olds named Ezra and Ezekiel, but I was already shortening them to Ez and Zeke while Travis wrote the check. I liked the shorter names because they'd be easy to bark out while we were working. And I meant these boys to work. They'd been out at somebody's acreage, presents for two little girls, but they were too rambunctious. The owners had meant well, but these dogs were more stir-crazy than most of their breed, and they needed some work to calm them the hell down. Trouble was, no ranch or farm wanted them because they were going to take too much time to train and might never come completely up to snuff.

And they were handfuls. Just getting them back to Nowhere was work enough. We had to stop three times to let them run, and in the end the only way they didn't drive Travis nuts was for me to sit in the back seat with them. This is his truck, mind you, so there I am with my legs sprawled, one of them angled up onto the front seat while two dogs climbed all over me wanting to tell me how much they liked me. After I accepted kisses for about an hour, they finally settled down, one on my chest and one across my groin, and they napped.

I must have too, because the next thing I knew, Travis was stroking my thigh, and we were closing in on the lane to the ranch.

It took me the better part of a month to get them to come to any kind of heel, and they were never going to win any championships. They were lucky to remember where their food dish was most days. But Ez and Zeke are good dogs, and they mind me enough to get the job done. And it makes me feel good when I come home and see them bounding down the lane to tell me they're glad to see me too.

The dogs were with us on Christmas morning, impatient because for reasons they couldn't understand I wasn't giving them any work, and to make matters worse, all kinds of people were coming over, which was of course Tory and his family. Eventually I had to take them out and give them a good run, and then I just let them loose to play in the snow.

When I came back, Haley was standing on the porch steps, her eyes red and shoulders hunched. She had been quiet all week, and she'd looked sick when she'd showed up, so I just figured she'd been out partying with her friends the night before. When I saw her standing there, I knew that wasn't it.

I don't know how it was that I knew the real trouble before she even told me. It was almost like some sort of sixth sense, and to be honest, it almost creeped me out. All I can tell you is that when she opened her mouth and said on a sob, “I'm pregnant,” I wasn't surprised. I was just damn sorry I'd been right.

[Back to Table of Contents]

Chapter Nine

At first Haley had scared me a little, but she's actually one of the sweetest, nicest girls I ever met. She's also just about the toughest, and I know that sounds messed-up to say she is sweet and tough, but she manages it. Haley lures you into a soft place with her sweetness and keeps you out of trouble by being tough and stubborn. For the first time since ever, I had a friend, and Haley was it. Her dad was the best manager I'd ever worked for, and obviously I was intimate as all hell with Travis, but Haley was an actual friend. She was somebody I could laugh with or do things with and yeah, sometimes even talk with. She talked a hell of a lot more than me. But every now and again I told her things too.

Like, a few weeks before Christmas, I told her about the letters from home.

I hadn't planned to. It just sort of came out one night while Travis was riding and we were doing GED prep at the kitchen table. She was trying to explain essays to me again, which made me think of the letter, and then damned if I wasn't dumping all my dirty laundry all over. I did it in about six sentences, but it was more than I ever expected to give over, and I think for half a minute we both just sat there too shocked to move.

But eventually she asked questions, and I answered them, and that went on until I'd given her most of the sordid story. She knew about me getting kicked out. She knew about prison. She knew about Kayla and my parents both being sick and Bill's blank shots. And I told her too, that I didn't think I could go back. Then I waited, pretty sure she was going to hate me.

She didn't. She was pissed off, but not at me. In fact, she launched a stream of cussing at my family and my brother, and I decided then and there it would be best she never met Kayla, because one of them was going to get arrested. I honestly don't quite understand most of what she said, because Haley gets philosophical a lot, and most of it went over my head. She carried on about how they were happy to tell me about their lives but had absolutely no interest in mine, that they figured since I was gay, that meant my life was crap. That kind of hung around in my head awhile.

I had felt pretty comfortable with Haley before, but she felt like an old glove after that night. She taught me the GED stuff, but after that was done, she hung around and did stuff like tell me about her favorite music. She could sit for hours and go on and on about the poetry of the lyrics, and I swear to God, there were some songs she played for me where a certain note would hit and she would start to cry. It was nice music. Kind of like country but wasn't. Haley made me a CD of her favorites, and I played it sometimes while I worked in the kitchen.

Haley never bossed, and when she told me I did a good job, she never patronized me. Haley is a real class act. It cut me to the bone to see her like she was just now.

It was fucking cold outside—like, it was twenty below with windchill—and here she was, pregnant, not even wearing a coat. I could tell by the way she looked like she was about to go to pieces that I was the first she'd told, and that she'd waited to come here today and tell me. That she wanted just the two of us to go off and talk about it. I had no idea what in God's name I was going to say, but I figured mostly she needed to talk and to cry. I will tell you, I was damn scared. But this was Haley. I had to do it.

I took my coat off, bussed a kiss on her cheek and squeezed her shoulder. “You go on up to my apartment over the barn. Turn the heat back up as high as you want. Let me just tell Travis where we've headed so people don't fuss, and I'll be up.”

She nodded, wiping her eyes on my coat sleeve. She looked like she wanted a hug, and I wanted to give her one, but I was mindful of that cold and gave her another gentle but firm, “Go on,” and she got. I relaxed a little as I saw Ez and Zeke catch up with her and follow her to the stairs. It would be hard to be too down with those nuts trying to cover her in slobber.

Travis was already looking for me, and I met him in the hall by his office. “I need to go sit with Haley a bit,” I told him. “I sent her to my apartment.”

That made him frown, but it was because I'd said “my.” His latest thing was to ask me why the hell I had to keep stuff over there when there was so much space at the house. I had my reasons, but I wasn't going to get into that now.

“She's in trouble,” I said, keeping my voice low, but as soon as I said the words, I knew they were the wrong ones. He was about to tell me how her dad and mom deserved to know if there was trouble, and before I knew what I was doing, I blurted, “She's pregnant.”

I felt bad telling him, because I knew Haley wanted it secret, but it felt good to tell him too. Everything got easier as soon as I got that off my chest.

He figured out this was a secret all on his own, and he relaxed too, even as he looked tired and sad. “Shit. What's she going to do?”

“I don't know. I figure that's what we're gonna talk about.” Then all of a sudden the nerves came back, and I reached out for his hand. “I'm scared I'm going to say the wrong thing.”

His fingers stroked mine, and he gave me a one-sided smile. “Just listen mostly, I would say, and be kind. She's probably beat herself up plenty on her own.”

I nodded, and because I'd already acted all kinds of fool around him over this, brushed a kiss on his mouth in silent thanks. He caught my chin and kissed me again, a lingering, sweet one.

I carried it with me across the yard all the way to the barn.

Halfway over I backtracked and went over to my car to get a CD. It was one of the artists she'd played for me, and I listen to it while I drive around. I brought it along to play while we talked, because I thought she might like that.

She did. She laughed and smiled and asked if I went and bought this on my own, which of course I had, which just made her all the happier. Like I had given her something by going to buy it, which I hadn't even thought of but was glad for now. I put it in the player and turned it down soft and got her a soda from the minifridge. I got myself a beer. I had the feeling I was going to need it.

I sat her down on my bed, and I sat in the saggy chair by the TV with the dogs at my feet. I settled in to listen.

She stared down at the carpet a lot while she talked, which wasn't like her at all.

“It's Cal's.” She grimaced. “But since he accused me of sleeping around too, he's never going to believe me. Anyway, I don't want him messed up in this. I don't want a thing from him. He doesn't know, and he's not going to.” Her voice broke on the end, and she sighed and wiped at her eyes with her fingers. “Sorry.”

I liked being in the chair because it felt safe, but I could tell for her I was too far away. I rose, stepped over the dogs, and sat hesitantly beside her. She melted against my side, crying softly as she went on.

“Roe, I'm so scared. This is going to ruin my whole life. My
whole life
. No school now. Aren't I an awful mother already, that this is all I can think about?” She laughed, but it had jagged edges. “Want to know the worst of all? I keep hoping that if I keep being sick and not eating and crying all the time that I'll miscarry and not have to worry about it. That's how awful I am.”

That went right up my nose. “Hey. You aren't awful. Stop saying that.” A gear that had been turning slowly since she'd told me on the steps clicked into place, and the slow thought formed. “Are you—I mean, are you going to...get rid of it?”

This time the laugh was so bitter it made me jump. “Abortion, you mean. I tried. I went yesterday. On Christmas Eve, I went to kill my baby.”

“Don't say it like that,” I shot back, sharper than I meant. But I couldn't seem to gentle either. This was a jagged conversation all around. “And what do you mean, you went yesterday? You mean your mom knows already?”

“I went by myself,” she said.

I was so mad I had to stand up because I was shaking, and my hands were balling into fists. The dogs sat up too, and they started barking. Haley stopped crying and drew back, surprised.

“You went to get an abortion
by yourself
? What the hell, Haley! You just drove—what, to Rapid City?”

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