Authors: Mary Calmes
Tags: #m/m romance, #contemporary, #m/m romance, #contemporary, #gay, #glbt, #romance, #mary calmes, #dreamspinner press
“Where do you have to go?” he pried. “You’re on vacation.”
“Fine, do you happen to know a lady named Grace Freeman?”
He scowled down at me. “Sure, she owns the Dancing Horse
Ranch down toward Hillman. Why?”
I took a step back to put a little distance between us, because if I
didn’t, I was going to attack him. The man smelled amazing, clean and
spicy at the same time. His eyes were darkening pools of heat, and
looking at his plump, pink bottom lip was giving me chills. “I––I hafta
see if she wants to sell.”
He squinted at me. “You work for Armor South?”
“No,” I cleared my throat, taking another step back. “I work for
Chaney Putnam, and we’re the ones acquiring the land for Armor
South.”
“Whatever.” He advanced on me, one hand on the roof of the
Lexus, pinning me back against the side of the car. “She ain’t gonna
sell.”
“I think that’s awfully naïve of you to say when everyone else
did, in fact, sell.”
“She’s different.”
“How so?” Maybe he knew something I could use.
“She knows things ain’t always easy.”
“Okay, but does everything always hafta be hard?”
His scowl could have peeled paint.
“And why do you even care?” I asked, looking up at him.
He took a quick breath. “Because every ranch is important. We all
support each other.”
“The other ranchers already sold. How is that support?”
“You don’t know anything about working a ranch or about the
pride that comes from that,” he growled at me. “You have no idea.”
“I don’t need to,” I shot back. “I only need to know about Mrs.
Freeman and what’s best for her and her family.”
“You don’t know anything.”
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“Fine, can you move?”
He took a step back, and I walked around the car and got in. I felt
instantly better. Out on the highway, I breathed a huge sigh of relief.
Being around Rand Holloway took so much energy, and I hadn’t even
had coffee yet. Maybe Mrs. Freeman would have some.
It turned out that not only did she have coffee, but she made me
breakfast as well.
As I sat out on the porch sipping sweet tea with Mrs. Freeman
after breakfast, I realized that she was in a real quandary about what to
do. Her own sons had not wanted the ranch, and only one of her
grandsons seemed interested in the life. On the other hand, some of the
men that worked for her wanted to pool their money and buy the ranch,
but none of those plans were a certainty. The money Chaney Putnam
was offering was for sure, and her neighbors wanted her to take it. If
she said no, they all had to go back to their struggling ranches. Who
was she to sentence them to that when they all wanted to leave? But the
land had been in her family for generations and she didn’t want to be
the person who sold it.
“Yeah, you’re kinda screwed either way,” I said, smiling over at
her, holding my sweating glass of tea.
Her smile was wide. “That company of yours is mighty smart,
Mr. Joss, to be sendin’ me such a sweet boy to talk to.”
I waggled my eyebrows for her, eliciting a deep laugh. “Please,
call me Stefan, and I heard you didn’t like the other guy at all.”
“What other guy?”
“The first rep from Chaney Putnam. I heard you threw him off
your land.”
“Darlin’, you’re the first one who’s come.”
But that made no sense. Either she was mistaken, or Knox had
lied. But why would my boss lie to me? What would be the point of
that?
“Sweetheart?”
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Mary Calmes
But suddenly, I knew what the point was. Knox had tried to make
the whole situation that much more hopeless and dire so I would have
no choice but to go. Between the two of us, he was infinitely more
dramatic.
“Stefan?”
I cleared my throat. “So how ’bout I come back on Monday
before I leave and we’ll talk some more? How would that be?”
Her face showed her astonishment. “You… you’re not going to
try and get an answer now?”
“No, ma’am,” I assured her. “You need to think hard. You know
better than I do what the community needs. I mean, there are jobs
associated with the opening of the kind of store that Armor South wants
to put up, but you have to weigh that against the lives of your family
and the men who work on your ranch.”
“Yes,” she agreed solemnly.
I leaned over toward her. “You have my number; call me if you
just need to talk. I’m a really good listener. Maybe there are
alternatives that neither of us has thought of yet.”
When I reached out my hand, she took it.
“Whatever I can do,” I said gently.
“Thank you, Stefan,” she sighed deeply. “Thank you so much.”
I GOT back after lunch, and Charlotte wanted me to go with her to shop
for lingerie for the wedding night. Her girlfriends were thrilled to have
me along and surprised that I had good suggestions for my friend. We
met Ben and the rest of the wedding party out for dinner. I was pleased
that we were missing Rand. I wasn’t up to a second altercation with
him.
After dinner, we went into Lubbock for the bachelor party, and
after four strip clubs, the drink minimum plus more at each place,
moving from bar to bar and club to club, everyone was drunk. Around
one, once everything closed, we returned home. I was the last out of
the car because I was carrying Ben. He had been awake in the car for
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twenty minutes of the hour ride back but had passed out in my lap
shortly thereafter. At least he had not succumbed to barfing, like two
of the other guys. Charlotte started giggling as soon as she saw me,
and I asked her if maybe she wanted to take charge of him. She was
marrying him, after all.
“Oh hell no,” she said like I was high.
“God, Stefan, isn’t he heavy?” Clarissa asked me.
“Yeah, he weighs a fuckin’ ton,” I grumbled, starting up the
stairs. It was awkward, since he was taller than my own five-eleven,
closer to six-three, but I managed.
“Is he all right?” she laughed at me.
“Yeah, he’s just done,” I assured her, waving without looking at
her.
“Well, throw him in bed and come back down. I want to talk to
you,” Charlotte told me.
I loved her, but I was beat. “How ’bout I’ll see you in the
morning?”
“Okay,” she called after me. “I’ll see you then. Love you!”
“Right backatcha.”
Upstairs, I eased him down on the bed as gently as I could. After I
took off his shoes and socks, I decided to leave the rest. I covered him
with a blanket and was almost to the door.
“You know, I’ve never been in a fist fight in my life.”
Weird thing for him to say out of the blue, but he was drunk, so I
went with it and turned around to face the bed in the darkness. “No?”
“No,” he burped. “How many have you been in?”
“Too many to count. Now go to sleep.”
“Wait.”
I groaned but turned again from the door.
He sat up and flicked on the small light on the nightstand. “How
come you’ve been in a lot of fights, Stef?”
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Mary Calmes
“I dunno, just have.”
“Because of being gay?”
“No,” I yawned, “not once because I was gay. Mostly from
drunks, some because of trying to break something up, and one because
my roommate has a big fuckin’ mouth.”
He grinned, and in the faint light, his warm brown eyes glowed as
he looked at me. “Oh yeah? Charlotte got you in a bar fight?”
“Yep,” I nodded before I explained about the drunken brawl in
the middle of the pool hall when we were in college. Charlotte had
been running her mouth, not backing down from the table of drunken
frat boys shooting pool alongside us. When they had finally had
enough, I was the one they came after, since they couldn’t hit a girl.
“How many guys?”
“Just three,” I lied. It had been more like five.
“Jesus, Stefan ,you’re a badass, huh?”
“I just wasn’t as drunk as they were.”
His mouth was curled up in the corner, his eyes slits, and his hair
was sticking up on one side. He was a disheveled mess, and I had never
seen him look better. “Go to sleep.”
“Wait.”
I looked back around the door, since I was already in the hall.
“What?”
“What if I hafta barf?”
“The trash can’s there next to the bed.”
“You think of everything,” he said softly, his eyes on mine.
“Always.”
“Thanks for bein’ such a good friend, Stef. You didn’t hafta like
me”—he burped—“’cause you’re Char’s friend and all, but you do, and
I appreciate it.”
“I’m your friend too.”
“No, I know, I didn’t mean it like that.”
“You mean if you guys get a divorce you know she’ll get me.”
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35
“Well that’s a nice fuckin’ thing to say right before I get
married.”
“I’m just sayin’.”
“Shit.”
I laughed at him. “Go to sleep already.”
“Wait.”
“What?”
“I used to be worried, you know, when I first met you. I thought
maybe you’d wanna fuck me or something and it sorta weirded me
out.”
“Uh-huh.”
“But now I know it ain’t like that.”
“’Cause you’re not my type,” I teased him.
“Shut up,” he burped, “I’m tryin’ to have a moment here.”
“Sorry.”
“I just… you’re the only gay person I know.”
“I seriously doubt that,” I told him honestly, “but I appreciate the
sentiment. Can you go to bed now?”
“Yeah,” he belched loudly, lying down on the bed. “I think maybe
I should, but Stef?”
“What?”
“Come kiss me goodnight.”
I flipped him off before I closed the door behind me.