The Wildcatter. Peggy Nicholson
he and Tankersly had planned the day’s work. “Yep, I’ve been watchin’ him. Didn’t get really interesting till last night.” He’d hoped Ben would ask. He reached into his shirt pocket, pulled a cigarette out of his pack, and stuck it between his lips. Proceeded leisurely to light it.
The tractors fired up and hauled the wagons down the road, off to the fields for a day of baling. Tons of hay to be stacked and moved and stacked again. Heydt’s tail would be dragging by the end of this day for sure.
“He’s been ridin’ most evenings, going a little farther every night, mostly upriver and down. But last night, danged if he didn’t set off like a dog smelling a bitch over the mountain. Straight line. Along the road to the main gate, then north, then through our gate on the other side. On and on east till he comes to the gate to the Sweetwater Flats. I’m hanging way back, you understand, but ’bout then we lost the last of the light.” The foreman drew on his cigarette, squinting through the smoke as he exhaled.
“You know how ragged that section is. Reckon I’d’ve broken my neck a dozen times if there hadn’t been a half-moon.” Maybe, come to think of it, that was what Heydt had been waiting for—enough moon to see by?
“Anyways, I move up a bit closer. I’m starting to wonder if maybe he’s scouting cows to rustle.” He’d begun to regret that he’d not thought to pack his .22 along. Heydt was unfailingly pleasant, but something told a man that he’d be a rough one to cross.
“Ya think?” Tankersly scowled. Rustling was no longer a hanging offense, and that was a pity, because it was a growing problem in the West. A thief could fill a cattle truck with twenty head, drive ’em to hell and gone, earn himself a year’s pay in a single night.
“Not now I don’t. Eventually he comes to where we’ve fenced off the creek bed, and he ties his horse and climbs through the wire. I’m figuring he’s forgotten his canteen and he’s meaning to drink from the stream, and I’m grinnin’ to myself, picturing his face when he tastes that water. So I wait, expecting him to come scrambling back up the bank, spitting and wiping his mouth. But he doesn’t show.”
He leaned over to tap his ash off on his boot heel, then straightened again. “After a bit, I get kinda curious and I ride up t’where I can see over the fence and down into the cut. It’s about twenty feet deep along there…” He dragged in a lungful of nicotine, smiling inside at the look on the boss’s face. Oh, he had him, all right. “’Bout a quarter mile on, I see a light–bright light, one of them halogen lanterns. Kid’s walking real slow, playing his beam over the banks, first one side, then t’other. Stops every so often, looks real close at something, then moves on.”
“Huh.” Tankersly spat thoughtfully into the dirt.
“I follow along the top of the flats, find another place to peek over the side. But he’s just moseying on, flashing his light.”
“He ever find anything t’speak of?”
Joe shrugged. “Not’s so as I could tell. I hung around till two or so, till I was yawnin’ so hard I feared he’d hear m’jaw crack. He was still hard at it when I headed on home.” He’d flopped onto his couch at the foreman’s house not long before sunrise. Had slept for an hour, then saddled Tankersly’s mount for the day and set off to fetch him. “If Heydt made it back to the bunkhouse in time to snatch the last biscuit, I’d be surprised.” And served him right for keeping an old man out all night.
Tankersly rubbed his craggy jaw. “Now, what the devil’s he up to?”
RISA RODE her outrage all the way down to the ranch yard. How dared he? Did Ben imagine she was still a rebellious fourteen, to be sent to her room without supper when she disobeyed? Or fifteen, forbidden to drive with her girlfriends to Durango to see a movie?
But to have intercepted Eric’s messages…this was a new low in high-handedness even for her father!
And worse, he’d almost succeeded in driving a wedge of misunderstanding between her and her fiancé. After three days of echoing silence, she’d begun to fear that Eric had stopped returning her calls. That perhaps he’d found someone at the law firm where he was working. That he’d finally come to his senses and realized he could do much better than Risa Tankersly.
To call him one last time at work had taken all her courage. She’d gotten past the secretary who’d recorded her previous messages and reached Eric himself.
And learned that over the past three days, he’d called Suntop four times! Once her father had answered the phone, and the other times Socorro, their cook and housekeeper, had taken Eric’s calls.
Neither of them had passed his message on.
Furious as she was, Risa couldn’t blame Socorro; the woman had worked for Ben for thirty years and she knew who signed her paychecks. She only would have been following orders. But Ben? “You manipulative heartless bastard!” she swore, swinging down from Sunrise by the barn. Pity her father wasn’t here so she could say that to his face! He was off in his Town Car, at one end of the ranch or another.
She knew because she’d checked the garage, up at the Big House. Had she found his car, she would have taken it and paid the consequences later.
But no such luck.
Which brought her here. She would not sit meekly at home, letting Ben think he’d won again. After tying Sunny’s reins to the hitching rack, she loosened the mare’s cinch, then stalked off toward the bunkhouse.
Her steps shortened as she neared it. The bunkhouse was off limits to her and her sisters. Ben insisted that the men liked their privacy, and no doubt that was true. But over the years, the forbidden had bred fascination. To the Tankersly women, the shabby old one-story barracks had an aura of masculine mystery, much like the sacred ritual house of Hopi men. A kiva for cowboys.
Don’t be silly, she scoffed at herself. It’ll just be a bunch of hands, wandering around without their shirts on. Bad enough. She should have brought Tess along for support. Go on. All you have to do is rap on the screen door and ask for him.
Then endure the knowing smile on the face of whichever man answered her knock! She came to a halt, one foot on the bottom step of the stairs leading up to the sagging porch.
“You look lost, señorita!” called a low mocking voice from across the yard.
She jumped, then glanced over her shoulder. Miguel Heydt sat astride the tow hitch of a horse trailer that had been uncoupled and left parked alongside the tool shed. Leaning back against the trailer’s streamlined front, he held a beer balanced on one blue jeans–clad knee. He tipped his head back in inquiry, but he didn’t rise as she approached.
At least he still has his shirt on, she told herself. Actually, it was a T-shirt, clinging damply to his broad chest. She stopped close enough to smell an aroma of hay and hot male that did funny things to her pulse. “You’re not inside,” she said, suddenly at a loss over how to begin.
“Waiting for my turn in the shower.” He rubbed the hard angle of his jaw and she heard the tiny rasp of bristles. He hadn’t bothered with shaving this morning; the blue shadow gave a rakish air to his weary smile. He looked like a bandido one jump ahead of the posse.
But not worried about the outcome—far from it. “Looking for someone?” he inquired politely.
“You.” There was no way she could think to hide that fact. “I was wondering if you’d—” She ran out of air, had to stop for a breath. “If you might loan me your truck—that is, if you don’t mean to use it yourself. Tonight. I’d be happy to fill it with gas for you. Pay you something, if you like.”
His dark eyes narrowed behind thick black lashes. “Ah.” Absently he raised the bottle of beer to his lips, then seemed to focus on it. “Could I offer you una cerveza? Or maybe you’re not of age. Perhaps a cold drink. We have lemonade.”
He, also, saw her as a child? She felt her temper kick up a notch. “I’m quite old enough to drink, thank you, but no, thank