Montana Creeds: Logan Page 16
The need to kiss her for real was almost palpable, but it wasn’t the time.
Briana gave a belated nod, as though just then registering the sleep remark. “I could make some coffee,” she said, sounding bemused. Alec’s near miss had taken a lot out of her—she seemed literally beside herself. Another reason to leave her alone—or to stay the night.
Logan grinned. “The last thing you need right now is caffeine,” he told her. “Lock up behind me, and then go get some shut-eye. Things will look better in the morning.”
“Will they?” she asked.
Logan had turned to go, but he stopped and looked back at her, his heart snagged on the soft, sad way she’d spoken. “Bring the boys over, if you have to work,” he said, determined not to take advantage, but tempted, too. “I’ll keep an eye on them.”
He saw the struggle in her face—need against pride, fear against courage. What a brave little thing she was—the kind of woman who had helped build the west. Taking things as they came, good and bad, making the best of limited resources.
“I’m not ready to leave them with Heather again,” she admitted. Then she smiled feebly, but the effort was valiant. “She’s probably not ready yet, either.”
“Josh has his cell phone,” Logan reminded her. How could his voice sound so normal, with all he was feeling? It was as if a bucking bronc had been turned loose inside him, kicking down fence rails on all sides. “You have yours. If I turn out to be the babysitter from hell, he can call you.”
She laughed at that, but there was a sob in there someplace, too. She’d been carrying a big load, alone, for a long time. It was hard for her to trust, hard to accept help, particularly from a relative stranger. “They can be a handful,” she said, but she was wavering, and that pleased Logan in a way he hadn’t expected. “Alec and Josh, I mean. They argue constantly—”
“I have brothers of my own,” Logan said. “I can argue with the best of them.” He paused, grinned, one hand on the doorknob, hesitant to go. “And I can whistle, too. Fit to split your eardrums.”
“So I’ve heard,” Briana replied, and now her smile was steady, though her eyes were still moist.
The need to stay and hold her through the night was almost visceral now. If ever a woman had needed holding—just that and nothing more, though God knew he wanted more—it was Briana Grant, but there were kids in the house. And he had two dogs at home, waiting for him, and horses to feed in the morning.
The rancher’s life. He’d wanted it; now he had it.
“See you tomorrow,” he said, and went out by sheer force of will.
The night was warm and dark, with just a sliver of a moon etched into the sprawling sky. He stood on the porch for a few moments, talking himself out of going back in.
Time enough, he thought, looking up at the clear country stars, following their ancient courses. There would be time enough.
“YOU’RE OKAY WITH THIS?” Briana asked her boys the next morning, as she flipped pancakes at the stove. “You don’t mind going over to Logan’s for the day?”
“Mind?” Josh said, slipping Wanda a morsel of bacon under the table. “It’ll be fun.”
Alec was downright chipper, for somebody who’d been hit by a van the night before. “I want him to sign my cast,” he said. “Think he’d let us ride one of his horses?”
Briana stopped in midflip. “You are not to get on any horse, Alec Grant, unless I’m on it behind you.”
Alec rolled his eyes. “I know how to ride, Mom. Dad taught me.”
It was true. Although Vance hadn’t owned a horse of his own for years, he’d had access to plenty of them through the rodeo, and the times he’d settled down for a month or two to take a job as a ranch hand on some spread. Briana had always wanted to stay; Vance had invariably gotten restless and insisted that it was time to move on.
Both Alec and Josh had been on horseback with their dad as soon as they could hold their heads up without help.
“Still,” she said, setting the pancake platter in the center of the table with a thump. “No riding unless I’m there. Got it?”
Thinking of all the places they might have made a life, she and Vance, and all the times they’d packed up and pulled out, leaving some shabby but perfectly good little house behind, she ran square into the old reality. Vance was Vance, and he would be leaving Stillwater Springs one day soon, job or no job, wife or no wife—sons or no sons.
How could she prepare them for that?
She couldn’t, of course. She’d have to pick up the pieces afterward, try to explain something she didn’t understand herself, even after years of happy traveling with her dad—the mysterious pull of the rodeo circuit and the open road. The difference was she’d known Bill McIntyre loved her more than the gypsy life, more than the cheering, laughing spectators, more than the bulls and the broncs.
If she’d asked him to settle down, he would have done it.
The thing he wouldn’t have done was leave her behind.
“Mom?” Josh prompted. “Aren’t you going to eat?”
She smiled, shook off the what-makes-Vance-tick quandary. There was no figuring him out, and trying to was a habit she needed to break.
So she ate a pancake, and part of a fried egg, and drank her orange juice. She fed Wanda, let her out and then in again. Put together a peanut-butter-and-jelly sack lunch for the boys.
Then they all piled into the truck—Alec needed a little help—and headed along the county road, toward Logan’s place.
He was straddling the gate beam when they arrived, setting the sign right. He’d ridden the buckskin down from the barn; it stood nearby, saddled and grazing on the high grass.
With a grin and a wave, Logan swung a leg over the beam, hung for a moment by his hands, then dropped to the ground—at least ten feet—to make a nimble landing on both feet.
Briana winced, rolled down the driver’s-side window.
“The sign looks good,” she said. He looked good—in jeans, boots and a sleeveless T-shirt that left his biceps gloriously bare.
“Check out the horse!” Alec spouted, from the backseat. “You’re here, Mom. Does that mean I can ride it?”
“No,” Briana said.
Logan, standing close enough that she could see the dare in his eyes, waited.
She peered through the windshield, studying the gelding.
“He’s as gentle as they come,” Logan said.
“Please, Mom,” Alec wheedled. “I’ve been traumatized. I need positive reinforcement.”
Logan chuckled at that, shoved a hand through his somewhat dusty hair.
“I’m not dressed to ride,” Briana pointed out, referring to her customary casino getup, which amounted to a uniform. She couldn’t show up with horse hair all over her slacks.
“Logan is,” Alec said.
Logan raised both eyebrows.
“All right,” Briana heard herself say, and was astounded.
Alec whooped with delight.
“Can I have a turn after Alec?” Josh wanted to know.
“If it’s okay with your mom,” Logan said. He rounded the truck, opened the left rear passenger door and whisked Alec out of the vehicle and onto the back of the gelding, all in a few strides. Before Briana could even catch her breath, he’d swung expertly into the saddle behind Alec and taken the reins.
The way Logan Creed looked on that horse, like he was part of it, cell for cell and breath for breath, was—Well, it should have been illegal.
Logan gestured toward the house with one hand. “After you,” he said.
Alec beamed.
Josh scrambled out of his seat belt to kneel and watch through the back window of the truck as Briana continued up the driveway, Logan and Alec riding behind. “Cool,” he said, sounding both impressed and resentful.
“You’ll get your turn,” Briana said, resigned.
She only glanced into the rearview mirror a couple of times, making sure Alec hadn’t been bucked off. The second she’d
parked in Logan’s front yard, though, she was out of that truck and standing on the ground, shading her eyes from the morning sun and watching as Alec and Logan rode closer, the horse moving at an easy trot.
Sidekick and the Yorkie came to sniff at her pant legs—at least, she thought it was the Yorkie. Gone were the blue bow and the flowing dog-tresses.
“What happened to Snooks?” Briana asked, as Logan got down off the gelding’s back and lifted Alec after him.
Logan’s grin was as dazzling as that midsummer sun. “Found some shears in the attic and gave him a haircut this morning,” he said, bending to pick up the dog. “He’s still a scrawny little varmint, but at least he’s got some dignity.”
“Can I have my turn on the horse now?” Josh asked, trying to restrain his eagerness and not succeeding very well.
Briana sighed and took the brown-bag lunches she’d packed for the boys out of the truck. Handed them to Logan, who immediately set them aside on the hood of his Dodge to hold the buckskin’s reins while Josh mounted up.
Why did she bother to set rules, when she always ended up changing them?
Still, she felt a flash of pride, seeing her boy on the back of a horse, and something very much like grief, too. Alec and Josh were growing up so fast. Before she knew it, they’d be men, following faraway dreams of their own. And she’d be on the perimeter of their lives, like a one-time planet demoted to moon status, always waiting for a phone call or an e-mail.
“I’ll be back as soon as I can,” she told Logan, who was watching Josh ride the buckskin around the yard at a walk. It was good of the man to look after the boys, but she couldn’t expect him to do it every day.
“No hurry,” Logan said easily.
Briana got into the truck, started it and headed for work.
Heather was waiting near the main entrance when she arrived, looking particularly forlorn. She wore the usual tight jeans, another skimpy top and a teensy denim jacket against the nonexistent chill.
Briana wondered, briefly and uncharitably, if the woman had developed a gambling habit—or already had one. It galled her that she was supposed to trust a virtual stranger with her children, but the reality was that Josh and Alec needed Vance, and Heather was part of the deal.
“Vance and I talked,” Heather said hurriedly, walking fast to keep pace with Briana as she went toward the office to clock in, the brightly lit, noisy slot machines a colorful blur as she passed them. “And we agreed I shouldn’t work until after school starts this fall. I’ll make sure I’m off before they get out of class, so I can take care of them.”
Briana stopped, speechless.
Heather had the good grace to avert her eyes.
“You did a great job of looking after them last night,” Briana said evenly. Okay, so she wasn’t at her most gracious, and the better angel was off somewhere, bugging somebody else, but Heather wasn’t the only one who’d suffered a shock.
Briana was still jarred, could still hear Vance’s voice, telling her Alec had been hurt.
Heather’s clumpy mascara started turning to liquid.
Off to her left, at the edge of her vision, Briana saw Jim coming toward them, frowning a little.
“Is there a problem?” he asked when he drew up alongside Briana. He was general manager and, as such, chief of security, as well. Any sign of trouble, however subtle, was guaranteed to bring him on the double.
“I’m sorry,” Heather told Briana, lower lip bobbing.
“No problem at all,” Briana said, addressing Jim but looking at Heather.
“I didn’t mean to hit Alec with the van!” Heather protested.
“She hit Alec with a van?” Jim gasped.
“He’s going to be okay,” Briana assured him. The better angel was back, damn it. “Look, Heather,” she added reluctantly, “I’ll stop by your place after work and we’ll talk, okay?”
“Okay,” Heather said moistly. Then the transformation came, startling and instantaneous; she turned a showgirl smile on Jim. “I dealt poker in Reno for a while. Maybe I could work here next fall—maybe seven to three?”
Briana’s mouth fell open. Was the woman serious? She wanted to work with her husband’s ex?
Jim looked from her to Heather and back again.
Briana glared at Jim.
He stifled a smile. Turned politely to Heather. “Fill out an application,” he said, directing her to the customer service desk. “We have a fairly high turnover, and we’re usually shorthanded in September, after all the grad students go back to school.”
Heather nodded, smiled mistily at Briana and headed for the desk.
“Who is that?” Jim asked.
“My exhusband’s new wife,” Briana said, “and if you hire her—”
Jim grinned, rocked back on his heels. Waited.
She huffed out a sigh. Like she had anything to say about hiring and firing. “I’ve got to clock in,” she said.
But Jim took her by the arm and squired her into his private office, a virtual command post full of flickering monitors. Heather waggled her fingers at them as they passed, employment application in hand.
“If Alec was hit by a van,” Jim said reasonably, once they were alone, “what are you doing here?”
“He’s not in critical condition, Jim,” Briana answered. “He broke an arm, and he and Josh are with Logan today.”
A grin quirked Jim’s mouth. “Logan’s babysitting?”
“Don’t let Josh and Alec hear you call it that.”
Jim smiled, touched Briana’s shoulder. “Go home,” he said. “We can run this place without you.”
“That’s what I’m afraid of,” Briana said.
“You can take sick leave, or vacation days.”
“I’m not sick.”
“You look sick to me,” Jim said speculatively, tilting his head to one side as he studied her.
“Gee, thanks.”
“Go,” he said. “Your job will still be here when you get things under control.”
“Things are under control.”
“Are they?”
“Sort of,” she said.
Five minutes later, Briana was back in the parking lot, watching Heather pull out in Vance’s van. She’d follow her to the trailer, she decided, and get their talk out of the way before going back to Logan’s to pick up the boys.
She nearly slammed into an old Corolla, she was so distracted.
Then Brett Turlow got out, smiling his smarmy smile, and came toward the truck. He’d tried to put the moves on her several times—it happened a lot, in her line of work—and so far she’d always been able to brush him off without making a big deal.
“Where you goin’, Briana?” he asked. She’d automatically rolled down the window, because the truck didn’t have air-conditioning, and now she regretted it.
“I’m taking the day off,” she said, trying to smile, anxious to be gone already, if she was going.
“That’s a pity,” Brett answered, standing so close she was afraid he’d climb onto the running board. “You sure do brighten this place up.”
Briana made a look-at-the-time motion, though she wasn’t wearing a watch. She’d forgotten it that morning, when she’d taken it off to mix up the pancakes.
Brett’s small eyes narrowed. He was only one of a dozen pests, and Briana had never been afraid of him, but she felt uneasy now.
“Gotta be going,” she said.
“There’s a new movie startin’ up at the drivein Friday night,” Brett ventured. “We could grab some supper in town and—”
“Sorry,” Briana broke in cheerfully. “I have other plans.”
Why did she always have to be so nice? Brett Turlow made her skin crawl, and she wouldn’t be going anywhere with him Friday night or any night.
He looked petulant. Not to mention perpetually grungy. “You always have other plans, it seems to me.”
Briana drew a deep breath, let it out, shifted the truck into gear and got ready to hit the gas pedal. �
��I don’t date customers,” she said moderately.
“You didn’t mind dating Jim Huntinghorse,” Brett taunted. “And he’s nothin’ but a damn Injun.”
Something tripped inside Briana. “All right,” she said. “Get lost. Is that clear enough?”
Brett stared at her, wheeled back from the side of the truck as if she’d reached through the window and slapped him.
Briana took that opportunity to boogie.
Glancing into her rearview mirror, she saw him watching her, and felt little invisible bugs creeping up and down her spine. With a shudder, she pressed down harder on the gas.
Suppose he followed her?
She spotted Heather up ahead, in Vance’s van, stopped at a light. Don’t be paranoid, she told herself, but she sped up just the same. Safety in numbers.
She’d planned to stay on Heather’s bumper all the way to the trailer on the other side of Stillwater Springs, but Vance’s bride surprised her by heading for the auto shop where he worked instead. And Briana knew the sick feeling in the pit of her stomach had nothing to do with the conversation she and Heather would have had. Would still have to have, at some point.
All the way home, she kept checking her rearview mirror.
THEY STOOD AT the fence for a while, Logan and Josh and Alec, after unsaddling the buckskin and turning him back into the corral. To Logan’s amusement, Josh had gathered up Snooks and tucked him inside his T-shirt, “so he wouldn’t get stepped on.” Now, both the dog’s and the boy’s heads were sticking out of the neck-hole. Every so often, Snooks would lick Josh’s cheek.
“Our lunches probably suck,” Alec said.
After a moment, Logan realized the kid was talking about the two brown paper bags still sitting on the hood of his rig.
“Don’t hint, buttface,” Josh told his brother.
“Who’s hinting, jerk-wad?”
Logan grinned. “Do I have to whistle?” he asked.
Both boys shook their heads, though their eyes snapped with mischief.
“Are there really bears in the orchard?” Alec inquired, scuffing at the dirt with the toe of his sneaker as they started, by tacit agreement, toward the house.
“Sometimes,” Logan said.
“What would you do if you met one?” Alec queried, his eyes huge. His cast was starting to look respectably grubby now—Logan had added his signature, as had all the guys working on the barn restoration.