Оценить:
 Рейтинг: 0

Rescuing the Cowboy

Автор
Год написания книги
2019
<< 1 ... 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 >>
На страницу:
9 из 13
Настройки чтения
Размер шрифта
Высота строк
Поля

“I didn’t.” Cara evaluated the horse with crossed arms and a narrowed gaze. “Are you sure? He doesn’t act blind.”

“Haven’t you noticed he dislikes being approached from behind?” Quinn demonstrated, using Mama.

“I have but I didn’t associate it with partial blindness.” Cara nodded approvingly. “How’d you know?”

“I had a blind donkey before. It’s easy to overlook.”

“You rode a donkey?”

“I roped a donkey. Easier to use them than calves when training a green roping horse. They don’t spook like calves or tire as easily.”

Quinn and Cara discussed the other program horses until she asked, “Is there any chance you can swing by the tuxedo rental store this week for your fitting? The wedding’s going to be here before you know it.”

“Sure. No problem.”

“Thanks.” Her eyes twinkled. Getting married looked good on her. On his cousin, too.

Quinn had grown up with both Josh and Cole back in California. They were more like brothers, having lived in the same town and within miles of each other. But he’d always been a little closer to Josh. Seeing him about to get married to a great gal and become a father for the third time cheered Quinn, as did Cole’s relationship with Violet. It made him believe there was still good in the world.

As far as Quinn was concerned, no one deserved to be happy more than his cousins. They’d suffered a lot, having a father who’d abandoned them at a young age and then being raised by a bitter, angry mother. Obtaining co-ownership of the ranch when August died last fall didn’t make up for years of neglect.

Finding their future at Dos Estrellas did. It had changed them. Given them an entirely new outlook. Maybe the same would happen to Quinn.

Feeling his pocket vibrate, he plucked out his cell phone and frowned when he didn’t recognize the number.

“Excuse me,” he said to Cara, stepping away and answering. “Hello.”

“Quinn? It’s Summer. I hope you don’t mind my calling. Cara gave me your number.”

“No, it’s all right.” He glanced at Cara, who smiled guiltily. Apparently, she’d guessed the identity of his caller. “What’s up?”

“I know it’s short notice, but my boss had a cancellation this afternoon. He said he’d be glad to talk to you, if you can be here by four.”

Was it a coincidence he got off work at three thirty?

Cara gave him a what-are-you-waiting-for wave, confirming his suspicions that she was in cahoots with Summer.

“Thanks, but I—”

“I’m sure Martin can help you,” Summer insisted.

Quinn paused.

Her long sigh carried across the connection. “I’m being pushy, and I shouldn’t. Finding your daughter is your business.” She sighed again. “Sometimes I overstep. It’s a bad habit.”

He pictured her sitting at her desk, multitasking while they talked because she was probably a doer and a go-getter. His counselor in prison had been the same way. Except she wasn’t nearly as pretty as Summer and was about thirty years older.

“Fine.” He heard himself agreeing even before he’d decided. “See you at four. Can you text me the address?”

“Of course.” She sounded surprised, then pleased. “I’ll tell Martin. See you then.”

Aware of Cara’s stare, Quinn saved Summer’s number to his contacts before clearing his screen, silently chiding himself while he did. What reason would he have to call her?

“You planned this,” he said to Cara, acting madder than he was.

“I did give her your number when she told me why she wanted to call.”

Quinn grabbed the lead rope from where he’d hung it on the corral post and hooked it to Mama’s halter. Cara tagged along when he led the mare through the gate. As expected, the other five horses trailed behind them.

“Come on, Quinn.” Cara squeezed past Mama. “She likes you, and I think you like her, too. In fact, I’m sure you like her.”

Did being his cousin’s fiancée automatically make Cara his friend? One with rights to butt into his personal business?

Quinn ground to a halt. The horses did, too, bumping into each other and jerking their heads back.

That was the problem with happy people. They wanted everyone else to be happy, too, and went to great lengths to accomplish it.

“I’m not looking for a girlfriend, Cara. Besides, Summer can do a whole lot better than me.”

“She’s not like that. She accepts everyone for who they are. No judging.”

Quinn didn’t doubt it. Nonetheless, he said, “I don’t want to hurt her.”

“What makes you think you will?”

He groaned. “She needs someone who can step up. Be there for her and Teddy unconditionally and without hesitation. Someone who doesn’t come with his own set of problems and can put them first. I’m not that man. And after what I’ve been through, I may never be him.”

This time when he started for the stall, Cara didn’t go with him. She stayed behind, apparently stunned into silence.

Chapter Three (#ulink_2ae6f531-393a-50c9-8f43-d37d944dfdf1)

Summer struggled to concentrate. Quinn was due any minute. He hadn’t sounded enthused when she called earlier offering him the open appointment, but surely he’d show up. Finding his daughter was too important to him.

“What’s with you today?” Her coworker Alicia plopped a stack of papers on her desk. In the years Summer had been employed with the small law firm, paralegals had come and gone. Alicia was one of the best.

“Nothing.” Summer gave the stack a passing glance. They’d talked earlier about the copies and packages needing to be mailed before the end of the day.

“Could have fooled me. You’ve been on edge all afternoon. Is Teddy okay?”

“He’s great. Improving every day and talking more and more.”

Most important, there’d been no outbursts for almost a week, which had to be a record. She didn’t count the battle they’d engaged in this morning over which shorts to wear or the one yesterday over lunch—she’d run out of peanut butter, an earth-shattering disaster. Those types of battles were par for the course as far as Summer was concerned. A regular part of their daily routine.

“Then what is it?” Alicia asked. She understood a lot of what Summer had to deal with. Alicia cared for her ailing grandfather, whose senility continually worsened.

“Just a lot going on.” Summer patted the stack. “I’d better get started on these.”

A few minutes later, she gave a nervous start when the door to the office opened and Quinn strode in. He removed his hat with one hand, stopped when he spotted her behind the desk and nodded.
<< 1 ... 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 >>
На страницу:
9 из 13