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Cowboy to the Core

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2019
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“He is. And he’s dying to meet you. I’ve told him all about you, my friend. The winner of the state math competition and karaoke queen.”

“Oh, God, that was so long ago. Can we just go with mother and buyer for Duran Muton?”

“You look far more like a model than a buyer. But speaking of motherhood, where is Celeste? She did come, didn’t she?”

“She and a friend. They’re over there, absorbed in a juggling act.” Dani nodded toward the crowd seated on concrete benches shaded by a web of net and intertwined branches.

“Great. I’ll catch up with both of you at the dinner tonight. I’m rushing off right now to reconfirm the setup for the tables and to make sure they have plenty of champagne . Everything will be outdoors.”

“Perfect weather for that. Is there anything I can do to help?”

“No, just enjoy yourself, unless…” She hesitated.

“This doesn’t have anything to do with the guy you wanted me to meet, does it?”

“No,” Bethany assured her. “But you’ll probably be begging me to fix you up once you see him.”

“Don’t count on it. So, how can I help?”

“Arnie’s sister is supposed to sing at the ceremony, but she woke up this morning with a terrible headache and a fever. She thinks she may be coming down with the flu.”

The one thing worse than a blind date. “I haven’t sung in front of an audience in years.”

“You’re kidding, right?”

“No, and it’s not that shocking, Bethany. I was never that good.”

“Yes, you were. If there had been an American Idol back then, you’d have won in a landslide.” Bethany glanced at her watch. “I have to go, but consider singing for me at the ceremony, please. It’s just two songs. We’ll talk more tonight. Gotta run.” She gave Dani a parting hug.

“I’m seriously out of practice,” Dani called after her.

Bethany either didn’t hear or chose to ignore her. Dani imagined it was the latter. She’d protest again tonight, but it would be a wasted effort. Bethany was not one to take no for a final answer, and it would be pretty crummy to refuse a bride in distress.

The good thing was that other than Celeste and Katie, she would neither know the guests nor have to face them again after she murdered the music.

Murdered. Even thinking the word gave her chills after this morning’s hallucinations. They’d been so intense that Dani had actually felt the thrust of the blade as it punctured the walls of the chest and sliced into the victim’s heart—as if it were happening to her.

In broad daylight. Eyes wide open, at least they had been until she’d passed out.

“You should have seen the jugglers, Mom. They were funny and really good.”

Startled, Dani jumped and then spun around to face the girls.

“Are you okay?” Katie asked. “You look kind of pale.”

“Eeks, you do,” Celeste agreed. “You’re not going to faint again, are you?”

“I’m not pale. I just haven’t gotten enough sun lately. Today’s the day for it.”

“Where’d the cute cowboy go?” Katie asked.

“Who needs a cute cowboy when I have you two? Now tell me about the jugglers.” She forced the disturbing memories to the back of her mind. She had to get a hold of her emotions and regain her stability before she turned this whole weekend into a fiasco.

“The jugglers were really cool,” Katie said, thankfully changing the topic of conversation. “They even juggled fiery batons.”

“And they threw a knife and chopped the end off a carrot a woman was holding in her mouth.” Celeste used her hand to show how close the knife had come to the woman’s nose. “I never would have trusted them to try that with me.”

“Good for you,” Dani said. “Any ideas what we should do next, or should we just walk and take in the sights?”

“A boy sitting next to us said we should be sure and go to the jousting exhibition,” Katie said. “He said it’s all staged but that it looks real and sometimes the guys get knocked off their horses.”

“And you can cheer for whichever rider you want to win,” Celeste added, then turned to watch a rickshaw go by that was being pulled by a scantily clad slave lad. The pseudo lord and lady riding in the cart waved.

“This is so neat,” Katie said. “Like taking a time machine into the past. I can’t wait until we get our costumes for tonight’s party.”

Dani wasn’t quite up to that yet. She checked the program and her watch. “The next jousting exhibition is at one o’clock. That gives us twenty minutes, if you want to make that performance.”

“Let’s do it,” Celeste and Katie said in unison.

A few seconds later they’d checked the map and were on their way across the festival grounds to the day’s next adventure. The girls hurried ahead but stopped frequently to peek at wares on display outside of the shops—jewelry; sandals; pewter, fire-breathing dragons cast in stone. Some findings were far more authentic than others. All of them captured the Renaissance spirit.

The spirit of revelry started to dissolve Dani’s misgivings about having come here today. Maybe the warning was just for her not to buy a green dress for the party or wedding. No problem there. She’d go in her jeans first.

But suppose someone else wore that dress to the party, maybe even Bethany Sue?

She shook her head to clear it, then stood perfectly still when she got this disconcerting feeling that someone was watching her. She turned. No one was paying her the slightest attention, not with two busty wenches posing for pictures near the beer stand.

If she was going to be this jumpy all weekend, she should just pack it up and go home. Or perhaps she should have held on to the sexy cowboy a while longer, even invited him to the party tonight as her guest. A new image took hold in her mind, this one of her in Marcus Abbot’s arms, dancing beneath a star-studded sky.

The slow burn that settled between her thighs sent a quick flush to her cheeks. Lusting after strangers was not her style. She had to get out more. It had been months—no, make that a solid year—since she’d had any intimate contact with a man.

With good reason, she reminded herself. Her last date had been a miserable exercise in how much boredom she could endure.

As a group of sexy wenches passed, a young teenage boy walked up to her and stuck out a note. “I’m supposed to give you this.”

Dani took the slip of paper and read the message that was printed in black ink.

Beware of the dark knight.

The boy started to walk away. She slipped the note into her pocket and hurried to catch up with him. “Why did you give me that?”

“That man back there asked me to.”

“What man? Show me.”

He looked around. “I don’t see him now, but he was standing right back there by that tree a minute ago.”

“Was he wearing a cowboy hat?”
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