Читать книгу Her Holiday Rancher - Cathy Mcdavid - Страница 12

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Chapter Three

Gabe watched Reese bid goodbye to his mother and Hector, fetch her coat and purse from the back of a dining room chair and leave by the front door.

A moment later, when no one was looking, he followed her, catching up as she reached her parked car in the driveway.

“Reese.”

She stopped and turned, her car key clutched in her fingers. “Oh, did I forget something?”

“You by chance have a second?”

“Sure.”

She looked anything but sure. A second later, she popped the locks on her Honda sedan. Opening the car door, she deposited her purse on the passenger seat, then waited.

“Why didn’t you tell me yesterday you were the trustee?” he asked.

She crossed her arms over her middle. “My instructions were not to tell anyone before the reading of the will.”

“I helped you rescue your horse.”

“Doesn’t work that way, Gabe.”

He shifted, the chilly November air penetrating his dress shirt. Why hadn’t he grabbed his suit jacket before coming outside?

“Isn’t there a conflict of interest?”

“Rest assured, I’m completely unbiased when it comes to my job, and completely professional.”

“Your father has been after Dos Estrellas for years. Twice he tried to buy it when Dad fell behind on the property taxes. And he made an offer earlier this year. Dad was going through chemo. Nothing like kicking a man when he’s down.”

“What are you implying?”

“Can you be relied on not to use your position to advance your father’s ambitions?”

She pivoted on her high heels. It was a miracle she didn’t lose her balance and face-plant in the driveway. “I’m going to pretend you didn’t say that.”

Gabe took hold of her elbow. They both stilled. “It’s a fair question.”

“I have never used my job to advance my father’s ambitions or my own. Nor would I. You asking such a thing is insulting.”

“Look at me, Reese.” He waited until did. “I’m protecting my family.”

She sagged, some of the fight going out of her. “You’re angry—about the terms of the will and your brothers inheriting two-thirds of the ranch. You were also taken aback learning I’m the trustee. For those reasons, I’ll pretend you didn’t just question my ethics.”

“Our fathers didn’t get along.”

“I disagree. They actually liked and admired each other greatly. My father has always spoken very highly of yours.”

“They were business rivals. And your father was considerably more successful than mine.”

“Your father had two families to support. I’m an only child, and my mother left when I was eight. It makes a difference.”

Her parents’ divorce was another similarity they shared. While Gabe’s father had taken a mistress, Reese’s mother had abandoned her family, running away with her lover, who was, at the time, the Small Change’s tax accountant.

“And your father came from money,” Gabe said.

“Which gave him all the more reason to admire yours. August Dempsey made something of himself from humble beginnings.”

Gabe didn’t voice what was on his mind, that, in the end, his father had lost much of what he’d built. The family would be paying off his medical bills for years. Which meant Reese would be the trustee of his father’s estate for a long, long time.

“Can we not argue about this?” She glanced down at her arm, which Gabe still held.

He let his hand drop and instantly missed the intimate contact. He’d felt warmth beneath the fabric of her jacket. And soft, supple flesh. It had stirred his senses.

“Does your boss know about the feud between our families?”

“Of course he does.”

“And he doesn’t care?”

“First of all, I’m the one who told Walt. I thought it would be best he hear it from me. Secondly, as I said earlier, I’m required by my position with the bank to be honest and fair. Also, every detail of my work will be scrutinized by the board.” She squared her shoulders. “Should even one small detail come under question, my job could be at stake. I won’t risk it.”

“You don’t need to work. Your father’s well-off.”

Reese inhaled sharply. “You’re hardly an expert on my personal life.”

Gabe could have kicked himself. “I’m sorry. I was out of line.”

“Fine. Apology accepted.” She reached for the open car door. “Now, if you don’t mind.”

“Would I also be out of line if I requested someone else at the bank be appointed as trustee? Surely, you aren’t the only person qualified.”

He expected her to be mad. She fooled him again by dismissing his question with an indifferent shrug. “You can ask. The answer will be no.”

“Why?”

“I’m not at liberty to say.”

“Sounds like a convenient excuse.”

“It isn’t.”

Again, she’d barely reacted. Gabe found that interesting. Reese was either incredibly confident or she knew something she wasn’t telling.

Her cell phone chimed from her jacket pocket. Extracting the phone, she glanced at the display and promptly answered with an anxious, “Yes, Enrico.” After a pause, she said, “I’ll be right there,” and disconnected. “I have to go,” she told Gabe.

“Is everything okay?”

“Yes. No.” She fumbled with the phone before returning it to her pocket. “My father fell from the porch steps.”

“Is he hurt?”

“Banged his knee. He may need to see the doctor.”

For a banged knee? Gabe thought Reese might be overreacting. Theo McGraw was tough as nails and wouldn’t be bothered by a little tumble off the porch steps. “Call me if you need anything.”

She narrowed her gaze. “Really? After raking me over the coals, you’re offering to be the good neighbor?”

“I, um...”

He’d started to say he was concerned for her, then changed his mind at the last second. He didn’t give a damn about Reese McGraw.

Except, that wasn’t true. He did feel something for her. Compassion and sympathy, at least. Why else would he have kept her secret all these years?

If not for their fathers’ rivalry, their relationship might have taken a different path. They had been classmates and neighbors. Dating in high school wouldn’t have been far-fetched.

Anything transpiring between them now, however, was out of the question, and Gabe was wise to maintain a safe distance.

The problem was he wanted to take her in his arms, give her a hug and tell her not to worry. Her father was going to be fine.

“I don’t hate you, Reese. And I don’t wish your father ill. If he needs help, or you, call me.”

“Thank you.” She slid onto the driver’s seat, her hands gripping the steering wheel. “I’ll see you tomorrow at two.”

Aware he was crossing an invisible line, Gabe covered one of her white-knuckled hands with his. She was obviously worried about her father. “Drive careful. It’s getting dark.”

For a moment, they remained where they were. If Gabe didn’t know better, he’d think a part of her wanted to stay. But that was ridiculous.

Whatever spell they’d fallen under ended, and she started the engine. Gabe watched her depart, thinking he should return to the house. Why, then, didn’t he? At the end of the long road leading from the ranch house to the main road, Reese’s brake lights illuminated. She turned left, in the direction of the Small Change.

He might have spent more time contemplating why her father’s seemingly minor fall prompted her to leave in such a hurry except he was interrupted by the last person he wanted to see. His brother Josh.

Dammit. What did the man want now? The shirt off Gabe’s back?

“Hope I didn’t interrupt anything.”

Gabe ground his teeth together. His brother’s timing was impeccable. Or, perhaps, intentional. He could have spotted Gabe and Reese from the living room window.

“You didn’t.” Gabe pushed past him. Whatever Josh wanted, he wasn’t interested.

“Got a minute?”

Gabe halted and cursed under his breath. “For what?”

They’d hardly spoken these past few days despite living in close quarters. Gabe had no intention of changing the status quo.

“You and her,” Josh hitched his chin in the direction Reese had driven in her car, “are you friends?”

Gabe’s hackles rose. His relationship with Reese was no one’s business. Especially Josh’s.

“We’re neighbors.”

“I know. I lived here once.”

He couldn’t help thinking the reference to Josh residing at the ranch before Gabe came to live there was intentional.

“What I’m asking is, are you close?”

He stared his brother down.

Josh held his own. “It’s a reasonable question. She’s going to control the ranch’s finances. If you and Reese are involved, there could be a conflict of interest.”

Five minutes ago, Gabe had been asking Reese the same question. Now he defended her.

“She’s a professional. She won’t do anything to jeopardize her position at the bank.”

“But you’re friends.”

“I’m not discussing her with you.” Gabe once again started for the house and once again, Josh halted him with his words.

“I don’t like this any better than you.”

“We have nothing in common.”

“Other than our father and this ranch and the fact we have to work together. Or agree to sell.”

That rankled Gabe. “I’m not selling.”

“Think about it before you decide. Dad left us with a lot of bills to pay and little means at our disposal. Selling would get us out of debt and free us to move on.”

“There’s no we as far as I’m concerned. Our father promised me the ranch. Not you and your brother.”

Josh inhaled deeply as if to control his temper. “Cole and I have every right to inherit a share of Dos Estrellas.”

“Because why? We happen to share the same blood?” Gabe snorted in disgust. “You haven’t set foot on this place for twenty-four years.”

“He cheated on my mother.”

Josh had targeted Gabe’s one weak spot, and the blow inflicted the desired damage.

He knew with all his heart his father had loved his mother deeply. That didn’t make it right for him to disregard his marriage vows. Gabe’s mother had raised him to be honorable. It was hard for him to accept the fact his father hadn’t divorced his wife before becoming involved with Gabe’s mother.

He’d asked once when he was twelve. His mother’s face had immediately hardened, and she told him to never, ever bring up the subject again or she’d tan his hide. It was a private matter between her and his father.

In his early twenties, Gabe approached his father and got no further with him. The reason his father gave for not marrying his mother—that Gabe’s maternal grandfather was very traditional and didn’t approve—smacked of an excuse. When Gabe pressed, his father had stormed from the room. Only the love and devotion he felt for both his parents kept him from resenting them.

“We’re done talking.” Gabe strode ahead without looking back.

Good manners dictated he should return to the house and tell Hector goodbye. The attorney had been his father’s closest confidant. But, like yesterday, Gabe needed an outlet to vent his frustration.

It was too late and too dark for a ride in the nearby mountains. Not too late to clean out the tack room, he decided. Nothing beat tossing a few crates and harnesses around to burn off steam. Dress shirt be damned.

“I remember,” Josh called after him. “It was you who punched me in the nose at school. You had a pretty good right hook for a kid.”

Gabe didn’t miss a step, though it was the first thing his brother had said that made him smile.

* * *

REESE OPENED THE jewelry box on her bedroom dresser, lifted out the top tray and removed a tiny framed picture hidden beneath. It was a ritual. Every year on this day, Celia’s birthday, Reese studied the picture of her newborn daughter, let the memories of her birth warm her heart and then placed a phone call.

Today, Reese came home from the bank during her lunch hour in order to call Celia, but also to check on her father. His tumble off the porch yesterday could have been worse. Luckily, he hadn’t fallen far, but he had landed hard and badly bruised his knee. Loss of balance was a common side effect of Parkinson’s. As was stooped posture. Her father looked ten years older than he had mere months ago. She’d also noticed a slight tremor in his right hand and a quiver in his voice. Each new symptom increased her despair.

Feeling the weight of the little silver frame in her hand, Reese stared at Celia’s infant face and was reminded of why she’d excused herself after lunching with her father and retreated to her bedroom. How could she not be thinking of her daughter on this special day? The problem with Parkinson’s was it consumed the thoughts of the person afflicted with it, along with their family members.

While Celia’s parents made no secret of her adoption, they and Celia were the only ones who knew Reese was her birth mother. Shortly after her high school graduation, Reese had moved to Oregon to live with her older cousin Megan on the pretense of taking a year off before college. There, she’d given birth to Celia, who was then adopted by Megan and her husband.

They adored Celia. They also encouraged her to have a relationship with Reese, for which Reese felt grateful and blessed.

Ever since Celia could talk, Reese called her on a prearranged day once a month. Three times over the years, she’d flown to Oregon for a visit. In her closet, Reese kept a small trunk filled with letters from Celia, drawings, cards, photographs and, lately, school papers. Her computer contained numerous picture files organized by age.

Someday, when they were both ready, Celia would come to Mustang Valley for a visit and to meet her grandfather. Reese hoped it was soon, before the Parkinson’s advanced to the point her father couldn’t function or communicate.

“Hi, sweet pea,” Reese said when Celia answered the phone. “Happy eleventh birthday.”

“Reese! You called.”

“Of course.” Reese bit back a sob. Her emotions were getting the best of her today. “It sounds like you have a cold.”

“We were supposed to go out for pizza tonight.” Celia snuffled. “Now we have to wait for the weekend.”

“That’s too bad.”

“I got your present. Thank you. The boots are exactly the ones I wanted.”

They talked for twenty minutes until Reese had to say goodbye. The meeting at Dos Estrellas was scheduled for two, and she wanted to check on her father one last time before leaving.

“I hope you feel better soon,” she said.

“Me, too. But I get to miss school, so that part’s good.”

Reese enjoyed their easy banter. “Send me pictures of the pizza party.”

“I will. Goodbye, Reese.”

“Goodbye, sweet pea.” Reese disconnected before softly saying, “I love you.” She and Celia weren’t quite close enough for her to speak the words. Not yet, anyway. Maybe one day. She refused to push.

In the kitchen, she found her father sitting at the table, having his customary afternoon coffee.

“I thought the doctor said caffeine was bad for you,” she scolded.

“Would you rather I have a whiskey?”

“Dad!”

“I’ve given up everything worthwhile. You’re not taking away my coffee.”

“Fine.” She patted his shoulder and kissed the top of his head. “I won’t tattle on you.”

“Your Aunt Louise sent me an email earlier. She wants to come for a visit at Christmas.”

“Great!” Reese’s mood brightened. She adored her father’s younger sister, who’d been like a second mother to her after her parents divorced. “How long’s she going to stay?”

“I told her no. That we were busy.”

“What!” Reese dropped into the chair across from her father and gaped at him.

“It’s not a good time.”

“You can’t hide your Parkinson’s forever.”

“I’m not ready to tell her.”

“It won’t be Christmas without family visiting.”

“Your Aunt Louise is a busybody. Always thinks she knows what’s best for people.”

“She loves you.”

“She’ll interfere.”

Reese bit her tongue. Her father was the one sick, not her. It was his choice whom he told and when, regardless if she disagreed.

“Off to your meeting at Dos Estrellas?” He was attempting to distract her, and she let him.

“Depending on how long the meeting lasts, I may come straight home and skip going back to the bank.”

“I’m still trying to wrap my brain around you being the trustee of August Dempsey’s estate.”

She’d finally informed her father last night, when she was able to do so. “Strange, I know.”

“August must be having himself one heck of a good laugh up in heaven.”

“He did choose the bank to act as trustee.”

“Probably didn’t realize you’d be the one running the show.”

There was no way for Reese to respond without violating her client’s privacy, so she said nothing.

“Poor man,” her father said. “He must have hated seeing the ranch fall to ruin like it did.”

“Dos Estrellas is hardly in ruins.”

“It’s buried in debt.”

Buried was an exaggeration. Waist-deep, maybe. “I can’t discuss the ranch finances with you.”

“He should have sold it to me when he had the chance.”

Reese shook her head. “And what would you do with Dos Estrellas? Let’s be honest, you’re having enough trouble running the Small Change.”

He grunted in displeasure. “Don’t count me out yet.”

“Never.” She smiled and kissed his head again before retrieving her briefcase and a travel mug of coffee from the counter. “I’ll see you later.”

“Good luck,” he called after her.

Reese passed Enrico on the way to her car, and they exchanged hellos. The ranch foreman was heading inside to give her father a report. The loyal employee had been doing that more and more of late, three or four times a day. And because her father was being regularly checked on, Reese was able to leave the house, confident he’d be all right.

In the indeterminable future, whether her father agreed or not, they would need to hire a caretaker. Reese could anticipate how their conversation would go and was dreading it.

During the ten-minute drive to Dos Estrellas, she mentally prepared for the meeting. This, she realized, was the third day in a row she’d see Gabe. She should get used to it. With her new responsibilities, they would be in frequent contact. The notion gave her a not-so-small shiver of anticipation—which she promptly squashed. Her attraction to Gabe was inappropriate, and even if they were to date, the timing couldn’t be worse. He had a ranch in serious financial trouble to run alongside two brothers he didn’t get along with.

Reese slowed to take the turn into the Dos Estrellas driveway. She parked in the same spot as yesterday, instantly reminded of her and Gabe’s awkward, yet strangely intimate, parting. She’d have sworn he was about to say something revealing and romantic to her. When he didn’t, she blamed her overactive imagination playing tricks on her.

But there was that moment between them on the hilltop when he’d fastened her into the poncho...

Enough, she told herself. This has to stop.

Raquel Salazar answered Reese’s knock on the door, smiling affectionately. “Come in, chiquita.”

Little girl? Reese could hardly call herself that. Raquel, however, was the motherly type who called everyone by an endearment.

“I have the office all set for you.” Raquel indicated a door off the living room. “This way.”

August’s home office was a masculine mixture of functional and comfortable. Situated behind a heavy antique desk was an oversized executive chair. It nearly swallowed Reese when she sat down. Certificates lined one wall. August, it appeared, had been a member of several professional organizations, including the Arizona Cattlemen’s Association.

On the other wall hung family portraits spanning several decades, back to the first Dempsey who’d originally purchased the land and built the ranch. A well-worn leather couch sat beneath the portraits and looked cozy enough to sink into for long hours of reading or listening to the old-fashioned stereo system.

Notably absent was evidence of modern technology. No computer. No TV, flat-screen or otherwise. No smartphone docking station or Bluetooth speaker. In fact, the one phone was an antiquated desktop model with a push-button dial pad, and the clock required a weekly winding to run.

Reese glanced around the room. “Where did August keep the ranch records?”

“In here.” Raquel walked to a black lateral filing cabinet adjacent to the couch and opened the top drawer.

Reese could see rows and rows of hanging file folders with various headings: Payroll, Vehicles, Insurance, Veterinary Care, to name a few. “What about the financial information?”

“Ah.” Raquel pulled out an elongated brown binder, which she placed on the desk in front of Reese. “Do you mean this?”

“Wow.” Reese opened the binder and stared in amazement at the three-to-a-page checks and the thick stack of stubs. “I didn’t know anybody used manual checks anymore.”

“August didn’t trust computers.”

“So I see.” Reese sighed, flipping through the stubs and noting the entries. “What about income? How did he track that?”

Raquel opened a side drawer of the desk. Inside were a half dozen green accounting ledger books stacked one on top of the other.

“Great.” Reese definitely had her work cut out for her. “Prior year tax returns handy?”

Those were in the next drawer down. Reese was relieved to see they’d been prepared by a local CPA.

Thankfully, Hector Fuentes had given her a flash drive with August’s plan for the ranch, including a month-by-month and year-by-year schedule. Reese wasn’t sure what she’d have done with handwritten notes.

“I’ll tell the boys you’re here,” Raquel said and left, her footsteps soundless on the thick, colorful area rug.

Reese removed her laptop from her briefcase and powered it up. She also pulled out a copy of the entire living trust. When, a few minutes later, no one had yet arrived, she began examining the first accounting journal. It was meticulously updated until four months ago. After that, the entries were sketchy, then they stopped altogether.

August had probably gotten too sick to continue, which didn’t bode well for the ranch finances.

Cole entered the office, removing his cowboy hat and running a hand through his windblown blond hair. Not the person Reese expected to see first.

“Hi.” She greeted him in her best assistant bank manager smile. “Have a seat.”

Raquel had brought in three chairs from the dining room and placed them across from the desk. Cole chose the one on the right and, sitting, balanced his hat on his knee.

“Will this take long?” he asked.

“I’m not sure. Depends on a number of things.”

“Like?” He couldn’t have a bigger chip on his shoulder if he tried.

“The number of questions you all have. How quickly we get through reviewing the records. What shape they’re in.” Terrible, these past four months. “How cooperative you are.”

He answered by slouching in the chair, crossing his boots at the ankles and his arms over his stomach.

Reese wasn’t impressed or intimidated.

Gabe entered the office next with Josh right behind him. If she didn’t know better, she’d think they arrived together. But that was impossible, right?

“Hey, Reese.” Josh grinned affably before taking the middle chair. “It is okay if I call you Reese?”

“Of course,” she replied, trying not to stare at Gabe like a love-struck teenager.

He’d clearly come from the pastures or barn or wherever it was he’d been working. He smelled of the outdoors and looked ruggedly handsome with his tanned complexion and two-day growth of beard. With a nonchalance both unconscious and incredibly sexy, he sat, rolled down his shirtsleeves and rebuttoned them at the cuffs, but not before Reese caught sight of strong, prominently muscled arms with a light dusting of hair.

She remembered those arms from when they’d held her the night of their senior prom. She’d thought then they were the kind of arms a woman could rely on to take care of her and keep her safe.

“Are we ready to start?” Thankfully, her voice didn’t betray the riot of emotions warring inside her.

Her Holiday Rancher

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