The Ranch She Left Behind. Kathleen O'Brien
Читать онлайн книгу.She had climbed halfway up toward the back porch steps when she heard Rowenaâs voice, equal parts shock and delight. âPea, is it really you?â
Penny smiled as Ro came rushing through the door, her arms still full of linens sheâd obviously been folding. Rowena had always been an uncorked bottle of raw emotion. The difference, now that sheâd found true love here in Bell River, was that the emotion bubbling out of her was happiness, not anger.
âWhat on earth are you doing here? Why didnât you call?â She draped an unfolded sheet across her shoulder like a toga, freeing her arms for hugging. The sheet was warm, straight from the dryer, and smelled sweet and clean.
âIâm sorry,â Penny said. âI wanted to surprise you, soââ
âIâm surprised, all right!â Rowena laughed. âLook at you! You look fantastic!â She smoothed the sleeve of Pennyâs dress affectionately, with that big-sister pride, and Penny grinned as if sheâd just gotten an A on something important. âBut darn it. Weâve got every single room rented out through September. If Iâd known you were coming...â
Rowena frowned, her green eyes fiercely focused on solving the problem immediately. âLetâs seeââ
âItâs okay, Ro.â Penny took a breath. âYou see, Iâm notââ
âNaw, donât worry.â Rowena grinned, tucked her hand under Pennyâs elbow and led her toward the house. âWeâll think of something. Weâll kick Alec out of his room if we have to. Heâs in the doghouse anyhow, for sneaking out last night, andââ
âI did not sneak out! I left a note!â As if out of nowhere, Alec suddenly bounded up the stairs behind them. âHi, Penny! You can have my room if you want, but I did not sneak out!â
Penny turned, hardly recognizing the mud ball she saw rushing toward her. Rowenaâs new stepson, ten-year-old Alec Garwood, was ordinarily a twinkling, ridiculously handsome four-foot-three hunk of pure mischief. Today, though...
Today Alecâs clothes and cowboy boots were black, his hands were silver, and his face and hair were gray. At first glance he looked like a statue, but Penny realized quickly that he was covered in mud from head to toeâhis thick blond thatch sticking out like a witchâs broom, and his white teeth and blue eyes gleaming from his gray face like jewels embedded in a cave wall.
He hugged Penny as if everything were perfectly normal, though, and seemed shocked when Rowena cried out in a mixture of laughter and horror. âWhat do you think youâre doing? Youâre going to ruin Peaâs pretty dress!â
âWhy?â Alec reared back, insulted. Then he glanced down at his hands. âOh. Yeah. Sorry. Trouble was chasing a duck. I had to stop him. Heâs even dirtier than I am.â
âGreat.â Rowena rolled her eyesâbut there was no real anger in her voice. From the start, Rowena had doted on this rascally little boy. âThat dogâs not coming in the house until heâs clean. And neither are you.â She poked the tip of her index finger onto the center of Alecâs head, and twirled it to signal that he should turn around. âBarn hose. Now.â
Alec smiled, showing those diamond teeth and cracking the drying mud around his lips. He never minded being scolded, which was a good thing, since he seemed chronically to be in trouble.
âSee you later, Penny,â he said, waving a filthy hand, dislodging gobbets of mud, which then rained onto the porch. âIf you use my room, be careful. Definitely donât open the jar under the bed, okay?â
âOh, my dear Lord.â Rowena laughed out loud. âScat, you disgusting creature!â
They both watched the boy trot away, whistling merrily and calling for his dog. He passed Barton James, the general manager Ro had hired last year, and the two high-fived each other. Barton never so much as blinked at the mud that caked the boy.
âPenny!â Barton bounded up the stairs, apparently as delighted to see Penny as if they were best buddies, when actually sheâd met him only a couple of times.
But everyone loved Barton, and Barton loved everyone. She accepted his hug without reservationâlaughing when he had to slip his guitar around to his back to make room. How he managed to get so much accomplished, and yet always be strumming some tune on that old thing, no one could ever understand.
âGood thing youâre here,â he said merrily. âIâve just about got the older two Wright gals married off, and I was wondering who Iâd matchmake next.â
Penny laughed. âNot me,â she assured him. âIâve sworn off men for an entire year.â
He frowned, as if sheâd said she ate little green Martians for lunch. âPoppycock,â he said. âA year? At your age? Canât be done.â
âBarton, not everyone is as romantic as you are.â Rowena shook her head. âHey, see if you can find Bree, okay? Let her know Pennyâs come home!â
âDone,â he said. He kissed Penny one more time, then held her at armâs length, appraising her. âIâm thinking an older man. Not old like me. I wish. But a few years older than you, maybe. Seen the world. Would know how to treat a lady.â
âBarton.â Rowena gave him The Look.
âOkay, okay,â he said, grinning, and then he sauntered off, swinging his guitar back to the front.
Rowena turned to Penny with a smile. âSorry about that. He really is such a darling old man. But he can be a bit much sometimes.â
âI love him,â Penny said honestly. Barton was obviously a treasureâthe perfect general manager for the ranch. Not only was he a charmer who immediately won over every female guest, he was also a former dude ranch owner himself and knew everything. More than once, heâd kept the neophyte Wright women from making terrible mistakes.
As he told it, heâd tried retirement for a couple of years and hated it. He was born to work, and the harder he worked the happier he was. There wasnât a chore too lowly, or a responsibility too heavy for him to take on with a smile. He sawed and painted, cooked and cleaned, ran financial programs and mocked up publicity flyers. He sang and danced, played the guitar and chess and horseshoes and generally made sure no man, woman or child left Bell River Dude Ranch feeling disappointed.
âSorry about Alec, too,â Rowena said. âWeâve got a lot of crazy males around here, apparently. Iâll move the jar, whatever it is.â She shuddered dramatically.
âRo, itâs okay. You donât need to kick Alec out. Iâm not staying at the ranch.â
Rowena stopped abruptly at the threshold and turned. âYouâre not?â
âNo.â
âAw, Penny. You donât have to go back to San Francisco tonight, surely? Dallas would be so disappointed. You havenât even met Gray yet. You canât go back tonight!â
âNo, butââ
âPenny!â Bree appeared in the great room suddenly, balancing a tray of coffee cups and flatware. Obviously Barton hadnât found her, because her face lit up with delighted surprise, and she instantly began searching for a clear space on which to deposit the tray.
Once free, Bree enveloped Penny in a hug so tight she temporarily had to give up all thought of breathing.
âWhy didnât you call?â Bree frowned