The Rancher and the Girl Next Door. Jeannie Watt

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The Rancher and the Girl Next Door - Jeannie Watt


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the reclining chair, pulling her knees up to her chest as the sky flashed and a blast of thunder shook the trailer almost simultaneously. This was not only her first night alone in her new home, it was one of her first nights really alone anywhere. As in, no family down the hall, no neighbor on the other side of the wall. No neighbors within a quarter of a mile, for that matter.

      It felt…strange.

      But she could handle it.

      In fact, she had a feeling that she might even grow to like it. If not, she only had ten months to get through before she moved back to Vegas.

      Her cell phone buzzed. Claire glanced at the number, debated, and then gave in to the inevitable.

      “Hi, Mom.” She forced a note of cheerful optimism into her voice. Nothing set her mother off like Claire doing what she pleased and enjoying it. Arlene had wanted her to be an engineer. Claire was talented in math, but hated the cut-and-dried engineering way of thinking. She was more free-form—way more free-form—and didn’t understand why Arlene couldn’t see that a free-form engineer who hated to double-check her equations was probably going to be a dangerous engineer. Arlene resented the fact that neither of her daughters had gone into the high-profile, high-paying professions she had chosen for them before they’d entered preschool. And she still hadn’t given up on turning their lives around.

      “I called to see how you’re settling in.”

      “Just fine,” Claire said breezily, deciding not to share her snake adventure just yet. “I’ll be going to school tomorrow to see my new room and do some decorating.”

      “Any regrets?” her mother asked hopefully.

      “Not yet, but there’s still time.” Claire knew that Arlene wanted her to at least entertain the possibility that she’d be sorry for putting off grad school for a year.

      “Well, there’s a reason they can’t keep a teacher at that school.”

      “Any idea what it is?” Claire asked innocently.

      Arlene did not deign to answer, and Claire decided to change the subject while they were still on polite terms. She sifted through several topics and dismissed them all. Her stepfather, Stephen, was off-limits, since he had moved out of the house, informing Arlene that he would not come back unless she decided being a companion was as important as running her business. Claire wasn’t all that sure that Stephen would ever be coming back.

      She couldn’t ask her for career advice—or decorating advice, since she was living in a rundown rented trailer on the edge of a hay field. But she could try cooking, their only common ground.

      “Hey, Mom…” A boom of thunder nearly drowned out her words.

      “What on earth?”

      “Thunderstorm.”

      “You shouldn’t be on the phone.”

      “It’s a cell phone.” Claire decided not to argue. “You’re right.” She smiled slightly. “Thanks for calling, Mom. I was lonely.”

      “Goodbye, Claire. It was good talking to you.”

      Claire pushed the end button. It really hadn’t been too bad a conversation. They’d both behaved fairly well. She held the phone in her hand for a moment, then punched in her sister’s number. Regan answered on the first ring.

      “I’ve been waiting,” she said.

      “Why?” Claire knew why. For about nine-tenths of her life, she’d run every decision past Regan, even if she rarely followed her sister’s advice. It was a habit that had started when they were young, and continued well into college. It wasn’t until Regan had moved away from Las Vegas that Claire realized maybe life wasn’t always a joint venture.

      “Because you’ve never lived alone before.”

      “Well, I’ve been alone,” Claire said, “and this isn’t all that different.”

      “So how are you settling in?”

      “Fine, now that Brett got the snake out of the house…”

      “The snake?”

      “My students hid a snake in my house before I got here. It scared the daylights out of me when I found it, and since I don’t know anything about snakes, I had Brett come and remove it. Then I asked him out for a beer as a thank-you and he told me he doesn’t socialize.”

      There was silence on the other end of the line, and then Regan murmured, “Don’t take it personally.”

      “That’s what he said,” Claire replied, swinging her legs over the one arm of the chair and leaning back against the other. “And I’m not. I just thought it was odd, which makes me wonder, why are the gorgeous ones always tweaked in some weird way?”

      Regan laughed.

      “What?”

      “Oh, I was just thinking that you could take a long look in the mirror and ask yourself that same question.”

      “Ha, ha, ha.” They talked for a few more minutes, making plans to meet when Claire made her next trip to Wesley for supplies.

      “Speaking of shopping,” Regan said, “Kylie is planning an Elko trip and she wants to know when you can come. She says your taste is better than mine, which, I have to tell you, worries her father a bit.”

      “Tell her to name the day,” Claire said with a laugh. Elko shopping was nothing like Vegas shopping, but it was a heck of a lot better than Barlow Ridge shopping or Wesley shopping. And Kylie, Regan’s stepdaughter, was a girl after Claire’s own heart. A true renegade.

      Claire finally hung up and set the phone back on the side table. The thunderstorm had passed without dropping any rain, but the air in the trailer felt fresher, cooler. She got to her feet and headed down the narrow hallway to her bedroom, walking a little faster as she passed the washing machine. Logic told her there were no more snakes lying in wait for her, but her instincts told her to take no chances. She’d yet to have much experience with animals, but when she did, she wanted them to be furry and friendly.

      “YOU THE NEW TEACHER?”

      Claire smiled at the grouchy-looking woman behind the mercantile counter. “Yes, I am.”

      “Gonna stay?”

      “One year.” Claire spoke easily, truthfully.

      The woman snorted. “That’s the reason the kids are running wild, you know.”

      “What is?”

      “The fact that none of you will stay.”

      “Yes, well, there’s not a lot to do here, is there?”

      The woman gave her another sour look, but didn’t argue. It would have been hard to. The community had one store, a bar that served food and a community center that looked as if it was well over a hundred years old. Actually, everything in the town looked a hundred years old. Including the proprietress of the store, who was still glaring at Claire as if it were her fault teachers didn’t want to settle permanently in a community a zillion miles from civilization.

      “I’m Claire Flynn,” she said with her best smile.

      “Anne McKirk,” the woman grudgingly replied.

      “You have a nice store.” It was definitely an everything-under-the-sun store. Food, hardware, crafts, clothing. One of the soda coolers held veterinary medications. It wasn’t a large space, but it was packed to the rafters.

      “I try.”

      Claire unloaded her basket on the counter. She would have liked some fresh fruit, but considering the circumstances, she’d take what she could get.

      “Your sister taught here.”

      “Yes. Three years ago.”

      “She was good,


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