it doesnât?â
He didnât like her pessimism. â If it doesnât . . . Iâll leave. Iâll give you an annulmentâif thatâs still an option . . .â
She was shaking her head, clutching the pillow against her stomach like her life depended on it. âNo.â
What did he go and say that for?
âDonât need your answer now. Mull it over.â He put his hat on his head.
âDonât need to.â
He glanced out the window. âOliviaâs âbout done with the weeding. All right if I keep my promise?â
Her lips pressed together. She was tempted to say no, but she wouldnât. âFine. Have her back in an hour. And not one word of this.â
âYes, maâam.â He touched the brim of his hat. âStay off that foot now.â He left just in time. The pillow hit the door right behind him.
14
M r. McCoy showed me how to skip rocks.â Olivia moved her bowl closer on the TV tray. Sheâd fixed a corn and black bean salad for them after Shay had insisted that Travis finally leave.
Shay hadnât had a pain pill in hours, not wanting to doze off again, but she was taking one before bed, that was for sure.
âHe can make âem skip, like, ten or twelve times. Iâm not that good yet, but he told me if you pick a real flat one . . .â
Shay set the fork on her empty plate and resisted the urge to roll her eyes. All sheâd heard since Olivia had returned was Mr. McCoy this, Mr. McCoy that . She was going to gag at the next mention of his name.
â. . . and Mr. McCoy said . . .â
Heaven help me .
Sheâd been napping when they returnedâhadnât woken until afternoon. By then Travis had fixed the corral fence, organized the tack room, and apparently held the world on its axis.
She couldnât get his offer off her mind, crazy as it was. She even called the county clerkâs office, making sure it was just as Travis said.
Still, they could file for an annulment. A little paperwork, a little time, and all this would be over. Only one thing had stopped her from doing it.
Her ranch. She needed the money and the help. Theyâd only managed today because of Travis. Her friends had ranches of their own, financial problems of their own. The recession had hit everyone hard.
Everyone except Travis, apparently.
One minute sheâd find herself thinking this was the perfect solution. It would give them half a shot at stability, if only for five months. But if she was smart, she could set them up for the future. Could make some investments that would pay dividends down the road and give her enough operating capital to keep things going long term.
Then sheâd remember the look in his eyes.
She didnât need that. Didnât want his . . . whatever it was. How could she protect her heart for five long months? Waking to him every morning, working side by side, sitting across from him meal after meal after meal.
And then sheâd decided, no. She couldnât do it. Wouldnât risk her heart with a man whoâd already cut and run once before. Wouldnât face the whispers when everyone thought they were together again. The looks of pity whenâ
The lights went out, and the whirring fan of the air conditioner went quiet.
âMom?â
The tray rattled as Shay set her spoon in her bowl.
âWhat happened, Mom? Itâs not storming . . .â Her daughterâs voice sounded younger than her years.
Maybe it was a breaker. Or someone hitting a pole. âIâm not sure.â Shay pushed her tray back. Who was she kidding? It wasnât a breaker, and there was no accident. âWeâre a little behind on the electric bill.â
And the mortgage. And the phone. And the credit card. Did she really think they wouldnât follow through on their threat to shut it off?
âWhat are we gonna do?â
Shay had exactly $72.54 in the bank. She was saving that
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