going to tell your parents?â
âTalked to them this afternoon. Iâll keep tabs on the ranch for them. They know about our marriageâsaid to tell you congrats.â
Something like a growl snarled across the line. âGood-bye, McCoy.â
âGet used to it, darlinâ.â
Her answer was a click followed by a dial tone.
15
T ravis pulled his truck to Shayâs barn and turned off the ignition. It was predawn, and the house lights were off, the property quiet. Home sweet home. At least for the next five months.
He exited the cab and made his way toward the barn on buoyant legs. He loved mornings. The crisp air, the smell of dew. But that wasnât why he could scarcely keep his feet on the ground.
He didnât take this second chance for granted. Heâd winged a thousand prayers of gratitude skyward since Shayâs call, in between packing his bags and tossing in bed until his alarm sounded.
He entered the barn and flipped the light switch. Nothing. Strange. He felt his way to the tack room and flipped that one. Same thing.
Faulty fuse? Electricity out? It hadnât stormed. There couldâve been an accident, but heâd had electricity at the Barr M.
Probably just a breaker. He fetched the flashlight in his truck and found the breaker box in the barn. Nothing wrong there. He needed light to work, and the sun wasnât going to hasten its arrival. He wondered where Shay kept her generator.
Travis scanned the barn but didnât see one. He hated to wake her, but chores were waiting.
Making up his mind, he lit out for the house. The darkened structure took on a new meaning. Electricity probably went out in the middle of the night. Shayâs alarm wouldnât have gone off.
He turned off the flashlight as he reached for the doorknob. No sense spooking them. The door was unlocked, just as he expected. If heâd thought the barn was dark, the house was a cave. He closed the door quietly. The air was cool. The girls must be freezing.
Two steps in, a phone pealed loudly. Shayâs cell lit up across the room. Maybe it was the electric company. No, not this early.
Between rings, he heard the bedding rustle in Shayâs room.
Better answer before Olivia woke too. He started for the phone, bumped his leg on a table, and hobbled the last few steps, biting his tongue.
He grabbed the phone on what felt like the twentieth ring. âYeah,â he said quietly.
No response.
âHello?â he said, louder.
Across the room, there was an awkward thump-thump in the vicinity of Shayâs bedroom. He pictured her standing in the doorway, crutched, rumpled, and most likely glaring. No wonder, after the ruckus heâd made.
âWho is this?â a voice demanded. Beau Meyers: the riled version.
Travis walked the phone toward Shayâs shadow. âFor you.â What was he doing here, in her house, answering her phone? There was no hiding the lack of electricity now. Of course he had to find out. But she didnât have to like it. And she didnât have to like his waltzing into her place like he owned it and answering her personal phone.
Shay snatched the lit-up cell from his hand. âThis is Shay.â It came out like a croak.
âWas that McCoy ?â
Beau. Perfect. She cleared her throat. â âMorning, Beau.â
âDonât good morning me, Shay. Whatâs he doing there?â
She shouldered the phone, shut the door firmly, adding a glare she knew Travis couldnât see, and hobbled toward her bed. This was not the way sheâd planned to tell Beau. Why hadnât she just broken things off at the picnic? It was all Travisâs fault. Blast the man.
âShay?â
âItâs a long story. I was going to tell you.â
âBy all means, go right ahead.â
She couldnât blame him for being sore. She was a lowlife, letting him think there was more to their relationship. Her foot had begun
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