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Authors: Anna Jeffrey

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Jude barely halted a catch in her breath and willed her eyes not to bug.
Nooooo!
she wanted to scream, but she said, "What do you mean?"

He lifted his cap and reset it, revealing brown hair,
streaked by the sun and darkened by sweat and curling at his collar. "They never had any kids to leave it to. They sort of favored me."

How could
she not have heard about this? She hadn't known Marjorie Wallace personally, but everyone in Willard County knew that a few months before her death, she had suddenly sold her cattle herd and taken up residence in the town of Lockett's only nursing home. Only then had she revealed she had terminal cancer. Everyone, including Jude, had assumed the 6-0 would be put on the market after its owner passed away.

Jude rarely found herself at a loss for words, but this unexpected news left her scrambling for what to say next. She gave the deceased woman's nephew a nervous titter. "Want to sell it?"

"You’re kidding, right? I'm gonna live here."

Now her heartbeat became a bass drum in her ears. She
swung her eyes to the furniture in the Silverado's bed, then the house, then back to him. "Unless she kept it buried in the backyard, Margie Wallace didn't have any money to leave anybody. You rich?"

Frowning, he tucked back his chin. "That's no business of yours."

"Mister, I'm just saying, it's going to take a bunch of money to make this place even a little bit livable. I'd be surprised if the water well's even any good." She lifted her shoulders in a shrug and opened her palms in a show of feigned indifference. "But, hey. Like you say, it's none of my business."

She started to
ward her pickup again, drawing measured breaths to calm herself.

Damn and double-damn!
She needed this land, had been planning to buy it for weeks. Owning her own place would give her a chance to try her ideas in cattle breeding without Daddy and Grandpa criticizing her every move and bellyaching about why she didn't just get married. Now, the best chance she had run across lately to prove the points that she constantly argued with her father had been snatched away from her by…by some damn
heir
.

The only thing that kept her from breaking down and bawling was that Jud
e Strayhorn didn't cry.

 

 

What the hell was that about?
Brady watched his visitor walk back to a shiny black truck, his eyes on her butt that was molded into skintight denim. With tomboy agility, she climbed into the driver's seat and slammed the door. A one-ton was a big rig for a woman to be driving, but it was one good-looking truck.

And she was one good-looking woman, like something out of a magazine, all neat and polished and gleaming. Hell, her boots could make his next month's child-support payment.
What she had paid for those big-ass sunglasses would buy his groceries for the week. He knew plenty about the cost of women's fashion. He had learned it in a hard lesson from his ex-wife.

Jude Strayhorn.
Little Judith Ann, all grown up and curved in all the right places. He knew her. Sort of. She was a cousin to one of his best friends growing up, Jake Strayhorn. Brady had spent part of his youth hanging out with Jake and another of Jude's cousins, Cable Strayhorn. In those days Judith Ann had been a little kid, always throwing fits and getting in their way.

Without giving him another look, the full-grown woman fired the engine, expertly backed in an arc and turned the big truck around in the narrow driveway.
He spotted a fifth-wheel hookup in the bed. A horse-hauling rig. God knew he had seen enough of those. North Central Texas, where he had come from, was known as cutting-horse country. There, half the pickup trucks on the road pulled luxurious horse trailers filled with high-value horseflesh on the way to cutting shows and competitions.

The daughter of one of the wealthiest ranching families in Texas
was a woman who just might own both of those things, the last woman a man of modest means should ever give a second glance. Rich and spoiled. He knew her type too well, had married it and paid the price. And because he had paid dearly, no woman like her would ever grip him by the balls again.

Even with that dismal reminder and resolution, he watched until she reached the highway, made a right turn and
eventually disappeared into the horizon.

She had affected him in an unexpected way. The image of her athletic body and storm of
red-brown hair whipping around in the wind lingered in his mind. He had always liked the look of long, lean women with thick, luxurious hair. It made him think of something wild and primitive.

Common sense told him to forget it. She was further out of his league than the queen of England.
The Strayhorn family owned most of Willard County. They had probably lost count of all the cows, horses and oil wells they owned. Besides that, there were too many close connections from years back.

For once, he listened to that voice of caution
in his head—something he hadn't always done when it came to the fairer sex—and forced her out of his mind. He had more important things to think about anyhow.

He returned to his inspection
, trying to determine if his inheritance was a boon or a boondoggle. He ambled back toward the outbuildings that were surrounded by tall grass and assorted weeds. Grassburrs stuck on his jeans like miniature cacti. Before going into the big barn, he stopped and picked the prickly little bastards off, then dug a heavy key ring from his pocket and unlocked the padlock on the barn's double doors.

Inside the barn's silent murk, slivers of sunlight seeped through cracks in the weathered wood siding and lay in stripes
across the dirt floor. Dust motes floated in the narrow sunbeams. Brady stood in the center of the huge room and turned in a circle, remembering the day his uncle Harry had given him his first saddle on this very spot. He had been around eight years old. His uncle had known that in the Fallon household, there was no extra money to spend on something as extravagant as a saddle. Brady's throat tightened with emotion.

As a boy
, he had spent summers here at the 6-0 ranch. Back then, he hadn't questioned why his aunt and uncle had taken to him in a way they had not taken to his younger sisters and brother. Not that they had been unkind to his siblings, but they had treated Brady as if he were their own kid.

Later, after he was grown, his mother had told him that Margie and Harry had been unable to have children.
They had always wanted a son. Thus, they had formed a special attachment to Brady from the day he was born.

Seeing the condition of the buildings reminded him that he had been negligent
of his benefactor in recent years. After his marriage, he had been caught up with his new wife, becoming a father and building his business. A few years after that, Uncle Harry died from a stroke. By then, Brady had become preoccupied with his crumbling marriage, his bitter divorce, the nasty custody battle for his son and finally the altogether collapse and liquidation of his business.

Brady hadn't kept in touch with his
widowed aunt as he should have. He hadn't visited her, hadn't even known of her declining health and desperate circumstances until her last days. For that matter, his mother, Aunt Margie's own sister, hadn't known, either. Aunt Margie had always been as private as she was independent. When he heard she had left him everything she owned, a nagging guilt had settled within him and it hadn't gone away yet.

He forced his
attention back to the barn, studying it, applying a professional eye to the buckled walls, the sagging roof supports, the collapsed stalls. The building was older than he was. Back when Uncle Harry had given him that saddle, the barn had been hell-for-stout and whitewashed. It had withstood decades of extreme West Texas weather. Now it was rickety and the paint had weathered away. But having been in the construction business for years and knowing a little about building things, Brady had already determined that all the outbuildings could be saved, including this big old barn.

He moved on to the outside, gazing
out at the barbed wire fencing that stretched as far as his eye could see. Tumbleweeds filled the space between the strands of wire. The pesky thistles might have been accumulating for years. Mounds of tan sand had formed a berm against them. Clearing all of that could be a huge task. Perhaps impossible without tearing out the fence altogether.

He scanned the expanse of pasture searing in silence in the blistering sun, its wild grass pushed east by blusters of westerly breeze. It was a landscape raw and treeless except for new junipers and burgeoning mesquite trees threatening to overpower the grass. In an un
-irrigated pasture in a part of the world where rainwater was scant, those parasites competed with grass for every drop of moisture. The mesquite thorns cut livestock, leaving wounds that were open invitations to blowflies and thus, worms. The thick brush gave the pests and predators a place to hide. The brush and mesquites would have to be poisoned or dug out by the roots and burned. Or all of that.

He narrowed his focus to the outbuildings, all metal
except for the barn. Salvable, but in need of some cleaning, some antirust treatment and some new paint. The rusting steel-pipe corrals needed the same.

And all he needed was money.

And therein lay his biggest problem today.

A blossom of gloom opened in Brady's chest, threatening the optimism he usually felt. He had just come from the courthouse, where he had spent damn near his last spare dime catching up the taxes on the place. The lawyer who had called and informed him of his inheritance had said his aunt had sold everything not nailed down to pay off debt against the land and pay for her last days in the Lockett nursing home. Almost as an afterthought, the guy had added that there had been no surplus funds for paying the taxes.

After filling his truck's gasoline tank, Brady still had a few hundred dollars in his pocket. He had some money, hard earned, in a bank in Stephenville. Most of it was earmarked for child-support payments that automatically went to his ex-wife every month. And that was as it had to be. If so much as a hiccup occurred in the timely arrival of those checks in her mailbox, Brady Fallon would find his ass in jail. His former spouse came from a wealthy family, but she exacted penance from Brady every chance she could find.

The child-support payments were more than a stay-out-of-jail card, though. They
bought him a ticket to see his nine-year-old son, Andy, two weekends of every month. The restricted access was as painful as a slash from one of those mesquite thorns.

As for his need for money in the long term, even with the scars his divorce and the liquidation of his company had left on his credit, he could take his deed for the 6-0 to the bank and borrow against it. He might have to do just that at some point if he intended to get this place in shape, but he would let
a bunch of greedy bankers touch his property only if or when he had to.

He'd had some experience with bankers. Big-time.
He was too aware of the pitfalls of thinking a banker was a buddy, especially if the banker was better buddies with somebody more powerful than Brady.

No, he didn't need a banker at the moment. What he needed was a job and he needed it in a hurry. A way to earn a living until he thought through his options and made decisions.

But all wasn't lost. The guy at the service station had told him the Circle C ranch, a place he had known in his childhood, was hiring ranch hands. That had to be an omen. But was it good or bad?

 

Chapter 2

 

Jude Strayhorn, you are a clumsy nitwit!

On the road again, Jude couldn't keep from chastising herself for how clumsily she had handled the encounter with Margie Wallace's nephew. She just wasn't good in situations that called for finesse. She functioned better in an environment where everything was open and up front, where she could freely speak her mind.

An heir to the 6-0 ranch popping out of the woodwork meant she would no longer be making an offer to buy the old place with money from her trust fund. Her intended trip to Lubbock was no longer necessary. She now had nowhere to go.

Still off balance and disappointed, she picked up her cell phone and keyed in to the direct line of Bob Anderson, the
Lubbock banker who managed her trust fund. When he came on the line, she told him she no longer planned to make a real estate purchase and to halt the transfer of money from her trust fund. When he said he was happy to comply with her request, she heard relief in his tone. He had told her all along he thought it a foolhardy idea for her to purchase grazing land separate and apart from Strayhorn Corp, the entity that owned the Circle C Ranch. In fact, he had almost forbidden it, until she had reminded him that he wasn't her father.

She
had put him in a delicate position. She only hoped he would be discreet enough never to tell Daddy or Grandpa of her intent. Ethically, he shouldn't, but that didn't mean he wouldn't. He, Daddy and Grandpa were well acquainted. The Strayhorn family had had a relationship with the Mercantile National Bank in Lubbock for decades before Jude was born.

Keeping
her activity with the bank a secret had been necessary. Daddy and Grandpa would be hurt that she hadn't, at the very least, discussed her plans with them. But she couldn’t discuss
anything
with them that wasn't something they wanted her to do. Since both of them were clueless about their autocratic attitudes toward her, she had seen no point in stirring up a hornet's nest by bringing up the purchase of land that would be hers alone.

She spent the rest of the trip to Lockett stewing over who she should visit first—her cousin Jake, who, with his finger on the pulse of the county, might be able to tell her what was going on with the 6-0 ranch and Mr. Brady Fallon, or her best friend, Suzanne, on whose shoulder she could cry.
Not exactly cry real tears. To do such a thing would be out of character for a Strayhorn. She had always dealt with her emotional setbacks on her own, though this one might be harder than any she had faced since leaving college.

She chose to see her cousin first and made her way to the sheriff's office.

Among the many things Willard County's two-man sheriff's office did not have was a marble monument to law enforcement. The entire department was housed in a low-slung frame building. The sheriff's residence was on one end and the jail on the other, with the office sandwiched between the two.

Attached to the jail, enclosed by a tall chain-link fence, was an exercise yard a quarter the size of a basketball court. A coil of concertina wire spiraled along the top of it
. It looked to have been added as an afterthought, which, in fact, it had.

The whole setup looked so flimsy,
Jude wondered just how much trouble a determined criminal would have fleeing the jail or the exercise yard. But she knew—and everyone in Willard and the surrounding counties knew—that bars on the windows and razor wire on top of the fence were not the most effective security measures in place at the Willard County jail.

The deterrent against
jailbreak was the sheriff himself. If the .45 attached to Jake Strayhorn's belt didn't cause a criminal to think twice before attempting to run, one look into Jake's intense eyes did. He had been an MP in the army, a special investigator. After that, he had been a Dallas homicide cop. He had seen and handled everything and anything that might be required of a keeper of the peace. Nowadays, as the sheriff of virtually crime-free Willard County, he was as good as retired.

She found her cousin in his office, engrossed in paperwork. Ever the gentleman, he rose when she entered and propped his hands on his belt. People often commented on how much Jude and he
looked alike. He was tall and lanky, but solid of body. He had thick reddish brown hair, similar in color to hers, but his had a few strands of gray. Instead of brown eyes like hers, though, his eyes were distinctly green and as clear as bottle glass. And she had yet to see them give away so much as a scintilla of his deeper thoughts.

He dressed in the manner of m
ost county sheriffs in rural Texas—jeans and a starched, long-sleeve dress shirt. In Jake’s case, it contrasted with his suntanned skin. He wore his gold badge hooked in his left breast pocket, but more than the badge bespoke his authority. The man had a presence that filled a room. He was tough, independent and canny, a package of strong Scots-Irish genes, the stuff pioneer West Texans were made of. He was one of the few people who could intimidate Jude if he chose to. The fact that he had never chosen to was, in Jude's opinion, a mark of his character.

"Jude. How are you, girl?"

He always had time for her, no matter how busy he might be. He always asked about her welfare, but he never asked about the Circle C or anyone else associated with it. Jacob Campbell Strayhorn was the son of Jude's father's brother and, like most of the Strayhorns, a namesake of the original founder of the Circle C ranching empire. By blood, he was as much a part of the family as Jude, but he had distanced himself from all of them except for her and their cousin Cable.

"I'm okay," she said. "You?"

He invited her to sit and offered her coffee. She declined the coffee. "A hot drink raises the body temperature," she told him with a laugh as she took the seat he offered. “I’ve never understood why people want hot drinks when the thermometer registers a hundred degrees.”

Jake grinned. “
Habit. Cops thrive on coffee.”

She grinned, too. “That must be true.”

“Something's on your mind," he said, sinking into his own chair behind his desk.

Jake
was as good as John Edward at reading minds. Jude continued with a lighthearted attitude, intending to put him off his game. "Why would you think something's on my mind? I just stopped by to say hello."

"Jude, honey, if I ever decide to take up poker playing, I hope you're my first opponent."

Okay, so she was a little obvious. She sighed. "It's disconcerting having a conversation with someone who sees right through you. But honest, Jake. Nothing's on my mind. I'm on my way to Suzanne's and I just stopped by. No kidding."

"Uh-huh," Jake said.

Dammit, he didn't believe her. And he knew her too well. She raised her palms in surrender. "Okay, okay. I'm being nosy. I just met the new owner of the 6-0."

Jake leaned forward in his seat and rested his forearms on his desk blotter. "Brady Fallon? Where'd you run into him?"

Brady Fallon. The name still sounded as if it should mean something to her. "At the 6-0. Why didn't you tell me Mrs. Wallace had left her place to her nephew?"

"I didn't know it until I saw
Brady at her funeral. He told me then that he'd be heading out here."

Margie Wallace's funeral had taken place two weeks back. Jude, her father and her grandfather had been present, too. Now she knew why Brady Fallon looked familiar. He had been a pallbearer. "You know him?"

"He's an old friend, though I haven't seen much of him lately. He's been living in Stephenville. You know him, too, if you think about it."

She
searched her memory but came up with zero. "Why should I know him?"

"He used to spend summers with Margie and Harry when he was a kid. He ran around some with Cable and me." Jake picked up a pen and began turning it with his fingers, his eyes leveled on her face. "What were you doing at the 6-0?"

A glimmer of recollection started to glow in Jude's brain, but she refocused on answering Jake's question. No way did she intend for him to find out about her plans that had just been smashed. She ducked his gaze. "I just happened to be driving up the road on my way to town and saw a strange pickup parked at Mrs. Wallace's house. I thought it might be a thief."

Jake’s
brow arched. He stopped playing with the pen. "And you confronted him? Jude, how many times have I—"

"So he inherited that place, lock, stock and barrel, huh?" she asked quickly, sensing a lecture coming. "He told me he's going to live there."

Jake leaned on an elbow on his chair arm. "Maybe. But I wonder. He's taking on a handful. That house is so run-down, I don't know if it can be brought back. And I don't know what shape the other buildings are in. And the pasture..." He shook his head. "I just don't know."

Jude had given only a fleeting thought to the buildings at the 6-0, though she had looked closely at the pasture. It called for some work, for sure. But she couldn't let Jake know she had afforded it so much as a glance. "I guess I haven't looked that closely."

"It's too bad what's happened to that place,” Jake said. “It was pretty once. But it's reached the point of no return, in my opinion."

"From what I knew of Margie Wallace," Jude said, "the appearance of the place would have been the last thing to concern her. I still can't figure out how I missed hearing someone had inherited it. Holy cow, gossip's more prevalent than air around here."

Jake's mouth tipped into a grin. "Sometimes there's a dead branch in the grapevine."

Jude leaned forward and braced her palms on her thighs. "So this Brady guy has got some money, huh? To fix it up, I mean?"

"I don't know. He made good in Fort Worth in the construction business, but he got a divorce a couple of years ago. From the way he talks, I'm guessing he got skinned."

New hope flickered in Jude's heart. "You think he might sell the 6-0, then?"

"He says not. At least, not at this point." Jake leaned forward again, his eyes intently on her face. "Why are you so interested?"

For an instant, Jude wondered how it would feel to be a criminal guilty of something and be interrogated by Jake Strayhorn. "Oh, just being nosy. You know how I am. When you're a native, you just like to know what's going on."

If she'd had any doubt about the legitimacy of the inheritance and the new heir's intentions, this brief conversation with Jake had erased it. Time to change the subject.

"And speaking of what's going on, Jake, I heard
your deputy picked up Jimmy Wilson for DUI the other night."

"Lemme guess
,” Jake said. “Jimmy was one of your students."

Jude had been teaching biology and science and helping coach the girls' sports at Willard County High School since returning from A&M five years ago. With the total high school population at fewer than a hundred kids, she knew most of the teenagers as well as the young adults who had chosen to stay in Willard County rather than move elsewhere to make a living. She had a protective attitude about her students and former students. After all, she had graduated from Willard County High School
herself.

"Last year. I heard this wasn't the first time for him. Is he in a lot of trouble?"

"Not for me to say. It's up to the judge."

Inwardly, she sighed. She
would get nowhere questioning Jake, but she had to stand up for someone she believed to be a good person, someone who deserved a chance.

"He was one of my best students
,” she said. “He's a real smart kid. He has a real interest in science."

"Hangs out with the wrong people," Jake said. "If he's gonna have a future, he needs to get his act together. He should get out of Lockett."

Well, that was more than Jake usually said about people his office dealt with. "Easier said than done, coming from the family he does," Jude replied. "You should talk him into joining the army or something."

In a worse mood than ever and not wanting to
think about or discuss the influence on one of her student of his alcoholic parents, she got to her feet. "Well, I'm on my way to Suzanne's."

Jake, too, rose. She started for the exit but stopped in the doorway and turned back to reassure herself of the answer to one of the questions that had brought her here. "So we aren't kin to this Brady, then?"

She could barely keep all the members of the Campbell-Strayhorn clan straight. Grandpa talked about the dead ones as if they were still alive, which only added to her confusion. And she sometimes ran into distant cousins she didn’t know she had.

"No
pe. He's just an old friend from back when we were kids. Before the..."

Jake ducked his chin and a long pause followed.

Oh, wow!
He had almost said something about the scandalous incident no one discussed at the Circle C, the tragedy that had separated Jake and his mother from the Strayhorn family.

Other than the long
-range consequences, Jude personally hadn't been so greatly impacted by what had happened between Jake's father and her own stepmother or their deaths. She had been too young to be, but Jake had been fourteen when the fatal accident occurred. No doubt he still remembered much of it. He had lost not only his father, but his home and his  whole family on his father’s side. She waited for him to say more, longed for him to discuss it with her.

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