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Authors: Anna Jeffrey

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“Right-O,” Kelly said.

As Shannon latched her seat belt, she cast one last look at the corner and a comfortable future, not only herself, but also for her elderly grandmother.

On the way back to the real estate office, her thoughts settled on her grandmother, Evelyn Piper, in whose home Shannon lived. With the elderly woman’s only income being a small social security check, to help both of them, Shannon had moved in. In exchange for a roof over her head, Shannon had assumed their living expenses. And plenty of living expenses existed in a Victorian house that had been built in the nineteenth century. The heating and air conditioning bill alone was a monthly gasp.

Still, Shannon was happy living there and felt fortunate to have her grandmother in her life. It was nice to go home at night to someone who genuinely cared about her, something she’d never had in her whole life until now. But there was more to it than that. Grammy Evelyn had given her a new start when no one else in the world gave two hoots that she was alive. Shannon would never forget it.

Unfortunately, with the collapse of the mortgage business and foreclosures emerging everywhere, home sales had slowed to a crawl. Once, more than a dozen agents hung their licenses with Shannon and her small company was on its way to being the best. Now, most of the agents had had left to take jobs with regular paychecks. Shannon’s sales staff had shrunk to one team of herself and three other women.

The four of them were lean and mean, but they had to dig business from under every rock. No one of them could afford to be a slacker. She was the only one who didn’t have a husband to support her and pay the bills. Her share of commissions covered her expenses and still allowed her an income, but a small one. If the market didn’t pick up soon, she could be in big trouble. But all of those facts only reinforced her enthusiasm for buying the five-acre tract.

Kelly was as excited as Shannon. “Just think, Shannon, if you could get that corner, you could sell that whole thing to a big box store for millions. This town needs more retail.”

Kelly was quick, but Shannon was way ahead of her. She had done her homework. Without the corner, the bordering thirty acres weren’t worth much more than Shannon had paid for them. But with it, Kelly was right. Maybe not millions with an
S
, but
one
million for sure.

She had sold a couple of homes for a million dollars plus in her short career and that had been adrenaline-pumping enough, but the idea of so many zeroes in her own bank account and the financial security it represented boggled her mind.

“I know,” she said. “Thirty-five acres is big enough for most of the big boxes. Or even a small mall.”

Back at her office, Shannon immediately called the Dallas listing broker. He told her the owner of the five acres was out of town through Christmas and difficult to reach, but any offer that came in would be presented as soon as possible. Shannon glanced at her calendar and bit down on her lower lip. Christmas was a month away. Any number of snafus could erupt between now and then. She hated having her bid hanging loose for weeks, but she could do nothing else.

Kelly’s head poked through her office doorway. “Well, is it doable?”

“The owner’s out of town until after Christmas. You know what that means. There’s plenty of time for other bids to come in.”

“Maybe you’ll get lucky and there won’t be any.”

“Maybe,” Shannon said absently.She had never relied on luck. For her, luck had been mostly bad or non-existent. What had gotten her to where she was now was hard work, sacrifice and self-discipline, fueled by her grandmother’s faith in her. Having assumed the role of her caretaker, Shannon owed the tiny elderly woman security in her old age. She had to get her hands on that five acres.

Chapter 3

 

The Double-Barrel Ranch

Drinkwell, Texas

 

Drake Lockhart, founder and CEO of one of the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex’s most successful real estate investment companies, spent the Monday after his thirty-fifth birthday riding fence. He had done this task as a kid, when he lived at the Double-Barrel Ranch and cowboyed for his dad. The ranch owned numerous mechanized vehicles he could have used, but he liked reacquainting himself with the land from the back of a good horse.

Through acres of pasture destroyed by fire, Drake rode along a line of new barbed wire fence, checking for broken or loose strands. He had been riding since daylight. He wore a down coat and a neckerchief and silk long johns under his jeans, but still, he was chilled. The temperature had been near freezing when he first left the barn and had now risen to only the low forties. An unseasonable early norther had blown in and it had rained twice during the past week. With that and fog shrouding the landscape, a penetrating dampness hung in the air.

His mount—Silas Morgan had said his name was Mouse—evidently loved the brisk weather. He stepped out with purpose and showed high energy, causing Drake to hold a tight rein. He liked a horse that constantly reminded him he was horseback.

Climbing a rise, he spotted a dark object the size of a small steer darting behind a low hill.
Hog!
Adrenaline surged. Drake’s brain refocused.

Drake clucked to Mouse and spurred him to the crest of the rise, at the same time yanking his rifle free of its scabbard. He reined to a halt, set the gun at his shoulder and scanned ninety degrees through the scope. Spotting the hog again, he set his boots firmly in the stirrups, leaned forward and fired.
Crack
!

Mouse shifted and whirled, but Drake controlled him until he settled down, then sheathed his rifle and gave him reassuring pats on the neck. “Good boy, good boy. ’Sokay, boy.”

Drake was proud of him. Few ranch horses would tolerate a rider shooting from their backs. He trotted the horse downhill toward where he had aimed. Where a hog carcass should be lying, he saw nothing. Not even a sign. “Shit,” he mumbled. He was a good shot, didn’t usually miss.

He circled a small area, searching with his “hunter’s eye,” though it wasn’t as sharp as it had once been, he had to admit. He sat for a few minutes, watching and listening. And shivering. Giving up on the hog, he turned Mouse and walked him back up the rise, still scanning the landscape.

He halted the horse on the brow of the hill and relaxed the reins. As the gelding lowered his head and began to nibble on tufts of grass, Drake gazed out across a shallow valley. The fog and low clouds hid the far side, but he knew that in the distance on the other side of the basin, a miles-long blue mesa met the sky. It and everything between here and there made up a part of the Double-Barrel Ranch’s many thousand acres.

His near view took in four sections, roughly twenty-five hundred acres, known on the ranch as the North Pasture. That is, what was left of it. Last spring, it had been lush with good grazing. Now, grass struggled to take hold on charred, arid ground and hazy blackened skeletons of

scattered live oak trees and sagebrush showed through the fog like contorted skeletons. He couldn’t keep from thinking of the years of work that had gone into making the North Pasture an example of what conscientious range management produced. Ranching was about more than raising good cattle and horses. It was also about responsible stewardship of the land. Common sense.

Years back, before Drake had first left home for Fort Worth, cedar and mesquite trees had been a thick snarl and a haven for rattlesnakes. Every cattleman hated snakes and mesquites. The snakes were a hazard to man and beast. The mesquites sucked water from the ground, depriving grass of needed moisture. Their razor-sharp thorns tore cattle’s flesh, inviting infection and blowflies. They had even been known to pierce a cow or calf’s eye.

His younger brother, Pic, along with the ranch’s brush removal crew, had spent Pic’s summers home from college beating back the thorny growth in the North Pasture, reclaiming grazing land and seeding with hybrid grass.

But Pic and the brush removal crew’s years of effort had been all for naught. The past few years, high temperatures and low humidity had dried grass into kindling ripe for rapacious fire. Drought had turned trees and desirable brush into fodder. Spring had ended with the Lockharts, like every other landowner in Texas, sitting on pins and needles, hoping no accident of man or nature, chose them.

They hadn’t escaped. On one hot, windy afternoon the past June, range fire had rolled over the land and consumed every living thing on the North Pasture’s surface. In this pasture alone, a hundred head of cattle—mothers with new calves—had been trapped, suffocated by smoke and roasted where they stood.

Some believed the Treadway County fire had been set. A half-assed arson investigation was still ongoing, but Drake wondered if they would ever know for sure.

Half the state of Texas had been on fire all of last spring and summer. Hundreds of homes had burned and more than a million acres. Besides the North Pasture, thousands of acres of the Double-Barrel’s rangeland had gone up in flames. Drake had fought the fires himself. He and his two brothers, his dad and even his little sister had stood shoulder to shoulder with firefighters, national guardsmen and volunteers from all over the country.

The Lockhart net worth and cash reserves had taken a major hit. In an industry at the mercy of Mother Nature, disaster of one kind or another loomed ever-present, but in Drake’s lifetime, he had never seen the Double-Barrel faced with so much calamity all at one time. Yet, the Lockharts were luckier than some. Oil and gas royalties and, thanks to Drake, wind turbine leases on the family’s cotton farms in West Texas kept the ranch in cash.

After five months, memories of the fires and the aftermath no longer reduced Drake to weeping, but a knot of emotion had been in his throat all morning. This ranch had been his home from birth until he was twenty-five years old. He might not live here now, but he owned a part of it and felt an undying loyalty to it. He dabbed at his eyes with a corner of his neckerchief. He hadn’t known much true grief in his life, but over the past summer, he had learned it had a way of overpowering even a will as strong as his.

The record-breaking drought continued. He gazed down at the dry and cracking soil with sadness. With only a little help from man, the grass could grow back thicker and richer on the burned ground, but it would take rain. A lot more rain than had been seen so far. And time. So much time. Perhaps more time than today’s fast-paced business world would allow struggling ranchers.

Drake finally gripped his emotions and willed away his downbeat thoughts. He couldn’t do what he had to every day if he allowed negativity to gain a foothold in his psyche.

He breathed in the earthy smells of the damp earth and relished the solitude that surrounded him, let himself be sucked into a silence so profound he could hear it. Without a doubt,

lonesomeness had been born in his soul. No wonder people called him a loner.

He loved the land and being alone with the wide unfettered vistas, the quiet that came with being located thirty miles from the nearest population. This was where he found his strength, where he refueled, where he regained his perspective after weeks of wrangling in the high stakes investment and commercial real estate world in Fort Worth and Dallas. Real estate development and investment was a business in which he had been engaged since the day he graduated from SMU’s business school.

His world at present was a rough and tumble landscape populated by big money individuals and cutthroat players, arrogant lawyers and slick accountants, self-important architects and temperamental designers. Daily, he dealt with self-righteous inspectors, tricky politicians, environmentalist wackos and greedy bankers. Money gave no man mercy, he had learned, but making it with his wits had bought him profound personal satisfaction.

He was a man with a divided heart because as much as he loved the ranch, he loved his business in the city. He had found his niche and was at the top of his game. The rush that accompanied a multimillion dollar deal thrilled him. He delighted in the euphoria that followed triumph, perhaps even more than the financial reward. He didn’t enjoy the deals that went sour—and in the ten years since he had put together his company, he’d had his share—but he didn’t hate them either. Every one of them had taught him something.

A rumble in his stomach caused him to check his watch. Noon. He had eaten only a light breakfast and was famished. He inhaled another helping of the cold fresh air, then drew Mouse up, urged him down the hill and reined him toward the ranch house and food. The Double-Barrel’s sprawling barns and buildings came into sight and he nudged Mouse into a lope.

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