Caleb couldn’t imagine the logistics of dinner for seven people every single night. Tonight, one of Mandy’s two sisters was here, along with her two brothers, Travis and Seth, who was the oldest. And her parents, Hugo and Maureen, who looked quite a bit older than Caleb had expected, particularly Hugo, who seemed pale and slightly unsteady on his feet.
“I see the way you’re looking at my sister,” Travis said in an undertone as he took the armchair opposite Caleb in the corner of the living room.
“I was thinking she suits it here,” Caleb responded, only half lying. He was thinking a whole lot of other things that were better left unsaid.
“She does,” Travis agreed, “but that wasn’t what I meant.”
“She’s a very beautiful woman,” Caleb acknowledged. He wasn’t going to lie, but he certainly wasn’t going to admit the extent of his attraction to Mandy, either.
“Yes, she is.” Travis set his glass of iced tea on the small table between them and relaxed back into the overstuffed chair.
Caleb tracked Mandy’s progress from the stovetop to the counter, where her mother was busy with a salad, watching as the two of them laughed at something Mandy said. He didn’t want to reinforce Travis’s suspicions, but his curiosity got the better of him “Did she and Reed ever …?”
Travis shook his head. “It was pretty hard to get close to your brother. He was one bottled up, angry man after you lit out without him.”
Caleb felt himself bristle at the implication. He hadn’t deserted Reed. He’d begged his brother to come with him. “It wasn’t my leaving that did the bottling.”
“Didn’t help,” said Travis.
Caleb hit the man with a warning glare.
“I’m saying he lost his mother, then he lost you, and he was left to cope with your father’s temper and crazy expectations all on his own.”
Caleb cleared his dry throat with a sip of his own iced tea. “He should have come with me. Left Wilton here to rot.”
“You understand why he didn’t, don’t you?”
“No.” Caleb would never understand why Reed had refused to leave.
“Because of your mother.”
“I know what he said.” But it had never made sense to Caleb.
Their mother was gone. And the legacy of the ranch land didn’t mean squat to Caleb. There was nothing but bad memories here for them both. Their father had worked their mother to death on that land.
The sound of female laughter wafted from the kitchen again. Caleb couldn’t help but contrast the loud, chaotic scene in this big, family house to his own penthouse apartment with its ultramodern furniture, crisp, cool angles of glass and metal, its silence and order. Everything was always in its place, or at least everything was sitting exactly where he’d last left it.
Maureen passed her husband, Hugo, giving him a quick stroke across the back of the neck. He responded with a secretive smile and a quick squeeze of her hand.
Here was another thing that wasn’t in Caleb’s frame of reference, relaxed and loving parents. He couldn’t remember his mother ever voluntarily touching his father. And his father had certainly never looked at his wife, Sasha, with affection.
Travis shifted his position in the armchair. “Reed thought you were afraid to stay and fight.”
Caleb straightened. “Afraid?”
Travis shrugged, indicating he was only the messenger.
“I hated my old man,” Caleb clarified. “But I was never afraid of him.”
That was a lie, of course. As a child, Caleb had been terrified of his father. Wilton was exacting and demanding, and quick with a strap or the back of his hand. But by the time Caleb was seventeen, he had a good two inches on his father, and he’d have fought back if Wilton had tried anything. Reed was even bigger than Caleb, and Wilton was no physical threat to Reed by then.
“Where do you think Reed went?” Travis asked.
“I couldn’t begin to guess,” Caleb responded, thinking Reed’s decisions were finally his own. He honestly hoped his brother was happy away from here.
He’d thought a lot about it over the past two days. Reed was perfectly entitled to live his life any way he saw fit. As was Caleb, and Caleb had become more and more convinced that selling the ranch was the right thing to do.
Reed could do whatever he wanted with the money. And, in the short term, Caleb was in no position to hang around Lyndon Valley and run things. And he sure couldn’t continue to depend on the Jacobses to help him out.
He supposed he could hire a professional ranch manager. But, then what? It wasn’t as if he was ever coming back again. And Reed had made his choice by leaving. If Reed had any interest in keeping the ranch, all it would have taken was for him to jot down a contact number in his cryptic note. Caleb would have called, and they could have worked this whole thing out.
Mandy swished across the room, a huge bowl of mashed potatoes in her oven-mitt-covered hands. She’d changed from her usual blue jeans to a pair of gray slacks and a sleeveless, moss-green sweater. It clung to her curves and brought out the color of her eyes. The slacks molded to her rear end, while her rich, chestnut-colored hair flowed like a curtain around her smooth, bare shoulders.
“I see the way you’re looking at my sister,” Travis repeated.
Caleb glanced guiltily away.
“You hurt her,” Travis added, “and we’re going to have a problem.”
“I have nothing but respect for Mandy,” Caleb lied. While he certainly had respect for Mandy, he was also developing a very powerful lust for her.
“This isn’t Chicago,” Travis warned.
“I’m aware that I’m not in Chicago.” Chicago had never been remotely like this.
“We’re ready,” Maureen announced in a singsong voice.
Mandy sent Caleb a broad smile and motioned him over to the big table. Then she seemed to catch Travis’s dark expression, and her eyes narrowed in obvious confusion.
“She’s a beautiful, intelligent, strong-minded woman,” Caleb said to Travis in an undertone. “You should worry about her hurting me.”
Travis rose to his feet. “I don’t care so much about you. And I’m not likely to take her out behind the barn and knock any sense into her.”
Caleb stood to his full height. “Does she know you try to intimidate guys like this?”
The question sent a brief flash of concern across Travis’s expression. Caleb tried to imagine Mandy’s reaction to Travis’s brotherly protectiveness.
It was all Caleb could do not to laugh. “Stalemate.”
“I’ll still take you out behind the barn.”
“I’m not going to hurt Mandy,” Caleb promised.
Not that he wouldn’t let Mandy make up her own mind about him. She was a grown woman, and if she offered a kiss, he was taking a kiss. If she offered more, well, okay, he didn’t imagine he’d be around long enough for that to happen. So there was no sense in borrowing trouble.
He deliberately took a chair across the table from Mandy instead of sitting next to her. Travis grunted his approval.
As dishes were passed around and plates filled up, the family’s conversation became free-flowing and boisterous.
“If there’s a competing interest lurking out there,” Mandy’s sister Abigail was saying, “I can’t find it. But it’s important that as many ranchers as possible show up at the first meeting.”
“We need a united front,” Hugo put in, helping himself to a slice of roast beef before passing the platter to Travis. “It’s suspicious to me that they’re calling the review five years early.”
“The legislation allows for a water use review anytime after thirty years and before thirty-five,” Abigail responded. “Technically, they’re not early.”
Seth, the eldest brother, stepped in as he reached for a homemade bun. “When was the last time the state government did anything at the earliest possible date? Dad’s right, there’s something they’re not telling us.”
“I’ve put in an access to information request,” said Abigail. “Maybe that’ll solve the mystery.”
“That won’t get you anything,” Hugo grumbled. “The bureaucrats will just stonewall.”
“You should catch Caleb up,” Mandy suggested.
“This is important to you, too,” said Travis, and Caleb waited for him to elaborate.
“Any decrease in the flexibility of our water licenses, will devalue the range land.”
“Devalue the range land?” Seth interjected. “Who cares about the land value? It’ll impact our grazing density. There are operations up and down the valley that are marginal as it is. The Stevensons, for example. They don’t have river access anywhere on their land. A couple of tributaries, but they depend on their wells.”
“Seth,” Maureen put in, her voice stern. “Did anyone ask you to bring your soapbox to the dinner table?”
Seth’s lips thinned for a moment. But then he glanced down at his plate. “Sorry, Mom.”
Maureen’s face transformed into a friendly smile. “Now, Caleb. How long do you expect to be in Lyndon?”
Caleb swallowed a mouthful of potatoes smothered in the best gravy he’d ever eaten. “A few days. Maybe a week.”
“We’re sorry you missed the funeral, dear.” Maureen’s tone was even, but he detected a rebuke. One look at Mandy’s expression told him he’d detected correctly.
“I was tied up with work,” he said.
“Did you know Caleb owns his own company in Chicago?” Mandy asked.
Caleb appreciated the change in topic, and silently thanked Mandy. The Jacob family would learn soon enough that he was planning to sell the Terrell ranch. Just like everyone would soon learn about Wilton’s will. But he was in no hurry to field the inevitable questions.
“Active Equipment,” he told them. “Heavy machinery. We’re making inroads into Asia and Canada, and we hope to succeed in the South American market soon.”
“That’s lovely, dear,” said Maureen, her quick gaze going from plate to plate, obviously checking to see if anyone was ready for seconds.
“Active Equipment?” asked Hugo, tone sharp and vaguely accusing. “The Active Equipment, loaders and backhoes?”
“Yes,” Caleb confirmed.
“So, you can get me a discount?”
Maureen scowled at her husband. Travis laughed, and Mandy’s eyes danced with amusement.
“Absolutely,” Caleb answered, unable to look away from Mandy. Her green eyes sparkled like emeralds under the chandelier, and he didn’t think he’d ever seen a more kissable set of lips. “Just let me know what you need.”
“Seth and I will come up with a list,” said Hugo.
“Happy to help out,” said Caleb.
Mandy’s lashes swept briefly down over her eyes, and the tip of her tongue moistened her lower lip. He didn’t dare glance Travis’s way.
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