The Cowboy Takes A Wife. Trish Milburn
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An unexpected lump formed in Devon’s throat. How lucky Cole and Cooper were to grow up with such a mother. They might not have been wealthy, but they’d been rich in the ways that mattered most.
The three of them fell into a conversation about all the changes in Blue Falls over the past few years and specifically about the Arts and Crafts Trail as they finished up their dinner.
“Cole, show Devon what you’re working on,” Barbara said.
Cole looked across the table at Devon, and she wondered how many women had fallen for that face, those eyes. Who could blame them?
“Are you interested?” he asked, his tone making it sound as if he’d be surprised if she said yes.
“Yeah. I’ll admit to being curious.”
“Excellent,” Barbara said. “You two go on. I’ll take care of all this.” She gestured toward the dirty dishes.
“Let me help,” Devon said.
“Nah, I’ll have this done by the time you reach the barn.”
Devon didn’t feel she could argue more or her nervousness about being alone with Cole might become obvious. Why had she agreed to look at his sculptures? Oh yeah, she really was curious.
She smiled when Cole held the door open for her, unable to prevent the thought that he looked even more scrumptious when he was being chivalrous. But as they walked side by side toward the barn, she told herself to stop thinking that way. What was the use? What she could do was think of him as a friend. It would probably be nice to have Cole Davis as a friend. And really, who couldn’t use more friends?
“Sorry if you feel we roped you into more than you bargained for,” Cole said.
“No, not at all. I was thankful for the life preserver.”
As he opened the barn door, the look on his face made him appear as if he wanted to say something else.
Devon stopped and faced him. “What?”
“Is your mom that...persistent all the time?”
“In a word, yes.”
“I’m sorry.”
His apology, when he’d done nothing wrong, took her aback. But then it clicked that he was simply sorry she had to deal with that kind of pressure.
She shrugged. “Nothing new.” She pointed inside. “So, let’s see these sculptures your mom has been raving about like you’re the Michelangelo of Blue Falls.”
Cole snorted as he accompanied her inside. He flicked on the overhead lights as they walked into the barn. The first thing she saw was a beautiful roan horse that looked their way with large, dark eyes, a reminder that this was a working ranch even if Cole dabbled in art as a hobby.
“Who’s this handsome fella?” she asked as she approached the stall and rubbed along the silky smoothness of the horse’s jaw. It was obvious at a glance that Cole took good care of his horses.
“This here’s Duncan.” He scratched the horse between the ears.
“Duncan?”
“Named after Duncan, Oklahoma, where I won my first pro rodeo.”
“Ah. Well, it’s nice to meet you, Duncan.”
The horse sniffed at her hand then rubbed his head against her.
“He’s a big flirt,” Cole said.
“I can see that.”
“Come on.” Cole motioned for her to follow him. “My work area is back here.”
Devon did her best not to admire Cole’s physical attributes as she followed him to the back corner of the barn, where he’d knocked out the dividers between a few stalls to create a bigger space. In the middle of that space was a sculpture of a rearing horse, mane flying. It took a second look for her to realize that the whole was made up of many pieces that used to be parts of other things.
She stepped up close and slowly made her way around the horse. An old, rusty, metal tractor seat, chains, a muffler, truck rims and countless pieces she couldn’t identify shouldn’t be able to come together to make something so beautiful, but they did.
“It’s stunning,” she said, in awe of the obvious talent she would have never thought to attribute to Cole.
“That’s overstating it a bit.”
She shifted her gaze from the horse to Cole. “No, it’s not. Not everyone could do this. Heck, not everyone could even think this. If I were to see this stuff separately, there’s no way I could imagine how to put it all together to come up with something like this.”
Cole leaned against the side of the stall and crossed his arms, showcasing just how incredibly nice and tanned and strong those arms were. Yeah, she might have a thing for men’s arms.
“Well, we must be two really talented individuals then because my idea of soap is grabbing it at the grocery store.”
She shuddered, making him laugh. Her heart filled with puppies and rainbows and sparkly unicorns. Why did he have to have a sexy laugh, too? Didn’t he know she was trying to be friends, nothing more? Of course, he didn’t.
Devon shushed the conversation going on in her head and turned to look at some smaller finished pieces that sat along the back wall. A small bison, a cowboy sitting on a fence, even a starfish. She pointed to the starfish.
“This one reminds me of that game, ‘which of these is not like the others?’” She turned back toward him to see his expression dim for a moment.
“Reminds me of a vacation we had when Cooper and I were kids. Only time we went to the beach. I remember walking along holding my dad’s hand and we found a starfish. Mom still has a picture of me squatting down in the sand next to it with the goofiest grin on my face.”
Devon smiled at the image in her mind. “How did you get started doing this?”
“Would you believe rodeo?”
She turned more fully toward him. “Not connecting the dots here.”
He pushed away from the side of the stall and propped his hand atop one of the posts. “I was riding in a rodeo up in Wyoming and had some time to kill. Went to a local museum, and they had this kind of sculpture out front. A whole herd of bison. I thought it was neat, and the idea stuck with me. When I retired, I thought I’d give it a try in my spare time.”
She wondered if he was using the sculpture work to fill a void. “I was surprised when I heard you retired. You seemed like you really loved riding bulls, though personally I think it’s insane.”
Cole