Christmas with the Rancher: The Rancher / Christmas Cowboy / A Man of Means. Diana Palmer
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“I thought he was so sexy.” Maddie laughed. She brushed at her eyes again. “Then he lost his temper like that. He scared me,” she said on a nervous smile.
“It’s all right. Nobody’s going to hurt you here. I promise.”
She hugged the older woman tight. “Thanks.”
“At the time, that boy did apologize, and he meant it,” Sadie reminded her. “He was as much a victim as you were.”
“Yes, but he got in trouble and he should have. No man, even an angry young one with justification, should ever do what he did to a girl. He didn’t have nightmares for a month, either, did he, or carry emotional scars that never go away? Sad thing about him,” she added quietly, “he died overseas when a roadside bomb blew up when he was serving in the Middle East. With a temper like that, I often wondered what he might do to a woman if he got even more upset than he was at me that time.”
“No telling. And just as well we don’t have to find out.” Her face hardened. “But you’re right about that Odalie girl. Got a bad attitude and no compassion for anybody. One of these days, life is going to pay her out in her own coin. She’ll be sorry for the things she’s done, but it will be too late. God forgives,” she added. “But there’s a price.”
“What’s that old saying, ‘God’s mill grinds slowly, but relentlessly’?”
“Something like that. Come on. I’ll make you a nice cup of hot coffee.”
“Make that a nice cup of hot chocolate instead,” Maddie said. “I’ve had a rough day and I want to go to bed.”
“I don’t blame you. Not one bit.”
Cort was thoughtful at breakfast the next morning. He was usually animated with his parents while he ate. But now he was quiet and retrospective.
“Something wrong?” his dad asked.
Cort glanced at him. He managed a smile. “Yeah. Something.” He sipped coffee. “I went over her dad’s journal with Maddie. We had sort of an argument and I started toward her while I was mad.” He hesitated. “She knocked over a chair getting away from me. White in the face, shaking all over. It was an extreme reaction. We’ve argued before, but that’s the first time she’s been afraid of me.”
“And you don’t understand why.” His father’s expression was troubled.
“I don’t.” Cort’s eyes narrowed. “But you do, don’t you?”
He nodded.
“King, should you tell him?” Shelby asked worriedly.
“I think I should, honey,” he said gently, and his dark eyes smiled with affection. “Somebody needs to.”
“Okay then.” She got up with her coffee. “You men talk. I’m going to phone Morie and see how she’s doing.”
“Give her my love,” King called after her.
“Mine, too,” Cort added.
She waved a hand and closed the door behind her. “Tell me,” Cort asked his dad.
King put down his coffee cup. “In her senior year, Maddie was Odalie’s worst enemy. There was a boy, seemingly a nice boy, who liked Maddie. But Odalie liked him, and she was angry that Maddie, a younger girl who wasn’t pretty or rich or talented, seemed to be winning in the affection sweepstakes.”
“I told Maddie, Odalie’s not like that,” Cort began angrily.
King held up a hand. “Just hear me out. Don’t interrupt.”
Cort made a face, but he shut up.
“So Odalie and a girlfriend got on one of the social websites and started posting things that she said Maddie told her about the boy. She said Maddie thought he was a hick, that his mother was stupid, that both his parents couldn’t even pass a basic IQ test.”
“What? That’s a lie…!”
“Sit down!” King’s voice was soft, but the look in his eyes wasn’t. Cort sat.
“The boy’s mother was dying of cancer. He was outraged and furious at what Maddie had allegedly said about his family. His mother had just been taken to the hospital, not expected to live. She died that same day. He went to school just to find Maddie. She was in the library.” He picked up his cup and sipped coffee. “He jerked her out of her chair, slapped her over a table and pulled her by her hair to the window. He was in the act of throwing her out—and it was on the second floor—when the librarian screamed for help and two big, stronger boys restrained him, in the nick of time.”
Cort’s face froze. “Maddie told you that?”
“Her father’s lawyer told Cole Everett that,” came the terse reply. “There were at least five witnesses. The boy was arrested for assault. It was hushed up, because that’s what’s done in small communities to protect the families. Odalie was implicated, because the attorney hired a private investigator to find the source of the allegations. They traced the posts to her computer.”
Cort felt uneasy. He was certain Odalie couldn’t have done such a thing. “Maybe somebody used her computer,” he began.
“She confessed,” King said curtly.
Cort was even more uneasy now.
“Cole Everett had his own attorney speak to the one Maddie’s father had hired. They worked out a compromise that wouldn’t involve a trial. But Odalie had to toe the line from that time forward. They put her on probation, you see. She had first-offender status, so her record was wiped when she stayed out of trouble for the next two years. She had a girlfriend who’d egged her on. The girlfriend left town shortly thereafter.”
“Yes,” Cort replied, relaxing. “I see now. The girlfriend forced her to do it.”
King made a curt sound deep in his throat. “Son, nobody forced her to do a damned thing. She was jealous of Maddie. She was lucky the boy didn’t kill Maddie, or she’d have been an accessory to murder.” He watched Cort’s face pale. “That’s right. And I don’t think even Cole Everett could have kept her out of jail if that had happened.”
Cort leaned back in his chair. “Poor Odalie.”
“Funny,” King said. “I would have said, ‘Poor Maddie.’”
Cort flushed. “It must have been terrible for both of them, I suppose.”
King just shook his head. He got up. “Blind as a bat,” he mused. “Just like me, when I was giving your mother hell twice a day for being engaged to my little brother. God, I hated him. Hated them both. Never would admit why.”
“Uncle Danny?” Cort exclaimed. “He was engaged to Mom?”
“He was. It was a fake engagement, however.” He chuckled. “He was just trying to show me what