The Man From Montana. Mary Forbes J.

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her hand in a yes-gesture. “Would this afternoon be too soon? Say right after school? I’ll rent a U-Haul right away to take our stuff to the ranch. It shouldn’t take more than a couple hours, tops.”

      “What time this afternoon?”

      “I work till three, then I get Charlie from Lewis-Clark Elementary.” And she needed to check out of the motel, buy some groceries for a decent supper. “Say four-thirty-ish?”

      “Four-thirty it is. I’ll leave the key with Inez.”

      “Inez?”

      “Our housekeeper. I’ve left instructions with her, in case you have any questions.”

      “So you won’t be there?”

      “Probably not.” Pause. “Will someone be helping you?”

      Was he concerned? “We only have a few boxes and some clothes.”

      “No furniture?”

      “No.” What was the point when she moved every other year to yet another town, chasing yet another part of the series?

      “I see.”

      Actually, he didn’t, but explaining would incite questions she had no intention of answering. “We’ll be out shortly.”

      “Right.”

      “Bye—”

      Dial tone.

      “—Ash.”

      The McKees were not men of long conversations.

      She dropped her camera into her briefcase—a habit she’d established years ago in case an unexpected story presented itself—and pulled her purse from under the desk. Time to get her child from school. Time to start the ball rolling on why you’re in this hole-in-the-wall.

      Shrugging on her long gray coat, she called to the lone reporter left in the newsroom, “See you tomorrow, Marty.”

      His blond head lifted.

      Marty, of the fatal crash that killed Susie McKee. A foolhardy, energetic kid raring for the next story. You should be in Iraq or the Congo, not in Podunk, USA.

      “You moving out to the Flying Bar T?”

      He’d eavesdropped on her call.

      “I am.”

      His mouth twisted. “Don’t let Ash McKee bite you on the ass.”

      Hooking her scarf behind her neck, she stopped. “Why do you say that?”

      “He’s a loner.”

      “He has family, Marty.”

      He frowned. “Take care, okay? You’re only seeing the tip of the iceberg with him.”

      No, she thought, sitting in the car, waiting for Charlie to exit Lewis-Clark Elementary. Marty was wrong. What you saw with Ash McKee was exactly what you got. No secrets there. Portraits of his wife proved the point. He’d loved her. As he loved his daughter and father.

      When she arrived in an hour with the U-Haul, would he be at the house protecting his inside flock rather than outside with his cows? At the thought of seeing him again, her heart hastened. She leaned a little to the right and checked her hair in the rearview mirror. Good grief. What was she doing, preening for a taciturn man with a snarky disposition?

      You need a life, Rachel. Well, the minute Charlie was finished second grade, she was out of here. Leaving town on a jet plane at the speed of light. His next school year would be in Richmond, Virginia, and they would be living in a little house with a backyard and she would work for American Pie. She hoped.

      Charlie ran down the steps of the school, parka flapping open to the wind, book pack swaying from an arm. After hopping onto the backseat, he tugged the door closed.

      “Hey, baby.” Rachel smiled between the front seats. Her little guy, her pride and joy. “How was your day?”

      “Okay.”

      Perpetual kid answer. “Any homework?”

      “Have to do some math problems.”

      Second grade and already homework was arriving two or three times a week. Rachel needed to schedule an appointment with the teacher who continually wrote in her son’s agenda: Charlie read a novel again during lessons today. Class work not completed.

      From the day she brought home Barbara Park’s book Junie B. Jones Has a Peep in Her Pocket for his fifth birthday, he’d loved reading. But the ability hampered his progress in emotional and social areas. Fantasy offered comfort amidst the angst of new schools and new friends for a lonely little boy.

      And she was to blame. Restless Rachel.

      Disillusioned, she pulled onto the main road.

      “Can I play first, Mom?”

      He always asked, no matter that her response was the same, that she was a stickler about getting homework out of the way.

      “You won’t have time for playing tonight, Charlie. We’re moving out to the ranch right away.”

      “We are? Yippee! I get to see the horses now.”

      Rachel chuckled. “Not so fast, partner. First we buy groceries for supper, then we pick up the trailer, and then…” She paused. “You’ll do homework while I unload our stuff.”

      “I want to help.”

      In the mirror, his bottom lip pouted.

      “Homework first, Charlie. And push up your glasses.”

      He did. “Will Mr. Ash be there all the time?”

      “Yes. He runs the ranch.”

      “But will he show me the horses?”

      “Let’s not bother him about the horses just yet.” Or any part of the ranch. She did not need those dark looks boring into her soul.

      “I wanna see the horses,” Charlie persisted.

      Thrusting horses and Ashford McKee from her mind, Rachel pulled into the grocery lot and centered on what she and Charlie needed to eat.

      What’s on your supper table tonight, Mr. Rancher?

      Most of all, why did she care?

      He saw her the instant he rounded the juice aisle. She stood in the first checkout line with her son, her dark head bent to the kid’s wheat-colored one. At twenty feet, Ash studied her face. She had those clean, fine Uma Thurman lines. Sophisticated with a mixture of sweetness.

      He debated. Go back up the aisle, or head for the checkout?

      His

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