The Ranch She Left Behind. Kathleen O'Brien
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âJust say it, Harper,â Max said, trying not to sound as impatient as he felt. âWhatever it is, no offense taken, I guarantee.â
âWell.â Gray shifted, clearly uncomfortable. âThey want you to know that Penny...well, her brother-in-law, Dallas... The thing is...heâs the sheriff.â
The sheriff? So?
Then Max understood, and, finally, he started to laugh. This was about as unsubtle a warning as he could possibly imagine. He began to wonder whether Penny might be more than merely charmingly naive. Maybe she was a little barmy. Why else would her whole family feel so frantic to caution him that she was protected?
Or...on second thought...maybe the whole family was nuts. Maybe, by renting this duplex in a hurry, heâd just stepped into the biggest nest of crazy in all of Colorado.
âFantastic.â He let his laugh die off to a dark chuckle. âThe sheriff of Silverdell. Got it. You can report that I am sufficiently intimidated by the badge. But listen. Iâm going to say this one more time, and then I really think you should let it go. Your sister-in-law may have problems. In fact, Iâm starting to be pretty sure she does. But I am not one of them.â
CHAPTER FOUR
ELLEN WAS SO mad at everybody she wondered if she might explode. For the past half hour, sheâd been sitting under the biggest tree in the orchard behind their new place, with her back against the trunk. She was uncomfortable, but sheâd rather be miserable here than cozy back at the duplex.
To let off steam, she was tearing off blades of grass and throwing them as far as she couldâwhich wasnât far, because it was windy and the grass kept boomeranging back in her face.
She didnât want to be in this stupid townâif you could even call it a town when it had only one street with stores, and nothing at all to do. She wanted to be back in Chicago, with her friends.
Or at least the girls who used to be her friends.
She frowned as hard as she could, because she had a stinging in her eyes and a hot feeling in her throat that made her afraid she might cry. She picked up her cell phone for the tenth time in the past minute and checked for incoming texts. Nothing.
She had sent a group text to all her friends at least fifteen minutes ago. She wasnât supposed to use the data packageâher dad didnât want her on the internet. The phone was only for emergencies. But she didnât care. She needed to talk to somebody from home.
So sheâd taken a picture of herself with the built-in camera, making sure you could see the mountains in the background, and sheâd sent it to everyone. She was smiling like she was having the time of her life, and the text said, <3 CO! Epic sky, adorbs cottage. Miss u!
It had taken her a while to think of the perfect words. She couldnât say duplex, of course. Cottage admitted that it was small, but it sounded quaint and fun instead of pathetic and trashy.
The picture of her was good, too. Sheâd held the camera high, which made her face look skinnier. Plus, she was wearing the gold earrings her mom had left her, which were very sophisticated. And real, which was important. Stephanie said only losers wore jewelry that wasnât real.
But no one had texted back. Not even Becky, who had always been on the fringes of their group because Stephanie didnât like her. Stephanie said Becky was greasy from eating too much fast food. Probably, though, Becky would be allowed on the inside now.
Now that Ellen was gone, and a place had opened up.
The wind rose, tickling her hair into her face, and her eyes stung even worse. She swallowed three times, trying to loosen that tight feeling in her throat, and then clicked on her Facebook app. Maybe she should just post the picture there, so everyone could see.
But Facebook made her feel worse. Her news feed was full of pictures Stephanie and the gang had just taken at the mall, where theyâd gone to see a movie. âLess than a minute agoâ theyâd been horsing around at the Organic Highway counter at the food court. Laughing, throwing stuff at each other, making funny faces.
And, look at that shot! Becky stood so close to Gregory Parr the whole world could see she had a crush on him.
Well, Gregory Parr was the cutest guy in school. Ellen had a graph in her diary tracking how long it would take her to lose fifteen pounds, and what sheâd do then to make Greg notice her.
Except for Stephanie, who had been held back in first grade and was older than the rest of them, no one in their group had a boyfriend. Not outright. But everyone knew who liked who, and everybody knew you didnât go after the boys your friends had chosen.
But here was Becky, clearly trying to call dibs on Gregory. Ellenâs fury rose. If greasy Becky Fife thought she could just move in and take over every single part of Ellenâs life...her guy, her friends...
Ellen could imagine her dadâs reaction. âCould they really have been friends if they have forgotten about you in a week?â
Could Dad really be that clueless?
Of course they were going to forget her. They hung out together every day, and when you were gone, you were gone. You could hardly expect them to sit around for nine months waiting for you to come back.
Her tears had begun to fall. She reached up and ripped off her left earring angrily. They were only hooked over the edge of her ear, anyhow, because her ears werenât pierced.
Thanks for that, too, Dad.
She yanked the second one, and the filigreed hoop went flying out of her hand into the tall grass around her.
âOh, my God. No!â She got on all fours and tried to comb the grass, praying to see the winking gold. âNo!â
A sudden rustling in the tree overhead startled her. She felt a spasm of fear and froze in place. No bird could possibly be that big. Not even an eagle. Well, maybe an eagle. What did she know about eagles?
She sniffed, trying to keep her nose from running. She hated hick places like this. It could be anything up there. A snake, or a cougar, or...
âWhatâs the matter? What are you looking for?â
And abruptly, there he was. A boy, draped over the lowest big branch like the Cheshire cat, his skinny blue jeans and sneakers dangling, his grin and upturned eyes laughing at her.
Suddenly, she was madder than ever. He must have been in the tree the whole time. Heâd probably been watching her when she took the picture of herself. Pictures. Sheâd taken fifteen different shots, trying for one that looked perfect.
She blushed furiously, thinking how sheâd smirked at herself in the camera, trying to look happy and cute.
âWho are you?â She lifted onto her knees, fists on her hips. âThatâs pretty rude, to spy on people.â
âHey, now.â The boy swung himself down like a monkey and plopped onto the grass a couple of feet away.