Once a Champion. Jeannie Watt
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“My horse,” Liv said automatically.
Susie’s forehead creased. “But...he used to be Matt’s, right? I recognize that spot on his belly, but it took me a while to remember why I knew him.”
“Matt once owned him,” Liv admitted.
Susie smiled. “I knew it. He and Pete rope together sometimes when Matt’s home.” She frowned. “Isn’t this the horse that disappeared?”
Tread lightly. Liv did not want to alienate a team member with a snarky reply. Thankfully she had years of experience repressing true thoughts.
“You know, I don’t really know the history,” she said pleasantly. “He was for sale last year and I bought him.”
“Oh,” Susie said. “I see.” Although she didn’t. “Well, the two of you did great for the first drill.”
“Thanks,” Liv said. “Can’t wait for the next practice.” She might be a little sore and mentally exhausted, but it was going to be a lot more fun than shopping with Shae.
* * *
DINNER AT MATT’S parents’ ranch was canceled on Friday due to an unexpected storm that delayed his mother’s flight home from Las Vegas, where she’d been visiting her best friend from college. Matt was beyond grateful.
Not only was he avoiding an uncomfortable family dinner, but Craig also wouldn’t have to watch Matt and his father stiffly interact. Craig was an astute kid, and Matt was certain he’d key in on the dynamic between him and his dad—and he’d also ask questions. Questions Matt didn’t feel like hearing or dealing with.
“So what are we going to eat?” Craig asked upon receiving word that they would be staying home for supper.
Craig might be a fourteen-year-old cleaning wonder, but he wasn’t much of a cook. Unfortunately, neither was Matt, but one of them had to put food on the table. When he was alone, Matt usually grazed or ate out. When he did cook for himself, he fried up steaks or burgers, dumped some lettuce out of a bag and called it a salad. On special occasions he might bake a potato.
Right now, though, he was out of steak, burgers and potatoes.
“I think we should go out for a pizza,” Craig announced. “I’ll buy.”
Matt didn’t think that was a bad idea—the pizza part, not Craig buying.
“Let’s go,” he said.
“We’re going out for pizza?” Craig asked, springing up off the sofa. Matt remembered when he used to be able to move like that. Hell, he’d give just about anything to be able to move like that again. Almost thirty-one years old and he felt like he was sixty-one. Or older.
But he’d get it back. Soon.
“We’re going to the grocery store. We’ll stock up on some frozen pizza and whatever else you like to eat.”
“Mom gave you money, right?”
Matt grunted and hoped it sounded like an affirmative. He was in a lot better shape financially than Willa. “Can I drive?” Craig asked as they walked to the truck.
“Sure. In about a year and a half.”
“Mom lets me drive all the time.”
“I’m sure she does.”
“Once I was the designated driver when her designated driver failed in his designated task.”
Matt smiled without looking at the kid. Craig’s use of vocabulary slayed him.
“So what shall we get?” he asked a half hour later as Craig pulled a cart out of the line.
“We start with some real cereal.”
“Wheaties aren’t real?”
Craig shook his head and grabbed a box of Cap’n Crunch.
“Would your mother approve?”
“She practically has stock in the company. Check her purse. You’ll find a plastic bag full of the Cap’n.” Craig looked over his glasses. “For emergencies, of course.”
“Of course,” Matt said, adding a box of Wheaties to the cart. “What else?”
Craig led him through the aisles. In addition to his usual staples—steak, hamburger, salami, bread, eggs, milk, cheese, Pop-Tarts—Matt bought crackers and peanut butter, chocolate milk, frozen pizzas...lots of frozen pizzas...Hot Pockets, frozen dinners and a watermelon. Willa was allergic and never bought watermelon, so Matt gave in and bought a melon that the two of them would never get eaten. Not alone anyway.
“Is this everything?” Matt asked before they got to the checkout stand, a bit in awe of the sheer amount of food in the cart—most of it of the snack variety.
Craig’s expression changed. “Did Mom give you enough money?”
“More than I need,” Matt said. “I was being literal. I hate shopping and don’t want to come back.”
“If you let me drive—”
Matt just shook his head and started for the nearest checkout stand, wishing he’d seen that Dirk Benson, the assistant manager of the store, was behind the register before he’d pushed the cart to the stand.
“Hey, Dirk,” he said, pulling out the wallet he wouldn’t be needing for a while, what with the amount of food Dirk was going to ring up.
Dirk called for backup, aka a courtesy clerk, and started sliding items over the scanner. He was almost done when he asked, “So what’s going on with you and Ryan Madison?”
And just when Matt thought he was going to get out of there without an inquisition. He should have known better. Dirk’s son had rodeoed with Matt and Dirk and took local rodeo very seriously.
“In what way?” Matt asked, knowing full well in what way, but not wanting to talk about it in front of the kid.
“In the way that he did a lot better than you did at the NFR last year, what with him qualifying and all.”
Matt nodded congenially, determined not to let the guy get to him. Dirk had never forgiven Matt for being a better athlete than his own son. Add to that the fact that Dirk’s kid and Ryan had buddied up in college and, yeah, Dirk was no Matt Montoya fan.
“And now he’s pretty close to qualifying again and even though you’ve got a lot more earnings, doesn’t look like you’ll be adding to them.”
Matt smiled tightly, then swiped his card with a quick motion that he hoped conveyed his feelings, as in...shut up, Dirk.
“There’s a big purse for the challenge,” Dirk continued. “And Madison will probably win.” He blinked innocently at Matt. “What with you being injured and all.”