The Ryders: Jared, Royce and Stephanie. Barbara Dunlop

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helping stable hands?” she asked.

      “No, but I’m thinking about banning fraternization.”

      His obvious euphemism was more than a little offensive. “You think I had time to fraternize with Rafe before dinner?”

      Something flickered in his eyes. It might have been regret. “I think flirting is your only life skill.”

      “It’s not.” For starters, she had a university degree. She owned real estate. And she had a good job, soon to be a great job if she could pull off this interview.

      “Do tell,” he challenged.

      “I’m intelligent, articulate and organized.”

      “You couldn’t even organize a bus ticket to Seattle.”

      “Buying the bus ticket ahead of time wasn’t the point.”

      “What was the point?”

      “I’m experiencing America.”

      “By batting your eyes and swaying your hips?”

      She held up her blistered palms. “By shoveling your stable for eight hours.”

      He reached for her wrist, moving her hands under the beam of a yard light, and his expression tightened. “You put something on this?”

      “Work gloves.” And she wished she’d thought to do it sooner.

      “I’m serious.”

      She pulled her hand from his grasp. “I’m fine.”

      He took in her body from head to toe. “I don’t think you’re cut out for manual labor.”

      She subconsciously shifted her injured hands behind her back. “I told you I was fine.”

      “You know how to operate a computer? Type? File?”

      Oh, no. She wasn’t giving up her ranch job. “I’ve never worked in an office,” she lied. “Besides, I only need bus fare. I’ll be out of your hair in a week.” At least that part was true.

      “You might not last a week.”

      “I lasted a day.”

      “Maybe.” He paused. “But you know those guys you’re flirting with are going to eventually expect you to put out.”

      “No, they won’t.” She wasn’t flirting anywhere near that seriously.

      Jared grunted his disbelief.

      The man was an alarmist. But he didn’t have the worst idea in the world.

      Instead of arguing with him, she sidled forward, tucking her hair behind her ears and lowering her voice to a sultry level. “So how far do you think I’ll have to go?”

      He brows quirked up. “You’re flirting with me?

      She leaned in. “Is it working?”

      He shifted, letting his crooked hip and cocked head transmit his indolence. “All depends on what you’re after.”

      What she wanted was the story of his life. And she was definitely prepared to bat her eyes a little to get it. “An exemption from riding your horse,” she said, instead. “He’s scary. Where’d you get him?”

      “He’s a direct descendent of Renegade.”

      Melissa tilted her head and widened her eyes, letting the silence go on for a moment.

      “My great-great-grandfather’s stallion,” said Jared. “The pair of them settled this valley back in 1883.”

      “I thought your grandparents built the original house.” She’d seen the impressive structure when she first arrived this morning.

      “The house, yes.” He nodded downriver. “The original cabin’s been abandoned for decades.”

      “So you’re the fifth Ryder generation to live here?” Her article wasn’t going to focus on the family history, but Melissa found herself fascinated by the thought of such deep roots.

      “I’m the fifth,” said Jared. “Tango’s somewhere in the twenties.”

      “You’ve kept records?”

      “Of course we’ve kept records.” His tone told her she should have known that.

      To cover the blunder, she turned and started walking down the rutted driveway, continuing her way toward the Windy River and the little white cottage she’d been assigned this morning. “How many horses do you have now?”

      Jared fell into step beside her. “Several hundred. Several thousand head of cattle.”

      “Is the ranch still profitable?”

      He hesitated, and she could feel him looking down at her. “Why do you ask?”

      She kept her focus on the quarter moon riding above the silhouetted mountain range across the river. “You went into construction.”

      “How did you know that?”

      “I heard people talk. Around the ranch.”

      “Gossip?”

      “No,” she quickly denied. “Just chitchat. You’re here. You’re usually in Chicago. People commented on it over lunch.” Truth was, Melissa had carefully orchestrated the conversation that had revealed that information and more, but there was no need to mention that to Jared.

      “You seem to know a lot about me.”

      She dared to look up at him. “You’re the boss. People naturally care about what you do.”

      “They shouldn’t.”

      She couldn’t help but smile at that. “Maybe not. But that’s not the way life works.”

      “It’s gossip,” he stated. “Plain and simple.”

      “It’s curiosity,” she corrected. “And it’s interest. And respect.”

      He ground out an inarticulate sound.

      “You can’t make millions of dollars and hope to stay under the radar,” she told him.

      “How do you know I make millions of dollars?”

      “How many acres you got here?”

      “Five thousand.”

      “I rest my case.”

      “Most cattle ranches lose money these days.”

      “Most construction companies make money these days.”

      Jared

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