Last Chance Cowboy. Cathy Mcdavid

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Last Chance Cowboy - Cathy Mcdavid Mustang Valley

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chunk of change they must have received when they sold the land.

      What she didn’t know was that every dime had been spent on his mother’s heart transplant and medical care. So much money. Sadly, it had bought her only another few months of life before her body rejected the replacement heart, and she died of severe infection. Even if there had been money for a second transplant, the doctors weren’t able to save her.

      “We kept about thirty acres.”

      “I’m surprised you didn’t move,” Sage said.

      “Powell Ranch is my home. My family’s lived here for four generations.” He went to bed every night praying there would be a fifth. “And while most of the land is developed, the ranch is still the heart of this valley.”

      She looked at him. Really looked at him. Intently. As if she was trying to read what lay hidden beneath the surface.

      Gavin turned away. He didn’t want Sage, or anyone for that matter, seeing how deeply affected he was by his loss.

      WITH AVARO SETTLED AND snacking hungrily on some grain, Gavin took Sage over to meet his brother. Two of the ranch’s several dogs lay curled together by the tack room door, their heads resting on their paws and their wagging tails stirring up small dust clouds in the dirt.

      Ethan slowly straightened, letting go of the gelding’s hoof he’d had braced between his knees. “Hi, again.” Setting his rasp on top of his toolbox, he removed his gloves and stuffed them in the waistband of his chaps.

      “Ethan, this is Sage Navarre,” Gavin said. “She’s with the BLM.”

      “Really?” He wiped the back of his hand across his brow, which had risen in surprise. “Is this about the mustang?”

      “Yes.”

      Ethan’s glance cut to Gavin.

      “Sage is here to capture the mustang, and we’re going to help her.”

      “We are?”

      “She says the BLM will allow me to purchase him and bypass the usual adoption process.”

      “That’s great.” Ethan’s features relaxed into a grin. “Glad to hear it.”

      “Her mare has a loose shoe. Any chance you can check it out when you’re done with Baldy here?”

      “Happy to.” Ethan stepped forward, his leg wobbling for a second before he steadied it.

      “No rush,” Gavin said.

      Ethan responded to the concern in Gavin’s voice. “I’ll handle it.” To Sage, he said, “How long you staying?”

      They chatted amicably for a few minutes. Well, Sage and Ethan chatted amicably. Gavin mostly listened. And observed. While he’d struck a deal with Sage, he wasn’t a hundred percent sure of her. Then again, to be honest, he was betting his future stud and breeding operation on his new partner, a man he didn’t know a whole lot better than her.

      Gavin wished he weren’t so desperate. Normally, he proceeded far more cautiously.

      “You ready to park your trailer?” he asked during a break in the conversation.

      After a word of advice about Avaro’s tendency to nip, Sage followed Gavin.

      Outside the stables, she paused. “Which way?”

      “I’ll ride with you. It’ll be easier than trying to give you directions.”

      The inside of her truck was messy. Crayons, coloring books, dolls, a stuffed cat and a collection of tiny farm animals occupied the passenger seat. A notebook, travel log, empty paper cup, a CD case and a partially folded map filled the middle. Unidentifiable trash littered the floor.

      “Sorry about the mess,” Sage said, sweeping her daughter’s toys into the pile of her things. “Isa gets bored on road trips. I’m sure you understand.”

      “Not really.”

      Her apologetic smile fell.

      Ignoring the well-deserved stab of guilt, Gavin climbed into the passenger seat, his feet inadvertently kicking the trash. He’d already told Sage more about his family than he intended. Cassie was off-limits.

      “That way,” he said, and pointed, acutely aware of the tension his remark had created.

      Sage said nothing, leaving Gavin to stew silently. How could he explain to Sage, a virtual stranger, that he’d only seen his daughter a few times while she was growing up? That money for plane trips to Connecticut was hard to spare. In December, he and Cassie’s mother would revisit the full custody issue. If Cassie wasn’t happy, wasn’t adjusting to school, if her and Gavin’s relationship didn’t improve, she might be returning to Connecticut. Given the current state of his family’s finances, he had no idea when he’d be able to swing another visit.

      Not a day passed Gavin didn’t stare his many failures as a father square in the face and wish circumstances were different.

      Picking up the stuffed cat, he set it on top of the coloring book. “Cassie’s kind of a neat freak. Always has been.”

      His explanation appeared to appease Sage for her features softened. “You don’t know how lucky you are.”

      Except he did know. This six-month trial he had with Cassie had been an unexpected gift. The result of her mother’s recent remarriage and pregnancy. He hated that he hadn’t immediately formed a close bond with Cassie, one like Sage and her daughter obviously shared. And he worried constantly that he’d lose Cassie before he ever really had her.

      “Pull into the barn,” he told Sage. “That way, you can park in the shade.”

      “Wow. You really did have some cattle operation.” Her gaze roamed the interior of the large barn. “I’m impressed.”

      “Most of the equipment’s gone.” They’d sold it off piece by piece over the years.

      “Yeah, but it wouldn’t take much to start up again.” Sage rotated the crank on the hitch, lowering the trailer’s front end.

      Gavin went around to the rear of the trailer and placed the blocks of wood she’d given him behind the tires. “My plans are to turn it into a mare motel.”

      “Really?” He could see she’d deduced his plans for the wild mustang. “It would make a good one.”

      Gavin wondered if he should be less leery of Sage. She seemed genuinely nice and willing to make their agreement work.

      “What time tomorrow are we starting?” She shut and locked the trailer’s storage compartment.

      “We can’t head out until Saturday.”

      “Oh.”

      “I wasn’t expecting you. My day’s full.”

      “Okay.” Disappointment showed in her face.

      “I

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