CHAPTER 4

CHAPTER FOUR

Entertainment was everywhere in town that

day. People were singing and making all kinds of music and tribal

dancers performed at the town stage. You could take a ghost tour of

the town or study the native language of the local Washoe Indians.

Birders were collecting to go birding and Western dance instruction

was going on in another part of town.

Lily was amazed at the diversity in Western

culture. It had been incredibly different living in San Francisco

and she wanted to soak in all the local customs and traditions.

Everywhere she looked, people were eating, exploring, talking,

singing and in general, being happy. She had needed a shot in the

arm and it looked like she had found the right town to get it. Lily

just hoped she wouldn’t forever be branded as an outsider.

Sometimes you have to be born in some of these places to ever

really fit in.

The huge stage occupied a major presence by

the old City Hall. Flags and pennants decorated it with the state

flag of Nevada flying alongside. Battle Born was the state slogan.

During the Civil War, President Lincoln had needed the silver and

gold ore from the Comstock mines up around Virginia City, so he had

made Nevada a state. History dripped from everywhere.

Men with huge cowboy hats and long mustaches

began to assemble on the stage. They wore brightly colored Western

shirts, vests, jeans, and jackets. Every single man had on

beautiful print scarves knotted neatly at their necks. GQ magazine

had nothing on these guys. With some of them, the bigger the hat,

the longer the mustache. Their faces were weather-beaten with rosy

cheeks. Speaking and laughing together, Lily guessed they had

either known each other forever, were the happiest guys she had

ever seen or maybe both. There was indeed something to the cowboy

way of life…

She was looking for a seat close to the stage

when she saw him. Sandy looked more handsome than all of them, and

that was saying a lot.

Lily stopped and stared.

What was it about this guy?

He sure had a certain something – charisma?

He wore a terrific red shirt with a silver buckle on his belt that

decorated his worn jeans. Chaps over his jeans made him look like

he had just galloped in on Ole Paint. She wouldn’t have been

surprised to watch him brush the dust off his jeans or kick the mud

off his boots.

Her eyes fell to those boots. They were the

same ones she saw him wearing that day they’d met in her classroom.

Oh, if those boots could talk, what would they say about all those

days in the wide-open spaces rounding up cattle or roping horses?

She wondered what the boots might say about the last time he stood

close to a woman or danced with her. She wanted those boots to be

very chatty.

Well, it was time to take a breath and find

that seat. “Oops, he’s looking at me too,” she muttered.

Sandy had seen her at the same time. He

watched her lithe figure stop when she saw him and openly stare. He

had half listened to Dave on his right, talking about his new poem.

Her face was beautifully framed with those soft curls of black

hair. What was it he found so attractive about women with dark eyes

and hair?

Sandy muttered a few ‘heys’ to the various

men assembled and tried not to look back at Lily. But he couldn’t

help it. She looked so natural in jeans, light blue shirt and vest.

She looked like she had lived here all her life. Her teacher

clothes definitely didn’t do her figure justice and he had even

loved the skirt and blouse she wore that day in the classroom when

they met. But in jeans – Whew… His mind was drawing blanks

when he finally heard, “Sandy, are you listening to me?” from an

agitated voice.

He looked over to the voice’s source and

found Amy Breen tugging on his sleeve and saying his name, “Sandy,

earth to Sandy. Anyone home?” He came out of his reverie about Lily

to focus on Amy.

“Yes, Amy, I’m here. What do you want?”

“Jesse and Arturo are playing just fine with

no evidence of being tired. Are you sure you can’t go to the dance

with me after the gathering?” A syrupy sweet voice tried to change

his mind.

“I’m beat, Amy. Really, the only thing I want

to do tonight is escape to my living room, build a fire and put my

feet up, without the boots.” Sandy tried to smile with his

half-hearted attempt at levity, but he knew Amy wasn’t buying. Her

smile didn’t meet her eyes.

“Have you met the new teacher, Lily Cable?”

Her friendly but detached voice now tried to lure him in. “She’s

from San Francisco, I hear. Can’t trust those Californians, you

know.”

“Oh, come on. That’s crap and you know it.

And yes, I’ve met Miss Cable. She’s Jesse’s teacher and he loves

her. She seems very nice from the little I’ve spoken to her.” Sandy

automatically glanced at Lily sitting in the second row as he

spoke. She still looked good.

Meanwhile, Lily had turned her attention to

the nice couple on her right. They were from Reno and were chatting

with her about another cowboy poetry festival in Elko, Nevada. Lily

wanted to absorb as much Western culture as she could. It suddenly

seemed very important to her to learn and appreciate as much as

possible. Nodding to the couple beside her, Lily wondered about her

attitude. Where was this newfound interest coming from? Why did she

want to know so much about this culture all of a sudden? With a

jolt, she glanced at the announcer on stage turning on the

microphone. A loud popping sound came from the microphone and the

man cleared his throat.

After waiting for the applause to die down,

he began. “Thanks for comin’ tonight, folks. We’ve got one heckava

lineup for you: Dave Hamey from Elko, Dan Michaels from Tonopah,

also…”

He continued down the list until Lily heard

him say, “And last, but certainly not least, our very own Sandy

Johnson! Let’s hear it for this incredible collection of cowboy

poets!”

The audience literally hooted and hollered.

Lily didn’t think audiences actually did that after 1860.

First up was Dave Hamey who had won several

Nevada literary arts awards. He wore his signature huge, gray

cowboy hat with silver piping around the broad brim. Dave spoke of

his days working on Nevada ranches as a cowboy. His poetry

captivated Lily with the meter and rhyme and the way he would spin

his Western tales. The cadence of his poetry was hypnotic and Lily

found herself tapping her feet and imagining the sights he was

describing. The audience broke into thunderous applause when he

finished. It was easy to see why Dave had won various awards and

had performed his poetry in festivals and on TV shows all over the

world. The man was a rock star!

And on and on it went. Each man looked like

the fictional Marlboro Man and spoke like Robert Frost or Frederic

Remington or some other magnificent poet. Their poems’ imagery

would rouse the audience with high intensity with one poem and make

them cry with the next. Cadences were fast, slow, swing, stop.

Every time a poem ended, the audience would hold its collective

breath waiting for the next line that never came. Applause erupted

again and again.

Lily was surprised at the intensity and

involvement of the audience. She didn’t think that Robert Frost, as

good an American poet as he was, could elicit this kind of response

from an audience. Cowboys certainly were a special breed.

Lily bent down to pick up her ticket that had

fallen on the ground. She looked up to see Sandy Johnson on the

stage watching her. She straightened immediately and pushed back

the hair that had fallen in her face. This guy seemed to unnerve

her with a look!

Sandy rose from his seat and took the

microphone mid-stage.

A hush fell over the audience as if this was

the cowboy they had all come to hear. Lily looked around at the

reverential faces sitting by her. Maybe he was special too.

Sandy began to speak and he was eloquent. His

poems were of loving and loss, of guilt and redemption. Lily’s eyes

widened and her lips parted when he spoke of his love for the land

where he was born. His poems flowed with passion for the life he

was proud to live. Sandy used particular rhymes and meters that

made Lily suspicious he had been an English major at one time. Who

else knows about internal rhyme and iambic pentameter? One poem was

so vivid in imagery that Lily could picture the scene with the

horses fleeing for their lives and lightning striking all around

them. Imaginary smoke from the wildfires filled her nostrils.

Most of the time he closed his eyes when

reciting his poetry, almost like it was too personal to share. Lily

knew how he felt. She had only gotten up her nerve to read a few of

her poems to students last year. Her poetry was very personal and

sharing was too hard sometimes. She hadn’t wanted to ever share her

poetry again after her last involvement. The guy couldn’t have care

less. But Sandy was… different. Lily felt she might, just might, be

able to share some of her poems with him: a man who wrote his

own.

His last poem spoke of longing for the right

person to share his life and how hard it was to find that person.

Sandy opened his eyes and recited it looking right at Lily.

She stared back at him as if hypnotized. What

a moment! It was like in Pride and Prejudice when Mr. Darcy

cast a long look at Elizabeth Bennett in the drawing room,

signaling an attachment between them. An equal understanding passed

between Sandy and Lily.

Lily quit breathing while Sandy was speaking.

She sucked in a gulp of air when he finished. They smiled at each

other and the audience broke into a sustained applause. All the

people assembled stood up to give him a standing ovation. The other

cowboy poets came over to shake his hand and pat him on the back.

Sandy was apparently the hit of the evening and everyone crowded

the stage to shake his hand. Soon Lily couldn’t see him anymore and

she sat back in her chair breathlessly. The Reno couple said their

good-byes and left. Nice couple. She was happy to have met

them.

Lily was so impressed with Sandy’s poetry

that she was dumbstruck. Never in her life had she heard a man

speak that way! Cowboys… She grabbed her purse and started for the

aisle. The stage was still a mob scene with well-wishers for all

the cowboy poets. Sandy was nowhere to be seen, so she turned to

leave and saw he was walking up to her. Jesse ran up first,

breathless and smiling his crooked grin.

“Miss Cable! Did you hear Daddy? Wasn’t he

great? I never heard that last poem before though. When did you

write that one, Daddy? Huh?” Jesse tilted his little face at Sandy

and then Lily.

Lily and Sandy stared at each other for a

long moment.

Clearing his throat, Sandy asked, “What did

you think, Lily?” He clutched tightly to his hat, turning it around

and around.

She choked and had to start again.

“I can hardly find the words to say…how

fabulous your performance was. You wrote all those beautiful poems?

The imagery, the rhyme, the stories…I didn’t know people wrote like

that anymore. Not in this century at least.” Lily was babbling.

Sandy seemed to relax and smiled. He looked at his son.

“And Jesse, I wrote that last poem last

night. What did you think of it?”

“It was kinda mushy, not like your horse

poems. I like those better.”

So Sandy had written that after meeting her?

No, that couldn’t be. Lily blushed and Jesse yelled, “I want to say

goodbye to Arturo. Be right back!” He ran off to find his

friend.

Sandy shifted his stance. He shyly looked

straight into her blinking eyes. “I don’t want to do this

anymore.”

“Do what?”

“Pretend that I’m not attracted to you

because I am. What do you think about that?” He held his breath as

his eyes roamed her face.

“I’ve… got some… baggage, Sandy. It won’t be

easy.” People brushed by and she stepped out of their way. She

glanced back at him.

“I can be a good porter if the situation

calls for it. Let’s do something together and see what

happens.”

Lily realized she was looking at him as if

she was starving and he was a big juicy steak. Maybe her luck with

men was changing. Maybe it was worth it to find out.

“Okay. I mean, yes. I mean -- I sure would

like to give it a try. Ah…that is, if you really want to.” Sandy

took her hand. The spark between them was becoming more like an

electric current.

“Come to the ranch this weekend like Jesse

suggested. We’ll try to make a cowgirl out of you,” Sandy smiled

his broad smile. “Would you like that?”

“… Absolutely!”

“I’ll write down directions tonight and then

you could drive out Saturday.”

“Okay. Thank you for the invitation. See you

then.”

He smiled so sweetly causing a lump to clog

Lily’s throat. When was the last time something so corny sounded so

good? And she hadn’t felt this happy in a very long time. Maybe,

just maybe he was ready for something else in his life besides

cattle…God knows she was ready for something different.

They were parting reluctantly when Jesse ran

up and was told of the plans. He yelled, “Yippee, Miss Cable is

coming to visit!”

Sandy tipped his cowboy hat at Lily,

“Ma’am.”

Wow! Lily’s heart beat louder and

faster. Jesse and Sandy went one way and Lily went the other.

Someone else had overheard the news: Amy

Breen was talking to one of the other cowboy poets when she heard

Jesse yell out about Miss Cable. Not that many paid attention or

cared, but she certainly did. Apparently, Lily Cable, the

troublemaker, didn’t know that Sandy Johnson was hers and hers

alone. She narrowed her eyes and began to think of ways to sabotage

this relationship before it could get started. She had done it

before when Sandy had shown an interest in someone around town and

she could do it again… and would.

* * *

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