Texas Dreams (Cowboys of Wildflower)

Texas Dreams (Cowboys of Wildflower)

By Irene Lawless

Chapter 1

The last five miles of any haul are always the longest. I've been behind this wheel since before dawn, six horses shifting their weight in the trailer behind me, and the afternoon sun has turned the hood of my truck into a skillet.

Even with the windows up and the AC running, I can taste the dust that hangs in the Texas air, dry and mineral-rich and nothing like the green Kentucky loam I grew up breathing.

Five more miles. That's all that stands between me and Twin Oaks Ranch, between the life I sold and the new one I'm building.

Then I spot her.

An old Ford pickup sits canted on the wide dirt shoulder about a hundred yards ahead, its front passenger tire flat as a stomped beer can.

A woman crouches beside it, blonde braid hanging down her back, throwing her entire body weight into a tire iron that isn't giving her an inch.

Even from this distance, I can tell she's been at it for a while.

Her shoulders are set with a rigid determination that says she'd rather wrestle that lug nut until sundown than admit she needs help.

I ease my foot off the gas and check my mirrors.

The trailer responds in its own time, the way twelve thousand pounds of horse and steel always does, but I guide the rig onto the shoulder without too much fuss and roll to a stop about forty feet behind her truck. Gravel pops and settles under my tires.

She doesn't look up when I cut the engine.

I climb down from the cab and approach at an easy pace, my boots scuffing up small clouds of dust with each step. "Need a hand?"

"No, thank you." She doesn't spare me a glance, just repositions her grip on the tire iron and throws herself into it again. The muscles in her arms strain against the sleeves of her faded t-shirt, and a bead of sweat traces a line down the side of her neck.

The lug nut doesn't move.

Now that I'm closer, I can see the rust eating at the wheel well.

Those lug nuts have been frozen in place for years, maybe longer.

I also get my first proper look at her, and my breath stalls.

She's beautiful, but not in the polished way I'm used to seeing at horse shows and charity galas.

Hers is the magnetic kind of beauty that doesn't know it's there, sun-kissed skin dusted with freckles across her nose, a jaw set so hard it could cut glass, and an expression that dares me to say one wrong word.

"You sure?" I lean against the side of her truck bed and cross my ankles like I've got nowhere else to be. "Looks like you've been at this for a while."

"I'm sure." She finally lifts her head and meets my gaze, and those blue eyes hit me like a sucker punch. Bright, furious, and sharp enough to leave a mark. "I can handle it."

I cross my arms and settle in. Behind me, the horses stamp and snort in the trailer, but they're patient animals who've spent a long day on the road. A few more minutes won't hurt them.

She attacks the tire iron again, bracing one boot against the truck frame for leverage. Her hands slip on the metal, and she catches herself just before she goes sprawling backward onto the gravel. I watch her regain her footing and set her jaw even tighter, which I wouldn't have thought possible.

"You can leave now," she says, breathing hard. "I've got this."

I just smile.

She turns back to the wheel with a ferocity that suggests I've just made this personal.

I watch her throw everything she has into that tire iron for another full minute, and despite the fact that she's losing this battle badly, I find myself more impressed with each failed attempt.

I've worked with horses like her my whole life, the ones with so much fight in them that they'd rather run themselves into the ground than accept help from a stranger.

Those are always the ones worth waiting for.

But enough is enough.

I push off from the truck and hold out my hand. "Let me."

"I don't need—"

"What you need," I say, keeping my voice easy, "is someone who can break those nuts loose from hubs that have been rusted shut since the Reagan administration."

She stares up at me from her crouch, those blue eyes taking my measure with the careful assessment of someone who doesn't hand over control lightly. I hold her gaze and wait, because pushing her right now would be the fastest way to end up back in my truck with nothing to show for it.

Finally, she huffs out a breath and shoves the tire iron toward me. "Fine. Have at it."

I kneel beside the wheel and fit the iron over the first lug nut.

Rather than muscling it with my arms, I plant my boot on the handle and kick down hard, letting gravity and a hundred and ninety pounds of body weight do what her hundred and thirty couldn't. The rust surrenders with a satisfying crack, and the nut spins free.

"Show off," she mutters.

I grin and move to the next one. "Just trying to help."

"I didn't ask for your help."

"No, ma'am, you did not." The second nut breaks loose, then the third. "What's your name?"

"Does it matter?"

"Well, I'd like to know who I'm changing a tire for."

"You're just loosening the lug nuts." She stands and brushes the dust off her jeans with sharp, irritated swipes. "I can handle the rest."

I crack the last one free and glance up at her, squinting against the sun. She's standing over me with her arms crossed and her chin lifted, backlit by the afternoon glare so that the loose strands of hair around her face glow like filament. "Fair enough. But I'd still like to know your name."

I position the jack under the frame and start lifting the truck while she considers whether I've earned an answer. The silence stretches long enough that I figure the answer is no.

"Why?" she asks.

"Just being neighborly." I work the flat tire off the hub and reach for the spare she'd already pulled from the truck bed. "I'm Charlie Hayden. My ranch is about five miles up the road."

Something shifts behind her eyes. Recognition, maybe, or the particular brand of irritation that comes from realizing the stranger you've been trying to get rid of isn't actually a stranger at all. "I know who you are."

That catches me mid-motion, the spare tire hovering an inch from the hub. "You do?"

"Everyone does." She tilts her head, and the afternoon light lands across her face, sharpening those blue eyes into something I can feel in my sternum.

"You taking over the Morrison’s old place is all anyone's been talking about in town.

The hotshot horse breeder from Kentucky, coming to put this valley on the map. "

I let out a short laugh and slide the spare into place, threading the first lug nut on by hand before reaching for the iron. "I wouldn't say hotshot."

"That's what they're saying."

"And what are you saying?"

She doesn't answer. I can feel her watching me as I work through the remaining lug nuts, tightening each one in a star pattern the way my grandfather taught me, making sure the wheel seats flush against the hub.

The silence between us has a weight to it that makes the back of my neck warm even though the sun is doing that job just fine on its own.

I lower the jack, give the tire one final check, and straighten up, holding out the tire iron. "There you go. Good as new." I let a beat pass. "Now, it seems only fair that you tell me your name, since I just changed your tire and all."

The corner of her mouth twitches, fighting something that wants to be a smile. "I only needed help loosening the lug nuts. I didn't ask you to change the whole tire."

"No, ma'am, you did not." I hold the tire iron between us, waiting for her to take it. "But I did it anyway. So how about that name?"

She reaches for the iron, and her fingers brush mine as she takes it. The contact lasts maybe half a second, barely enough to register, but it sends a current up my arm that settles somewhere behind my ribs and stays there.

"Thank you for your help," she says, sidestepping my question with the precision of a cutting horse. She tosses the tire iron into the truck bed, pulls open the door, and swings herself into the driver's seat in one fluid motion before cranking down the window.

I cross the distance before I can think better of it and rest my forearms on the door frame, leaning in just enough to hold her gaze. "Come on now. Just a name."

She looks up at me, and something softens in those blue eyes. The hard edge smooths into something warmer, something that might be amusement or a challenge, and I realize with a jolt that I'd happily stand on this shoulder all afternoon trying to figure out which one.

"I'm sure we'll see each other around Stone Creek, Mr. Hayden."

She starts the engine, and I step back as she checks her mirror and pulls onto the highway without a backward glance. I stand there in the settling dust, watching her taillights disappear around the bend, and I'm grinning like an idiot who just got turned down and enjoyed every second of it.

I shake my head and walk back to my rig. The horses whinny their impatience as I climb into the cab, all of them reminding me they've been cooped up since dawn and don't appreciate the detour.

"I know, I know," I tell them, firing up the engine. "But that was worth the stop."

I pull back onto the highway with five miles left to go and a mystery woman's blue eyes burned into my memory. Life in Hill Country is already shaping up to be a lot more interesting than I expected.

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