"You misplaced one of your men," Chad remarked.
"I did?"
"He'll be along shortly with the baggage. He'll need to be untied."
Stuart laughed. "Sorry. I got a little impatient last night."
"So I gathered. What the hell you doing riding with Leroy in tow? That ain't your style."
Stuart shrugged. "He's been hanging around all week looking for work—and making some of the men nervous. I figured I was sending him on a wild-goose chase, that you'd show up here before he'd find you, then he'd move on. Didn't figure you'd weigh yourself down with vehicles and take another day to get here."
"I didn't figure on that either, but then one of the ladies refused to travel by normal means."
"The noisy one?"
Chad made a face. Of course Stuart would have heard all the screeching that had gone on outside.
They could have heard it out back in the bunkhouse, Amanda was so loud.
Chad found himself explaining, though he wasn't sure why, "She's had a bee in her bonnet from day one. She didn't want to come here, hates traveling. But her attitude should improve now that the traveling part is over."
"Don't kid yourself, boy. That's a born and bred nag if I've ever seen one. Probably spoiled rotten, too. Pretty little thing, though. I suppose she caught your interest?"
"Some," Chad admitted.
"Seriously?"
"Not yet."
"Good." Stuart grunted. "Nags don't usually grow out of being nags."
Chad rolled his eyes. "I told you why she was being difficult. Not that it's any of your concern—and when did you get to be such an expert on nags?"
"Since I spent two months with Luella's mother," Stuart mumbled.
Chad burst out laughing. He couldn't help it. Luella's vacant looks had been indicative of her mind, but her mother had been a nonstop chatterer the few times he'd been in her presence. That chattering must have got a lot worse after he left.
Stuart even grinned after a moment, but only for a moment. With nothing settled yet between them, he wouldn't unbend enough to relax. In fact, he finally broached the subject they were both waiting for.
"You ready to come home, boy?"
"You ready to admit who I marry is none of your damn business?"
"Can we at least talk about it?"
"We did that. I talked. You didn't listen," Chad reminded him.
"You didn't give Luella a chance, either," Stuart was quick to point out.
"It didn't take but five minutes to know I wanted nothing to do with her."
"But she's beautiful!" Stuart complained.
"Then you marry her."
"Hell, no."
"Why not? She's beautiful," Chad said, throwing that reasoning back at him.
"She's too young for me," Stuart grumbled.
"And she's too dumb for me. So can we agree that neither of us wants her in the family and drop the subject already? Or is she still at the ranch?" Chad asked with a frown. "If you tell me she's still at the ranch—"
"She ain't," Stuart cut in to assure him. "Went home last month. She would've waited around indefinitely for you, really liked the idea of marrying you, but her pa got insulted by your absence and came to fetch his womenfolk home. And not a minute too soon. Her mother was driving me nuts."
Chad grinned. "Then I guess it's safe for me to come home soon as I wrap things up here."
"Told you, I'll send over—"
"I'll finish what I started," Chad interrupted.
Stuart frowned now. "I hope you don't want to stay here longer to court the nag."
Chad resented his father's description of Amanda, when he'd barely met her. "Let's get at least one thing clear. Your approval of who I marry would be nice, but it's not the least bit necessary."
"You want to bring a bride home to live under my roof," Stuart growled belligerently, "then I reckon I should have a little say in it."
"Who says we'd live under your roof?" Chad shot back. "We could, but I could just as easily build my bride her own house so you don't have to deal with her."
Stuart mulled that over for a second, then chuckled. "That would work. That would work just fine. All right, boy, if you're not going to double my empire, at least give me a lot of grandkids who might."
"When I get around to it. But no more pushing, and no more rounding up fiancees for me. We got us a deal?"
Stuart slapped him on the back with a big smile. "Damn, it's good to have you home."
Chad was aware he hadn't got an answer. His father liked to leave himself escape routes. But that was all right. It was good to be home—and on good terms with his father again.
Chapter 19
RED WAS ON HER way back downstairs to see to her other guests when the noise started. She turned around, headed back to her nieces' room, and found their maid just leaving it.
She saw Red and shook her head. "Be best not to interfere, ma'am," Ella Mae warned. "This is long overdue. They'll be easier to live with afterward."
Red bit her lip. It wasn't hard to decipher the maid's meaning. The noise was very obvious, which made it hard for her not to want to interfere.
"But won't they—hurt each other?"
"No more'n two cats in an alley. They don't really know how to fight. A few scratches, maybe a bruise, a lot of rolling around. It's not the first time, ma'am."
"I see."
It was all Red could think to say, but she didn't see at all. Those weren't children on the other side of that door brawling, but grown women. And although it had been apparent from what had happened outside, that her nieces, or at least one of them, was going to be a problem, she hadn't guessed how much of a problem until now.
This was entirely her brother's fault. She had known Mortimer wouldn't make a good father any more than he had made a good brother. The kind of favoritism he'd practiced since they were children wasn't normal. He'd picked her twin sister to be his constant companion, and Red might as well not have existed for all the attention those two paid her—except when they wanted to rub in the fact that she would always be excluded from their little circle. She'd grown up with it, had hated him for it, and had seen it happening again when his daughters were born.
It was the major reason she'd wanted to leave Haverhill, and why she'd married Frank Dunn, who'd had plans to start a ranch out West. She hadn't loved him. He'd been a means to an end. She'd figured that moving out West would place her far enough away from her brother to afford her a measure of peace and happiness. And it had. She'd had no further communication with Mortimer and his family. She'd wanted none.
She'd used Frank. There was no nicer way to put it. But she'd repaid him by being a good wife. He'd had no complaints and didn't blame her for not giving him any children. Well, he wouldn't, because a doctor had implied the fault was his, not hers. He'd felt somewhat guilty after that for not giving her any children, but, such was life, and they'd had a good one together until he died.
Well, actually, not so much good, as comfortable. And if another man was capable of making her heart race, no one knew it but her.
Her heart had done a lot of racing last night when Stuart had showed up and pretty much invited himself to dinner. She'd gotten through the evening without making a fool of herself though, at least, not too much of a fool.
She'd giggled a few times, which she rarely did. She'd been tongue-tied a bunch more. And she'd blushed more than she had since she was a girl. But then she'd never been alone with Stuart before. Anytime she'd ever seen him, other people had been around.
She hadn't expected it to be any different last night either when she'd invited him and his men to dinner while they waited for Chad to arrive. But she didn't know his men never ate with him, and only he'd been sitting there in her dining room when she showed up for dinner—and started acting like a schoolgirl.
But Stuart had probably figured it was guilt making her behave so oddly, because she'd housed his son for the last three months widiout letting him know about it, when the whole county knew he was looking for Chad. At least he hadn't remarked on it to her. And he hadn't expressed any disappointment in her either, when she explained why Chad was staying with her. In fact, he'd scolded her a bit for not coming to him for help when she'd needed it.
She'd put Stuart up for the night when it became obvious that Chad wasn't going to make an appearance last night. His men were put up in the bunkhouse, but there was no question about putting the biggest rancher in the county there. She'd gotten no sleep, of course, with him just down the hall from her. And she'd made herself deliberately scarce at breakfast time. She hadn't seen him again until the maid had come to tell her the girls were arriving.
And what a surprise they were.
They were twins, but most folks probably wouldn't notice that right off. She remembered they had been identical when they were children, and it had been difficult to tell them apart. But not anymore.
Poor Marian had had to introduce herself. Red had taken her for a servant at first glance. But she'd realized her mistake quick enough on closer examination. Such an odd look the girl had, with those spectacles, and such a shame she had to wear them.
Amanda, now, was as pretty as expected. Even as children, it had been obvious the girls would be beauties, and Amanda had certainly turned out to be just that. Her behavior, too, had been somewhat expected. The result of being spoiled beyond redemption. She was so much like Red's sister had been, it was uncanny. And exactly why Red had left home. She had refused to watch her brother's favoritism divide his daughters, as it had his sisters.
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