Trouble At Lone Spur

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Authors: Roz Denny Fox
murmured discreetly. She didn’t want to be accused of aiding and abetting dissension.
    His sudden grin was like the sun coming out from behind a cloud. “Thanks. I’ll put the fear of the Lord in them so they won’t cause you any trouble. Riding fence is boring. Someday they’ll accept that it’s part of the job. Now they’re at the age where anything short of calamity is boring.”
    “Yeah, I know what you mean. I get so sick of hearing that word.”
    “You, too?” He laughed. “I always picture girls playing quietly with tea sets and dolls. Like Melody there.” He gestured over his shoulder at the pickup.
    Liz pointed out a fact he’d obviously missed. Mel had left the truck to join the twins and had just delivered a punt that sent both boys running back into the dry wash.
    Gil was still shaking his head when he mounted up and rode north along the fence row. He’d been right to bring the boys along. Being around Melody and Lizbeth might be the best way for them to learn some genuine respect for women.
    Liz appraised the way his soft blue shirt stretched taut across his broad shoulders and narrowed snugly down to lean hips that rocked gently against a tooled leather saddle. Heat struck her like a blast of hot wind. She jerkedsideways, assuming she’d let the forge get too hot. In fact, the fire burned low and steady. Annoyed by her own response, she coiled her lariat and went to separate Coppertone’s Pride from his companions.
    His feet were well shaped and symmetrical. Liz finished the easy shoeing just as the three children charged up, begging for water. She poured them each a generous cup from her jug. “Your faces are red as beefsteak tomatoes. Why don’t you go sit in the shade of that old oak to drink these?”
    “I’m ready to jump in the river,” one of the twins said. “What do you s’pose is keeping my dad?”
    Liz checked her watch. “He hasn’t been gone an hour. He said noon. It’s not quite eleven.”
    “We don’t have to wait for him,” the twin with the reddest face declared.
    “Oh, ho,” Liz chuckled, thinking he was baiting her. “Guess again, young man.” She’d almost called him Dustin, but caught herself in time as she wasn’t certain.
    “We don’t gotta mind you, do we, Rusty?” the boy said, deliberately crushing his plastic glass beneath the heel of his boot.
    So, it was Dustin. Instinct had served her well, Liz thought smugly. When it came to confrontations, she noticed he most often led. But this time, Rusty ignored his challenge. “You’re absolutely right, Dustin,” Liz said quietly, walking over to pick up his flattened glass. “The rules you have to go by are the ones your dad set down before he left. And only you and Russ know how he’ll react if you break them.” She walked past him to toss the plastic pieces into the box lid. Unfurling her lariat, she deftly roped the third gelding, Little Toot. At this moment Liz felt it described Dustin Spencer. With hisflashing go-to-the-devil eyes and pouting lips, he was a little toot, all right.
    “Hey, that was cool,” Rusty exclaimed, running to meet her as she returned with the dun-colored gelding in tow. “Will you teach me how to throw a rope like that?”
    Liz cast a surreptitious glance toward his surly twin. Dusty’s head was down and he was digging a furrow in the dirt with a boot heel. She’d bet the contents of her lunch basket that he didn’t want any part of her teaching.
    “I’m not sure how long it’ll take to shoe this horse.” She patted the soft nose as Little Toot nibbled her collar. “There are several lariats behind the pickup seat. Melody can explain the basics. If I have time before your dad gets back, I’ll be glad to show you some simple rope tricks.” She pointed. “See that old stump?” It looked as if it’d been sheared off by lightning. “That’s how I learned and how I taught Melody. You practice roping stumps by the hour.”
    Rusty let out a whoop that scared

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