night in the barn when the foal was born. You didnât seem to be aware of anythingâor anyoneâelse.â
Beau didnât bother to deny it. âYouâre forgetting that sheâs married.â
âAnd youâre wishing you could forget it.â
âIt so happens that Iâve had the dubious pleasure of meeting her husband.â Unwilling to discuss the subject of Natalie any further, Beau switched the focus back on his brother. âYou were never exactly a saint. So, tell me, Will, whoâs filling your bed since the divorce? Do you have a mistress tucked away somewhere? Or are there some desperate housewives in town, willing to put out for any man whoâll leave some money on the dresser to help with all their past-due bills?â
But he didnât get the expected rise from his brother. âIâm glad to hear youâre giving some serious thought to staying here at the ranch.â
Dumbfounded, Beau turned in his saddle to stare at his brother. âWhat the hell are you talking about? I never suggested any such thing.â
âOf course you did. Why else would you ask about the ready availability of sex in town?â Will countered.
âI wasnât talking about myself! I was talking about you,â Beau retorted, then added in a mutter, âBlanco Springs is the last place where Iâd go looking for it.â
The small town was a place of few secrets. There was too much chance that Natalie would find out if he happened to sleep with a woman she knew.
Before Will could offer a reply, Beau sank spurs into his mount, sending it jumping forward. A young steer burst from a mesquite thicket. And Beau took off in pursuit.
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Erin knelt in the straw, stroking the foal. His golden coat was velvety to the touch. His young muscles, growing stronger every day, quivered beneath her palm. In a few weeks heâd be big enough to run and play in the paddock.
âTesoro.â His ear twitched as she whispered his name. âWeâre going to have so much fun together.â
Sky had told her that Tesoro needed to learn his name and get used to the sound of her voice. So Erin talked to the foal the whole time she was with him. When she ran out of things to say, she sang old cowboy songs that Jasper had taught her when she was little. Songs like âRed River Valleyâ and âStreets of Laredo.â Sometimes she sang the country and pop songs her school friends preferred. But Tesoro seemed to like the old songs best.
His silky muzzle nudged her arm. Sensing what he wanted, she scratched behind his ears. Lupita raised her head, glanced at her baby, then went back to munching hay.
Erin dreaded tomorrow night when her mother would come to drive her back to town for school the next day. Foals grew up so fast. Tesoro would be bigger and more active when she came back next weekend. Would he still remember her?
The barn was quiet except for the soft horse sounds and the muted shovel-scrape of someone cleaning the stalls at the far end of the barn. Jasper sat on a wooden chair with the dog curled in the straw at his feet. The old manâs eyes were closed, but Erin knew it wouldnât take much to snap him out of his doze. He was alert to everything around him.
As if her thoughts woke him, he opened his eyes and stirred, looking a mite uncomfortable. âAre you okay, Jasper?â she asked him.
He looked mildly embarrassed. âFine, honey. But my rusty old plumbingâs not what it used to be. I need to find a restroom.â
âGo on. Iâll be fine,â she said.
âNo, I promised your dad I wouldnât leave you alone. Come on out of the stall till I get back.â
âJust let me stay here,â Erin said. âMy dadâs an old fussbudget. Iâll be fine.â
âDonât ask me to break a promise, girl.â Jasper pushed to his feet. âIf you want to stay, Iâll find somebody else.