home.â
âKing has mellowed just recently, thanks to Amelia,â Alan mused. âYou really will have to come home long enough to meet her. Sheâs quite a girl.â
âShe must have a backbone of solid steel to cope with our brother,â he said flatly.
âShe threw a carafe at him.â
Calâs eyes widened. âAt King?â
âHeâs still laughing about it. Sheâs more than a match for him. One shivers to think what sort of children theyâll have. I want to move away to a safe place before the first one comes along.â
Cal chuckled. âWell, Iâll be. I thought he was goingto marry Darcy, and there were times, mind you, when I thought he deserved to marry her.â
âShame on you. I wouldnât wish such a cold fish on King. Amelia is much more his style.â
He glanced at Alan curiously. âI had a letter from Mother about her. She thought you were the one with marriage in mind.â
Alan looked uncomfortable. âI was, when she seemed gentle and in need of protection. After her fatherâs death, she changed. She was more woman than I could handle.â He smiled ruefully. âIâm not like you and King. I want a gentle, sweet girl, not a warring Valkyrie.â
âNot me,â Cal said, eyeing the rig. âIf I marry, I donât want a woman I can browbeat. Sheâll need to be spirited and adventurous to keep up with the way I want to live. If I strike anything here, Iâll move onto the place and never leave it.â
âCamp out here, you mean?â
âSomething like that. I donât need a city woman with snobbish attitudes.â
âThat sounds suspiciously like youâve met one already.â
âWho, me? Go home, Alan. You arenât suited to drilling. Youâll just get in the way. I donât know why you came.â
âIâm on my way to Galveston for some fishing. Itâs just the second week in September, and I wonât be gang-pressed into roundup by Father until the end of the month at least. I need a break. This was just astop on the way,â he said, grinning. âI have a train to catch.â
âWhen are you coming back?â
âI donât know. Maybe after next weekend. Maybe a little later.â He frowned. âI did want to see a man in Baton Rouge about some ranch business as well. Maybe Iâll go on east first, and then double back. Iâll cable you.â
Cal clapped his brother on the back. âGo carefully, young Alan. We may be oil and water, but weâre family. Never forget.â
âI wonât.â Alan smiled. âGood luck.â
âThanks. Iâll need it.â
Alan climbed onto his hired horse and waved at Cal as he started back toward Beaumont. Cal watched him with a peculiar sensation in his chest, a feeling of loss. He laughed at his own foolishness and turned back to his chores. He had very little time left before he had to get back to Tyler Junction and the Tremayne ranch. He envied Alan that fishing trip. Drilling for oil was an occupation that was expensive, physically exhausting and not a little dangerous. Just last week, a derrick had toppled on a nearby piece of property, and a prospector had been killed. The dry hole was an occupational hazard as well, and after days of hope for a strike, it was a bitter break. Cal hoped that this next attempt would be more successful. He hated to leave the drilling crew alone, but it couldnât be helped. He was putting all his spare capital into the venture.He needed what he made as foreman at the ranch to supplement his income.
Besides, it gave him the opportunity to keep an eye on the familyâs massive investment in the Tremayne ranch. He hated spying on Chester, but it couldnât be helped. As much as the combine had paid to take it over, the Tremaynes stood to lose the most. In these unsafe days, it was better to cover a bet than risk the
J. S. Cooper, Helen Cooper