for calling?â I prompted. I didnât mean to sound impatient, but I probably did. My brain kept racing ahead to Parable, wondering how long it would take to get my business done and leave.
Lucy perked right up. âYes,â she said. âThe law firm across the hall from our offices is hiring paralegals. You can get an application online.â
I softened. It wasnât Lucyâs fault, after all, that I had to go back to Parable and maybe come face to face with Tristan. I was jobless, and she was trying to help. âThanks, Luce,â I said. âIâll look into it when I have access to a computer. Right now, Iâm in a rental car.â
âIâll forward the application,â she replied.
âThanks,â I repeated. The familiar road was winding higher and higher into the timber country. I rolled the window partway down, to take in the green smell of pine and fir trees.
âI wish I could be there to lend moral support,â Lucy said.
âMe, too,â I sighed. She didnât know about the Tristan debacle. Yes, she was my closest friend, but the subject was too painful to broach, even with her. Only my mother knew, and she probably thought I was over it.
Lucyâs voice brightened. âMaybe youâll meet a cowboy.â
I felt the word âcowboyâ like a punch to the solar plexus. Tristan was a cowboy. And heâd gotten on his metaphorical horse and trampled my heart to a pulp. âMaybe,â I said, to throw her a bone.
âBoss alert,â Lucy whispered, apparently picking up an authority figure on the radar. âIâd better get back to my charts.â
âGood idea,â I said, relieved, and disconnected. I tossed the phone back into my purse.
I passed a couple of ranches, and a gas station with bears and fish and horses on display in the parking lot, the kind carved out of a tree stump with a chain saw. Yep, I was getting close to Parable.
I braced myself. Two more bends in the road.
On the first bend, I almost crashed into a deer.
On the second bend, I braked within two feet of a loaded cattle truck, jackknifed in the middle of the highway. I had already suspected that fate wasnât on my side. I knew it for a fact when Tristan McCullough stormed around one end of the semi-trailer, ready for a fight.
My heart surged up into my sinuses and got stuck there.
The decade since Iâd seen him last had hardened his frame and chiseled his features, at least his mouth and lower jaw. I couldnât see the upper part of his face because of the shadow cast by the brim of his beat-up cowboy hat.
What does Tristan look like? Take Brad Pitt and multiply by a factor of ten, and youâve got a rough idea.
âDidnât you see the flares?â he demanded, in that one quivering moment before he recognized me. âHow fast were you going, anyway?â It clicked, and he stiffened, stopped in his tracks, a few feet from my car door.
âNo, I didnât see any flares,â I said, and I must have sounded lame, as well as defensive. âAnd I donât think I was speeding.â My voice echoed in my head.
He recovered quickly, but that was Tristan. While I was pining, heâd probably been dating rodeo groupies, cocktail waitresses, and tourists. While I was waiting tables to get through school, he was winning fancy belt buckles for the school team and getting straight Aâs at the University of Montana without wasting time on such pedantic matters as studying and earning a living. âBack around the bend and put your flashers on. Otherwise, this situation might get a whole lot worse.â
I just sat there.
âHello?â he snarled.
I still didnât move.
Tristan opened the door of the rental and leaned in. âGet out of the car, Gayle,â he said. âIâll do the rest.â
My knees were watery, but I unsnapped the seat belt and de-carred. Four stumpy French fries fell
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