Tina Leonard

Catching Calhoun


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her, Olivia defiantly crossed her arms over her chest.

      “Hello,” she said, her voice chilly. “I must apologize if my children have been bothering you.”

      “Not at all, ma’am,” he said, lifting his hat and showing a toothy grin. “I find them charming.”

      “We got lost,” Kenny said.

      Sure they did, Olivia thought. They’d been raised on the rodeo circuit. They knew where their grandfather was and where the trailer was. “Thank you for escorting them back to me,” Olivia said. “Sometimes they can be quite the handful.”

      “No, we’re not,” Minnie said. “We’re angels.” And she grinned up at the cowboy.

      Olivia shivered. “Excuse us.” She took the children by their hands and led them back to the trailer. Once inside, she sat them on the bed. “Minnie, Kenny,” she began, “no. No, no, no.”

      The children looked at her woefully. “We need help,” Minnie pointed out. “Grandpa’s getting too old to do the act.”

      They were speaking of Grandpa Barley’s knees being too arthritic to allow him to jump in and out of barrels these days. Olivia knew the kids were right, but that didn’t mean they were going to interview cowboys at every rodeo in the United States until they found one suitable for their act.

      “Your grandfather is fine, for now,” she told them. “Please don’t worry so much.” She hugged them to her. “Really. It’s going to be fine.”

      “How?” Minnie asked. “How is it going to be fine when we don’t have an act?” Her large eyes were too old for her nine years and too worried. So little childish spirit lingered in Minnie’s gaze.

      Olivia smiled at her daughter, kissing her forehead. “Trust me, it’s going to be fine.”

      Kenny began to bite at a hangnail. “It’s not fine. I could get in the barrels, and Gypsy could find me instead of Grandpa.”

      How could she explain to him that Gypsy and Grandpa were a team, and that teams couldn’t be broken apart? Once one member of the team no longer worked, the other went to pasture, too. At least in this case. Barley and his Gypsy were a horse and a man who could not be separated. Tough old Dad, Olivia thought. And tough old horse.

      The two had always worked together to feed and take care of her family.

      “Here’s the deal,” she told the kids. “I have to go ride Gypsy in a bit. If you promise not to ‘interview’ any more cowboys for Grandpa’s job, I’ll let you go watch the bull riding. If not, you can stay inside the trailer and do some math charts and spelling. I know you love to study, but I heard that there was going to be a superspecial bull tonight.” She lowered her voice with excitement. “And no cowboy can stay on. It’s a bounty bull. Mean as a three-headed rattler.”

      “Whoa!” Kenny breathed. “I gotta see that!”

      “Me, too.” Minnie slid off the bed. “It’s a deal. No more cowboys tonight, Mom.”

      “Ever.”

      “Okay,” Minnie said, giving out the promise at least, Olivia figured, until tomorrow. “No more cowboys.”

      “Good. I’ll see you after the events. Kenny, stay with Minnie, and Minnie, you know the rules.”

      “Yes, I do,” Minnie said, taking her brother’s hand as they left. “No, no, no.”

      Olivia smiled as her children left the trailer. Someday she’d explain to them that their father had been a cowboy, one with a wandering heart. And though she loved her children dearly, the reason they were all in the shape they were in today was because Olivia had fallen under the spell of the Elusive Sexy Cowboy.

      No more spells for her.

      “WHOA,” KENNY SAID, fifteen minutes later, having hotfooted it to the right to see the bull of which his mother had spoken. “Look at the size of ’im!”

      Minnie nodded. “He’s going to throw his cowboy into the next state.”

      Kenny giggled. “I can’t wait. Cowboy’s gonna look like a smushed grape by the time Bloodthirsty Black gets through with him.”

      “I like that bull’s name,” Minnie said thoughtfully. “The cowboy who stays on him wins a lot of money, cuz no one ever has.”

      “How much money?” Kenny asked.

      “I don’t know….” Minnie squinted her eyes at the bull. “A lot. That’s what we need to stay out of trouble with—”

      “The tax man,” Kenny said helpfully. “Grandpa’s always cussin’ him.”

      “We need a lot of money,” Minnie murmured. “Too bad you’re not old enough to ride.”

      “I’d stay on ’im,” Kenny bragged. “I’d stay on ’im like a gnat on his horn. Like spit in his eye. Like—”

      “Hey, kids.” A man’s voice interrupted. “What’s happening?”

      Minnie glanced up into a pair of twinkling black eyes. Friendly, and kind. Too nice for a bull like Bloodthirsty. She took a breath. “What’s your name?”

      “Calhoun.”

      “Are you going to ride Bloodthirsty Black?”

      Calhoun nodded, amused by her question. “Yes, I am. Shouldn’t you kids be with your parents?”

      “Mom works with the rodeo,” Minnie said bravely, thinking that the cowboy was awfully tall, the tallest one she’d seen in a long time. Maybe the biggest, too. “I’ve seen more rodeos than you’ll ever see, cowboy.”

      He laughed. “Is that so, young lady? Well, then, I’ll be on my way.” Tipping his hat, he left the pair.

      “Hey, I hope you win,” Minnie called after the cowboy.

      “If he doesn’t, I’m gonna ride that bull,” Kenny muttered.

      “No, you’re not,” Minnie said. “Mom will never let you.”

      “And Mom said you weren’t to size up any more, uh, marks,” Kenny reminded her. “You looked like you’d seen a movie star when you talked to that cowboy. You got all goo-goo.”

      “That’s what I’m doing wrong,” Minnie whispered. “I’m looking for marks, when I should have been looking for goo-gooey.”

      “Huh?” Kenny stared at his sister.

      “We don’t need a cowboy to work for us, we need one for Mom.”

      They watched as the cowboy lifted a child, a little girl her own age, Minnie estimated, onto a pony.

      “You mean, like a dad?” Kenny asked. “Grandpa Barley said he’d kick the bejesu—”

      “Shh,” Minnie said, “you’re not to quote Grandpa when he goes south of good manners, Mom says. If that cowboy can stay in the saddle, we’re going to find a way to drag him over to Mom. You can cry and I’ll pretend to be lost.”

      “And you’ll get in trouble,” Kenny said. “Mom knows when you’re, you know, looking out for her.”

      “Yes,” Minnie said, “but Kenny, our life would be simpler with a man who can jump into a barrel. And that cowboy looks like he can handle barrels just fine.”

      “Maybe we should get Mom to watch him,” he said. “Maybe she’d change her mind, although she’d probably say he was too big to…” His gaze wandered as he watched Calhoun walk to the other side of the arena.

      “…to fit inside a barrel,” Minnie finished for him.

      “Yeah.”

      “Kids,” Olivia said, walking to their side as they hung over