Laura Altom Marie

The Cowboy SEAL


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      His bloodshot eyes begged for an answer that left her wishing they’d found a way to install Clint’s hospital-style bed in the upstairs master bedroom as opposed to Kay’s old sewing room.

      How much had Clint heard?

      With an extra cantankerous growl, he waved the board hard enough to send the attached marker flying on its string. The writing instrument landed smack dab in the center of Clint’s eggs, which only made him roar louder.

      Jerking the marker back as if it were on a yo-yo string, he drew a line through his former word to painstakingly write: O-U-T!

      * * *

      “WHO ARE YOU?”

      After a long day of checking the well-being of not just the cattle, but fencing and the overall state of the land, as well, Cooper had just finished brushing his horse when a pretty, freckle-faced girl, whose braids reminded him an awful lot of Millie’s back when she’d been a kid, raised her chin and scowled.

      “Mom doesn’t like strangers messing with our livestock.”

      The fire flashing behind her sky-blue eyes also reminded him of her momma. “You must be LeeAnn?”

      “Yeah?” Eyes narrowed, she asked, “Who are you, and how do you know my name?”

      A boy peeked out from behind the partially closed door. He had the same red hair Jim had had when he’d been about that age. Jim Junior? Or J.J., as Peg more often called him. Through emails, Cooper had seen the kids’ pictures, but they hadn’t done them justice.

      His throat grew uncomfortably tight.

      How proud his brother must’ve been of these two, which only made his actions all the more undecipherable. If Cooper possessed such treasure, he’d be so careful....

      But then he’d treasured his mother and look what’d happened to her.

      Cooper pulled himself together, removed his right glove, then cautiously approached his niece, holding out his hand for her to shake. “LeeAnn, J.J., sorry it’s taken me so long to finally meet you. I’m your uncle Cooper.”

      “The Navy SEAL?” Seven-year-old J.J. found his courage and bolted out from his hiding spot. “Dad said you blow up ships and scuba dive and other cool stuff.”

      Judging by LeeAnn’s prepubescent scowl, she wasn’t impressed. “Mom said you abandoned your family when we needed you most.”

      How did he respond? Millie had only spoken the truth.

      From behind him, Sassy snorted.

      “You didn’t ride her, did you?” His pint-size nemesis followed him on his trek to the feed bin. “Because if you did, don’t ever do it again. Sassy’s mine.

      “Interesting...” He scooped grain into a bucket. The faint earthy-sweet smell brought him back to a time when he’d been LeeAnn and J.J.’s age. Everything had been so simple then. Do his chores, his homework, play with the dog. Speaking of which, he hadn’t seen their mutt, Marvel. Not a good sign. “Because Sassy was a birthday present for me.”

      “You’ve gotta be like a hundred,” his nephew noted.

      Most days, I feel like it. “Only seventy-five.”

      “That’s still pretty old....”

      His niece narrowed her eyes. “That’s not true. I heard Mom talking to Aunt Peg about Grandpa, and she said he was in his seventies. That means you can’t be that old—probably just like fifty.”

      Cooper laughed. “Yeah, that’s closer.”

      LeeAnn wrenched the feed bucket from him. “Since she’s my horse, I’ll take care of her.”

      “Be my guest.” Cooper backed away. “But since I’ll be here awhile, do you think we might work out a deal?”

      “Like what?” She stroked the horse’s nose.

      “Sassy’s allowed to help me with the cattle while you’re at school, then she’s all yours once you get home?”

      “Sounds good to me.” J.J. took an apple from his backpack and sat on a hay bale to eat it, all the while watching the negotiation with rapt interest.

      The girl nibbled her lower lip. Another trait she’d inherited from her mom. “I’ll think about it.”

      “Fair enough.”

      “LeeAnn! J.J.!” Millie called from the house.

      “Bye!” Jim’s son bolted.

      His sister chased after him.

      Cooper gave Sassy one last pat, made sure the three other horses had plenty of food and water, then closed up the barn for the night. As the day had wound on, the weather had only grown more ugly. At five, clouds were so heavy that it was almost dark. Sleet pelted his nose and cheeks on his walk across the yard.

      As miserably cold as the day had been and night now was, Cooper would’ve preferred to spend the evening in his truck rather than go back into the house. He didn’t belong there. At least in Virginia, he’d been part of a well-oiled team.

      On the ranch, he wasn’t sure what he was. No-good son. Disrespectful brother. Forgotten uncle.

      “Coop?”

      He glanced out from beneath his hat brim to find Millie hollering at him from the back porch. Much like she had with her robe, she now clutched the lapels of a chunky brown sweater. Wind whipped her long hair, and when she drew it back, she looked so lovely in the golden light spilling from the house that his breath caught in his throat.

      Lord, what was wrong with him? Appraising his brother’s wife? There was a special place in hell for men like him.

      “Hurry, before your feet freeze to the yard!”

      He did hurry, but only because he didn’t want her hanging around outside waiting for him.

      “Thanks.” He brushed past her, hating that he once again noticed her sweet floral smell. He removed his hat and stood there for a sec, adjusting to not only the kitchen’s warmth, but also the sight of the space filled with industrious bodies.

      J.J. sat at the round oak table, frowning at an open math book. LeeAnn sat alongside him, making an unholy mess with an ugly papier-mâché mountain.

      Millie had left him and now stood at the sink, washing broccoli. “Pardon the clutter. LeeAnn’s volcano is due soon, and J.J. has a math test tomorrow. I heard you all formally met in the barn?”

      “Yes, ma’am.” What else should he say? That she’d raised a couple of fine-looking kids? That he was an ass and coward for not meeting them before now? Instead, he glanced back to the table and said the first stupid thing that popped into his head. “That’s supposed to be a volcano?”

      The second he asked the question, he regretted it. His few hastily spoken words ruined the bucolic family scene.

      His pretty niece leaped up from the table, then dashed from the room.

      “It’s an awesome volcano!” J.J. declared before throwing his pencil at Cooper, then also leaving the room.

      “I realize you’ve probably never been around kids,” Millie said, “but you might try digging around in your big, tough Army Guy head to look for a sensitivity gene. LeeAnn’s worked really hard on her science project. You didn’t have to tear her down.” Having delivered his tongue-lashing, Millie chased after her brood.

      From upstairs came the sound of a door slamming, then muffled tears.

      Son of a biscuit...

      He slapped his hat onto the back-door rack and shrugged out of his brother’s coat, hanging it up, too. Then he just stood there, woefully unsure what to do with his frozen hands or confused heart.

      “For