Thankful for Love

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Authors: Peggy Bird

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Thankful for Love
Peggy Bird

 

Avon, Massachusetts

Copyright © 2015 by Margaret Bird.
All rights reserved.

This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher; exceptions are made for brief excerpts used in published reviews.

 

Published by

Crimson Romance

an imprint of F+W Media, Inc.

10151 Carver Road, Suite 200

Blue Ash, OH 45242. U.S.A.

www.crimsonromance.com

 

ISBN 10: 1-4405-9500-3

ISBN 13: 978-1-4405-9500-4

eISBN 10: 1-4405-9498-8

eISBN 13: 978-1-4405-9498-4

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, corporations, institutions, organizations, events, or locales in this novel are either the product of the author's imagination or, if real, used fictitiously. The resemblance of any character to actual persons (living or dead) is entirely coincidental.

 

Cover art ©iStockphoto.com/Moncherie.

 

First, this book is dedicated to Ben, one of the best grandsons anyone could have. When you're old enough to read it, you'll see how much of you I borrowed to create Lucas.

Second, I want to thank Melody Miller, sales director for the Wildhorse Resort and Casino on the Umatilla Reservation, who let me pick her brain about life in the area. If I got it right, she was a good teacher. If I got it wrong, I was a bad student.

Last, I owe thanks to the people of Crow Agency and the Rocky Boy's Reservation. Two years working as a public health nurse on those reservations taught this East Coast girl much about dignity, tradition, and pride.

 

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Contents
Chapter 1

Jack Richardson knew what was coming as soon as Anne Salazar said, “We need to talk.” He even felt a sense of relief that it was finally happening.

“I'm listening, Anne,” he said.

She put on her jacket as she spoke, avoiding looking directly at him, paying more attention to buttoning it up than she needed to. “I can't do this anymore. I'm so, so sorry, but I can't.” When she finally looked up at him, he saw regret in her eyes. He was sure she saw the same in his.

“I'm not surprised. I've been wearing you out with what I've needed from you,” he said. He reached for her hand, but she didn't respond to his gesture.

“I've been only too happy to help. I love you. You know I do. But I'm…”

“Done with it?”

“I'd stay if I could. But this body of mine isn't what it used to be. I'm seventy. I need to have my hip replaced. I can't take care of two active boys while I'm in the hospital and at PT appointments.”

“You don't need to apologize. I understand. You've been the best grandmother and mother-in-law anyone could ask for. I don't know what the boys and I would have done without you after Paula died.”

Tears appeared at the mention of the death of her daughter—Jack's wife—from ovarian cancer two and a half years ago. “I wanted to help. Had to help or I'd have gone crazy. I hate to leave you in the lurch like this, but the doc says I shouldn't put it off any longer.”

Jack hugged her. “We'll be fine. I'll start looking tomorrow for someone to help. When's the surgery?”

“Not for a month, so you have a little time.” She patted her son-in-law on the arm. “I'm not sure what I'll miss the most—feeling like I'm helping you out or being a part of my grandsons' lives.”

“You make it sound like you're moving to Timbuktu. You'll still be part of their lives.”

“But not every day the way I've been since ... well, for the past couple years.”

Anxious to assure her she wouldn't be losing touch with her grandsons, Jack said, “When you're back on your feet, we'll work something out so you see them regularly. Don't worry about it. Get yourself taken care of.”

Anne gathered up her purse and several containers, now empty of the food she'd brought over to feed the three Richardson males. “Shall I tell the boys, or do you want to?”

“How about we both do it? When I've got someone else lined up, we'll tell them together. Fair enough?”

“More than fair.” She put her arms around his waist in a farewell hug. “I wish I didn't have to do this.”

“We can't have you working so hard you end up on the DL. Don would shoot me.” Don was Anne's husband, the kids' grandfather.

“He wouldn't shoot you, although he might make your life a living hell at family dinners.” She gave him a kiss on his cheek and released him. “You've looked out for everyone else for so long you haven't had a chance to do anything for yourself. And now I've made it even harder for you.”

“You haven't. I'll be fine.” Jack accompanied her to the door then watched her walk slowly to her car. The limp he'd begun to notice a few months back was more pronounced. Either it was worse or she was no longer trying to hide the pain. Whichever it was, it was why he hadn't been surprised at her announcement.

He was glad she was getting her hip taken care of, but he had to admit it did make his life more complicated. It was spring. The wheat on his Eastern Oregon ranch was beginning to produce heads of grain and needed attention. He had to get the rest of the alfalfa he'd use to feed his small herd of cattle over the winter planted. The same herd of cattle that had begun calving. Then there was the foal due from the mare his late wife had loved.

Now he had to add finding someone to help with kid wrangling. At the rate things were going, he'd be an old, old man before he'd have a chance to do what Anne suggested—find time for himself.

• • •

“Any extra shifts for me this week?” Quanna Morales asked her supervisor. “I'll even work a double.”

“Sorry, kiddo, but unless someone calls in sick, I've got all the slots filled. Will you be around if I need you at the last minute?”

“I'm working the breakfast and lunch shift at the resort this weekend, but I'm available otherwise. You know how to find me.”

“Believe me, if I need you, I'll find you. You're the most dependable part-timer on staff.”

Her shift as an aide at the Golden Years Retirement Community over, Quanna headed for home with nothing to do for the rest of the day except fret about money. And how, if she didn't make more soon, she'd have to move back to the Umatilla Reservation where she'd grown up.

When she'd left for Portland so she could follow her dream of being a teacher, she had assumed that by the time she was in her late twenties, she'd be back on the rez in another way—teaching kids who needed to see that they, too, could have their dreams come true. But her life had unfolded a little differently than she had planned. The cost of living in the city and paying tuition was more than she'd imagined, so she'd had to recalculate how long it would take to get her degree. Then, about three years ago, her father died of a sudden heart attack, leaving her mother with few resources to take care of Miguel, her brother who'd been born with Down syndrome and several heart problems. She and her siblings had to pitch in. Quanna was the only unmarried one. So she volunteered to move back over the mountains to help financially and to be available to stay with her brother to give her mother some respite.

The two part-time jobs she'd patched together since coming back—her job at the retirement home as well as a shift every now and then at the restaurant in the resort on the rez—made it almost possible to afford her tiny apartment, a class at the local community college, and her contribution to her brother's care. The operative word being “almost.” If something didn't change, she would have to move back in with her mother if she had any shot at achieving her goal of finishing her degree so she could teach.

With everything on her mind, the sunny day and the sweet, sage-y smells of spring in the high plains didn't lift her spirits the way they usually did. She was merely reminded by what was around her that another season had arrived with little progress toward her goals.

• • •

“I was glad to see you were working today,” Quanna's friend Rita said when Quanna got to work in the middle of the following week. “I was afraid you'd miss out on the hot cowboy's usual visit to Joan Anthony.” Rita was almost drooling as she glanced up and down the hall.

Of course Quanna knew who Rita meant. Every woman in the place knew the guy. Mrs. Anthony had once described him as a nephew who was more like a son. Most of the female staff described him as yummy.

He was older, probably in his mid-forties, and he was a real deal cowboy, not the “big hat, no cattle” kind. His boots were made for work not show, and for the clincher, he sported a Stetson tan in the summer—pale forehead, where his hat rode low, the rest of his face dark from the sun. His jeans, which fit like they'd been tailored for him, were what the staff appreciated most. Well, his tight Wrangler butt the jeans showed off.

 His sandy brown hair always looked a little shaggy, and his deep chocolate eyes looked sad until he smiled and crinkles appeared around them to complement the dimples in his cheeks. He looked like he was in great shape and walked with the assurance of a man who was comfortable in his skin.

But there was something a little mysterious in the expression on his face, like he was holding something back. It was sexy and made all the women who drooled over him want to comfort him. Or something.

During his visits to Joan Anthony, some of the aides had been known to “drop by” her apartment to she if she needed anything just to get into a conversation with him. He was charming and funny, and they hoped by talking to him, they could uncover his secret, whatever it was. Quanna hadn't resorted to such an extreme. But she had asked Mrs. Anthony about him.

His name was Jack Richardson, and he ran a wheat operation twenty-five miles outside Pendleton. His late father was Mrs. Anthony's brother.

Today, however, instead of going directly to his aunt's apartment, Richardson went to the director's office. The staff gossip was hot and heavy about whether this meant Mrs. Anthony was about to be moved out of the facility or, if she stayed, transferred from independent to assisted living. She had, after all, been showing signs of slowing down recently, beginning to have trouble with some of the activities of daily living. Maybe her family had decided it was time to upgrade her level of care. The women all hoped she would be staying. She was one of the nicest people they cared for, and they would miss her. Not to mention miss seeing the hot cowboy.

Turned out, what he was apparently doing was asking permission to put a flier on the staff bulletin board before he went to see his aunt. Curious, Quanna took a look at what he posted the first chance she could. It was an advertisement for a job at the Richardson ranch, a “kid wrangler,” as it was described, for two young boys, with additional light housekeeping and cooking duties. The job was full time. The pay worked out to be double the hourly rate she was making at the retirement facility. Although she had no childcare experience other than babysitting when she was a teenager, Quanna was sure she could craft her résumé to show she had the skills needed. This could be the answer to her money problems. If only there were some way to ensure she had the inside track for the job.

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