Excerpt
A Highlander of Her Own
Pocket Books, 2009
Chapter Two
Prairieland, Texas
Present Day
The quick clip of worn cowboy boots resonated joyously in the short hallway, bouncing off the hospital green
walls of the clinic. It was all Ellie Denton could do to keep from skipping down the hall. So great was her relief
as she pushed through the swinging door into the aged waiting room, she had to resist the urge to hug the
elderly receptionist standing by the front desk.
“Them test results come out okay, Ellie?”
“Yes ma’am Miz Waller.” Ellie gave in to the urge and threw her arms around the little old woman, who giggled
like a schoolgirl.
“I’m real glad you got yourself some good news today, honey,” Ethel Waller murmured, reaching out to tuck a
stray lock of hair behind Ellie’s ear. “You sure do got your mama’s pretty black curls.” Then she giggled again
and fanned herself with her thin, blue-veined hand, “But you got them green bedroom eyes straight from your
daddy. Lordy, if he wasn’t the handsomest man I ever did see.” Ethel patted Ellie’s arm before returning to her
chair behind the front desk. “You be real careful driving home now, you hear.”
“I will Miz Waller. Thank you.”
That’s what came from living in the same small town her whole life. Everyone knew everything about her as if
they were all family. Still, Ellie was grateful for the good news, too. Anything good in her life was way past
due.
As she walked down the dusty sidewalk toward the little store where she’d parked her old pickup, she was
determined not to let even the busy noise of the little town darken her mood. Soon enough she’d have to deal
with all the unpleasantness life had thrown in her path the past few weeks. For the next couple of hours she
just wanted to savor the one positive she had been given.
The tests were all negative. Whatever this thing on her chest was, it wasn’t skin cancer.
Doc Hill had offered to set up an appointment with some skin specialist in Dallas, but Ellie had declined. She
wasn’t sure how she was going to pay Doc Hill, let alone come up with money for some expensive big-city
doctor. At this point, if it wasn’t going to kill her, by necessity it fell to the bottom of her list of priorities.
The little bell above the door jingled merrily when Ellie walked into the old store.“Well, I’ll be! You’re looking right happy there today Ellie. Haven’t seen you smiling like that since before--” the
old man behind the counter paused and coughed to buy himself some time before lamely finishing. “Yes sir, you
sure do look nice today.”
Ellie knew what he’d been going to say. Since her mother’s death, nothing had been worth smiling about. Until
today.
“Thank you, Mr. Paul. How’s Herman?”
“He perked right up after you were out to the house. The wife couldn’t believe it. Nobody could ever get that
cat to take pills like you did, Ellie. Darndest thing I ever did see. You sure got a special way with animals.” The
old man nodded to himself.
“Well, I’m glad I could help.”
Special way with animals? Mr. Paul didn’t know the half of it. She used to think she had a gift, an empathy for
all four-legged creatures. But recently that gift had turned into something else altogether. Something bizarre
and frightening.
Either that or she was going stark, raving mad.
“Sure is hot today. Bet we’re in for a storm tonight.”
“I wouldn’t doubt it,” Ellie agreed, wiping her hand along the back of her neck. Even pulled back in a ponytail,
her long, heavy hair stuck to her skin in this heat.
Ellie walked to the far shelf, studying the canned goods. Something portable and cheap was what she needed. Something she could keep in the pickup until she decided what to do.
Don’t think about it now.
She had, after all, promised herself a couple of hours reprieve.
“Vern Peters was in earlier,” the shopkeeper called from the front of the store. “He said when he drove past
your place there was a truck out there looked an awful lot like Ray Stanton’s.”
Just the mention of that man’s name made Ellie’s stomach turn. Her reprieve was over. Time to face the chaos
her life had become.
“Yes sir, Mr. Paul, that’s his truck alright. He showed up yesterday. Heard about mama’s death and seems to
think he has a right to take over the place.”
Ray had been sitting on the porch, his filthy boots propped on the railing when she’d come in from checking on
the sheep.
“Oo-whee, girl! You always did fill out a pair a jeans like nobody else.” He’d taken a long drag on his cigarette,
then tossed it to the porch and ground it out with his heel.
“What are you doing here?” Some small part of her had known the minute she’d pulled off the road and seen
his truck.
“Now, Ellie darlin’, is that any way to talk to your old daddy?”
“You’re not my father. Now get off my property.” She didn’t want anything to do with the loser her mother had
made the mistake of marrying five years ago. A marriage that hadn’t lasted twelve months.
“Oh, I don’t think I’ll be leaving anytime soon. Way I see it, with Nora passed, this is rightly my property now. I
talked to the sheriff, and he agrees. I’ve decided to move back in. But don’t you worry your pretty little head.
You can stay if you want. I’m sure we can work out something you can do to earn your keep around here.”
The conversation had gone straight downhill from there. Finally, with Ray’s laughter and taunts ringing in her
ears, Ellie had run to her pickup and sped away, leaving gravel and dust heavy in her wake.
There was no point in her going to see the sheriff. He was Ray’s brother in law.
Peanut butter, bread, a toothbrush, soap, some canned goods. A can opener. Ellie gathered items she would
need and headed up to the counter, trying to calculate just how much cash she would have left.
She paused to look longingly at the rack of paperbacks at the front of the store. Her favorite author had a
new Highlander romance out, but for now she’d have to content herself with re-reading the one she had out in
the truck.
Reluctantly, she turned her back on the books and piled her selections on the check-out counter.
“As I recall, your mama never did rightly divorce ol’ Ray, now did she?”
“No sir, Mr. Paul. She didn’t.” Nora hadn’t left a will either.
“That’s a damn dirty shame. I guess that good-for-nothing bum sees this as his golden ticket. You gonna fight
him on it?”
“I’m not sure.”
Fight him? Oh, she could take him to court. Probably could win if she got herself a good lawyer... which she
couldn’t afford. And Ray? His older brother was a big shot attorney over in Austin.
“Well, it don’t seem right to me.” Ben Paul shook his head, then peered over his reading glasses. “You going
back to College Station in the fall? You gonna be a vet like your mama wanted you to?”
“Right now I can’t say. After those developers were out from Dallas, Mama and I had talked about selling off
some of the north pasture land so I could finish school, but now...” Ellie let the words drift off.
Between her mother’s death and Ray claiming rights to the ranch, the likelihood of her being able to sell off
part of the land was pretty remote. Finishing school would have to wait.
The shopkeeper added up the items Ellie set on the counter. “That’ll be thirty-seven-fifty.”
She dug into the pocket of her jeans and pulled out her last two twenties, returning the meager change in
their place.
With a wave, she left the store and loaded the two brown paper bags into the seat of her old pickup before
heading out of town.
School? Who was she kidding? She had exactly two dollars and fifty cents to her name. And not even a place
to sleep tonight.
After dark the night before, she’d returned to her house and snuck out back where the load of wash she’d
done was still hanging on the line. Thank goodness she’d at least been able to get a clean change of clothing
to wear in to town today.
For now she headed to the same place she’d spent the night before, out to the far pasture on her land. To her
favorite place by the river that flowed across a corner of the property.
Pulling her pickup to a stop under the dappled shade of a huge old Mesquite tree, Ellie climbed out and walked
over to the river’s bank, breathing in the familiar smell of the place.
This had been her favorite spot for as long as she could remember. It was quiet here. Peaceful. A private
place where she had always come to think, to plan, to daydream.
She grabbed her new bar of peach soap from the bag of groceries, peeled out of her clothes and dove into
the river. The cool water closed over her, washing away her worries for the moment, along with the grime of
the day.
“A clean body means a clean mind,” her grandmama had always said. Ellie hoped that was the case now. She
needed her thoughts to be clear in order to plan what she would do next.
Heat hung in the air, even as dark approached. In no time she was dry, except for her hair. After putting on
her jeans and a clean T-shirt, she ran a comb through her curls before using an old bandana that had been
lying on the floorboard of her truck to tie her hair up into a ponytail. It would be a mass of long tangles
tomorrow, but she had more important things to worry about now.
Reaching under the seat of the old Ford, she pulled out her favorite romance novel, the pages worn from the
number of times she’d read it to escape into the fantasy of the Scots Highlands. Reading had long been her
refuge whenever she was unhappy.
And ‘unhappy’ certainly was hovering over her tonight.
Things had gone so wrong lately. Her mother’s death had been the first. Less than a week later this awful red
mark had showed up on her chest. Then there were all the strange games her mind had started playing on her.
Now Ray was back.
Ellie finished up her cold canned dinner, not wanting to start a fire and draw attention to her location. She
bagged her trash and tossed it into the bed of her old Ford before sitting down at the foot of her favorite
Mulberry tree. From here she could hear the fish break the surface of the water to gobble down the dark
berries that fell from the limbs hanging over the river.
In the far distance, thunder rumbled and lightning jagged a path to the ground, flashing a bright white in the
growing dark.
There wasn’t enough light left to read, but just having her book in her lap was comforting. She stroked her
hand over the cover as she tried to come to some decisions.
She couldn’t live out here in her pickup forever. What was she going to do? More specifically, what was she
going to do about Ray taking over her home?
That slimy worm!
She hated the man. He was even worse than all the chauvinistic cowboys she’d grown up around. This low-life
had broken her mother’s heart and now he had the nerve to show up and think she would forget all he’d done?
He was so full of himself. Sitting there on the porch yesterday, leering down at her, making his dirty little
insinuations about what she’d have to do to stay in her own home.
“I’ll have you know I already earn my keep around here, Ray. I work this ranch, which is more than you ever
did in the short time you were here.”
He stood up from his chair and pushed the sweat-stained straw cowboy hat back on his head. “You need a
man, honey. And I don’t mean for working those damn sheep. I can be that man.”
“Don’t flatter yourself. You think I’d be interested in a man my mama kicked to the curb?” Ellie laughed,
masking the fear she felt.
Ray’s eyes had hardened at that. “Look around you, missy. You got some secret true love out there
somewhere who’s gonna come riding up to your rescue? One of them bare-chested guys from those books you
and your mama used to read?” He’d laughed at her then, a thin mean bark of a laugh. “I don’t exactly see you
beating guys off with a stick, Ellie. You’re too goddamned picky for your own good. But that’s getting ready to
change. You want to live in my house, you’re going to do what I want, the way I want it. Matter of fact, I’m
thinking you could peel out of them jeans and we could start right now.”
She’d run then. Jumped in her old truck and raced away. Straight to this spot, where she’d cried until she’d
finally fallen asleep.
But that was yesterday. This morning she’d gone into town and gotten the best news she’d had in months. It
was the start of a whole new chapter in her life.
Now she would...what?
What could she do? The frustration of feeling so completely powerless in this situation almost had her in tears
again, but she fought it down. She would think of something, some way to deal with this. Her mama always did
say she was stronger than she gave herself credit for.
She leaned her head back against the massive tree trunk and closed her eyes.
When she was younger she would come out here, stare up at the stars and dream of her perfect man -- her‘true love’ as Ray had called him, He would show up in her little town and sweep her off her feet. A man with
whom she could be as happy as she remembered her mama and daddy being together.
In those days she had truly believed he was out there somewhere and that wishing on a falling star would
bring him to her.
Thunder rumbled again, much closer this time.
“Even the gods are laughing at that idea,” she muttered, watching as the lightning drew closer.
Whoever her dream man had been, he certainly wasn’t any of the boys she’d dated around here. They were all
alike. They talked about how their “little woman” belonged at home, raising babies and cooking meals. Barefoot
and pregnant, as the old saying went, sure wasn’t the life for her. Especially not with a man who thought he
had the right to tell her what she should be doing all the time. She’d had more than enough of that from the
guys she’d known all her life.
Besides, she didn’t want a man. She would never be weak like her mama had been. She wouldn’t settle for the
first cowboy that came knocking just because she wanted love so badly. Wouldn’t go looking for some man to
take care of her. She could take care of herself.
But the old fairy-tale dream wouldn’t fade that easily. Just for this one moment she allowed herself to feel that
dream again. To want. Wouldn’t it be wonderful? If such a man really did exist?
“That’s still what I’d wish for,” she whispered. “To find that one man who’s meant for me, my true love,
wherever he is.” She glanced down at the dog-eared book lying next to her and smiled. “A Highlander of my
own would be totally cool.”
The spot on her chest had begun to tingle and she unconsciously rubbed at it as she watched the lightning
cut through the dark. A quick count to the next peal of thunder told her the storm was still miles away, but
she could already smell the rain on the gentle breeze.
The tingle grew stronger and she felt the hair on her arms stand up as the next bolt of lightning met the
ground within feet of where she sat.
“That’s weird,” she muttered, rising to her feet.
Green lightning? She’d seen a whole lot of thunderstorms in her twenty-three years, but she’d never seen the
like of that before.
She forgot all about counting to the next clap of thunder when lights of all colors began to twinkle and flash
around her.
“What the...?”
The breath was sucked from her lungs as she felt the sudden rush of forward momentum and the
stomach-dropping sensation of a free fall into nothingness. A rainbow of lights flashed and danced in a frenzy,
circling about her, passing around and through her, all as she felt her body speeding though an eerily green-lit
emptiness.
A thought about the lightning being too far away to have struck her flashed through her mind just before her
world faded away to blackness.
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