Read Microsoft Word - ClaimingHisCowgirl_LoriKing_PDF.docx Online
Authors: Unknown
room was at the end of the hall, and he hurried to clean the grime and
sweat from his person before he faced his biggest fears.
The room he’d claimed as his for the last couple of decades was
now devoid of all decoration. Everything but his most basic personal
belongings had already been taken to the cabin to await his move. He
agreed to remain in the main house through the wedding to make it
easier for Lacy to touch base with him on his task list. Each person in
the family had been given a list of responsibilities, and she was like a
damn drill sergeant about them getting done.
On his list were three things. The first was to make sure Drannon
arrived at the wedding on time. The second was to collect the
wedding rings from the jewelry store in Grand Forks and make sure
they arrived safely at the wedding on time. And the third, and most
important in his mind, was to make sure the bachelor party went off
without a hitch. Lacy hadn’t exactly added that last item, but it was
supremely important anyway.
45
Lori King
After showering, he threw on a clean pair of jeans and a t-shirt,
and headed further into the main house in search of his favorite room.
Abe’s study still looked exactly as it had the day Abe died. They’d
continued on as though he was going to walk back through the door
and go in search of his checkbook and the bill register. Vin knew that
Franki was learning to handle all of the accounting for the ranch from
Drannon, but for the moment, the books still sat in the upper right
hand drawer of the desk.
Along with the familiar space, was the familiar fragrance of old
books, and furniture polish. Marilyn took extra care with the antique
desk and the built in book shelves, and they rarely held a speck of
dust.
Reaching for a well-read book of poetry, he dropped down onto
the chaise lounge, and opened to his favorite sonnet. For a moment
he wondered what Lauren would think if she saw him sitting there
reading poetry. Would she laugh? Did it really matter?
His heart ached for the time he’d lost with her. If only he hadn’t
been so selfish.
“What do you mean you’re leaving?”
“The judge offered me two options. I could go to jail for twelve
months, or enlist in the military. I leave for basic training in a few
days.”
Lauren’s big brown eyes filled with tears and confusion. “I
thought the lawyer said you wouldn’t have to serve time.”
“I don’t have to serve time if I go into the military. The judge
will give me a deferment, and the incident will stay in my juvie
records if I do this. Hell, maybe the Marines will be good for me; you
never know.”
“I still don’t understand why you have to leave so soon. I
thought…” She paused, and then took a deep breath, “I guess I
thought maybe you’d consider going to UND with me.”
He snorted out a laugh. “I could never get into UND with my
record. Besides, you have a scholarship to go to Louisiana. You need
to take it.”
46
Claiming His Cowgirl
“I can’t. I can’t leave you like that.”
“See, now you don’t have to worry about me. I’m leaving, too.”
“Vin, what about us?”
Stiffening his spine with every possible ounce of willpower he
had, he looked her squarely in the eyes and lied to her. “There is no
us, Lauren. Just a passing thing to fill the time while I tried to figure
out what to do with myself.”
Her mouth dropped open and pain filled her eyes. “You don’t
mean that.”
“Yes I do. If I hadn’t stolen those cigarettes and been arrested, I
still would have said the same thing. This just sped up the process.”
He shoved his hands in his pockets and took a step backwards. “Go
to Louisiana and follow your dreams. Be happy. Don’t look back.”
She’d done exactly as he asked. She’d accepted the scholarship
to LSU, and carved out a life for herself that didn’t involve anyone
from her past. He was proud of her and jealous of the life she’d built.
He’d gone on to spend almost seven years in the Marines followed by
an eighteen-month stint in prison and a dishonorable discharge.
It seemed no matter what happened, he was always going to be
wrong for her. He’d be better off avoiding her as much as possible
while she was here, and yet his body ached something fierce just
knowing she was nearby.
During Sera’s funeral, he’d been too heartbroken to reach out to
her, even though he saw her in the crowd. She’d held back, refusing
Drannon’s offer of a seat with the family. She still didn’t realize that
they considered her one of them. Maybe not a permanent resident of
Crawley Creek, but a large part of their story there.
Abe’s death had been such a shock. He honestly didn’t even
remember the funeral. He moved about for days in a haze of grief,
and by the time he’d come back to the real world it was over and
done. He should have taken one of those opportunities to reach out,
but he hadn’t been strong enough. The question now was whether or
not he had the balls to face her as a grown woman. Would she even
want to see him?
47
Lori King
Lost in his own thoughts, he absently turned the pages of the
book without really reading. It was the scent of her perfume that
caught his attention, and he looked up to find Lauren watching him
from the doorway.
~ ~ ~ ~
“Hey Vinnie,” she said softly, staring into his blazing blue eyes.
So many emotions filled her she could barely think straight. He
looked so good it hurt to look at him. His thick hair was buzzed off,
and she assumed that he’d picked up that particular style while in the
military because he’d always worn it longer as a kid. She drank in the
sight of his muscular limbs unfolding from the chaise lounge he was
sprawled out on. He’d always been a big guy, but years of manual
labor had added a chiseled edge to his jaw and ripples of hard muscle
under his skin.
“Lauren. Damn woman, you get prettier every time I see you.”
The compliment flowed over her, warming her to the core before
she remembered that she was still angry at him. “Thanks. You look
like hell.”
He snorted out a laugh and shook his head, putting his book
down to stand up. “Still the same old charming Lauren, I see.”
Tipping her chin defiantly, she narrowed her eyes. “Yep. And
you’re still sneaking off to spend time with the books.”
“I like books. I don’t have to deal with them smarting off to me.”
She felt her cheeks flush, but she refused to back down. He
might have been able to dominate her when she was a young, naïve
girl, but now she was a grown woman. “I’m surprised to see you still
hanging around here.”
“Why is that?”
“All that talk about moving on, spreading your wings and
experiencing life…” She paused and then shrugged. “Guess life
kicked your ass, huh?”
“I took a few knocks, but I got back up. At least I haven’t spent
the last eighteen years hiding from myself.”
48
Claiming His Cowgirl
The barb hit its intended mark, and she had to force herself not
to wince. Was this the way it would be between them from here on
out? Unable to resist slinging snarky comments at each other just to
inflict pain?
“Anyway, I just wanted to say hello since you didn’t come to
dinner.”
“Hello,” he said, pointedly ignoring the rest of her statement.
She waited, half hoping he’d say something more, but when he
just stood there, she sighed and turned away. It took everything she
had inside to put one foot in front of the other and make her way
upstairs, leaving him behind. If he didn’t want her around, she wasn’t
going to waste her time.
Exhaustion hit her as she collected her bath products and headed
for the bathroom closest to her room. There were only two bathrooms
for all six bedrooms to share, outside of the one in the master
bedroom, but thankfully, the rest of the upstairs was blissfully empty
of guests for the time being. She could take a long soak in the tub,
followed by a steamy shower and just unwind. It was the perfect way
to greet her old stomping grounds.
Water rose to her chin as she sunk into the tub with a sigh, and
she thought about how the day had gone. Everyone was genuinely
happy to have her there, except for the one person whose opinion
mattered the most. Vin had looked like a deer in the headlights when
she popped in on him. Was he that uncomfortable around her?
Focusing her mind, she thought about her other foster brothers.
Drannon and Roman both seemed to have found their soul mates. She
was happy for them, and she liked Franki and Lacy already. Lacy
reminded her a lot of Seraphina. They shared some of the same
mannerisms, and she even wore her hair in a braid the way the former
mistress of Crawley Creek did. It was slightly unnerving, and yet it
made total sense to Lauren. Drannon admired Sera so much when he
was young; it only seemed fitting he would find a woman just like
her eventually.
Franki, on the other hand, was an absolute riot. One moment she
was talking about her motorcycle, Hal, and the next she was arguing
49
Lori King
with Roman about her fear of horses. Apparently even after over a
month on the ranch, he was still unable to ease her past her phobia.
Lauren also heard more details about the traumatic events that
led to Franki’s move to North Dakota. It was bone-chilling to know
that there were people in the world who cared so little for others that
they would inflict that kind of harm. And to hear that a human
trafficking ring was working out of this part of the country was
downright shocking.
Franki seemed to be both mourning and moving on in her grief,
considering how recently it had occurred. At one point, Lauren had
wondered if she was doing more avoiding than grieving, but it wasn’t
her place to question the other woman.
All in all, it felt good to be home for a few days. She knew the
night would bring vivid heartbreaking memories in the form of
nightmares—as it always did when she was forced to relive her
childhood—but hopefully, she’d find closure while she was here. It
was time she let go of her feelings for Vin for good.
~ ~ ~ ~
“Damn it, Lauren!”
Her mother’s voice rang through the tiny two bedroom trailer
home, echoing off the walls. Lauren cowered in the corner of her
closet under her favorite blanket. Rainbows and grinning bears
dotted the material, but instead of smiling back at them, silent tears
slipped down her cheeks. If Joss was drunk enough she would pass
out before she tracked her daughter down. If not, Lauren would be
dodging her heavy-handed swings.
“Lauren Nicole Kensington, you’d better get your ass out here
now. I know it was you who hid my bottle. Eddie hasn’t been here for
three or four days.”
Eddie Wayland was Joss’s on again off again boyfriend. He
hated dealing with her drunk almost as much as Lauren did, and the
drinking kept the couple from finding any sort of peace or happiness.
Lauren liked Eddie, but he didn’t have much of his own. That’s how
50
Claiming His Cowgirl
he ended up with Joss in the first place. She’d found him at the
unemployment office where she worked, and brought him home to
“crash on the couch for a few days”. A few days turned into weeks
and then months of sharing her mother’s bed. They’d be content for a
while, and suddenly, something would happen, and Joss would start
drinking again, and Eddie would run for the hills.
He used the phrase “getting out of Dodge”, but he’d been doing
it so much that Lauren figured he had a whole other life he was living
away from the trailer park. Not that she blamed him. She hated when
her mother got like this. Joss was an angry, mean drunk. She would
start feeling sorry for herself, crack open a fresh bottle of liquor, and
before long, she was taking out her depression on her young
daughter.
Lauren had been dodging the blows for almost eight years, and
she prayed for the day that she’d be old enough to leave all of this
behind. It couldn’t come soon enough.