Read Just Down the Road Online

Authors: Jodi Thomas

Tags: #Romance, #General, #Contemporary, #Fiction

Just Down the Road (26 page)

Big sat out one dance while the nurse visited with her friends. Reagan knew Big was simply keeping her company and trying to cheer her up.

“I heard Noah’s riding again. Someone says he’s making money.”

When Reagan didn’t ask any questions, Big changed the subject to all he’d learned about babies. “With my luck, I’ll probably never get married, but kids are sure interesting little things. Not real bright. Think about it, a bird is born and a few days later it can fly out of a nest and make its own way. But a human, they are totally helpless for months. It’s a wonder we survived. You’d think the world would just be full of birds.”

Reagan enjoyed his efforts, but she decided to call it a night. When he offered to drive her home, Reagan shook her head and left alone.

She needed time to think … to heal … to grow. Big had been right; humans must not be very bright. She was twenty-one and still trying to figure it all out. Maybe she should turn her energy to work.

Concentrating on the harvest during the day and redecorating the upstairs of the house kept her busy for a while. Late at night she worked on her online classes and tried not to think about Noah. She’d seen the girls line up on TV after he rode and made the best time. They all wanted a kiss, or a date, or more from him, and they all had perfect hair, perfect bodies. The guys called them
midnight rides
.

Reagan didn’t just think she’d never be able to compete with the women he met, she didn’t want to. The Noah she wanted lived here. The other Noah belonged to the rodeo, not her.

Then, as if nothing had happened between them, one windy evening Reagan walked out of the barn and saw the cowboy standing on her doorstep.

He had his hat low, like most bull riders prefer wearing them, and his jeans a few inches too long and snug along
his slim frame. As she walked closer, she noticed the spurs on his boots and the gloves tucked into his back pocket. For once he looked like a working cowboy and not one dressed for show.

Glancing around, she realized his pickup was missing. Noah had ridden over, but she wasn’t sure from where.

He didn’t say a word as he watched her near.

When she was close enough to see his eyes, a sober brown gaze met hers. She stood a few feet away from him, having no idea what to say. She hadn’t started the fight they’d had at the bar that night, but she’d ended it with one slap.

“I’ve missed you,” he finally said, so low she barely heard him.

“I’ve missed you too,” she answered.

“I’m sober. Have been since you slapped me.”

She grinned. “Don’t tell me I knocked some sense into you.”

“You woke me up, Rea. Climbing on a hundred bulls takes less courage than coming out here to say I’m sorry. I was wrong. I was way out of line.”

Her emotions were too raw to face trouble. All her life she’d had to fight to survive, and if surviving meant letting go of Noah, she’d do it. “What do you want, Noah?” She wasn’t sure she could even handle being friends right now. She needed solid ground.

“I’m leaving tomorrow. I’ve got to make the rodeo in Houston.”

He didn’t smile his easy smile at her. The hardness she’d seen in him that first night, when he’d broken the door down, was back. Just as time had changed her, it had changed him, and they both knew they could never go back to being the kids they’d been when they first met.

“You came to say good-bye?”

“No,” he said. “I came to ask you to have dinner with me tonight. Call it for old times’ sake.”

She looked down at her dusty jeans and shirt. It was almost sunset. By the time she cleaned up and put on something else, every restaurant in town would already be
closed. “I’m tired,” she whispered, knowing this was a onetime offer. There would be no tomorrow. “I don’t want to go out tonight, but thank you for the invitation.” She wasn’t sure, but this might be as close to a date as he’d ever offered.

“We’re not going out,” Noah said. “I packed a meal and thought we’d eat in the orchard. I just want to talk to you. If we went into town, we’d be interrupted by every other person who passed.”

Reagan was shocked. She thought he loved the attention. “I don’t know. It’s windy.”

“It won’t be in the trees.”

Reagan didn’t want to fight with him. Maybe this would be a kind ending to what had almost been between them. They could eat, talk about years past, and she’d be able to wish him well. She figured a part of her would always love him.

“All right,” she said. “I’ll get a blanket.”

Noah stepped off the porch and offered his hand. “I got everything. It’s waiting over by the trees.”

Glancing toward the orchard, she saw his horse tied to one of the apple trees. In the fading light she made out a picnic basket, a lantern, and blankets. Hesitantly, she took his hand and they walked up the path.

He moved among the trees until he found a clearing big enough to spread the blanket, and then he lit the kerosene lantern, which looked to be a hundred years old. “I found this out in my barn. When I was little, my dad used to take me on campouts and he’d always bring this along.”

Reagan pulled the food out of the basket. Peanut butter, jelly, and a loaf of bread. “You went all out.”

That easy smile came to him then. “I brought cookies, too.” He dug out a bag of Oreos. “Remember that time you went with me to a little rodeo in Oklahoma and said you’d only go if we drove back that night. I had bruises all along my backside, but I got you back by midnight.”

She grinned. “We didn’t have time to stop to eat. All we had between us and starvation was two canned Cokes and a bag of Oreos.”

Then, as simple as that, they were talking again. He’d picked the one place in the world where they could just be themselves … where they could be best friends again.

When the wind died down and the moon came out above the bare branches, they lay on their backs and finished off the cookies while they talked.

When they were finally silent for a while, Noah said simply, “Rea, don’t sleep with Big anymore.”

“I don’t …”

“I know,” he interrupted. “But I don’t want you even sleeping next to him. I always like the idea that you only did that with me.”

“You’ve no right to ask, Noah. You fade into and out of my life.”

“I know I don’t have any claim on you, but we’re more than friends and you know it.”

She closed her eyes, remembering the kisses they’d shared and the rare times she’d felt so close to Noah that she’d almost believed in something silly like soul mates.

“Knowing you, Rea, just having you curl up next to me means more to me than a full-blown wild affair. I didn’t mean what I said about you not growing up. Believe me, I see folks all the time who are acting like rabbits in permanent heat who haven’t shown any sign of being an adult.”

“What are you asking from me, Noah?”

He was so quiet she wasn’t sure he planned to answer, and then he began. “I want our friendship. It’s strong, like none I’ve ever known before or ever will again. And if that’s all you want to give, I’ll count myself lucky, but I want that from you for as long as we live. I have to believe that nothing, not me being a jackass or getting drunk or even you sleeping with Big, will break it.”

She wanted that too, and she knew he was right. She had several people she called
friend
, but none like Noah. He’d been there when she’d come out of the darkness that had been her life for years. He’d been her friend when no one else would speak to her. She owed him friendship. “All right, but that doesn’t mean I can’t get mad at you.”

“Fair enough. Only no matter how mad at me, you’ll take my calls.”

Raising her head, she added, “You don’t take mine.”

“I lost my cell.”

She hit him hard. “You used that excuse the last time you disappeared for a month.”

He acted like he was in pain. “I suppose it would be too much to ask for you to take hitting me off the table, Rea.”

“Definitely.” She laughed. “It’s one of my great pleasures in life.”

He matched her laugh. “I must be some kind of masochist because if that’s the only way you’ll touch me, I’ll take the hits.” He rolled easily to his feet before she took another swing at him.

She took his hand without hesitation as he walked her back to her house.

“You planning on riding that horse all the way back to town?” she asked as she stepped onto the porch.

“No. I borrowed him from Hank Matheson next door. I’ve been helping him out for a few days before I have to leave. We’ve been moving stock. He says he’s finally got his place paying the bills.”

Reagan smiled. In this part of the country folks talked poor. Paying the bills meant they were doing good.

“I’ve got a few details to finish up, so I’ll be in the saddle from dawn to noon, then hopefully I’ll have time to clean up before I catch a flight.” He took a few steps before he added, “You wouldn’t want to drive me over to Amarillo, would you? We’d need to leave about four.”

“I could. I’ve got a few things to pick up in town.” They were at the porch, but Reagan didn’t invite him in. “Thanks for supper.”

“You’re welcome.” He leaned down and kissed her on the cheek, then stepped away into the shadows.

She listened, hearing him swing into the saddle and ride away. Part of her felt like she was walking on paper and might fall through any moment. She had no idea what Noah was up to. Did he really just want to go back to being friends?

Chapter 28
 

 

T
INCH DIDN’T WANT TO TAKE
J
AMIE BACK HOME AFTER
they’d visited the chapel and said good-bye to his mother, so they drove over to Bailee and had an early lunch. The vet in town mentioned in his e-mail that he’d had a busy week delivering three foals. Tinch thought Jamie would enjoy seeing them.

He’d been right. Jamie couldn’t wait to get out of the pickup the minute he saw the little horses. Newborn foals always made Tinch smile with their funny bushy tails and the mane sticking straight up on the back of their necks.

He let Jamie climb on the fence and watch them while he talked to the vet about his latest problem mare.

“The boy reminds me of you, Tinch, when you were about that age. Your dad would bring you over and, if I didn’t watch, you’d be in the stalls with the newborns. You had something, even then, a way with horses that even the horses could smell. I’ve seen devil bucking horses who hate the whole world eating out of your hand in no time.”

Tinch didn’t want to talk about himself. He’d never been comfortable when people described him as being gifted; he considered his talent more one of understanding when it came to any animal. Only, the more he denied it, the more people bragged to others about how they’d seen him work magic with a horse. A publisher of mostly animal nonfiction had even been asking him to try writing a book for people who bought horses, then had no idea how to handle them.

He reached over and straightened Jamie’s cap, wanting to change the subject. “He’s my nephew. His mom died last week, so it looks like he’ll be living with me.”

The old vet grinned. “It’s a lot of work raising kids. I got four of my own. Kind of takes over your life before you know it, until one day you realize they are your life.”

Tinch didn’t want to tell the vet that he wasn’t doing anything with his time anyway, but he decided to stay on the safer topic of horses.

While they talked, Tinch noticed Noah McAllen’s truck pull up with a trailer attached. The professional cowboy had one of those fancy trucks he’d seen only in ads. It even had his initials on the door.

Noah bounced out and headed his direction. “Afternoon, Tinch. Glad I caught you. Hank asked me to deliver a few bags of feed to your place. While I was picking them up, the guy who helped me load them said he thought he saw your pickup turn off here at the vet’s.”

Tinch groaned. He figured he’d go pretty much unnoticed forty miles from Harmony, but evidently not. Suddenly, getting home as fast as he could seemed like a good idea. “We could shift the feed to the bed of my truck and I’ll take it back with me. Save you a trip.”

Noah shook his head. “We also loaded up that cutting horse for you to take a look at. He’s been acting like he’s half-broke for a week. Getting so bad the men at Hank’s place are refusing to ride him.”

The bull rider glanced back at the trailer and looked frustrated.

Tinch smiled. “I don’t know what’s wrong with the horse, but how can I help you, ’cause something’s got you worried?”

Noah explained that he had a plane to catch and was running out of time. Even with Reagan Truman driving over the speed limit, they’d barely make it now with having to deliver a horse and feed to Tinch’s place first. “It’s my fault.” Noah swore. “I left in plenty of time, but half the people in the feed store wanted to talk to me and I lost track of time.”

“It must be tough being famous.” Tinch laughed. “Maybe I can help, with the horse anyway. How about we trade trucks? I’ll drive yours home with the feed and the horse, settle him in, and then drive over to the Truman place. It’s not all that far on the back roads, and I’ve got Jamie riding shotgun. You go catch your ride, but leave my keys in the truck. Before Reagan gets back from taking you, I’ll have your truck parked at her farm and mine back at my place.” He studied Noah. “If that’s where you want to leave it?”

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