Read Texas Ranger Dad Online

Authors: Debra Clopton

Tags: #Romance

Texas Ranger Dad (5 page)

“You can tell me, Mom. I can handle it,” he said, sensing her fear.

She closed her eyes and prayed God would be with the words. Prayed that He would help Max as he took in what she was about to reveal. A tear slipped out and she brushed it away with trembling fingertips.

“Mom—”

She patted his hand and waved off his concern. “Listen, Max. Deputy Cantrell was the Texas Ranger who protected me when I first went into the program—”

“You knew him! Cool. Did you know he was moving here?” Then his expression clouded with confusion. “But wait, you guys didn't say you knew each other.”

“No. He didn't tell anyone and I, well, I didn't know
he was coming here until the day I met him on the street. I haven't spoken to him in over fourteen years. Not since he left my case. But—” she stopped and took a deep breath “—I was confused, and scared when I knew Zane. And I made a choice that was wrong. I didn't know the Lord at that point either…and I fell in love—no, I
believed
I was in love with Zane. And, you know how we've talked about you being abstinent until you fall in love and get married.” He nodded. She knew he hated talking about this, but she'd insisted. Her mother had made the mistake. Because of her history, she'd made it a priority to be honest and open about relationships. Until now, he hadn't known her frankness came from her own experience. Looking at him, she paused. How could she tell him that she'd made a mistake but that he was a blessing at the same time?

Keep going.

“Max. What I'm trying to tell you is that Zane is your father.” She said the words and the entire world came to a screeching halt. There was no sound. There was nothing but the fear that she'd just lost the most precious thing in her life. Her son's trust.

“Wait, my dad isn't…” He paused on David's name. She'd gotten him away from David early enough and Max had stopped calling David his dad long ago. Max didn't talk about him and despised the fact that he'd beaten her. Oh, how she'd longed to erase David's name from Max's birth certificate and to tell Max the truth.

“No, he isn't.”

Max bolted from the chair, his fists at his side as he glared at her. “All these
years
—you knew! All this time and you never said nothin'. And him—Zane, he knew,
too, and he's just now coming around. What kind of dad—”

“No.” Rose stood, too, and tried to lay her hand on his arm, but he shrugged her off and moved away. She blinked back scalding tears. “Zane didn't know. I never told him. I haven't told him yet.”

Max was red with anger and Rose suspected the need to cry, also. Fury raged in his eyes and
she'd
put it there. Her heart was breaking.

“He doesn't know? All this time, living in shelters—in our car—and he was out there all along. And you didn't tell either one of us?”

The accusing words tore at her heart. “I'm sorry—”

“How could you
do
that?” he cried, then turned and raced into the woods.

Chapter Six

Z
ane stopped in front of Rose's house just as she came hurrying out of the woods. She was still pale and didn't look happy to see him. So be it. She'd get no sympathy from him. He wanted answers and he wanted them now. He'd tried to stay away, to calm down before coming here, but one look at her and his anger reappeared front and center.

He slammed his truck door while looking around for Max. He didn't see him. That was good for the moment.

“Why didn't you tell me?” he snapped, striding toward her, meeting her in the center of the yard.

“Tell you?” she snapped back, glaring up at him. “
You
left
me.
Remember? Walked away from me like I meant n-nothing to you. Why would I tell you anything? And how dare you, Zane Cantrell, judge
my
motives!”

Like I meant nothing.
The words stung but he wasn't in the mood for feeling sympathy. Or guilt. “I left you because I was doing what I thought was best for your safety. That was my job. Had I known about Max I would have come back.”

“And that was the last thing I wanted.” The words were bitter. “I would never have used Max as a reason to bring you back. For all I know you might have slept with all of the women you were assigned to watch over.”

The words struck him like a slap. “I'd
never
done that before,” he said in a low voice of barely refrained anger. He'd loved this woman.

“I don't believe you.”

“Fine. Believe what you want, but you had no right to keep Max from me. You stole fourteen years with my son from me. Years I will never get back. Doesn't that bother you in the least?”

She sucked in a heavy breath; her shoulders rose with the power of it but she didn't say anything. As if she felt like she didn't have to. Well, he was going to make her understand that from now on she would have to answer to everything that pertained to their son.

“You say you did what you thought was best for our son. How could the best be living on the run? Never having a place to call your own? I could have helped you.”

Her eyes narrowed. “You taught me to live that way.”

“I did no such thing. Giving you a new identity in a town, with a roof over your head, is a lot different than living in a succession of battered women's shelters. How could you choose to live the way you did when all you had to do was contact me? What kind of mother would do that to her son when she had other options?”

She paled and he almost felt bad. Almost. He was too angry.

“You walked away. You weren't an option.”

“I am now. And you can bet I'll be getting to know my son. My lawyer will see to that. I want my rights as a parent.” That scared her; he could see it written all over her, from the slumped shoulders to the trembling hand that she pressed to her heart. Good.

“I—I wouldn't stop that.”

He ignored the way her wobbly words tore at his heart. How could he feel anything for her after this betrayal? “I don't really care if you would or wouldn't. I passed the point of caring what you would or wouldn't want the minute I saw my son.”

His threat hit its mark and he watched her sink onto an old bench. She looked as if her world was spinning. Let it spin. He was working off shock now so let her see what it felt like.

Of course, he wouldn't do anything at this point to prevent Max from forming a relationship with him. That was exactly what keeping Max away from her would do. But she didn't have to know that…he had to have time to weigh all of his options.

Looking at her, his anger intensified—there was a part of him that wanted to pull her into his arms and tell her not to worry, that everything would be okay. It was unbelievable to him that he could feel that. Still, those feelings were overshadowed by the part of him that despised her for what she'd done.

“Where is he?” He wanted to see Max. Talk to him again. This time knowing he was conversing with his son. She blinked rapidly and he knew she was fighting tears. He didn't care. “You can't stop me from seeing him.”

“I'm not. It's just…” Her gaze flew toward the trees and then back to Zane. She looked paler than before. “I told him about you a few hours ago.”

“And how did he take it?”

“He's upset. Understandably. Very angry.” Her voice cracked and she blinked hard, brushing the back of her hand across her cheek when a tear escaped. “How do you think he feels? His mother betrayed him.”

Zane had to harden his heart against the agony he saw in her face and heard in her words. She'd caused this. “Does he think I abandoned him, too?”

She looked at the ground. “I explained that you didn't know. But I couldn't explain why you left in the first place.”

He yanked his hat off his head and slapped it against his thigh. “Where is he?” Zane had to talk to him. Had to explain. Had to try to fix this.

“He likes to be alone when he's upset…but he ran off over three hours ago and hasn't come back.”

“Three hours!” he roared. “And you haven't called anyone?” Zane hated the thought of Max out there in those woods upset, angry and alone.

“I was about to call for some help.”

“You should have called me immediately. Aren't you worried?” The words were meant to cut. How many times over the years had his son needed him and he hadn't been there?

“How dare you insinuate that I'm not worried! Of course I'm worried sick. It's not like him. But—”

Zane shook his head and stormed toward the trees he'd seen her coming from when he arrived. His disgust with her was like a living thing between them as she hurried to catch up to him. He didn't care how mad or angry she was with him. All he wanted was to find Max and make sure he was okay. He was seized with a sense of urgency that seared him almost to the point
of helplessness. Was this how a parent felt? He forced down the panic with iron determination. Max was fourteen.

“He's always gone off to be alone when he has something bothering him. But he always comes back within a couple of hours.”

Her words were breathless as she tried to keep up with him. He didn't slow down as he scanned the trail and the bushes for signs, anything that might show which way he'd gone.

“I've learned to give him the space he needs. But this situation isn't like losing a ball or doing badly on a test. This has been a shock to him.”

Irritation flared. “Which way did you check earlier?”

She nodded right, so he strode left off the path. What would he say to Max when he found him? The question unnerved him as he pushed forward through the scattered pine and scrub trees. It was quickly apparent to him that Max had come this way and Zane followed the signs, a broken branch here and trampled leaves there. Rose was quiet as she trailed him, maybe she was praying…Zane was. Somewhere in the seconds between panic and anger he'd begun to pray that God would protect his son and that He would give Zane the words and the wisdom to fix the mess they were in. Because he was out of his element.

There was no way he could do this on his own.

 

Deputy Cantrell was his dad! Max had been letting the knowledge sink in for hours now. All his life he hadn't actually known his dad. The man who he thought was his father all this time wasn't. That fact alone relieved him of so much bottled-up anger that it was unreal. The no-good jerk!

His mom didn't know it, but Max had always promised himself that when he was old enough, he'd go find David Kimp and tell him exactly what he thought of him. He was glad his mom had taken back her maiden name so he didn't have to go around wearing the name of a rotten coward. Any man who'd beat up on a woman wasn't nobody to be proud of, that was for sure.

Max wondered if Zane's name was on his birth certificate. What did it say? Man, he couldn't believe his mom had
lied
to him.

All this time she'd kept all these secrets.

He slapped his hands to his thighs and from where he sat, cross-legged on his favorite rock, he stared out across the valley. He loved this place. Mule Hollow had all sorts of terrain. Flatland littered with rocks and cacti and deep valleys that were like places he'd only seen in movies and magazines before he came here. This was one of those places. Not like Los Angeles, where he'd always felt hemmed in. Out here he felt free and happy, especially sitting here in his thinking spot—his dreaming spot.

He'd gone from furious to calm to excited in a matter of minutes. Sure he'd been mad at his mom but he knew her…knew that all she'd ever tried to do was protect him and find a better life for him. He wasn't a kid anymore. He'd considered himself a man for a lot longer than the adults had and he figured this was his moment to step up and prove what he was made of. All this time he'd been trying to prove he wasn't like his dad—like David. He'd thought he had his blood running through his veins and it had killed him…But that wasn't so.

He grinned. He couldn't help it—he had a
dad!
A hero dad.

Zane hadn't been around, but he hadn't known he had a son. If he had known he
would
have been around—he was a Texas Ranger after all. Just thinking about the possibilities made Max want to jump up and down like a little kid.

He had a Texas Ranger dad!

It just couldn't get any better than that.

All these years he and his mom had wandered around, hiding. They'd even lived in their car for a few weeks, though he didn't really remember it. And all this time he'd been ashamed because his dad was an embarrassment to the human race—but that hadn't been the truth. His mom had lied to him all this time.

Max thought about that, and, yeah, it bothered him, but he decided he didn't care. What he cared about was that he had a dad who was a hero.
A hero!

He bolted up, unable to keep all the feelings inside anymore. He jumped in the air and let out a yell, pumping his fist. Life just could not get
any
better than this!

The only thing that would have been better was if they'd been a family together all that time. The idea froze him in his tracks.

What if…what if there was a way for that to happen
now?

Max's heart started pounding like a thousand stampeding horses. Ever since he and his mom had moved to Mule Hollow, he'd been praying she'd marry a good cowboy. He'd seen how happy all the ladies were who'd gotten married and he wanted that for his mom. But this, this was way better.

He started walking. It was time to go home because he had things to do. Plans to make. Big plans!

He knew just the people to help him, too. The idea
made him walk faster, pushing tree limbs out of his way as he went.

He lived in Mule Hollow with a bunch of women who made happily-ever-after happen all the time.

You betcha that's what they did! And now, it was his mom and dad's turn at a happily-ever-after…he could hardly wait.

He was going to make this happen.

 

“Ohhh!”
Rose cried when she tripped on some underbrush and landed on her hands and knees. She'd been tramping through the woods after Zane for the past fifteen minutes. The man had become a raging bear storming through the trees and her short legs just couldn't match his pace.

“Are you hurt?” he asked, spinning toward her, the tone more a demand than inquiry.

“No,” she snapped, using the moment on her knees to take a deep breath. She was so worried about Max she didn't know what to do. Add Zane on top of that and the fear that he might file for custody, and she was a wreck. He'd mentioned his lawyer.

“Are you sure?” he asked, startling her by stooping down in front of her. His expression was grim and his anger at her still very evident, but no one would ever say Zane Cantrell didn't come to their rescue. Oh, no, the man was Mr. Rescue all the way.

“Let me look at your hands,” he said, and before she had time to react, he grabbed both her wrists and turned her palms up.

“No, I'm fine,” she said, jerking her hands only to have his grip tighten and hold her still. The last thing she wanted was for him to touch her. The man's touch did things to her system that she didn't welcome. Even
now, while she was so angry with him she could slap him, her heart was pounding. From rage, she told herself, but she was afraid it was a lie. It was infuriating!

“I don't need your help,” she ground out through clenched teeth.

“Yeah, you've made that obvious. Now hold still,” he demanded, and bent his head to examine her palms.

They were too close and she was not comfortable at all. Rose tugged her hands again, which only caused him to shoot her a glare.

“I'm telling you to hold still, Rose. I mean it. Your hands are scraped.”

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