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Winning The Cowboy's Heart

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2019
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Heath shook his head. “Shots are stressful enough. We don’t separate them.”

“We don’t, either.”

“Huh.”

“Huh.” Their eyes clung for a moment, and she noticed a thin band of black surrounding his brilliant blue irises.

When Heath cleared his throat, she remembered to breathe. “Anyways. I’ll need you ready to go in an hour.”

Jewel peered at their destination, noting the coordinates, the elevation. “We can’t go there.”

Heath frowned. “Why not?”

“It’s your southernmost point...the most exposed to the drought. I bet forage sorghum grows there, right?”

“Some sorghum, but mostly ryegrass.”

“But sorghum is hardier in extreme weather,” she countered. “There’ll be more of it.”

The beginnings of a crease developed between Heath’s eyebrows. “What if there is?”

“We’ve never had a drought this bad. Extreme dry weather causes prussic acid to build up in sorghum grass, which will weaken the cattle. It slows their ability to take in oxygen, might even kill some.”

Heath rubbed the back of his neck. “And you know all this because...”

Outside the office, the horses nickered and shifted in their stalls. “I read. Go to conferences.”

Shock splashed across Heath’s face. “You read about cows.”

One shoulder rose. “Yeah—so?”

“Took you for more of an outdoorsy type than a bookworm.”

“Who says you can’t be both?” Her shoulders shot up, nearly reaching her ears. Why did everyone want to put her in a box? If life was a road, then shouldn’t you be allowed to change lanes? Take detours?

He stared at her for a long moment and nodded. With his vibrant eyes and near-heavenly features, he looked like she imagined an angel would. He had cheekbones and a jaw you could cut glass with, a face any artist would die to sketch—or touch. And those full, expressive lips were parted. “Look, the Lovelands have been driving cattle in this pattern for over a hundred years. We always start here. It’s how my father wants it done.”

“He’s not here. You are.”

A muscle feathered in Heath’s jaw. “And I’m doing it Pa’s way.”

“Don’t you ever just do what you want?”

He stilled, his expression as shuttered as any Loveland’s. Yet something in the corners of his eyes, a darkening, a creasing, betrayed his discontent. Was he dissatisfied with his life? Impossible. Soon he’d be married to the daughter of a wealthy family, about to have it all, respect, money, prestige.

Whereas she...she’d continue being just another hand on her family ranch if she didn’t get the range boss job.

She must have made a noise because Heath’s gaze lasered into her. Sparks of electricity crackled from his deep blue eyes. “Let’s get something straight. I call the shots.”

Their breaths came a little faster, harder, as they stared each other down. “Still doesn’t make you right about the pasture,” she snapped. “I’d make a better range boss.”

“Then why aren’t you Cade Ranch’s range boss?”

Her heart throbbed like a giant open wound. She willed away the sting of his words and pressed on. “James promised to give me the job if I proved myself this summer. Since I’m stuck here, I’ll prove it on Loveland Hills instead.”

“What’s that mean?”

“I challenge you.”

Heath’s frown deepened. “To what?”

“To prove who’s the better rancher.” She gestured between them. “Cade versus Loveland.”

“We’re on the brink of foreclosure,” he responded in clipped tones. “I’m not playing games or keeping score.”

Jewel picked up a pen and clicked the tip in and out. “I’m not playing, either, but I will be keeping score.” She dropped the pen and peered up at Heath. “And I intend to win.”

Heath made a quick, sharp, shaking-away motion with his head. “Play whatever games you want but know this... I’m in charge of everything on this ranch, including you.”

Her fingers curled in, nails biting into her palms as anger flushed through her system, hot and bitter. Oh, the terrible, crushing, breath-stealing burden of people who thought you didn’t measure up. “You’ll never be in charge of me.”

“We’re doing it this way, end of story. Be ready to head out in an hour.” He turned on his heel, strode away, then paused in the doorway. “I’m the range boss. Not you.”

He tossed those last two words at her like he was throwing down a gauntlet—the one she’d been battling her whole life.

Challenge accepted.

She stomped to Bear and flung her arms around his neck. “Miserable, stubborn, know-it-all Loveland,” she whispered into his thick mane inhaling his comforting, musky scent. “I can’t stand him,” she insisted, wondering who she was trying to convince.

James didn’t take her seriously, and now Heath?

Her skin tingled like a thousand fire ants were marching all over it. Heath had a lot of lessons to learn, one of them being to never underestimate a woman.

Especially her.

From here on out, it was war. Cade versus Loveland, and may the best rancher win.

* * *

HEATH LIGHTLY TAPPED his spurs into his mare’s sides and cantered along the line of trudging Brahmans. With his index finger and pinkie in his mouth, he whistled three sharp blasts. Blue wheeled around from the front. The cattle dog raced toward a pair of heifers who’d paused to graze. A few jaw-snapping lunges got the hungry animals moving forward again.

With a yank, Heath freed his kerchief from his back pocket and mopped his dripping face. It was drier and hotter than the center of a haystack, despite the lack of sun. The Loveland rain dance had conjured only clouds...and a different kind of storm. His gaze swerved to the petite redheaded rough rider who effortlessly drove the cattle ahead of him, her body in perfect sync with her enormous black stallion. In the distance, their destination, a southern valley with abundant greenery and a natural spring, beckoned.

Was Jewel right about the sorghum grass?

She hadn’t spoken since they set out a couple of hours ago, her silence bugging him for no good reason. His family rarely talked when working. Besides, he wanted this time on the range to make peace with his future as a married businessman, yet his thoughts kept returning to his and Jewel’s earlier argument.

She’d acted as though she’d save the day by steering them from this pasture and prove herself a better range boss. It’d blasted away his usual patience. He’d had to remind her who was in charge.
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