If Clayton was right—and that was what he was here to find out—then Little Joe and Devil’s Tornado were one and the same.
Except that the bull at the Billings rodeo had been a hot-tempered son-of-a-bucker who stood on its nose, hopped, skipped and spun like a top, quickly unseating the rider and nearly killing him. Nothing like the bull he’d ridden in Texas.
But Clayton was convinced this bull was Little Joe. Only with a definite personality change.
“Hey, boy,” he called softly as he advanced. “Easy, boy.”
The bull didn’t move, seemed almost mesmerized as Clayton drew closer and closer until he could see the whites of the bull’s enormous eyes.
“Hello, Little Joe.” Clayton chuckled. Damned if he hadn’t been right. Same notched ears, same crook in the tail, same brindle pattern. Little Joe was Devil’s Tornado.
Clayton stared at the docile bull, trying to make sense of it. How could one bull be so different, not only from years ago but also from just days ago?
A sliver of worry burrowed under Clayton’s skull. He definitely didn’t like what he was thinking because if he was right…
He reached back to rub his neck only an instant before he realized he was no longer alone. He hadn’t heard anyone approach from behind him, didn’t even sense the presence until it was too late.
The first blow to the back of his head stunned him, dropping him to his knees next to the bull.
He flopped over onto his back and looked up. All he could make out was a dark shape standing over him and something long and black in a gloved hand.
Clayton didn’t even get a chance to raise an arm toward off the second blow with the tire iron. The last thing he saw was the bull standing over him, the silver sickle moon reflected in the bull’s dull eyes.
Antelope Flats, Montana
County Rodeo Grounds
As the last cowboy picked himself up from the dirt, Dusty McCall climbed the side of the bucking horse chute.
“I want to ride,” she said quietly to the elderly cowboy running this morning’s bucking horse clinic.
Lou Whitman lifted a brow as he glanced down at the only horse left in the chute, a huge saddle bronc called The Undertaker, then back up at her.
He looked as if he was about to mention that she wasn’t signed up for this clinic. Or that The Undertaker was his rankest bucking bronc. Or that her father, Asa McCall, or one of her four brothers, would have his behind if they found out he’d let her ride. Not when she was supposed to be helping “teach” this clinic—not ride.
But he must have seen something in her expression, heard it in her tone, that changed his mind.
He smiled and, nodding slowly, handed her the chest protector and helmet. “We got one more,” he called to his crew.
She smiled her thanks at Lou as she took off her western straw hat and tossed it to one of the cowboys nearby. Slipping into the vest, she snugged down the helmet as Lou readied The Undertaker.
Swallowing any second thoughts, she lowered herself onto the saddle bronc in the chute.
None of the cowboys today had gone the required eight seconds for what was considered a legal rodeo ride.
She knew there was little chance of her being the first. Especially on the biggest, buckingest horse of the day.
She just hoped she could stay on long enough so that she wouldn’t embarrass herself. Even better, that she wouldn’t get killed!
“What’s Dusty doing in there?” one of the cowboys along the corral fence wanted to know. “Dammit, she’s just trying to show us up.”
She ignored the men hanging on the fence as she readied herself. Bucking horses were big, often part draft horse and raised to buck. This one was huge, and she knew she was in for the ride of her life.
Not that she hadn’t ridden saddle broncs before. She’d secretly taken Lou Whitman’s clinic and ridden several saddle broncs just to show her brothers. Being the youngest McCall—and a girl on top of it—she’d spent her first twenty-one years proving she could do anything her brothers could—and oftentimes ended up in the dirt.
She doubted today would be any different. While she no longer felt the need to prove anything to herself and could care less about what her four older brothers thought, she had to do this.
And for all the wrong reasons.
“Easy, boy,” she said as the horse banged around in the chute. She’d seen this horse throw some darned good cowboys in the past.
But she was going to ride him. One way or another. At least for a little while.
The horse shook his big head and snorted as he looked back at her. She could see her reflection in his eyes.
She leaned down to whisper in his ear, asking him to let her ride him, telling him how she needed this, explaining how much was at stake.
She could hear the cowboys, a low hum of voices on the corral fence. She didn’t look, but imagined in her mind one in particular on the fence watching her, his dark eyes intrigued, his interest piqued.
Her body quaking with anticipation—and a healthy dose of apprehension—she gave Lou a nod to open the gate.
In that split second as the gate swung out, she felt the horse lunge and knew The Undertaker didn’t give a damn that she was trying to impress some cowboy. This horse had his own agenda.
He shot straight up, jumped forward and came down bucking. He was big and strong and didn’t feel like being ridden—maybe especially by her. Dust churned as he bucked and twisted, kicking and lunging as he set about unseating her.
But she stayed, remembering everything she’d been taught, everything she’d been teaching this morning along with Lou. Mostly, she stuck more out of stubborn determination than anything else.
She vaguely heard the sound of cheers and jeers over the pounding of hooves—and her heart.
When she heard the eight-second horn signaling she’d completed a legal rodeo ride, she couldn’t believe it.
Too late, she remembered something her father always warned her about: pride goeth before the fall.
More than pleased with herself, she’d lost her focus for just an instant at the sound of the horn and glanced toward the fence, looking for that one cowboy. The horse made one huge lunging buck, and Dusty found herself airborne.
She hit the ground hard, the air knocked out of her. Dust rose around her in a cloud. Through it, she saw a couple cowboys jump down into the corral, one going after the horse, the other running to her.
Blinking through the dust, she tried to catch her breath as she looked up hoping to see the one cowboy she’d do just about anything to see leaning over her—Boone Rasmussen.
“You all right?” asked a deep male voice.
She focused on the man leaning over her and groaned. Ty Coltrane. The last cowboy she wanted to see right now.
“Fine,” she managed to get out, unsure of that but not about to let him know if she wasn’t.
She managed to sit up, looking around for Boone but didn’t see him. The disappointment hurt more than the hard landing. Just before she’d decided to ride the horse, she’d seen Boone drive up. She’d just assumed he would join the others on the corral fence, that for once and for all, he would actually take notice of her.
“That was really something,” Ty Coltrane commented sarcastically as he scowled down at her. Ty had been the bane of her existence since she’d been born. He raised Appaloosa horses on a ranch near her family’s Sundown Ranch and every time she turned around, he seemed to be there, witnessing some of her most embarrassing moments—and causing more than a few.
And here he was again. It never failed.
She took off the helmet, her long blond braid falling free. Ty took the helmet and motioned to the cowboy on the fence, who tossed her western straw hat he’d been holding for her. It sailed through the air, landing short.
Читать дальше