Always a Cowboy

Always a Cowboy Read Online Free PDF

Book: Always a Cowboy Read Online Free PDF
Author: Linda Lael Miller
having risen to their feet when their sister-in-law entered, sat again.
    If their mother, Blythe, was around, she was occupied elsewhere.
    Once settled, everybody eyed the soup tureen, but nobody reached for the spoon. In the Carson house, you waited until all expected diners were present and accounted for, or you suffered the consequences.
    â€œWhere’s Ryder?” Mace asked. They all liked Grace’s teenage stepson and considered him part of the family.
    â€œBasketball practice,” Grace replied, arranging her cloth napkin on her lap. Drake and his brothers would have been all right with the throwaway kind, or even a sheet of paper towel, but Blythe and Harry took a dim view of both, except at barbecues and picnics.
    Luce trailed in then, looking a little shy.
    Slater, Mace and Drake stood up again, and she blushed slightly and glanced down at her jeans and shirt—blue this time—as though she thought there might be a dress code.
    Drake drew back the chair next to his, since there was a place setting there and his mother always sat at the head of the table.
    Luce hesitated, then seated herself.
    Harry bustled in, carrying a salad bowl brimming with greens.
    â€œGo ahead and eat,” she ordered good-naturedly. “Your mother’s having supper in her office again. She’ll see all of you later, she said.”
    Having delivered the salad, the housekeeper deftly cleared away the dishes and silverware at Blythe’s place and vanished into the kitchen.
    For a while, nobody said anything, which was fine with Drake. He was hungry, fresh out of conversation and so aware of the woman sitting beside him that his ears felt hot.
    He helped himself to stew and salad and three biscuits when his turn came and hoped Luce wouldn’t whip out a notebook and a pen and make a record of what he ate and the way he ate it.
    There was some chitchat, Grace and Slater and Mace all trying to put Luce at ease and make her feel welcome.
    Relieved, Drake ate his supper and kept his thoughts to himself.
    Then, from across the table, his younger brother dragged him into the discussion.
    â€œSo,” Mace began, “have you warned Luce here that she ought to be careful because you like to swim naked in the creek some mornings?” He paused, ignoring Drake’s scowl. “I’m just saying, if she’s going to follow you around and all, certain precautions ought to be taken.”
    Drake narrowed his eyes and glared at his brother, before stealing a sidelong look at Luce to gauge her reaction.
    There wasn’t one, nothing visible, anyway. Luce seemed intent on enjoying Harry’s beef stew, but something in the way she held herself told Drake she was listening, all right. She’d have had to be deaf not to hear, of course.
    Drake summoned up a smile, strictly for Luce’s benefit, and said, “Don’t pay any attention to my brother. He’s challenged when it comes to table manners, and he’s been known to dip into his own wine vats a little too often. Must have pickled his brain.”
    â€œNow, boys,” Grace said with a pleasant sigh. “Let’s give Luce a little time to get used to your warped senses of humor, shall we?”
    Slater met Drake’s gaze, saying nothing, but there was a twinkle in his eyes.
    Mace pretended to be aggrieved, not by Grace’s attempt to change the course of the conversation, but by Drake’s earlier remark. “My wine,” he said, “is the finest available. It won’t pickle anything.”
    â€œThat so?” Drake asked. In the Carson household, bickering was a tradition, like touch football was with the Kennedys. He was beginning to enjoy himself, and not be so worried about the impression all this might make on Luce. “I seem to remember a science project—the one that almost got Ryder kicked out of school last term? Something about dissolving a tenpenny nail in a jar of your best
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