didn’t get that, then she wasn’t the girl for him. Logically he knew his father was right about that.
He just had to convince his heart.
Chapter Three
“A nd how’s Uncle Alan?” Cara asked, shifting the phone to her other hand as she slowed the car down and steered it around a tight corner. Dust from the gravel road swirled in a cloud behind her.
“He’s still very tired, but the doctor says that’s normal. How are you doing?” Aunt Lori sounded tired herself.
“I’m fine, busy, but things are going well. I’m on my way to take a stick out of a horse.”
“Just another day at a vet practice,” Aunt Lori said with a small laugh. “Uncle Alan asked me to remind Anita to do the supply checklist. He thinks the clinic is running low on—”
“You tell Uncle Alan that Anita has already sent in the order and everything at the clinic is under control.” Except my driving, she thought, as she pushed the accelerator down, hoping she didn’t hit any washboard on her way to the next call.
The Chapman ranch.
The last call she’d been on had taken too long. A sheep with trouble delivering her lambs. Something that could have been dealt with at the clinic, but the woman insisted someone come out to look at it.
Then the woman wanted her to check out her dog’s gums and have a quick peek at her laying hens.
Which now meant that in spite of keeping the accelerator floored, she was twenty minutes late.
So it was easier to blame her heavily beating heart on the pressure of trying to get there on time rather than possibly seeing Nicholas again.
“But I gotta run, Aunty Lori. Tell Uncle Alan I’ll be there tonight and give him a full report of how things are going.”
“You take care, sweetie. I’ll have supper ready for you when you come.”
Cara smiled as she hung up. She was busy, sure, but there was a lot to be said for coming home after a hard day of work to supper cooking on the stove.
While she enjoyed cooking, many of her suppers back in Vancouver consisted of pizza or a bowl of cereal in front of the television. Hardly nutritious, despite the claims of the cereal manufacturers.
Cara made the last turn up the winding road leading to the ranch. She allowed herself a quick look at the mountains edging the fields. The bright spring sun turned the snowcapped peaks a brilliant white, creating a sharp relief against the achingly blue sky.
When she and Nicholas were dating, they seldom came to the ranch. This suited Cara just fine. Every time she came, she received the silent treatment from Nicholas’s father, which created a heavy discomfort. Cara knew Nicholas’s father didn’t approve of her, though she was never exactly sure why.
All she knew was each time she saw Dale he glowered at her from beneath his heavy brows and said nothing at all.
So she and Nicholas usually went to a movie, hung out at her uncle and aunt’s place or visited Nicholas’s best friend, Lorne Hughes.
So when she found out the call came from Dale Chapman, she was already dreading the visit, and running late just made it more so.
She parked the car and, as she got out, she heard Dale Chapman speaking.
She grabbed a container with the supplies she thought she might need out of the trunk of the car. Then she headed around the barn to the corrals, following the sound of Mr. Chapman’s voice.
Dale was holding the horse’s head, talking in an unfamiliar gentle tone to his horse.
Just for a moment, Cara was caught unawares. She wasn’t used to gentleness from Dale Chapman in any form.
“Good morning, Dale. Sorry I’m late.”
His cowboy hat was pulled low on his head, shading his eyes, but when he looked up, his mouth was set in grim lines.
“I came as soon as I could.” Cara knew trying to explain to him about unexpected problems with her previous case would be a waste of time.
Cara set the kit down in what seemed to be a safe place, pulled a pair of latex gloves out and slipped them on as she walked toward