or the classes on deportment and refinement at the private finishing school her father forced her to attend.
âI have no intention of selling,â she assured him in a tone that could barely be considered civil. âNot now. Not ever. I will make this place prosper and then I will be stopping by the 4C to make you a fair offer for your spread.â
His eyes turned as cold as granite and his dark brows swooped down his forehead. A muscle ticked in his suntanned jaw. He looked quite intimidating, but Adriannarefused to back down to him or anyone else in the state of Texas.
âFirst off, Boston, a woman overseeing a Texas ranch, especially one the size of this one, has disaster written all over it. Secondly, as long as I have a breath left in my body, 4C will never be sold off part or parcel!â
Clearly, she had hit an exposed nerve, though she had no idea how or why. But since he had hit a sensitive subject with her, she didnât give a flying fig what had upset him.
She fisted her hands on her hips and met his intense glare. âThen it seems we understand each other perfectly. You are going nowhere and neither am I. You stay on your side of the fence, Cahill, and I will stay on mine.â
âFine, then, you upkeep your half of our shared fence and Iâll repair my half. Thatâs how itâs done in Texas.â
âThen thatâs how Iâll do it,â she snapped back.
âYouâve got yourself a deal, Boston. And donât come crying to me when you canât turn a profit with your Herefords or you discover your foreman is as incompetent as you are.â
On that ridiculing comment, he whipped around and stalked off to mount the striking bloodred bay gelding.
âAnd good riddance!â she called after him when he thundered off. She lurched toward the house, muttering under her breath. Adrianna vowed, there and then, to make this place prosper, if for no other reason than to assure that cocky cowboy that she was made of sturdy stuff.
He represented the opinions of narrow-minded menâand apparently there were as many in Texasas there were in Boston, after allâwho didnât think a woman could survive and thrive in a manâs world. But someday Quin Cahill would apologize for dismissing her as incompetent, she promised herself fiercely.
On that defiant thought, Adrianna stomped into her run-down house and put her bottled anger to good use by setting her bedroom to rightsâ¦before she collapsed in exhaustion that night.
Chapter Two
âA ddie K.! Iâm so glad to see you!â Rosalie Greer Burnett called out excitedly when Adrianna entered the fashionable boutique on Town Square. âI was afraid youâd be so busy settling in that you wouldnât be in town for a week.â
Adrianna gave her beloved cousin an affectionate hug, then surveyed the shop filled with racks of stylish gowns and hats that Rosa had designed herself. She had struck out on her own to follow her dream and she had a successful shop to show for it. Plus, Rosa had married the previous month and she looked so happy she was about to burst her seams.
âWas the house in better condition on the inside than the outside?â Rosa asked anxiously. âAre Butler, Elda and Bea satisfied here?â
âThey are undertaking the challenge but the interior needs as much attention as the outside.â
âDo you need more help? I couldââ
Adrianna flung up her hand, then shook her head.A curlicued strand of hair tumbled from her hastily assembled coiffure and dangled by her cheek. She shoved it out of the way and said, âWe are managing fine. You have your shop to tend and a husband to boot.â She frowned disapprovingly at her blond-haired cousin. âAnd by the way, I am none too happy that you couldnât wait to marry Lucas until the railroad tracks were completed so I could move here. You know I wanted to help with your
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