Jake
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For my three sons, Tom Jr., Patrick, and Mike,
who make me so proud and happy.
And for my darling Tom, who hung the moon.
Prologue
Conway ranch—The Devil’s Wilderness
Wyoming—1982
Quinn. Josh.” Big Jim Conway’s voice had his two grandsons looking up from their chores in the barn.
“Yes, sir?” Quinn paused, and the hose in his hand continued spilling water across the floor of the barn.
“Watch what you’re doing there, boyo.”
“Oh.” The boy turned off the spigot and dropped the hose. “Sorry.”
“Where’s your little brother?”
“Don’t know.” Quinn glanced guiltily toward his brother Josh, and the two boys waited for the explosion they knew would follow that admission. Since the day their mother, Seraphine, had vanished without a trace two years earlier, they had been charged with keeping a close eye on seven-year-old Jake. Not an easy job on a ranch this huge, especially since their youngest brother had a habit of wandering off to find all sorts of mischief.
“Sorry, Big Jim.” The boys never called their grandfather by anything other than that. There were no warm, fuzzy nicknames for this tough rancher, even by the youngest members of his family. “Last I saw Jake, he was out behind the barn.”
The old man walked away, muttering in frustration. A search of the area behind the barns came up empty, and Big Jim climbed the hill to the spot where a gleaming headstone stood, with five smaller stones forming a semicircle around it.
As was his custom, the old man lay a gnarled hand on the headstone that marked the resting place of his wife, Clementine, who had borne him six sons, five of whom had died in infancy. “I swear, Clemmy, that boy will be the death of me. He’s too damned independent for his own good. Do you have any idea where he’s gone this time?”
As if in answer a small head popped up from the far side of the hill. Jake was carrying something in his arms that appeared to weigh more than he did.
“What’s that you’ve got there, boyo?” As the boy drew closer Big Jim’s jaw dropped. “Is that what I think it is?”
“It’s a cougar, Big Jim. He’s just a little one, and he’s hurting.”
The old man’s growl was a combination of rage and fear. “Put that critter down before he devours you.”
The boy merely continued toward his grandfather. “I can help him, Big Jim.”
“I said put him down.”
The boy halted, then knelt in the grass before depositing the animal gently on the ground.
The old man ventured close enough to see that the young cougar was bloody and mangled, but still alive. “Looks like he tangled with something big and ornery. Probably a mother bear, and the bear won.”
“His ma was dead.”
“You know that for a fact?”
The boy nodded. “Looks like she fought hard to save him. He was lying beside her, licking her face. Can I take him to the barn and doctor him?”
“Listen to me, boyo.” The old man’s voice lowered, hoping to soften the blow. “It’s a fine thing you want to do. But this is a wild critter. He may be too weak to keep you from doctoring him now, but if he should survive, once he’s well and strong, he’ll do what wild things do. He’ll try to kill you. It’s his nature.”
Jake turned those wide, trusting eyes on his grandfather. “I know, Big Jim. But I still have to try to help. Look at him. He’s hurting something bad. And he doesn’t have a ma either.”
And he doesn’t have a ma either.
The little boy’s words were a knife to Big Jim’s heart. How could he possibly refuse a motherless boy’s request to help a motherless creature? Besides, there would be plenty of time for the lad to learn that nature could be cruel as well as beautiful.
“All right, boyo. I’ll help you build a cage and lend a hand with the doctoring. But you’re not to forget that he’s a wild thing that sees other creatures as food. As soon as he’s strong enough, he’ll bite the hand that doctors him.”
“I won’t forget, Big Jim.” With great tenderness the boy lifted the heavy animal.
“Let me give you a hand with him.”
As the older man reached out, Jake shook his head. “I can do it.”
He carried the big cat toward the barn. Inside, he applied ointment to the worst of the bite marks, and then went in search of Ela, an Arapaho woman who cooked for their family and had been with them since Big Jim’s wife, Clementine, had died some thirty years earlier.
Ela showed Jake how to use a needle and some fine thread to close the gaping wounds and stem the bleeding until they could heal.
For the next week Jake slept in the barn beside the cage his grandfather had made, and he even took his meals there, hand-feeding the cougar and applying ointment whenever its curious tongue weakened the stitches and opened another wound. Jake’s father, grandfather, and brothers reported hearing the lad talking to the animal late into the night.
A week later, when the young cougar had passed through the crisis and began to grow restless, Jake persuaded his grandfather to load the cage into the jaws of their front-end loader and drive it out to the range, near where the animal had been found.
Once there, they deposited the cage on the ground and then sat trying to figure out how to open it without risking their own safety.
“I’ll just lift up the door,” Jake said calmly.
“Like hell you will, boyo.” The old man shook a finger in his face. “You’ll stay up here on this machine with me, and we’ll figure out a way to snag the door with a rope and hook.”
While his grandfather was pondering the situation, Jake jumped to the ground, walked to the front of the cage, and lifted the door before stepping back.
For a moment the cougar stared at the boy, and then at the man, who was swearing a blue streak.
With a last look at the boy, the cougar calmly stepped out into freedom, before sprinting off.
Big Jim hurried to stand beside his grandson as the cougar made a great leap onto a rock ledge, where it lay panting in the afternoon sunshine.
Before they could turn away, the cougar lifted a paw and began licking it. It seemed, to the old man, that the animal wasn’t so much grooming itself as waving to the one who’d saved his life.
Or maybe, the old man thought, he was merely getting a bit dotty in his old age. After all, this predator would probably thank them by killing off more of their cattle.
Still, he’d swear that young cat was smiling and purring. And all because an innocent lad with a passion for healing couldn’t bear to see another living creature suffer.
Chapter One
Paintbrush, Wyoming—Present Day
Thanks, Jake.” The grizzled rancher pumped Jake Conway’s hand hard enough to have him wincing. “Figured old Scout here had seen his last sunset. I tried every home remedy I could think of.” The old man grinned. “Hated having to give in and pay a vet. You know how it is.”
Jake nodded in understanding. Every rancher in these parts knew how to birth a calf, treat a lame horse, and cure the hundred-and-one things that could go wrong with ranch animals. A veterinarian was called only in extreme circumstances, or when an animal had to be pu
t down and its owner couldn’t bear to do the deed.
“Looks like I’d better start calling you Doc.” The old rancher winked at his teenage granddaughter, who was practically swooning over the handsome young veterinarian as though he were a Greek god.
His wife, standing beside their daughter, thrust a covered plate into Jake’s hands. “Brownies,” the older woman said with a shy smile. “Our Tina here baked them herself.”
“Thank you, Anna. And thank you, Tina. How’d you know about my sweet tooth?” Jake turned that famous Conway smile on both females, who audibly sighed.
The old rancher couldn’t suppress a grin. The women in his household were all smitten with Cole Conway’s youngest son. Word in the tiny town of Paintbrush was that Jake Conway had the same effect on every female there from sixteen to sixty. It had been that way since Jake was twelve or thirteen, and still trailing his older brothers around town wearing a sweaty T-shirt, dusty denims, and one of his grandfather’s cast-off frayed, wide-brimmed cowboy hats. As he’d matured, he’d grown into a tall, muscled cowboy, whose rugged good looks were enhanced by a spill of curly black hair always in need of a trim, and devilish blue eyes that sparkled with unmistakable humor. A big part of his charm was that good-natured, roguish smile. Women just gravitated to him like bees to honey.
“I guess what I’ve heard around town is the truth. You’re some kind of miracle worker.”
“Not me. I’ve got miracle drugs.” Jake smiled and patted his pocket before tucking away the syringe and vial. “Just doing my job, Will.”
“The way I see it, thanks to that fancy vet school in Michigan, you’re doing it even better’n old Doc Hunger did. And that’s saying something.”
Jake couldn’t hide his pleasure at the compliment. It meant the world to him that the ranchers accepted him without question. Not an easy task when they still thought of the youngest Conway son as a lightweight compared to his father, grandfather, and two older brothers.
At his truck, the two men shook hands again before Jake climbed inside and started toward home.
As he drove along the dusty road he played back his phone messages. One from Phoebe, their housekeeper, reminding him that Ela was baking her famous corn bread to go with the ham she’d put in the oven, and he’d better not be late.
His mouth was watering as he played the second message, this one from his brother Quinn, reminding him of dinner Saturday night as a surprise for his wife’s birthday, and that if Cheyenne had so much as an inkling of what was planned, he’d know it was all Jake’s fault for having a big mouth.
Jake was still grinning as the third message began. A woman’s breathy voice, sounding either stressed or annoyed.
“This is Meg Stanford. I’ve just arrived at my father’s ranch to dispose of his estate, and there’s a colt out in the barn that appears to be lame. I’m not sure there’s anything you can do for it, but I’d like you to…” The voice paused for so long, Jake thought the call may have been interrupted. But then the message continued. “…do whatever it is you do with animals that are beyond help.”
Unsure of what he’d heard, he played the message a second time before dismissing all thought of Ela’s corn bread and ham from his mind. He made a sharp U-turn and headed toward the Stanford ranch.
As he drew near, it occurred to Jake that though Porter Stanford had been his family’s nearest neighbor, he’d never before set foot on the property. He and his brothers had been warned when they were just boys that they were to stay clear of the rancher, whose volatile temper was well-known around these parts.
In the town of Paintbrush gossip spread quicker than a prairie fire, and the juicy tales about Porter Stanford before his sudden death days ago had all been negative. Folks around these parts just shook their heads over his hair-trigger temper, the hellish life his two ex-wives had endured at his hands, all of which they’d been eager to share with anyone who would listen, and of the fact that his third wife had been young enough to be his granddaughter. She’d died two years ago of a brain hemorrhage, leaving Porter with a young son.
Jake wondered about the woman claiming to be Porter’s daughter. He could vaguely recall hearing about a wild child who matched her father in looks and temperament. But that was years ago, before Porter’s very public first divorce, when she and her mother, Virginia, had taken themselves off to parts unknown.
Jake turned his truck onto the lane that led to the rustic ranch house. Nestled on a bluff, the house overlooked some of the richest grazing land in the territory. Now in early spring, the land was just turning green and was dotted with buds of Indian paintbrush and towering cottonwood. No wonder Porter Stanford had thought of himself as a king and all of Wyoming as his fiefdom. Maybe, Jake thought with sudden insight, that was another reason why Stanford had a particular dislike of the Conway family. Not only were they his nearest neighbors, but they owned all the land around him, leaving him unable to expand his kingdom.
Jake followed the curving driveway to the back door of the house and stepped out of his truck. A sleek, candy-apple-red rental car was parked beside the porch.
He climbed the wide porch steps and knocked.
A sexy female voice called, “Come in.”
He stepped into a kitchen offering a spectacular view of the Tetons in the distance. Finding no one there, he stepped through the open doorway into a massive great room, where a woman was walking toward him, carrying a cardboard box that was bigger than she.
“Hello.” Though he couldn’t see the face, the view from the waist down was enticing. A tiny waist and long, long legs encased in narrow denims.
“Oh. Hello. If you want to take a look at the farm implements, you may as well start tagging the things out in the second barn.”
“You’re planning an auction?”
She peered around the box. “Aren’t you from the auction house?”
“No. Sorry. I’m the vet. Here. Let me help you.” He took the box from her hands. “Where do you want this?”
“The kitchen table will be fine.” She led the way and Jake followed.
As he set down the heavy box he shot her a grin. “What’ve you got in there? A safe?”
She sighed. “Sorry. I should have warned you. I found several locked metal boxes in an upstairs room and thought I’d bring them down before opening them to see what’s inside.” She offered her hand. “I’m Meg Stanford.”
Jake accepted her handshake and took the moment to study her. She had her father’s fiery red hair, pulled back into a ponytail, and green eyes the color of prairie grass.
“Jake Conway.” He was fascinated by her lips. Soft, pursed lips that, though bare of makeup, were absolutely enticing. “I’m sorry about your loss.”
“Thank you.” She spoke the words in a flat, unemotional tone. “You said you were the vet. I was expecting Dr. Hunger.”
“He retired. His service directs his calls to me.”
“I see.” She nodded toward the door. “I’ll take you to the barn.”
Jake trailed behind her, enjoying the view of her trim backside in the shiny, new denims. They were so crisp they looked as though they’d just come off a store rack, as did the cotton shirt buttoned clear to her throat and tucked precisely into the waistband.
He glanced at her feet. Even the sneakers were brand-new, though they wouldn’t remain that way once she stepped into the barn.
“How long have you been here?”
“Since this morning.”
“Where are you from?”
She paused, her hand on the barn door. “Washington.”
“As in Spokane?”
She smiled. “As in D.C.”
“You’re a long way from home. What do you do there?”
“I’m a lawyer.”
His smile deepened. “That explains the new duds. I’d never mistake you for a rancher.”
That brought a smile, transforming her face from pretty to gorgeous. “My usual wardrobe runs to tailored suits and heels.
I figured I’d need something more practical for the week I plan on being here.”
“A week?”
She nodded. “My vacation time. Not exactly the way I’d hoped to be spending it. I haven’t been back to this place since I was a kid. I honestly never expected to see it again.”
She lowered her voice. “As you can imagine, I’ve forgotten more than I can remember about ranch animals. The colt has a pronounced limp. I thought I’d ask a vet to take a look and advise me as to the best way to…deal with it.” Her voice lowered to a near-whisper, as though she were sharing state secrets. “If you have to euthanize the colt, I’d appreciate it if you would take it with you rather than do it here. There’s the boy…” When she faltered, Jake waited until she composed herself. “My father’s sudden death wasn’t my only surprise. I’ve learned that I have a half brother. I’m not sure of his birthday, but I’m guessing he’s about seven. I suspect that he was alone here when our father had his heart attack. That may be why he doesn’t speak—at least not to me. But he seems really attached to the colt. That’s why…” She looked at the ground. “…I’d rather not add to the boy’s suffering.”
“All right.” Jake nodded toward the door. “Let’s have a look.”
She opened the barn door and led the way to a stall. As Jake’s eyes adjusted to the gloom, he could see the colt lying in the straw, its head cradled in the lap of a blond, shaggy-haired boy in dirty denims and an even dirtier T-shirt.
Meg’s tone was cautious. “Cory, this is Dr. Conway. I asked him to take a look at your colt.”
“Hey, Cory.” Jake knelt beside the boy and ran a hand gently over the colt’s forelock. “Does your horse have a name?”
The boy merely stared at him.
“Can your horse stand?”
Cory shuffled out from under the horse’s head and got to his feet before tugging gently on the animal’s mane.
The colt scrambled to its feet.
Jake pointed toward the door. “Would you mind leading him outside?”
Without a word the boy led the horse out into the sunshine, with Jake and Meg following.