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Steamy Dorm

Page 92

by Kristine Robinson


  Chapter 1

  Lilly was excited to start her new life at the Rocking U Ranch. She'd just come from her mother and father's failed ranch. They'd been pushed out by some of the bigger cattle operations up north, and Lilly had had to move to the next ranch over, which happened to be the Rocking U Ranch, to look for a means of support her parents. She wasn't bitter about it, though. She knew sometimes life had a funny way of putting you exactly where you should be, and Lilly had an idea that was what was happening now. Her father's bad leg had been giving him trouble while he ranched, but he wouldn't have given it up if he hadn't been forced out. Lilly felt that her mother was secretly grateful, she knew she sure was.

  Life was going to be different at the Rocking U Ranch. Different, but not necessarily worse. Lilly was excited to meet new people and prove herself. She was just in her early twenties, but having worked at her family’s farm all her life, she knew she was as good as, and probably better, than any cowboy. She felt guys didn’t appreciate that though. Maybe they thought her sweet face, and her lean young body didn’t match the rough ranch work she loved doing. Lilly didn’t care. Of course quite a few men had approached her, she was really pretty, but they found her intimidating and she found them boring.

  This morning was her first time stepping foot on the Rocking U Ranch. She'd heard that every hand there met Sam on their first day. Sam was the ranch manager and owner, a woman who didn't take shit from anyone. She had a reputation for being tough, yet fair. Lilly waited in the dining room of the main cabin, wondering when Sam was going to show.

  “Well, hello,” Sam said. “It's a pleasure to meet you! I've heard a great deal from our foreman, who you spoke with in town, Brad. Tall, brawny looking guy?”

  “Yes, I remember him” – Lilly said still holding Sam’s hand. She was blown away by the woman's ability to project strength and power without even trying. Lilly had not met anyone like that before, man or woman. Sam was also very attractive; about 30 years old, with shiny dark hair that fell softly on her shoulders, and green eyes that were hard to ignore. Her figure that was slender but curvy. She didn't sound like a rough woman at all, just a woman that was about business; and she wore a gun on her hip, which many ranchers had stopped doing considering how modernized everything was becoming.

  “It’s a pleasure to meet you,” Lilly said. “That's my beat up blue pickup truck out by the well. I hope you don't mind me parking there, I wasn't sure where else to put it.”

  “Oh, no, no,” Sam said. “Don't worry about that! Where ever you park is just fine. So, tell me a little bit about yourself. What brings you to the Rocking U Ranch?”

  Lilly looked around self-consciously, wishing that this beautiful woman named Sam, her new boss, wasn't putting her on the spot.

  “Well,” Lilly said. “My parents' ranch just went under, as I'm sure you're aware. That means I've had to figure out a way to help support them while they figure things out, and I'd really like it if that way turned into something permanent if it's a good fit.”

  “That's right, I heard your parents' ranch did go under,” Sam said. “That's a shame. The big operations up north are trying to run everyone out of business by hiring scumbags who aren't even real ranch hands. They take anyone willing to try to learn how to ride a horse.”

  Lilly nodded.

  “I know,” Lilly said. “I just wish things were different. My dad isn't taking it so well, and I have a hard time blaming him. Just before they went under his leg had been acting up badly, and I think he was trying to prove something to himself by keeping the ranch going as it was.”

  “It was a small operation, your parents' ranch,” Sam said. “I'd imagine that your father put in many hours working, probably much more than he did managing.”

  Lilly shook her head in agreement.

  “An operation that small can't afford to pay anyone who isn't family because someone who isn't family wouldn't accept such poor pay,” Lilly said. “But I didn't mind the pay, it was just watching my parents get run off the range by a bunch of businessmen who think that moving cows is nothing else than making money. They don't love the country, and they sure as well don't care about ranching.”

  Sam smiled and nodded, offering her hand across the table to Lilly.

  “I think you'll make a great addition to Rocking U Ranch,” Sam said. “And I'm glad that you came here for work. Brad will show you around, tell you how things work here. You're going to have to work near twice as hard as the men to earn their respect, but it is possible, believe me. Everyone who works for me has to pull their own weight, because, as we both know, the people up north are a bunch of bastards who work transients to death for near starvation wages. It's hard to compete with that.”

  “I won't let you down,” Lilly said. “And fully intend to prove myself to the rest of the men here.”

  “Hey, Brad,” Sam said. Brad had just walked through the door. “Would you please show Lilly up to her room?”

  “Sure,” Brad said.

  Chapter 2

  “I know things are a little Spartan in here right now,” Brad said. “But soon enough I'll refurbish your room, and it'll be right as rain. Is it big enough for you? What do you think?”

  Lilly took a step forward into the room and looked around. It was plenty big, although rich city folk would have scoffed at its dimensions. The room wasn't bad at all, in Lilly's estimation. It had a country feel, which made her think of home. It was also cozy, and right next to the stove pipe, running up from the kitchen to the roof above her, so she wouldn't ever be cold.

  “I like it,” Lilly said. “There is so much potential!”

  Brad nodded.

  “I want you to know that you're welcome here,” Brad said. “And if you ever need anyone to talk to, about anything, just let me know.”

  Brad stamped back down the stairs and I followed him

  “Well, I hope you enjoyed the only time you'll feel special at the Rocking U Ranch,” Brad said. “Because we are far too busy to entertain even the most remote idea that any kind of princess-like behavior is going to be tolerated!”

  Lilly wasn't sure if he Brad was being serious at first or not. He had a mean expression on his face, but his temperament and posturing were obviously just that. Lilly thought about it for a moment, and something clicked.

  “You wouldn't have happened to have served in the military at some point,” Lilly said. “Would you?”

  Brad laughed.

  “You aren't the first person to notice, I assure you,” Brad said. “Now, listen up. Life here is fairly straightforward. You wake up and do what needs to be done. As a cowhand, you know that that could be anything on a given day. Why one day it might be finding the next place to dig a well, and another day it might be helping me deliver a baby calf in the middle of nowhere and trying to save the mother's life.”

  Lilly nodded, realizing that the Rocking U Ranch was a little different in size and scope than her parents' ranch. At her parents' ranch, there had always been help just a ten minute or so ride away, but here at the Rocking U Ranch things were bigger, more spread out. Getting in serious trouble far away from home was possible. It was no wonder that Sam carried a pistol on her hip.

  Chapter 3

  The days at the Rocking U Ranch moved by slowly. It felt like a whole week had elapsed already and it was only the morning of the third day. Part of it was how Brad wouldn't let up on her, not even for a second. He wasn't mean or condescending about it, but it was so relentless that Lilly was starting to have a hard time with it. Today was the start of a big drive, and Lilly was determined to show Sam, Brad, and everyone else that she knew her way around a saddle and a steer, and could throw a lasso and shoot like the best of them.

  All of the ranch hands were on their horses and were running them at a trot out to the cattle pen. The Rocking U Ranch had so many cattle Lilly could barely believe her eyes. Her parents' ranch had only had near five hundred, and that had been a real handful for her and her father and
their few employees. The number of animals in front of her now made her wonder how the big outfits up north did it using people with so little experience. Was it really possible to get the job done right by the sheer number of individuals working on it? Lilly didn't like to think it so, but maybe it was.

  “Get your head on straight,” Brad said. “You look like this is the first time you've seen this many cattle.”

  Lilly hated the way Brad could read her.

  “I'm fine, thanks,” Lilly said. “And don't you mind what I have my eyes on.”

  “They just look big, that's all,” Brad said. “And I didn't want you to seem foolish in front of Sam—believe it or not I'm not such a bad guy sometimes.”

  Lilly ducked her head and thanked Brad under her breath. He was probably right, she didn't have much of a poker face, and she knew it. It was incredible how a seasoned cowboy could keep all of his thoughts hidden behind the stonewall mask they all wore as faces. Lilly hoped she could have some measure of that ability, but she didn't want to lose who she was. Lilly liked that she wasn't hard like everyone else; she thought there was something to be said for being soft and easy going.

  The great pen of cattle in front of her opened, and the herd issued forth. They started to stampede nearly immediately, but Brad and some of the more seasoned hands slowed the heard by cracking big bullwhips in the air over their heads. It seemed like complete chaos for a moment to Lilly, but then she saw with what skill Brad controlled everything. In the background was Sam watching from her horse. Lilly was taking it all in, and her horse was slowly walking backward away from the rumbling herd.

  Behind Lilly, a rattlesnake lay coiled in the shade of a cactus. It rattled its tail in a vain attempt to warn the horse to stay away. It wasn't until it struck, and missed, that the horse realized the danger. It bucked, hard, and Lilly had to hold on for dear life. There had been other times in her life when she'd had to control an animal which was out of control, but not like this. The horse had been really badly spooked by the near strike and was bucking for its own life. There wasn't any malice in the animal’s actions, just the will to survive in an environment which was hostile. After a few minutes of wild bucking, the horse calmed down.

  Just then part of the herd broke away. Lilly jabbed her spurs into the flanks of her stead and quickly brought the animals back to the main group. One was particularly stubborn, and Lilly had to use a lasso to drag it away from its course out into the open desert. She didn't think much of her actions, it being her job and all, but from out of nowhere came Sam's voice.

  “You really are a hell of a cowgirl,” Sam said. “And that's something I respect more than anything else. The way you stayed on that horse after the snake spooked it, and the way you handled that rogue steer like it was nothing, you really are a good at this. Your parents' would be proud of you. Hell, I'm proud of you.”

  Sam flashed Lilly a huge smile from on top of her horse. She'd ridden up behind Lilly while Lilly had been catching her breath from all of the excitement.

  Lilly wasn’t sure why but she felt really good knowing she had had made Sam proud.

  “I love how the cattle makes you live in the moment,” Lilly said. “The way I can't daydream or think about tomorrow. It's one of the things that makes the job enjoyable, the way I lose myself in it sometimes. I mean, one second I'm riding a bucking bronco, and the next minute I'm bringing back near thirty head of cattle to the herd by myself. It's just so . . . Exciting!”

  Lilly stopped talking, realizing she sounded too eager, and blushed.

  “Oh, don't be silly and get embarrassed,” Sam said. “You should be proud of what you did just then. Not every cowboy can do that, and you are out here showing the world your skills! Look at all the men looking at you. That's real jealousy. They're all wondering if they would have had what it takes to actually handle what the countryside can throw at you. Because if you'd been bucked, well, I've seen what being thrown hard can do to a person, and it's not pretty. That would have thrown off the entire drive. And sometimes it even stops an operation, because it just demoralizes everyone.”

  Sam brought her horse a little closer to Lilly's.

  “Listen,” Sam said. “Later, I want to speak with you alone.”

  Lilly nodded, and she felt like butterflies in her stomach. What did Sam wanted to talk about, and why did that woman make her nervous? Sam turned her horse and rode back to the front of the herd. It was only a few seconds before she was replaced by Brad. He looked stern.

  “I wish you knew better than letting your horse walk backward over ground you haven't checked,” Brad said. “I realize you just did all the right things, but it started out with the wrong thing. Just food for thought is all. I'm not trying to be buzz-kill, but I'm also not trying to tell your parents how I watched you break your neck at the start of a big drive.”

  With that, Brad was off. Lilly was by herself for a moment before she spurred her horse after the herd to join the rest of the cowhands. In those brief, few moments, Lilly felt so alive. And she also felt lucky to be alive. This was what being a cowgirl was all about, the little things that were hard to explain, like the look of the sun as her whole body whipped back as the horse bucked, or the way the steer felt as she wrapped her end of the lasso around her saddle horn and walked it back to the herd by force from the top of her horse.

  It was good to feel alive, healthy and free. On her parents' ranch oftentimes there had been moments when she hadn't felt like she was free, mostly because the ranch had been so small. On a ranch, those little surprises are hard to come by. Everyone covers the same ground so much that all the snakes get stamped out, and the routes the cattle run are worn into the ground like a reverse carpet. There really wasn't a whole lot of what Lilly considered fun about the job when she worked at her parents' ranch. Now, at the Rocking U Ranch, things were much different.

  Lilly felt lucky to be working at the Rocking U Ranch, and she also felt lucky that Sam had seen her do such a damn fine job. Lilly knew deep down it was prideful to think that way, but that didn't mean that she didn't occasionally have those thoughts. Especially when it came to her gorgeous boss, and catching her eye from afar. That made Lilly feel good, real good.

  Chapter 4

  Later that night all the cowhands sat around a big bonfire Sam had built with Brad. They'd had someone cart along most of the wood because it was so hard to find out on the plains. Everyone passed around a bottle and talked to each other about how the day's work had been. Sam made her way around the campfire, speaking to each of her cowhands, before sitting next to Lilly.

  “Hey, how are you feeling? The day went well, I thought,” Sam said. “You know, there really is something about running a herd around the plains that makes me feel like everything is right in the world. And even though the boys up north are running herds twice this size with six times the people, I still feel pretty good.”

  “I was thinking about that today,” Lilly said. She still felt nervous being so close to Sam, but after watching her all night she had finally realized why that was. She wanted Sam, she was intoxicated by her personality, her looks and her strength. But did Sam feel the same about her?

  “How in the world do the bigger operations get things done when they hire pretty much anyone who is willing, no matter how little they know?” – Lilly said trying to behave normal

  “Well, first of all, they don't pay shit,” Sam said. “And secondly, they don't have them do anything that would take skill. They have what they call 'hand handlers' for that, kind of like squad leaders in the military. I don't know. Me and Brad have talked about changing things to that style of operation because we both served and we know that it sort of works, but at the end of the day, I'd like to run things around here a little leaner than that. I don't want to look around and know that more than three-fourths of my employees are pretty much worthless to do anything but put themselves between the herd and the open plane.”

  Lilly nodded. Sam had a way with words—sim
ple and straightforward, but not unthoughtful. It impressed Lilly, made her want to hear more of Sam's voice.

  “Do you like it so far. The whole working for the Rocking U Ranch thing?” Sam asked.

  “It's different than I thought it would be,” Lilly said. “But not in a bad way at all. I just didn't ever envision a strong woman like you running it, especially one so . . .”

  This time, it was Lilly's turn to trail off. Sam smiled a knowing smile and put her hand on Lilly's leg.

  “You know, we could slip off into the night, and no one would care that we were gone,” Sam said. “That's one of the beautiful things about the Rocking U Ranch—everyone has your back, but everyone minds their own business at the same time.”

  Lilly thought about it as she ran her hand over the top of Sam's. It felt good to be wanted by someone she wanted back, and Lilly knew that she would go with Sam anywhere she wanted. But she wanted to talk a little bit first. There was so much about Sam that Lilly didn't know, but wanted to know.

  “I'd like to know how the Rocking U Ranch came to be,” Lilly said. “There is just so much about this place, and you, I don't know. But I hope you can fill me in. And then, the dark, well, it does offer some privacy.”

  Lilly moved her hand from Sam's hand to Sam's leg.

  “The Rocking U Ranch started back when my parents were around,” Sam said. “But then they moved back east and sold it to me. I'm not sure what they're doing now. We aren't close, and they honestly just kind of got under my skin most of the time. They always had some backward ass opinions about things that I didn't want to hear. So that's how the Rocking U Ranch started. As far as me, this is what I do. I spend nearly all my time doing it. When I'm not out here on the plains or working out administrative stuff, I can usually be found reading some smutty romance novel I picked up at the dime store.”

 

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