"Yes."
"What's going on, Meg? You said you couldn't explain over the phone, and I figured out that Ledger had to be your dad. But there's more to this, isn't there?"
Meg bit her lower lip. "Ted is dying," she said. "And it turns out that Carly has no one else in the world except me."
Brad processed that, nodded. "Be careful," he told her quietly. "Carly is Carly. It would be all too easy—and com-pletely unfair—to superimpose—"
"I wouldn't do that, Brad," Meg broke in, bristling. "I'm not pretending she's—she's our daughter."
"Guess I'll go rustle up that T-shirt," Brad said.
Meg didn't respond. For the time being, the conversation— at least as far as their lost child was concerned—was over,
Carly wore the T-shirt home—Brad's guitar-wielding profile was silhouetted on the front, along with the year of a recent tour and an impressive list of cities—practically bouncing in the car seat as she examined the showy signature on the face of each of her CDs.
"I bet he never trashed a single hotel room," she en-thused, from the backseat of Meg's Blazer. "He's way too nice to do that."
Meg and Ted exchanged a look of weary amusement up front.
"It was quite an evening," Ted said. "Thanks, Meg."
"Brad did all the work," she replied.
"I like his dog, too," Carly bubbled. She seemed to have forgotten her situation, for the time being, and Meg could see that was a relief to Ted. "Brad said he'd change his name to Stitches, if he didn't already answer to Willie."
Meg smiled.
All the way home, it was Brad said this, Brad said that.
Once they'd reached the ranch house, Ted went inside, ex-hausted, while Carly and Meg headed for the barn to feed the horses. Despite her earlier condemnation of the entire equine species, Carly proved a fair hand with hay and grain.
"Is he your boyfriend?" Carly asked, keeping pace with Meg as they returned to the house.
"Is who my boyfriend?" Meg parried.
"You know I mean Brad," Carly said. "Is he?"
"He's a friend," Meg said. But a voice in her mind chided, Right. And last night, you were rolling around on a mattress with him.
"I may be twelve, but I'm not stupid," Carly remarked, as Ihey reached the back door. "I saw the way he looked at you. like he wanted to put his hands on you all the time."
Yeah, Meg thought wearily. Specifically, around my throat.
"You're imagining things."
"I'm very sophisticated for twelve," Carly argued.
"Maybe too sophisticated."
"If you think I'm going to act like some kid, just because I'm twelve, think again."
"That's exactly what I think. A twelve-year-old is a kid." Meg pushed open the kitchen door; Ted had turned on the lights as he entered, and the place glowed with homey warmth. "Go to bed."
"There's no TV in my room," Carly protested. "And I'm not sleepy."
"Tough it out," Meg replied. Crossing to the china cabinet on the far side of the room, she opened a drawer, found a notebook and a pen, and handed them to her little sister. "Here," she said. "Keep a journal. It's a tradition in the McKettrick family."
Carly hesitated, then accepted the offering. "I guess I could write about Brad O'Ballivan," she said. She held the notebook to her chest for a moment. "Are you going to read it?"
"No," Meg said, softening a little. "You can write anything you want to. Sometimes it helps to get feelings out of your head and onto paper. Then you can get some perspective."
Carly considered. "Okay," she said and started for the stairs, taking the notebook with her.
Meg, knowing she wouldn't sleep, tired as she was, headed for the study as soon as Carly disappeared, logged onto the Internet and resumed her research.
"You won't find him on that contraption," Angus told her,
She looked up to see him sitting in the big leather wingback chair by the fireplace. Like many other things in the house, the chair was a holdover from the Holt and Lorelei days.
"Josiah, I mean," Angus added, jawline hard again as he remembered the brother who had so disappointed him. " told you he didn't use the McKettrick name." He gave a snort "Sounded too Irish for him."
"Help me out, here," Meg said.
Angus remained silent.
Meg sighed and turned back to the screen. She'd been scrolling through names, intermittently, for days. And now, suddenly, she had a hit, more an instinct than anything specific.
"Creed, Josiah McKettrick," she said excitedly, clicking on the link. "I must have passed right over him dozens of times."
Angus materialized at her elbow, stooping and staring at the screen, his heavy eyebrows pulled together in consternation and curiosity.
"Captain in the United States Army," Meg read aloud, and with a note of triumph in her voice. "Founder of 'the legendary Stillwater Springs Ranch,' in western Montana. Owner of the Stillwater Springs Courier, the first newspaper in that part of the territory. On the town council, two terms as mayor. Wife, four sons, active member of the Methodist Church." She stopped, looked up at Angus. "Doesn't sound like an anti-Irish pirate to me." She tapped at Josiah's solemn photograph on the home page. Bewhiskered, with a thick head of white hair,
he looked dour and prosperous in his dark suit, the coat fastened with one button at his breastbone, in that curious nineteenth-century way. "There he is, Angus," she said. "Your brother, Josiah McKettrick Creed."
"I'll be hornswoggled," Angus said.
"Whatever that is," Meg replied, busily copying information onto a notepad. The Web site was obviously the work of a skillful amateur, probably a family member with a genealogical bent, and there was no "contact us" link, but the name of the town, and the ranch if it still existed, was information enough.
"Looks like you missed something," Angus said.
Meg peered at the screen, trying to see past Angus's big index finger, scattering a ring of pixels around its end.
She pushed his hand gently aside.
And saw a tiny link at the bottom of the page, printed in blue letters.
A press of a mouse button and she and Angus were looking at the masthead of Josiah's newspaper, the Courier.
The headline was printed in heavy type. MURDER AND SCANDAL BESET STILLWATER SPRINGS RANCH.
Something quivered in the pit of Meg's stomach, a peculiar combination of dread and fascination. The byline was Josiah's own, and the brief obituary beneath it still pulsed with the staunch grief of an old man, bitterly determined to tell the unflinching truth.
Dawson James Creed, 21, youngest son of Josiah McKettrick Creed and Cora Dawson Creed, perished yesterday at the hand of his first cousin, Benjamin A. Dawson, who shot him dead over a game of cards and a woman. Both the shootist and the woman have since fled these parts. Services tomorrow at 2:00p.m., at the First Street Methodist Church. Viewing this evening at the Creed home. Our boy will be sorely missed.
"Creed," Angus repeated, musing. "That was my mother's name, before she and my pa hitched up."
"So maybe Josiah wasn't a McKettrick," Meg ventured. "Maybe your mother was married before, or—"
Angus stiffened. "Or nothing," he said pointedly. "Back in those days, women didn't go around having babies out of wedlock. Pa must have been her second husband."
Meg, feeling a little stung, didn't comment. Nor did she argue the point, which would have been easy to back up, that premarital pregnancies weren't as uncommon in "his day" as Angus liked to think.
"Where's that old Bible Georgia set such store by?" he asked now.
Georgia, his second wife, mother of Rafe, Kade and Jeb, had evidently been her generation's record-keeper and family historian. "I suppose Keegan has it," she answered, "since he lives in the main ranch house."
"Ma wrote all the begats in that book," Angus recalled, "I never thought to look at it."
"She never mentioned being married before?"
"No," Angus admitted. "But folks didn't talk about things like that much. It
was a private matter and besides, they had their hands full just surviving from day to day. No time to sit around jawing about the past."
"I'll drop in on Keegan and Molly in the morning," Meg said. "Ask if I can borrow the Bible."
"I want to look at it now."
"Angus, it's late—"
He vanished.
Meg sighed. There were no more articles on the Web site;— just that short, sad obituary notice—so she logged off the computer. She was brewing a cup of herbal tea in the microwave, hoping it would help her sleep, when Ted came down the backstairs, wearing an old plaid flannel bathrobe and scruffy slippers.
Lord, he wanted to talk.
Now, from the look on his face.
She wasn't ready, and that didn't matter.
The time had come.
Dragging back a chair at the table, Ted crumpled into it.
"Tea?" Meg asked, and immediately felt stupid.
"Sit down, Meg," Ted said gently.
She took the mug from the microwave, grateful for its citrusy steamy scent, and joined him, perching on the end of one of the benches.
"There's no money," Ted said.
"I gathered that," Meg replied, though not flippantly. And the dizzying thought came to her that maybe this was all some kind of con—a Paper Moon kind of thing, Ted playing the Ryan O'Neal part, while Carly handled Tatum's role. But the idea fizzled almost as quickly as it had flared up in her mind—a scam would have been so much easier to take than the grim reality.
Ted ran a tremulous hand through his thinning hair. "I wish things had happened differently, Meg," he said. "I wanted to come back a hundred times, say I was sorry for ev-crything that happened. I convinced myself I was being noble—you were a McKettrick, and you didn't need an ex-yardbird complicating your life. The truth gets harder to deny when you're toeing up to the pearly gates, though. I was a coward, that's all. I tried to make up for it by being the best
father I could to Carly." He paused, chuckled ruefully. "I won't take any prizes for that, either. After Rose died, it was as if somebody had greased the bottom of my feet. I just couldn't stay put, and it was mostly downhill, a slippery slope, all the way. The worst part is, I dragged Carly right along with me. Last job I had, I stocked shelves in a discount store."
"You don't have to do this," Meg said, blinking back tears she didn't want him to see.
"Yes," Ted said, "I do. I loved your mother and she loved me. You need to know how happy we were when you were born—that you were welcome in this big old crazy world."
"Okay," Meg allowed. "You were happy." She swallowed "Then you embezzled a lot of money and went to prison."
"Like most embezzlers," Ted answered, "I thought I could put it back before it was missed. It didn't happen that way. Your mother tried to cover for me at first, but there were other McKet-tricks on the board, and they weren't going to tolerate a thief."
"Why did you do it?" The question, more breathed than spoken, hovered in the otherwise silent room.
"Before I met Eve, I gambled. A lot. I still owed some people. I was ashamed to tell Eve—and I knew she'd divorce me—so I 'borrowed' what I needed and left as few tracks as possible. That got my creditors off my back—they were knee-breakers, Meg, and they wouldn't have stopped at hurting me. They'd have gone after you and Eve, too."
"So you stole the money to protect Mom and me?" Meg asked, not bothering to hide her skepticism.
"Partly. I was young and I was scared."
"You should have told Mom. She would have helped you."
"I know. But by the time I realized that, it was too late." He sighed. "Now it's too late for a lot of things."
"It's not too late for Carly," Meg said.
"Exactly my point. She's going to give you some trouble, Meg. She won't want to go to school, and she's used to being a loner. I'm all the family she's had since her mother was killed. Like I said before, I've got no right to ask you for anything. I don't expect sympathy. I know you won't grieve when I'm gone. But Carly will, and I'm hoping you're McKettrick enough to stand by her till she finds her balance. My worst fear is that she'll go down the same road I did, drifting from place to place, living by her wits, always on the outside looking in."
"I won't let that happen," Meg promised. "Not because of you, but because Carly is my sister. And because she's a child."
They'd been over this before, but Ted seemed to need a lot of reassurance. "I guess there is one other favor I could ask," he said.
Meg raised an eyebrow. Waited.
"Will you forgive me, Meg?"
"I stopped hating you a long time ago."
"That isn't the same as forgiving me," Ted replied.
She opened her mouth, closed it again. A glib, "Okay, I forgive you" died on her tongue.
Ted smiled sadly. "While you're at it, forgive your mother, too. We were both wrong, Eve and I, not to tell you the whole truth from the beginning. But she was trying to protect you, Meg. And it says a lot about the other McKettricks, that none of them ever let it slip that I was a thief doing time in a Texas prison while you were growing up. A lot of people would have found that secret too juicy to keep to themselves."
Meg wondered if Jesse, Rance and Keegan had known, and decided they hadn't. Their parents had, though, surely. All three of their fathers had been on the company board with
Eve, back in those days. Meg thought of them as uncles—and they'd looked after her like a daughter, taken her under their powerful wings when she summered on the Triple M, and so had her "aunts." Stirred her right into the boisterous mix of loud cousins, remembered her birthdays and bought gifts at Christmas. All the while, they'd been conspiring to keep her in the dark about Ted Ledger, of course, but she couldn't resent them for it. Their intentions, like Eve's, had been good.
"Who are you, really?" Meg asked, remembering Carly's remark about changing last names so many times she was no longer sure what the real one was. And underlying the surface question was another.
Who am I?
Ted smiled, patted her hand. "When I married your mother, I was Ted Sullivan. I was born in Chicago, to Alice and Carl Sullivan. Alice was a homemaker, Carl was a finance manager at a used car dealership."
"No brothers or sisters?"
"I had a sister, Sarah. She died of meningitis when she was fifteen. I was nineteen at the time. Mom never recovered from Sarah's death—she was the promising child. I was the problem."
"How did you meet Mom?" She hadn't thought she needed, or even wanted, to know such things. But, suddenly, she did.
Ted grinned at the memory, and for just a moment, he looked young again, and well. "After I left home, I took college courses and worked nights as a hotel desk clerk. I moved around the country, and by the time I wound up in San Antonio, I was a manager. McKettrickCo owned the chain I worked for, and one of your uncles decided I was a bright young man with a future. Hired me to work in the home office. Where, of course, I saw Eve every day."
Meg imagined how it must have been, both Ted and Eve still young, and relatively mistake-free. "And you fell in love."
"Yes," Ted said. "The family accepted me, which was decent of them, considering they were rich and I had an old car and a couple of thousand dollars squirreled away in a low-interest savings account. The McKettricks are a lot of things, but they're not snobs."
Having money doesn 't make us better than other people, Eve had often said as Meg was growing up. It just makes us luckier.
"No," she agreed. "They're not snobs." She tried to smile and failed. "So I would have been Meg Sullivan, not Meg McKettrick—if things hadn't gone the way they did?"
Ted chuckled. "Not in a million years. You know the McKettrick women don't change their names when they marry. According to Eve, the custom goes all the way back to old Angus's only daughter."
"Katie," Meg said. Her mind did a time-warp thing—for about fifteen seconds, she was nineteen and pregnant, having her last argument with Brad before he got into his old truck a
nd drove away. Late that night, he would board a bus for Nashville.
We'll get married when I get back, Brad had said. I promise.
You 're not coming back, Meg had replied, in tears.
Yes, I am. You'll see—you'll be Meg O'Ballivan before you know it.
I'll never be Meg O'Ballivan. I'm not taking your name.
Have it your way, Ms. McKettrick. You always do.
"Meg?" Ted's voice brought her back to the kitchen on the Triple M. Her tea had grown cold, sitting on the tabletop in its heavy mug.
"You're not the first person who ever made a mistake," she told her father. "I hereby confer upon you my complete forgiveness."
He laughed, but his eyes were glossy with tears.
"You're tired," Meg said. "Get some rest."
"I want to hear your story, Meg. Eve sent me a few pictures, the occasional copy of a report card, when I was on the inside. But there are a lot of gaps."
"Another time," Meg answered. But even as Ted stood to make his way back upstairs, and she disposed of her cold tea and put the mug into the dishwasher, she wondered if there would be another time.
***
Phil was back.
Brad, accompanied to the barn by an adoring Willie, tossed the last flake of hay into the last feeder when he heard the distinctive purr of a limo engine and swore under his breath.
"This is getting old," he told Willie.
Willie whined in agreement and wagged his tail.
Phil was walking toward Brad, the stretch gleaming in the early morning light, when he and Willie stepped outside.
"Good news!" Phil cried, beaming. "I spoke to the Hollywood people, and they're willing to make the movie right here at Stone Creek!"
Brad stopped, facing off with Phil like a gunflghter on a windswept Western street. "No," he said.
Phil, being Phil, was undaunted. "Now, don't be too hasty," he counseled. "It would really give this town a boost. Why, the jobs alone—"
"Phil—"
Just then, Livie's ancient Suburban topped the hill, started down, dust billowing behind. Brad took a certain satisfaction in the sight when the rig screeched to a halt alongside Phil's limo, covering it in fine red dirt.
Livie sprang from the Suburban, smiling. "Good news," she called, unknowingly echoing Phil's opening line. "The Iversons' cattle aren't infected."
The McKettrick Way Page 14