Holding Out for a Hero

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Holding Out for a Hero Page 23

by Pamela Tracy


  “Then I guess it’s up to you,” Culpepper said to Oscar. “We do need dedicated people in the field. Townley was right. I’ll be sure to pass on how fine a job you did here in Sarasota Falls. Of course, I can’t promise you’ll be based in New Mexico. You’ll go where you’re needed.”

  Oscar didn’t respond.

  “How’s Jack holding up?” Riley asked.

  “He sold the home that he bought for himself and Tiffany. He’s moved into my mother’s neighborhood in Runyan. She’s practically moved in with him.” Oscar smiled and held up a hand. “No, not like that.”

  A call came in. Riley took it and headed out the door. Maureen followed him, saying something about picking Billy up from preschool. Culpepper shut down his laptop, gathered his papers and said, “I’m leaving shortly. My job here is done. Oscar, if I don’t see you before I leave, look me up next time you come to Albuquerque.”

  “Have a safe trip,” Oscar said.

  Then it was only Oscar and Shelley in the chief’s office, with little Oscar as a chaperone.

  Shelley smiled and shared, “Your aunt watched little Oscar, and I baked all morning. I love her kitchen, but wish I had one of my own, the same size. Then I took little Oscar and we went over and helped Robert with a few financial spreadsheets. I think he’s going to expand his business.”

  “What are you doing for the rest of the day?” Oscar perched on the table, scooted little Oscar’s carrier over and pulled Shelley in close.

  “I’m going to visit my dad.”

  “How about when I get off shift, I meet you there and we have dinner after?”

  It felt weird, these little moments, so intimate, yet never crossing the line to commitment. Since the capture of LeRoy and Tiffany Saunders, their time had not been their own. Oscar was filling out reports for both Sarasota Falls and the FBI while Shelley was dealing with the press, baking and taking care of a newborn.

  “I can’t believe he’s two weeks old already,” Shelley said. She didn’t move from Oscar’s arms, but she extended a hand to caress her son’s hair. “He looks a lot like Billy.”

  “Will Maureen stay awhile?”

  “I don’t know. Larry picked women who didn’t have family, or who didn’t have family who might interfere. She doesn’t have anyone in Utah. I think she’d stay if a job came her way.”

  “Jobs are important,” Oscar said.

  She closed her eyes, leaning against him. “Albuquerque’s not so far away. I know Culpepper said he couldn’t promise, but...”

  “I don’t want a long-distance relationship,” Oscar said.

  “Until my dad—”

  “I don’t want to work for the FBI, either.”

  She opened her eyes, looking up at him, searching. “What do you mean?”

  “I love working for the Sarasota Falls Police Department. I love community policing. If I stay here, not only do I get to bug Riley every day, but maybe, if you say yes, I could come home to you at the end of every shift.”

  “You don’t bug me!” Riley called from down the hall.

  “Of course,” Oscar said, “in a small town, everybody knows everything.”

  “What do you mean, come home to me?” Shelley asked.

  “It’s a strange thing, but I’ve worked since I was eighteen. I was trying to hunt down the memory of my father. In the last few weeks, I found out that while I am a lot like him—love adventure, want to do what I can for the world—I’m also a whole lot like my mother and my uncle Rudy. I want family, forever.”

  Shelley reached out, touched his cheek. His throat went dry, but he kept talking. “The military housed me. Even when I attended college. Here I live with Bianca. I tried paying rent and she kept sticking money in my shoes in order to give it back to me.”

  “What do you mean, come home to me?” Shelley repeated.

  “I bought a house today.”

  “What!”

  “For after we get married. I’m in love with you, Shelley.”

  “Don’t you think I should help pick—”

  “Does that mean yes?” Oscar interrupted.

  “No, I want some say-so in picking out the house.”

  “I bought your house. The one your parents owned and you had to sell. I want to fill it with children and laughter. Your father can visit. And—”

  “Yes.”

  “Your father can visit?”

  “Yes, but that’s not what I’m yessing. I’m yessing you. I’ll marry you. I love you, Oscar.”

  Oscar’d spent the last fifteen years thinking he needed to save the world.

  His whole world stood in front of him now.

  “Kiss her already!” Riley yelled.

  So Oscar did.

  * * * * *

  Be sure to check out the rest of Pamela Tracy’s compelling Harlequin Heartwarming romances:

  THE MISSING TWIN,

  SMALL-TOWN SECRETS,

  THE GREATEST GIFT,

  WHAT JANIE SAW and

  KATIE’S RESCUE!

  Available at Harlequin.com.

  Keep reading for an excerpt from LUKE’S RIDE by Helen DePrima.

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  Luke's Ride

  by Helen DePrima

  CHAPTER ONE

  A HAND TOUCHED his shoulder, a gentle shake at first, then rougher. “Luke, you’re dreaming—wake up!”

  He gave a last shuddering gasp and opened his eyes, still seeing the great bulk of the bull hurtling toward him, the dirt slamming up toward his face. He rubbed his eyes with both hands, trying to erase the images.

  “Okay,” he said. “I’m awake.”

  The hand shifted from his shoulder to his wrist as Betsy Fulton, his favorite night nurse at Hill Country Rehab, stepped from behind him to the side of his bed. Smart gal—he’d been known to strike out in the nightmare’s grip, and from the hips up he was still quick and strong as a mountain lion.

  Nights were always bad. All his life, Luke Cameron had worked hard and played harder, able to sleep like a healthy animal. Now he dreaded the hours after the bustle died down in the unit and he dawdled over dessert and coffee—decaf only after 4:00 p.m.—as long as anyone would hang around to gab. Eventually the night staff would chase him to his room, citing the benefits of a normal sleep-wake cycle. Alone in his
bed, he fought off sleep with its dreams of running and leaping, laughing with his fellow bullfighters in the face of danger, only to wake pinned to his bed by the weight of his useless legs.

  “Damn sirens,” he said, wiping the sweat of terror from his face with a shaking hand. They didn’t freak him out in the daytime, but the banshee wail of any emergency vehicle grabbed him by the throat in his sleep.

  He’d been transported by ambulance twice before during his career as a rodeo bullfighter, but he’d been out cold both times, coming to in the ER or the recovery room following surgery. This go-round, he’d been awake and aware every second—the grittiness of arena dirt between his teeth and the explosion of pain in his lower spine, trying to drag himself to safety using his elbows and then Doc Barnett’s voice asking if he could move his legs. Followed by the howl of the siren as the ambulance rushed him to the nearest trauma center.

  Betsy sponged his face with a cool cloth. “I thought you might need company—a fire truck just went by. I guess you won’t be hearing sirens much when you get home.”

  “Not hardly,” he said. “We’re the last spread on a dead-end road. Somebody gets hurt, we load ’em up and haul them to meet the paramedics. My dad had a heart attack a while back with a blizzard blowing in. My stepmom drove him an hour to the hospital with the roads closing down behind her. He probably wouldn’t have made it if she’d waited for help to reach them.”

  Betsy flipped his pillow and filled his cup with ice water from the carafe on his nightstand. “I bet you’ll be glad to get back to the wide-open spaces.”

  “You’re right about that, darlin’.” He could have gone from the hospital in Oklahoma City to a rehab facility closer to his family, but the trip from Oklahoma halfway across Texas to Austin, still immobilized in a body cast, had been grueling enough. Hill Country Rehab was Doc Barnett’s home base. Every athlete involved in professional bull riding, cowboy or bullfighter, trusted Doc to deliver the best possible result.

  Luke wasn’t at all sure he was ready to leave. Here was security and a hand to hold in the night when the nightmares struck. He would hate showing that kind of weakness to his family except maybe to his father’s wife, Shelby, who rarely put a foot wrong dealing with emotions. But he’d wanted to adjust to his new reality away from his family’s well-meaning concern. He’d healed as much as he was going to, had mastered all the skills the therapists could teach him. Doc had told him bluntly his odds of walking again were slim at best even with the bone fragments teased from his spinal cord and rods stabilizing his lower back. Maybe Doc was right, but Luke had never been one to take much stock in the voice of authority.

  * * *

  IN SPITE OF his interrupted sleep, Luke was in the solarium at dawn watching, for the last time, as the sun came up across the Texas hills. Tomorrow morning he’d be somewhere in New Mexico and then in Colorado by nightfall the next day. He’d gone home beat up more than once, but always before he’d had a decent expectation of complete recovery.

  Betsy’s reflection appeared in the window behind his. “I was all set to bring you breakfast in bed your last morning with us, but you sneaked out again,” she said. “Trying to make me look bad?”

  From the time he was six or seven he’d groused about rolling out of bed before daybreak on the ranch; now he took a perverse pleasure in getting himself up and dressed before anyone came to help him.

  “Gotta do as much for myself as I can,” he said. “I won’t have you around to baby me after today.”

  “I’m sure your folks will take good care of you. Will you be staying with them?”

  He shrugged. “For now, till I get my feet on the ground.” He gave a short laugh. “So to speak.”

  “Did you have your own place before the accident?”

  “Darlin’, it’s a family ranch—we don’t commute to work. I live at the main house, and my brother built a cabin half a mile up the creek when he got married. Maybe that’s what I’ll do once I figure out what kind of modifications I’ll need.”

  He dreaded being dependent on his folks. Even more, he hated the thought of being useless—dead weight, like his legs.

  He pivoted his wheelchair and headed toward the door. “You can help me pack. If I know Dad, he’ll be ready to roll as soon as I get my final briefing from Doc Barnett.” He propelled his chair down the hall with Betsy following but offering no help.

  Sure enough, Jake Cameron, Shelby and Dr. Barnett were waiting for him when he returned from breakfast.

  “Vacation’s over,” Doc said, peering at Luke over his gold-rimmed half-glasses. “I’m kicking you out.”

  Luke snorted. “Some vacation—I trained harder here than I ever did for dodging bulls.” Images flashed through his mind of himself and his fellow bullfighters performing their split-second choreography to lure away a ton and a half of bucking bull from the cowboy rolling in the dirt. Even with a couple serious injuries, he’d stayed ahead of the game almost fifteen years until the odds finally caught up with him.

  “Any last-minute instructions?” Jake asked. “Anything we shouldn’t let him do?”

  “He can do whatever he wants,” Doc said. “He’ll take some falls, but he knows how to take care of himself. The bull stepped on his back, not on his head.”

  He turned to Luke. “I’ve faxed outpatient orders to the PT department in Durango—you can set up appointments once you get home.”

  “A visiting nurse came out to the ranch,” Jake said. “She said Luke should be fine with the changes we made downstairs for Tom that time the bull fell with him.”

  Dr. Barnet nodded. “I figured you folks would be able to manage.” He turned to Luke. “I’m sending your records to the University of Colorado School of Medicine. I know Denver’s a haul from your corner of the state, but they’re doing some great research on spinal injuries—I hope you’ll get in touch with them.” He handed him a card. “Here’s the contact number.”

  “Maybe.” Luke stuffed the card in his shirt pocket. Or maybe not. He’d had all privacy stripped from him in the hospital; he didn’t much feel like becoming a case number in a research study.

  As if he could read minds, Doc said, “I can’t promise you’d get any personal benefit, but you could add to their data, maybe help other patients in the future.”

  Luke flushed. “Sure, I get that.”

  He switched gears. “Okay if I ride?” If he could get a horse between his knees, he could be of some use on the ranch. After all the years he’d complained about mending fences and clearing irrigation ditches, now he’d give up years of his life to stand knee-deep in icy snowmelt.

  “Okay with me—riding would be good for your balance and core strength. But can you?” Doc shrugged. “You’ll have to figure that out for yourself.”

  Luke couldn’t imagine hanging on to his own cutting horse. Jigsaw had great cow sense but was so quick he’d left Luke sitting in the dirt more than once. Old Sadie, maybe, but she stood over sixteen hands and had gaits like a truck with square wheels.

  “We’re on it,” Shelby said.

  Count on Shelby to put him on horseback. She’d find him the right mount and train the crap out of it.

  “Sure you don’t want to go home by plane?” Jake asked. “It’ll be two long days on the road. I can fly with you and let Shelby drive the van home.”

  “I can’t,” Luke said. He’d flown all over the US and Canada, to Australia and Brazil as well for bull-riding events, but the thought of being wheeled through the airport made his throat close up in near panic. Even worse would be the ordeal of security screening. Old ladies and kids in wheelchairs got hassled—they’d take a guy his age apart from his bones out. He’d never backed down from a challenge, but he wasn’t ready for this one.

  “I’ll be fine,” he said.

  “I’ll miss you,” Betsy said and planted a kiss
on his mouth, something he’d been angling for ever since he landed here three months ago.

  “You could come with me,” he said, wrapping his arm around her waist.

  “I am so tempted, but my husband wouldn’t care for the idea.” She shook hands with Jake and Shelby. “Take care of this boy—he’s one of the good ones.”

  Luke grabbed his gear bag off the floor and settled it on his lap. “Let’s hit the trail.”

  Copyright © 2017 by Helen DePrima

  ISBN-13: 9781488012181

  Holding Out for a Hero

  Copyright © 2017 by Pamela Tracy Osback

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