Page 25 of Cash
I watch her set down the brownies on top of the oven. My stomach grumbles. I wish I could eat that kind of thing and not be in pain afterward.
Patsy is mid-fifties, if I had to guess, her gray hair neatly parted down the middle and pulled into a low ponytail. She’s got a warm smile and bright, curious brown eyes.
I like her immediately. Or maybe it’s the insanely delicious smell of just-baked goods that I like.
Whatever the case, Patsy rounds the island and immediately wraps me in a hug, ignoring the hand I extend. “It is so nice to finally meet you, sugar. And those boots! Love the purple.”
I don’t know how I feel about being calledsugar. ButPatsy’s hug is tight and warm, genuine in a way I haven’t experienced in a long time. I feel a smidge of relief that she doesn’t appear to hate me.
So I just keep my smile pasted on my face and say, “It’s nice to meet you too, Patsy. Your food looks delicious and smells even better.”
She releases me, putting her hands on my shoulders. “Lordy, you look just like your daddy.”
I want to reply with something like,That’s what everyone says,or,I get that a lot. But no one’s ever said that to me. No one I know, anyway. My life in Dallas was so separate from Dad’s on the ranch—our paths crossed so seldomly—that none of my friends or neighbors even knew who he was. They couldn’t say whether or not I looked like him because he was never around.
My throat contracts.I will not cry.
Swallowing hard, I look away and nod at the food. “So you cook like this all the time?”
“We have lots of mouths to feed here on the ranch. We fit as many as we can here in the kitchen, but the bulk of the ranch hands will eat the food I bring to the bunkhouse.” She nods at the older man standing at an enormous farm sink and a younger one seated at the table with a paint-smeared toddler on his lap. “Mollie, meet my husband, John B, and there at the table is Sawyer Rivers and his daughter, Ella.”
My stomach dips at the nameRivers. Sawyer looks at me, raising little Ella’s hand in a wave, and my stomach dips again at the familiar cobalt-blue shade of his eyes.
No question he’s Cash’s brother. He’s got the same build: big shoulders and broad chest. But unlike Cash, he offers me a friendly smile.
“Nice to meet ya, Mollie. Ella, can you say hi?”
Ella doesn’t say anything, but she also smiles, a mirror image of her father’s, dimples and all.
I wave at her. “Hi, Sawyer. Hi, Ella. How old are you?”
Sawyer helps her hold up three fingers. “Just had a birthday, didn’t we?”
“Ella get more presents?” the little girl replies.
We all laugh.
“Ella, honey, I think you know the answer to that.” The older man turns around, resting his hands on the lip of the sink behind him. “You’re always getting presents.”
Patsy grins. “How could we not spoil you, sugar? Look at that sweet face.”
“She is absolutely precious,” I say.
“Thank you.” Sawyer smooths back Ella’s baby-fine blonde hair. “But really, y’all, it’s becoming a problem. She’s got so many toys, we’re running out of room.”
John B shakes his head. “Good problem to have. Mollie, welcome to Lucky Ranch.”
“Are y’all cowboys here or…”
“Sawyer is.” John nods at him. “My daughter, Sally, and I provide veterinary care across the county.”
“Best vets in Texas,” Sawyer adds.
Goody nods. “It’s true. The care they provide for the animals is second to none.”
A young woman in jeans and boots strides into the kitchen from what appears to be a pantry, a five-pound bag of sugar tucked in the crook of her arm. “Thank you kindly, Goody. I’ve learned from the OG.”
The woman, who I’m assuming is Sally, goes up on her tiptoes to kiss her dad on his whiskered cheek.