came to you, for you, the ride was like no other.
QUEENS UP
Andrea Dale
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I t was my daddy who taught me to play poker.
He was a good father as fathers go, I suppose, especially considering my mother died when I was four and he had his hands full raising me. He was also a very good teacher, and I was hustling the ranch hands before some of them realized the ragged moppet who dogged their heels was not, in fact, of the male persuasion. Took them a right long while, too, considering how Iâd been so modest about peeing in front of âem.
I tended toward wearing menâs clothes even as I grew older, because it was much easier roping cattle in breeches than a skirt, and skirts were just nuisances anyway, not to mention stockings and petticoats, and besides, there was no one around to properly lace me into a corset.
Even my childhood playmate Margaret Compton didnât know when we were children. Which is why when we grew older things grew a mite complicated, because I had a crush on her.
In the end, though, it worked out fine, because sweet Margaret
Compton wasnât about to go getting any crushes on men, either, and when she found out my secret, well, we then had a delicious secret to share, just between us two.
But I was talking about my daddy.
For all he was a good man at heart, the problem was simple. There was one other thing that he was good at, and that was drinking. So, for all his good teaching of the cards, my father wasnât a very good poker player at all.
Which is how he came to lose our familyâs ranch to one Mister Samuel Owens.
By the time this happened, Iâd been running the ranch for years, not that anyone outside knew that. Wasnât proper for a woman to be making such decisionsâwhat did a pretty thing know about cattle and budgets and weather patterns and ordering men around? So my daddy was the figurehead, the one who went to the bank and the auctions (on mornings after Iâd hidden his bottles so his head would be clear). Me, I balanced the books and wrote up orders for supplies and, yes, bossed the men around, but by that time they knew I was capable and cared enough about the ranch to keep our secret safe.
God took pity on me the next morning when Samuel came out to the ranch to take a good, long look at his new ownings (not that I knew the reason for his visit as yet).
I wasnât riding out on the back forty or forking hay off a wagon that day. Instead, I was inside catching up on some business correspondence for my daddy to sign when he woke up from last nightâs binge, and Margaret had time to run in and let me know company was approaching.
Iâd have to play hostess while someone roused Daddy and stuck his head under the pump to shock some soberness into him.
Margaret was more versed in the intricacies of womenâs clothing than I, so she rushed about gathering skirts and boots with tiny buttons and whatever else Iâd need to shoehorn myself into.
At that point in our relationship, we had to keep things pretty quiet, so Margaret slept in the servantsâ quarters and our trysts were rare, stolen moments. Her own daddy had died coming up on two years ago, and Iâd promised him that weâd take care of Margaret as if she were one of my own. And she was my ownâshe had my heart, and I hers. By outside appearances, she was our maid and cook, and when the occasional hand took a fancy to courting her, she smiled and gently eased his attentions aside.
My point being, when I looked up from shucking my shirt and trousers, I shouldnât have been surprised by the look in her eyes.
Hunger. Need. Lust.
The same sensations flared through me, ignited a fire in my bellyâand below.
Aware of my own foolishness, I still couldnât help but step toward her, take her face in my hands, kiss her.
Every time I kissed her was heaven, but it had been far too long since weâd been able to be