dressed up pretty fancy to help load a horse.â
The rosy color on her cheeks deepened but she didnât comment. Instead, she glanced toward the building and asked, âIs he ready?â
Jace didnât know about the horse, but knew he was. Ready to spend time with her. Lots of time. âRio is inside. The vet is giving him a final look before we leave and said heâd drive out to your place to check on him again tomorrow to see how heâs settling in.â
Delaney shook her head and frowned. âHe doesnât have to do that.â
âI asked him to,â Jace said, his voice coming out raspy and uncomfortably low. A flood of guilt continued to engulf him every time he thought of the accident and his injured pal. He was afraid that animal rights group might be right. He shouldnât have been so confident about his own performance. He should have cut the leathers when he had the chance. Before his ride.
Delaneyâs expression softened and although she didnât touch him, or even come near, the look of compassion in her eyes reached out and drew him to her more than any amount of dressinâ up ever could.
He cleared his throat and opened the wide side door to the hospital. âShall we?â
Rio hobbled along step by slow step, but other than a few seconds of hesitation here and there, he gave Jace and Delaney next to no trouble when they went to load him into the back of the horse trailer. It was almost as if all his fight was concentrated on supporting his leg as he moved forward. Jace gave him an affectionate pat on the neck and whispered a few lines of encouragement into his dark mane before locking him in.
âHeâll be all right,â Delaney assured him.
Jace nodded. âIâll drive slow.â
This time she did touch him. On the arm. âSlow is best,â she agreed.
Other trucks on the road passed him, including Delaneyâs, but Jace didnât care. His only concern was for Rio and his injured leg. He didnât want to take any sharp turns or hit any potholes too fast. Just one hard stumble could damage Rioâs injury beyond repair. And he wouldnât let that happen. From now on, Rioâs well-Âbeing would come before anyone elseâs, including himself.
He didnât realize how tight heâd been clenching his knuckles until he came to a stop in the parking lot of Collins Country Cabins and pulled his hands off the steering wheel. His fingers ached, the muscles in his jaw ached, and his gut felt as if heâd taken a punch. Stepping down from the truck, his legs almost buckled. Heâd been that stiff. Stiff with worry.
Now that theyâd made it, Jace relaxed, and took a deep breath. The crisp clean air cleared his lungs and refreshed his brain. Heâd had a lot on his mind the last few days. It would be good to get away for a while, away from the circuit, schedules, long drives, flashing cameras, and the limelight. Not only would he have time to spend with Delaney but heâd also have a chance to decide what he wanted to do if Rio couldnât return to rodeo.
âLook! Itâs Jace Aldridge !â
âHeâs here! Oh my gosh, pinch me! I canât believe this is real!â
âAs real as you and me!â
Jace turned his head toward the series of squeals that followed and saw the two redheaded girls just two seconds before they had their hands on him. They each grabbed an arm and gazed up at him with identical sets of starstruck hazel eyes.
âOh, Mr. Jace, can I have your autograph?â one of the twins asked.
âYou can sign your name on my arm,â said the other.
Thankfully Delaney appeared. âNora and Nadine, let the man be.â
However, the twins either didnât pay attention to her or didnât care to listen.
âIâm Nora,â the first introduced. âAndâÂâ
âIâm Nadine!â finished the second. âWeâre going
Jo Ann Ferguson
Matt Richtel
Patricia Reilly Giff
Linda Turner
Betsy Anne
Ronald DuBois
Gregory McDonald
Nick Hopton
Robert Conroy
Mack Maloney