
Rodeo Reunion
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Shannon Taylor Vannatter
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Chapter 1
âIsnât there anyone who makes your heart rev?â
Raquel swallowed hard. Her friend was only trying to help.
Three years since Dylanâs death and no one had made her pulse speed up since heâd been gone. She searched the familiar restaurant for something, anything, to change the subject to. But Caitlyn wouldnât give up that easily. She might as well be honest.
âItâs been years since my heart revved over anyone other than a certain seven-year-old.â
âUh-uh. This is your momâs day out. No talking about Hunter.â Caitlyn wagged a finger at her and Raquel tried not to squirm on the booth seat. âAnd no changing the subject. You know Dylan wouldnât want you to be alone.â
âHe did make me promise to find someone else if anything ever happened to him.â Raquel shrugged.
âYouâve even got permission from the love of your life to move on. So whatâs stopping you?â
âRight nowââ Raquel traced the condensation on her tea glass with her fingers ââmy focus is Hunter and baseball. I want him to have fun and be happy living in Aubrey. Even though Iâll admit Iâm lonely and I know my son needs a father, if God has someone out there for me, Iâll trust Him to make it happen in His time.â
âYou know Iâm no good at waiting on Godâs timing. I ask Him to forgive me daily for trying to rush things without Him.â Caitlynâs stomach growled and she pressed a hand to her huge baby bump.
âSounds like Juniorette is hungry.â Raquel glanced toward the door as it opened, letting in mid-February evening air. âMitch should be here anytime and he wouldnât want you to keep his baby girl waiting. We should order.â
âIt might take a crane to unwedge me from this booth.â Caitlyn groaned.
Raquel winced. âWhy did you pick a booth?â
âI wanted to prove I could still squeeze in here. May not get out. But Iâm in.â
âDonât get out. Iâll order.â Hopefully, by the time she returned, Caitlyn would have forgotten her line of questioning.
âGood idea, but only if you let me pay.â Caitlyn held out a twenty.
âYou can buy next time.â
Raquel placed their orders, then moved to the register, dug her money from her wallet and waited for her change.
The man behind her in line ordered and she turned to see if he was anyone she knew. He looked familiar. Inky waves, sage-green eyes, chin cleft. Where did she know him from? Parent from school? Church?
He smiled.
And her brain kicked in. Slade Walker.
Her mouth went dry. Her wallet slipped from her fingers.
Coins danced and rolled; bills fanned around her feet; credit cards bounced, spun and slid across the hardwood floor.
In most places, people would dive in and steal as much as they could. But this was Aubrey, Texas.
Slade knelt at her feet along with the lady behind him in line and helped her pick everything up. A man she didnât even know handed her one of her credit cards.
âThank you.â
In minutes the contents of her overstuffed wallet were back in place as Slade gathered stray change.
âDonât worry about the change.â
âIs that everything?â He stood.
âYouâre Slade Walker.â
âYeah. Got all your cards and money?â
She tugged her gaze away from his long enough to flip through the bills and cards, then nodded. âYes, thanks.â
A slow smile tugged at his lips. âIâm sorry, but have we met? I usually remember beautiful women, but Iâm drawing a blank.â
Her face heated. âYou were my husbandâs favorite baseball player.â
âWow.â He blew out a soft whistle and rubbed his right shoulder. âThat was a long time ago and my career was short-lived. I canât say Iâve been recognized for baseball in a long time.â
âWell, you should be. You were great. If my son was here, heâd be beside himself. Could I get your autograph for him?â
His face turned red.
âI mean, I donât want to bother you.â
âNo, itâs fine. Itâs just been a long time since anybody asked. Got any paper?â
She scurried to the booth where Caitlyn waited and grabbed her purse. âCaitlyn, this is Slade Walker. The Slade Walker.â She must have sounded like an idiot.
With a confused frown, Caitlyn offered her hand. âNice to meet you.â
âNot a baseball fan, I take it? No worries. Itâs been a few years.â Slade accepted the grocery receipt Raquel handed him as several people brought her quarters, nickels, even pennies. Small-town proof there were still good, honest people in the world.
âWhatâs your sonâs name?â
âHunter Marris. I mean, you can just make it Hunter.â
âMarris? I went to elementary school with a Dylan Marris.â
Raquel nodded like a bobblehead. âMy husband.â
âNo wonder you know who I am. We were best friends until fifth grade when I moved. How is Dylan?â
Her heart squeezed. He didnât know.
âRaquel!â Caitlynâs face contorted with pain. âI hate to interrupt, but I think I might be in labor.â
âOh, my goodness. Letâs get you to the hospital.â
âShould we wait on Mitch?â Panic dwelled in Caitlynâs eyes. Everyone was looking at them.
Calm down, Raquel. She was a nurse. But this was her friend and treating anyone she loved in medical distress rattled her. Ever since Dylan.
âIâll call Mitch.â Deep breaths. She could do this. âHe can meet us there. Everything will be fine. Remember, Iâm a nurse.â
âLet me help you up.â Slade offered his arm to Caitlyn.
She managed to unwedge herself from the booth, but as she stood, she quickly doubled over as another contraction rocked her.
More deep breaths.
âMaybe I should drive you.â Sladeâs voice was calm. âThat way you can sit in the back with her and keep an eye on things.â
âGood idea. Donât worry, Caitlyn. Iâll be right there with you to monitor the babyâs progress.â Oh, Lord, please let everything be all right.
âNo.â Caitlyn clenched her teeth against obvious pain. âI appreciate your help, Mr. Walker, but I donât even know you.â
âIâve never had a speeding ticket or been in an accident.â Slade pressed his free hand to his heart. âI promise.â
âAnd heâs a Christian. He led Dylan to Christ. I know who he is.â At the moment Raquel didnât care if he was an ax murderer. She was much too shaky to drive.
âOkay.â Caitlyn moaned.
Slade helped Caitlyn with her jacket, then supported her as she hobbled to the exit. âWhereâs the hospital?â
âIn Denton.â Raquel held the door open.
âDo you need me to carry you, maâam?â
âNo.â Caitlyn wailed. âIâd break your back for sure. Ooooh!â
Another contraction already? Denton was only fifteen minutes away, but this was happening too fast. Would they make it?
âCaitlyn?â Raquel used her most soothing nurse voice. âHave you been having contractions for a while?â
âI thought it was false labor like last week.â
Please, Lord, let me keep it together and help Caitlyn through this.
* * *
The hospital was chilly. Slade zipped his jacket. Why was it always so cold in hospitals?
Doctors and nurses scurried past the waiting room. Families and friends dotted the chairs surrounding him. Probably some of them were here for Caitlyn. He kept expecting to see Dylan, but no sign of him yet. Caitlynâs husband had met them en route and given them a police escort. It obviously came in handy to have a Texas Rangers husband.
Slade was out of place. Probably should leave. But since heâd been a part of this drama, he couldnât bring himself to go.
Besides, maybe his sister would show up. What would he do if she did? He pulled the two clippings from his pocket.
First their fatherâs obituary. He ran his fingers over the grainy publicity image from years gone by. Back from his fatherâs heyday before the boozing had sabotaged his career, before the numerous comebacks, concert tours and rehab stints.
Raised by his grandparents, Slade had never known who his father was. His mother had been an inconsistent menace in his life until she finally gave his grandparents guardianship when he was seven. After that sheâd just been inconsistent. Over the years, heâd often asked about his father. His grandparents had claimed not to know who he was. When his mother came around, and he asked, she never answered.
Then a lawyer called his grandparents claiming Sladeâs father had died and left him a sizable inheritance. Heâd thought it was a scam, but the lawyer wouldnât leave him alone until he finally agreed to a meeting. That day he learned his father was famous, a jerk whoâd paid Sladeâs mother to keep silent about his paternity. But heâd left Slade a fortune. A man of contradictions.
He folded the first clipping and slipped it back in his wallet. Through the obituary, heâd learned he had a sister. Though his grandparents were awesome, heâd always yearned for a real family. His throat constricted. A sibling. A younger sister. But an older sister might do in a pinch.
Months had passed before heâd gotten the nerve to search for her on Google, which had led him to her wedding announcementâand the second clipping.
Fair coloring, nothing like him. She looked happy. The dark-haired man at her side smiled at her as if she made his world go round. Slade hoped so. Hoped she was still as happy as when that picture was taken. What was she like? Would she be glad to learn she had a brother? Or angry that her father had cheated on her mother?
There was no way to know. Other than to track her down. Which heâd done. Which had brought him to Aubrey.
âMother and daughter are both fine.â Raquel stood in the doorway, looking tired but smiling. âThe babyâs in the nursery, if anyone wants to come see.â
Cheers and amens went up and the waiting room cleared out. Clearly Caitlyn had lots of friends and family. Slade folded the clipping and put his wallet away.
âYouâre still here?â Raquel sank into the seat beside him.
âI wanted to make sure your friend was okay.â
âThanks for driving us.â She shivered. âIâm really not sure I could have.â
âWhy is it always so cold in hospitals?â He shrugged out of his jacket and offered it to her, even though the cool threatened to raise goose bumps over his flesh.
âSo the doctors and nurses are comfortable. You canât imagine how hot it gets in the OR rooms with all the lights. Keep your jacketâIâm fine. Just wound up.â
âI thought nurses had nerves of steel.â
âNot sinceâŠâ She swallowed hard. âLetâs just say my days as an ER nurse are over.â
âYouâre not a nurse anymore?â
âA school nurse now.â She shrugged. âIt suits me better and I have the same hours as Hunter, including summers off.â
âI thought Iâd see Dylan here.â
âHowâs Caitlyn?â A dark-haired woman hurried into the room.
âFine. The ultrasound was right. The babyâs a girl. Theyâre both fine.â Raquel stood. âI can take you back to see the baby.â
âIs that where the crowd rushed off to down the hall?â At Raquelâs nod, the woman settled into a chair. âSince everythingâs fine, Iâll wait till things clear out a bit.â
âThanks again for driving us, Slade. I really appreciate it, and Caitlyn did, too. She was just a bit panicked. Iâm going to check on her.â
Dismissed. He should have left already. âMaybe Iâll see ya around.â
But she was already gone. Should have gotten her and Dylanâs number. Heâd love to catch up with Dylan. At least he knew where they were now.
And his sister, too.
âStar Marshall.â The dark-haired woman handed him a business card. âYou a friend of Raquelâs?â
âNot really.â He glanced at the card. Real estate agent. âI just ran into her in Aubrey and her friend went into labor, so I offered to drive.â
âNew to the area?â
âJust visiting. But Aubreyâs a nice town.â
âWell, if you ever think of relocating, just give me a call.â
âIâll keep that in mind.â He stood. âNice meeting you.â
His old friend Dylan Marris lived in Aubrey. His sister lived in Aubrey. And a real estate agent had landed right in front of him. Was God trying to tell him something?
* * *
Maybe none of the cowboys could tell how distracted Slade was during his sermon this morning. Except Frankâhis mentor.
With his Bible tucked under his arm, Slade stood at the outdoor arena exit shaking hands, smiling, making small talk as the well-wishers and preacher-duckers emptied from the arena. The sun was working overtime at warming the morning air, but theyâd still had a good crowd.
A few volunteers lingered to make sure there were no coffee cups left behind, freeing his mind to stray to his visit to Aubrey earlier in the week.
After the fifth grade, heâd seen Dylan only a handful of times. But theyâd always taken up right where theyâd left off as if no time had passed. The last time theyâd seen each other was after high school graduation.
âGood sermon.â Frank clapped him on the back.
âNot my best, but Iâm glad you came. I hope my lack of focus didnât show.â
âNot at all. Surely I donât make you nervous.â The older manâs knowing gaze appraised him. âWhatâs got you so distracted?â
A couple left the arenaâthe cowboyâs arm around his wifeâs shoulder, nestling her against his side. Their laughter blended as they shared a private joke.
A painful knot lodged in Sladeâs throat. He wanted that. Someone to share life and laughter with. Someone to settle down and start a family with. For months now, the road had been wearing on him.
âThe road getting long and lonely?â
âHow did you know that?â
âGod knew it wasnât good for man to be alone, so He created woman to keep us out of trouble. Somehow Eve didnât get the memo.â
Slade smiled.
âTraveling the circuit is a surefire way not to have a family or a place to call home, since most of the women hanging around are attached to the cowboys.â Frank propped his booted foot on the fence rail. âUnless you go for the buckle bunnies.â
âTrust me.â Slade chuckled. âTheyâre not interested in the chaplain or anything I have to say.â
âYou need an Irene. She was as happy as I was traveling the circuit with me while I was a rodeo chaplain. The kids were grown and gone and we found a fulfilling way to spend our twilight years.â
Over two years had passed since Irene lost her fight with cancer, and Frank had recently remarried, but the pain of losing his first wife was stamped in every wrinkle lining his face, every silver streak in his hair.
âHowâs Meredith?â
âKeeping me happy. Donât change the subject. Tell me whatâs really bothering you.â
âLetâs not keep Meredith waiting. Weâre still on for lunch, right?â
âOne of the many things I love about Meredith is her patience.â
There was no sense trying to hide anything from Frank. Heâd even told Frank about his inheritance and discovering who his father was. Sladeâs shoulders slumped. âI found out I have a sister.â
Frank blew out a big breath. âKind of knocked you for a loop?â
âI canât stop thinking about her, and I donât know what to do.â Slade leaned his elbows over the fenceâs top rail. âItâs driving me nuts. Yesterday I went to Aubrey, where she lives.â
âDid you talk to her?â
âI didnât even see her. I guess I just kind of wanted to feel it out. See if I just happened to run into her, but I didnât.â
âMaybe you should call her.â
âAnd say what? Iâm your younger brother from an affair your father had on your mother.â
âHmm.â Frank stroked his silver beard. âThat complicates things.â
âI did run into a friendâs wife there. Dylan and I were best friends until the fifth grade, when I moved to my grandparentsâ house, and we kept in touch for a long while. He called weekly after my baseball injury and was a big encouragement until I went on the circuit and eventually lost touch with him. Seeing his wife got me thinking about him again.â
âSo Dylan grew up with you in Garland. Whereâs your sister from?â
âFrom what Iâve found on the internet, Ponder originally, and Fort Worth for a while.â
âKind of odd that your sister and your friend ended up in the same tiny town.â
âI even met a local real estate agent.â A lump formed in Sladeâs throat. âItâs like Godâs trying to lead me there or something.â
âEver thought of giving up the circuit?â Frank shielded his eyes from the sun with one hand. âYou could preach at a church.â
âIâve thought about it.â Slade shrugged. âBut I donât want to let these guys down. I mean, letâs face itâsome of these guys will never darken the door of a church, but theyâll come hear a sermon at a rodeo arena.â
âFind somebody to replace you, like I did.â
âBut you didnât quit. You retired and you probably wouldnât have if Irene hadnât been sick.â He couldnât turn his back on his rodeo ministry. Or on the cowboys.
âThe circuitâs a worthy ministry.â Frank scratched his chin. âBut if your heartâs not in it anymore, are you fulfilling Godâs call?â
âGood question.â Yet just this morning, three cowboys had come forward to accept Christ. âBut my work here is still bearing fruit.â
âTrue. But someone else with a fresh fire for it might bear more fruit. Maybe you need a sabbatical.â
Sabbatical? That might help. Visit Aubrey. Slow down. Think. Regroup. Refuel. Decide whether to contact his sister. Or not. Maybe settling down would wear thin after a while and heâd come back with a fresh fire in his belly for his ministry.
The breeze stirred the manure scent. He wouldnât miss that.
âYou might be onto something.â But who could take over the ministry? âKnow any preachers dying to take on the circuit?â
âBoy howdy, sometimes seeing God work makes my head spin.â Frank clapped him on the back. âMeredith and I arenât here by accident. Weâre testing out the motor home we bought recently. Planning to do some traveling and even talked about taking up chaplaining again.â
God had known he needed a breakâeven before Slade had. His chest tightened. Was it just a break or could God be nudging him to make a change?
âWhy the third degree if you want back in?â
âI wanted to see where you stood on the subject. Under no circumstances would I want you feeling like I moved you out. Itâs your decision.â Frank put an arm around Sladeâs shoulders and they walked toward Meredith. âTake three months off, then see how you feel. If you want to come back, Meredith and I can work another area. Texas is a big state with plenty of rodeos and cowboy souls for the both of us.â
Just like thatâSlade was free.
He could rent a house in Aubrey. Catch up with Dylan. Decide what to do about his sister. See what it felt like to settle somewhere. See what came next.
* * *
In the first weeks after Dylanâs death, the photo album had become a daily ritual for Raquel. As Hunter had gotten older, theyâd pored over the family pictures at least once a week. Slowly, it had become a monthly thing. And slowly, she was losing Dylan.
Hunter leaned against her on the couch, fresh from his bath, the scent of lime shampoo clinging to him. Warm and cuddly in his pajamas with logs crackling in the fireplace.
âI canât really remember him anymore.â Hunter peered at a picture of Dylan holding him when he was an infant.
âI know, sweetie. You were so young when we lost himâonly four.â Her eyes misted.
Sheâd thought following their dream of living in Aubrey would make her feel closer to Dylan. But Dylan had never lived in this house with them. He had sat on this couch with them and his woodsy cologne had once been captured in the cushions. But not anymore.
âTell me about the picture.â
It had always been Hunterâs favorite picture and he had a copy in his room. Though sheâd told him the story countless times before, it was their way of holding on to Dylan. âYou were only a few weeks old. We still lived in Garland then and I woke up to a quiet house.â
âAnd that was weird, cuz I usually woke you up crying.â Hunter snuggled closer.
âI found yâall on the back deck of our apartment. Daddy was sitting crisscross-style with you cradled in his arms.â His brown eyes focused solely on their son.
âAnd he was so focused on me he didnât even see you.â
âI hurried to get my cameraââ she kissed the top of his head ââsnapped the picture through the glass patio door and watched yâall for several minutes before Daddy realized I was there.â
âHe finally looked up, you opened the door, and he said he wanted you to get some extra sleep cuz you deserved it for giving him such a perfect son.â
âThatâs right.â Her eyes singed. She glanced at the clock. Getting late. Hating to interrupt such precious memories, she gave him a good squeeze. âItâs bedtime.â
âAw, Mom. I like sitting here with you and weâre not done with the album.â
âI like sitting here with you, too. But you have school tomorrow. Tell you whatâtomorrow night weâll do it again.â
âPromise?â
âPromise.â She kissed his cheek, thankful he was still young enough he didnât shrug off her affection just yet.
What would she do when he got older and didnât want to cuddle? When he grew up? When he got married and left her alone?
* * *
The whirring furnace knocked the chill off in the rental house. Second day of March and Slade had three months to figure out what came next.
âYouâre sure the landlord is okay with a dog as large as Blizzard in the house?â Slade gestured to the huge white fluff-ball inspecting every nook and cranny.
âHe okayed pets.â Star, Aubreyâs Realtor, grinned. âAnd didnât mention size restrictions.â
âBlizzard will be either outside or in the laundry room when Iâm gone.â
âSo does that mean you like it?â
He scanned the house. Sheetrock walls painted taupe with hardwood floors and simple furnishings. No bells or whistles. Perfect for him.
âWhen can I move in?â
âToday.â
âIâll take it.â
âGreat.â Star went over the deposit, how much he needed to pay up front, when the rent was due and the exit policy.
âI plan to stay through May. Can I just pay it all in advance?â
âSure, if thatâs how you want to handle it.â She tapped numbers on her tablet and gave him the grand total. âSo my husband recognized your name. He said you were a major-league pitcher for the Rangers and you were really good.â
âI wasnât bad.â He rubbed his shoulder. âUntil I tore my rotator cuff in the first season. My first surgery was a success, but against my doctorâs orders, I rushed my recovery and tore it again during off-season practice.â
Heâd sacrificed everything to follow his grandfatherâs footsteps into baseball. His laser focus had gotten him a baseball scholarship to college and then a ticket to the major leagues. But heâd been so focused heâd never even had a girlfriend in high school.
So ten years later, here he was with just Blizzard to keep him company. No wife, no family except his grandparents and a sister who didnât even know about him.
He signed the check and handed it to Star in exchange for the keys. âI hope my neighbors wonât have any problem with Blizzard.â
âI donât think youâll have any problem with the neighbors.â Her phone rang. âI need to get this. Let me know if you need anything.â She waved and backed out the front door.
Hmm. Did the neighbors have a bigger, noisier dog than Blizzard? Or maybe fifteen dogs?
âWoof.â Blizzardâs bark echoed through the sparsely furnished house.
âWant outside, boy?â
The dogâs ears perked up and his bushy tail thumped.
âHow about a walk?â
âWoof.â The huge dog quivered with anticipation.
And people thought dogs didnât understand. He clipped the leash onto Blizzardâs collar and headed for the front door.
* * *
âMom.â Hunter got two syllables out of the word. âThrow it right.â
âIâm trying, sweetie.â Raquel concentrated on the spot where the seven-year-oldâs bat would swing and threw the baseball with all her strength. Her shoulder protested. Sheâd probably thrown it out of socket.
The pitch looked good. Right height, but it sailed two feet out of Hunterâs reach.
âMom.â Two syllables again.
âIâm doing the best I can.â She massaged her shoulder. âI never pitched. Maybe Uncle Brant can help.â
âHeâs on tour, and besides, he never pitched either.â Hunter poked at the piece of two-by-fourâtheir makeshift home plateâwith his bat. His shoulders slumped. âIt doesnât matter. I canât do it anyway.â
âDonât say that.â His defeat squeezed her heart. âYou can do anything you set your mind to.â With Hunterâs first baseball practice next week, sheâd wanted to encourage him. Instead sheâd discouraged him with her lousy pitching skills.
Why, why, why did Dylan have to die? Hunter needed his father. If Dylan had been here, Hunter would already have been hitting home runs. But Dylan wasnât here. And Raquel had to do this alone.
âI wish my dad was here.â
Her vision blurred. âMe too, sweetie.â But all Raquel had left of Dylan was his seven-year-old spitting image waiting for a decent pitch. And Hunter would never really know his father, no matter how hard she tried.
âSurely thereâs somebody in this town who can pitch a baseball. Weâll find somebody.â
Like Slade Walker. Heâd pitched for a short time in the major leagues. What were the odds of running into him a few weeks ago? But heâd probably been only passing through.
âWhoâs that man?â Hunter looked past her.
Raquel turned.
A man and a large white dog stepped through the line of dormant crepe myrtle trees lining her property.
She stiffened, ready to protect her cub, but recognized the familiar smile.
âDid I hear something about needing a pitcher?â
âMr. Walker?â As if sheâd wished him into existence.



































