Total pages in book: 158
Estimated words: 160732 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 804(@200wpm)___ 643(@250wpm)___ 536(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 160732 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 804(@200wpm)___ 643(@250wpm)___ 536(@300wpm)
“What about the life insurance?”
Yes.
Still testing.
“You haven’t had a lot in your life, Clara,” he said softly. “And that guy fucked your life and your future. He owes you that. He owes you more than that, but at least that’s something. It’ll be a nest egg for you. And if you’re careful with it, you’ll never be back where you were ever again. And I can’t say I don’t like that for you.”
I could read from that I had been correct in my earlier thoughts.
Perhaps Minnie (and Lorie and Pinky) had to put up with a man calling the shots.
But it would seem Buck was not like that.
So…
Yes.
Pure Buck.
After some significant bad, he gave good answers, reminding me about all there was to Buck, how much of it there was, and the fact that most of it was pretty awesome.
Hmm.
Fortunately, these answers were good enough, at least by the time we got to Mrs. Jimenez’s and picked her up, I wasn’t in a dither.
I could do the introductions and even laugh when she stared at Buck when she first saw him like she didn’t know if she wanted to flee or throw herself into his arms and lament time, wishing she was thirty again and she could make a play for him.
It was cute.
What wasn’t cute was the look she gave me after.
Filled with such relief, such warmth, such happiness all that was West Hardy was at my side, I nearly cried.
Mercifully, I got a handle on it and didn’t.
And now, I could bury my thoughts in Buck’s enchiladas, Gear’s winning personality and Mrs. Jimenez’s love.
So at least, I figured, I’d be able to get through the night.
“Aiy,” Mrs. Jimenez said from the backseat, “you have a beautiful home, West.”
I twisted in my seat to see she had her eyes glued to Buck’s house.
So I looked at his house on the short ridge, nestled in the trees, above the pretty, twinkling-in-the-waning-rays-of-sunlight creek flowing in front of it. A house with all its windows, gleaming wood, fantastic deck, the red rock foothills rising steep from beyond the valley.
She was right. I’d thought it before. It was a cool house in a beautiful location.
But it was far out of town. Hard on the gas budget, which was hard on the environment. And living there meant, if you needed anything outside groceries, or had a desire for food outside what you could get at the Valley Inn or the single Italian place that also delivered pizza, you had a long slog to get there, that same slog back.
As such, it weirdly defined Buck.
That house was awesome, the locale amazing, you had everything you needed there and then some.
But it came with drawbacks.
They didn’t seem significant.
But over time, they could wear on you.
“Wait until you see the view from the inside,” I told her, trying to sound excited and thinking I’d failed when I felt Buck’s eyes on me.
I looked to the windshield to avoid his gaze only to see four things.
One was Gear standing outside looking strangely troubled.
Another was Gear’s sweet ride, as ever, shiny clean and clearly taken care of.
The third was another sweet ride, this one an interesting shade of blue/green and definitely awesome.
The last was a hugely smiling Tatiana who was bouncing on her toes and not looking troubled, angry, pouty, blank or any way she normally looked while around me.
The last made me stare.
“Shit,” Buck muttered under his breath, and I turned my stare to him to see his gaze locked on his daughter.
Buck stopped the SUV, but before he’d done it, Tatiana launched herself toward us and she was in Buck’s door nearly before he got it fully open.
“Daddy! A Charger! I knew it!” And she threw her arms around him when he jumped down.
“Babe,” he murmured as I got out, closed my door and went to help Mrs. Jimenez.
“A 1969 Dodge Charger. Turquoise!” she screeched.
I looked her way as I helped Mrs. Jimenez get out and saw Tatiana was jumping up and down.
“It’s perfect!” she declared. “It’s better than the last one! It’s even cooler than Gear’s ride! It’s the bomb.”
“Tatie,” Buck said as I closed Mrs. Jimenez’s door and we moved to the hood of the truck, all this while Tatiana ran toward the turquoise car, which she was right, was quite something.
“I knew you didn’t mean what you said!” Tatiana yelled, still jumping up and down, but every once in a while, stopping to touch the car reverently with both hands. “I knew you wouldn’t make me wait.”
We all moved toward her, Buck stopping a few feet away, Gear, for some reason, keeping his distance.
I took Gear’s distance as a warning and stopped Mrs. Jimenez at a safe location not close to the exuberant Tatiana.
“Gear says it’s just somethin’ you’re workin’ on. But I know. I know!” she continued.