Rhim.
aylan is out in that pen for hours.
I find myself drawn back to the window again and again to watch
I have Boโs laptop, and I was able to access my personal files. Not the ones for all of Griffin, Briar, Weiss, because they donโt allow remote access from unknown IP addresses. But anything I scanned in myself I can still open, read, and edit.
So there should be plenty for me to do. Plenty to hold my attention.
Instead, Iโm back at the kitchen window, watching Raylan gallop around and around that pen with infinite patience.
He doesnโt seem to be trying to calm the horse. Actually, it looks like heโs urging it to run faster. I guess that tires it out sooner.
I donโt know why I feel so agitated, watching him.
Iโm impressed by his patience, and by his skill in riding the horse bareback, balancing flawlessly, barely even shifting when the horse abruptly startles or turns, trying to throw him off.
And yet . . . I feel a sort of anxiousness, too. Almost an antipathy toward Raylan. I look at that beautiful, wild horse, and I almost want it to fling him off, so it can kick its way out of the pen and go thundering off across the field again.
Thatโs an immature impulse, I know.
Itโs just a horse. It was bred and raised for work.
But thereโs a stubbornness in me, a contentiousness, that wants to see that horse rebel. I hate to see it broken.
I force myself to sit down at the kitchen table again, to return to the endless rows of data in my purchase agreement spreadsheet. Thereโs a couple of numbers that arenโt adding up in the deposit column, and Iโm trying to figure out which figures are causing the discrepancy.
Iโve always been good at spotting patterns, especially in numbers. I wouldnโt like to admit this out loud, but I have a burning passion for Excel spreadsheets. I love the formulas, the neat tables of data, the way that the cells can be manipulated to provide answers to all sorts of questions.
Finally, I spot the issue thatโs disrupting my perfect structure.
There are two properties with almost the same nameโone is listed as Benloch Commercial Lot 29, and the other as Benloch Commercial Lt 29. At first I think itโs just a typo, but then I see there really is a purchase agreement for both, and two separate wire transfers for the payments.
Itโs odd. We had to purchase almost a hundred properties for the South Shore Development. Still, Iโm surprised that two had such similar names. Especially with a numerical signifier at the end. Iโll have to get the original documents from the office to see if this is accurate.
I send a quick email to Lucy, asking her to scan the documents and send them to me.
With that done, I find myself wandering back to the window again to check on Raylanโs progress.
The horse has finally slowed down its gallop. Itโs trotting around the pen now, clearly exhausted. It still holds its head high, though. And I see that Raylan is only gripping the rope loosely, letting the horse think that it has control of its own motion.
It doesnโt, though. Itโs trapped in that pen. And it couldnโt throw Raylan off no matter how hard it tried. Itโs broken, whether it knows it or not.
I shift, pressing my hand into the small of my back. Iโm going to be sore tomorrow when I wake up. All that riding around today will catch up with me.
Bo comes into the kitchen. Sheโs wearing an oversized manโs shirtโ probably a hand-me-down from Raylan or Grady. Her black hair is in a loose plait. I canโt help noticing how beautiful she is. She has Raylanโs striking, wolfish features, but in feminine form. Her eyes are narrow and slightly tilted up at the outer corners, her lips fuller.
โThat laptop work for you?โ she asks. โIt did. Thank you.โ
She acknowledges the thanks with a nod. โYou going to the dance tonight?โ she says.
She has an abrupt way of speaking, without any of Raylanโs laid-back charm. She seems impatient, like the rest of the world is moving too slowly for her.
I understand that. I often feel like people are thinking and speaking at half- speed. Itโs a constant struggle to maintain the appearance of patience.
โI donโt know,โ I say. โThis is the first Iโm hearing about it.โ
โYou can borrow clothes,โ Bo tells me. โI know you donโt have any. Raylan said your whole apartment burned up.โ
Thereโs a hint of sympathy in her tone. Not much, but enough to prove that Bo isnโt totally unfeeling. Sheโs certainly been generous with her clothes and toiletries. I get the impression she doesnโt give a shit about โstuff,โ but I still appreciate it. Itโs hard for me to accept kindness. I wouldnโt be able to stand it, if she made a big deal out of the favor.
โThank you,โ I say again. โI know this whole thing is weird. Us showing up here.โ
Bo shrugs. โRaylan likes trouble. He always has.โ
โIs that why he didnโt stay here?โ I ask her. โIt wasnโt enough adventure for him?โ
Bo narrows her eyes at me, looking me up and down like sheโs analyzing the motive behind my question.
โHe had his reasons for leaving,โ she says at last. Then she turns abruptly and leaves the kitchen.
I feel like I offended her, but I have no idea how. Or maybe she wasnโt offendedโshe just didnโt want to leave space for any more questions.
I look out the window again, my eyes irresistibly drawn back to Raylan. I feel a pull toward him unlike anything Iโve experienced before.
I donโt know what the fuck happened between us down by the river. Iโve never felt anything like that. I was completely out of control. And usually I hate that sensation. Hate it more than anything.
But in this particular instance . . .
It was almost worth the trade. Giving up my sense of security and dignity, in return for the most transcendent sexual experience of my life.
Iโve never felt pleasure like that.
I can feel my face flaming, just remembering it.
I donโt understand how it happened. Iโve never been so wildly attracted to someone. Never felt my body respond like that . . .
And now I want to shut it off again. I want to turn it off like a faucet, because I donโt know where this will take me. I donโt know what will happen if I give in to that impulse again.
I want to leave and go back to Chicago.
Iโm overwhelmed by Raylanโs ranch, his family, his personal life. Overwhelmed by seeing him here in his element, where heโs most comfortable, most himself.
Heโs at his most powerful here, and Iโm at my most confused and off-kilter. I donโt have any of the trappings of my normal lifeโmy clothes, my routine, my career, my own family. Those are the core elements of my identity. What am I, stripped down to nothing and brought to this strange place?
Raylan and I missed lunch when we were riding around all morning. I made myself a sandwich while I was working, but he stayed out in the pen, probably getting hungrier by the minute.
He spends so long with the horse that he almost misses dinner, too.
Iโm alone in the kitchen with Celia when she starts the evening meal. Iโm working away on Boโs laptop, but I feel guilty watching her peel potatoes and chop carrots, knowing Iโll be eating the food when itโs finished. Especially considering sheโs doing all this work with a clunky boot on her right foot.
โCan I help?โ I ask her.
โNo need,โ she says. โYouโre already working.โ
Her tone is genuineโsheโs not trying to nudge me into offering again. But I close the laptop and stand up anyway, feeling like I should contribute, since Iโm staying in her house, wearing her daughterโs clothes, and eating her food.
โI donโt know what the hell Iโm doing,โ I tell her honestly. โBut Iโd like to help.โ
โDo onions make you cry?โ she asks. โI donโt know.โ
โTry cutting these up,โ she says.
She gives me a couple of yellow onions, plus a worn cutting board and a large chefโs knife that has clearly been sharpened again and again over time. The blade is honed to fragile thinness.
I take the counter space next to her, and I try cutting and peeling the onions.
I can tell Iโm wasting too muchโitโs hard to get the skin off, without taking a ring or two off the onion as well. Then my pieces are all different shapes and sizes, not uniform like when Iโve seen Raylan do this. I try to use the grip on the knife that he showed me, and the rocking motion. That helps a little.
The onions are stinging the hell out of my eyes. I blink hard, sending tears running down my cheeks. I swipe my eyes with the back of my hand, but that only makes it worse.
โSome people seem immune to onions,โ Celia says. โNot me, thatโs for sure.โ
โMy pieces are wonky,โ I point out.
โDoesnโt matter. Theyโll taste the same regardless.โ
Celia uses the knife to scrape the onions into a cast-iron frypan, which is already sizzling with butter. She sautรฉs carrot, onion, and celery pieces all together, filling the kitchen with their savory scent.
โHow did you like riding this morning?โ Celia asks me.
For a second I can feel myself blushing, as if Celia might guess what happened at the river. Then I remember that nobody knows thatโall they saw was me trying out a horse for the very first time. So I say, truthfully, โIt was much better than I expected. Really incredible, actually.โ
โMost people are scared of horses if they havenโt ridden before.โ
โI was scared, at first,โ I admit. โI would have been more afraid if I was on Brutus instead of Penny.โ
Celia looks over at me, her blue eyes searching my face.
โI can see why Raylan likes you,โ she says. โYouโre honest. Thatโs important to him. He canโt stand being lied to.โ
โWe donโt . . . weโre not . . . โ I trail off. I want to tell Celia that weโre not dating, but I canโt exactly say thereโs nothing between us.
โI know, I know,โ she says, stirring the contents of the frypan. โHe told me you werenโt together. But heโs never brought a girl home before.โ
Despite the fact that I donโt want Celia getting the wrong idea, her statement gives me a warm flush of pleasure. I would have been jealous at the thought of Raylan bringing another woman here. Introducing her to his family, taking her on horseback for the first time. Even though I donโt particularly want the distinction, Iโm enjoying it anyway. Knowing this is all as new to him as it is to me.
โHere, cut this up in bite-sized pieces,โ Celia instructs me, handing over some cold chicken out of the fridge.
While Iโm working on that, she flours the countertop and rolls out a large lump of pastry. She lines two pie pans with the dough, while also making some kind of white sauce on the stove that smells buttery and delicious.
โWhat will this be?โ I ask her. โChicken pot pie,โ she says.
Iโve never tried that before. Possibly my expression betrays that, because Celia says, โDonโt worry, itโs good.โ
โIโm sure it is,โ I say hastily. โIโm not picky.โ
As I watch her assemble the pies with the chopped chicken, the sautรฉed vegetables, and the gravy-like sauce, it reminds me of an Irish dish.
โMy family makes something like this,โ I tell her. โChicken and dumplings.โ
โSure,โ Celia says. โThatโs similar.โ
Celia shows me how to top the pie pans with another circle of pastry, then crimp the edges to seal the top and bottom of the pie. Then she makes little slashes across the top of each pie.
โWhat does that do?โ I ask her.
โLets the steam out.โ She slides the pies into the oven. โThere. Thoseโll be done in an hour.โ
I know I should probably use that time to shower and change my clothes, but I find myself lingering in the kitchen, which is warm and cozy and smells like sage and browned butter. I want to talk to Celia longer.
So I say, โRaylan is so good with horses.โ
โOne of the best Iโve ever seen,โ Celia agrees. She wipes a strand of hair away from her forehead with the back of her flour-dusted hand, giving me a little smile. โAnd Iโm not just saying that because heโs my son.โ
I hesitate, hoping Iโm not about to offend her.
โWhy did he enlist?โ I ask. โHe seems to love it here . . . โ
Celia sighs. โHe does,โ she agrees. โI think . . . I think he felt he had to leave. For a while, at least.โ
I frown, not understanding.
โHas Raylan told you anything about his father?โ Celia asks me. โNo.โ I shake my head. โNothing at all.โ
An omission I noticed immediately, since he talked openly about all the rest of his family.
Celia hesitates a moment, as if sheโs deciding how much to tell me. Iโve seen this before in depositionsโthe human desire to share information, battling against the endless unknowable consequences of our own words. I can see that she wants to explain but doesnโt want to anger Raylan.
At last, she says, โI didnโt grow up in a house like thisโbig and beautiful, with every amenity. I was the kind of dirt poor you only see in the south. I had one pair of shoes, and when they got too small for me, I slit the front of them so my toes could poke out. I had seven brothers and sisters. I was the oldest, so most of the care for them fell on my shoulders. Getting food for them was a constant battle. Iโd get a loaf of Wonderbread and make margarine and brown sugar sandwiches, if we had margarine or brown sugar. And then the whole loaf was gone, and I had to find something else.โ
She presses her lips together, as if wincing from the memory of hunger pains. And I realize that the massive meals she cooks that fill the table
might stem from a long-ago desperate desire to be able to feed the people she loved with as much delicious food as they could stomach.
โI left school in the tenth grade, and I got a job. I was working as a waitress at a roadside bar. I wasnโt supposed to be serving drinksโI wasnโt anything close to twenty-one. But the owners knew my situation, and they needed the help.
โIt was rough. I know things look rugged around here now, but itโs nothing to how it was thirty years ago. Silver Run was the kind of place where people didnโt stick their noses in other peopleโs business. Which is why nobody did anything about the fact that my parents were too high to feed or clothe their kids, or make sure any of us attended school. And if something did happen that crossed a lineโpeople were more likely to take the law into their own hands than to call the sheriff.โ
I nod slowly. I know exactly how that works. In the Irish Mafia, itโs the sameโeach family runs their own affairs. And when thereโs a conflict, you take it to one of the head bosses. Never to the police or to any other outsider.
โSo,โ Celia continues, โI served drinks and food to all types. Ranchers and truck-drivers, farmers and line-workers. Most of the men were local, and reasonably respectful to me. Theyโd flirt or tease or maybe give me a little slap on the ass now and then. But I was relatively safe and making enough money that my next two siblings down the line could stay in school, and hopefully, graduate. Then one night, somebody Iโd never seen before came in to eat.โ
A shiver runs down her frame, like a cold breeze just blew on the back of her neck.
โHe was about forty years old, tall and handsome. He wasnโt dressed like the men I usually saw. He had on a proper suit, and his hair was freshly cut. What I noticed most of all was how clean he was. Not a speck of dirt on his shoes or trousers. And his fingernails were spotless. Iโd hardly ever seen a grown man look like that. He wasnโt tanned, either. His face and neck and hands were pale like theyโd never seen the sun. So he caught my eye at once.
โI went over to his table. He was sitting with two other men I didnโt recognize, though they had on the usual Wranglers and button-ups. And they were normal-looking men. They didnโt draw the eye the way Ellis did.
โThat was his nameโhe introduced himself as soon as I came to take his order. He had a soft, cultured voice. A northern accent, which made him sound exotic to me then. He said, โIโm Ellis Burr. Whatโs your name?โ so politely, and with such genuine interest.
โI think I was blushing redder than a stop sign. I donโt even know if I managed to say my name properly. He ordered a Gray Goose martini, which I also thought was unutterably fancy. His friends got whiskey. And he asked me what I wanted to drink.
โI said, โI canโt drink, Iโm only sixteen.โ And he smiled, showing the most white and perfect teeth Iโd ever seen. I should have realized then what a warning that smile was, but when youโre a teenager, you donโt realize youโre just a child. You donโt realize how different adults are from you. You think youโre one of them, or close to it. You donโt know that in innocence and vulnerability, youโre like a kitten padding around next to a tiger.โ
I feel a sick sense of dread at where this story is going, but I donโt want to interrupt Celia, not even to encourage her. Iโve learned that when someone is in the flow of a narrative, the worst thing you can do is derail them. Not if you want to learn something.
โHe asked me a few more questions about myself, as I brought their drinks and then their food. I didnโt dare ask anything about him. I found out later, from the regulars, that he was a bigshot at a building materials company in Knoxville. Heโd just built some big estate thirty miles outside Silver Run.
โEllis paid the bill for the table, which came to maybe sixty dollars. And he laid three crisp, new hundred-dollar bills on the table.
โIf he would have been there when I picked them up, I would have said, โThatโs too much,โ and refused to take it. But the men had already left. So I just picked the money up, staring at it like it was a gold nugget. Like it was something magic left by a genie in a fairytale.
โThen, a couple of hours later, when I had wiped down all the tables and weโd closed for the night, I went out behind the restaurant to get my bicycle. And there was a sleek black car, parked ten feet away from my bike. Ellis got out of that car and said, โLet me give you a ride home.โ
โI never took rides from men at work. Not even if it was raining. But I felt like I couldnโt refuse him, because heโd given me all that money. So I got in his car.
โIโd never been in a truly luxurious space before. The gleam of the dashboard, and the scent of the leather . . . it was like I was sitting in a mobile palace. And Ellis himself seemed ten times as powerful and intimidating, now that I was in his space, sitting right next to him.
โBut his voice was as soft and gentle as ever, as he asked me all about my parents and my siblings, and why I wasnโt in school.
โHe drove me straight home, respectful as can be, and dropped me off in front of the house.
โWhen youโre poor . . . you can be incredibly practical. By the time I was eight years old, I was paying our electrical bill. I understood a lot of awful things that no child should understand. And yet . . . I lived in a fantasy world, too. I had to create these dreams for myself. Possible futures I might have someday. If I won the lottery. If I became a famous actressโnever mind that I was horribly shy. If I won a trip to Paris somehow . . .
โSo when I left work the next night and Ellis was waiting for me . . . I finally felt special. And chosen. As if fate had noticed me at last.
โHe was so kind to me at first. He bought me gifts, and my siblings, too. Never asking anything in return. He never laid a hand on me. I almost imagined at first that he might want to adopt me, like Daddy Warbucks in Annie . . .
โOf course, that was innocent in a way that I should not have been innocent, since I knew better by then what men want from girls. I was a virgin, but only thanks to several narrow escapes.
โEventually, Ellis did expect favors back from me. But by that point, I was so deeply in debt to him . . . thousands of dollars in gifts and dinners and
even cash . . . I felt like I had to give him whatever he wanted.
โLooking back on it now, he probably spent less than three thousand on me. Which seemed like all the money in the world. Now I think how cheap I sold myself to him.โ
I canโt keep quiet at that. I say, โYou were a child. And you were desperate. You didnโt sell yourself. That implies that you made a choice.โ
Celia sighs. โI saw the path I was on. And I never tried to leave it. I knew about birth control . . . he refused to use it. I continued on anyway. And of course I was soon pregnant. Pregnant with Raylan.
โEllis proposed. I accepted. Though even as he slipped the shiny ring on my finger, I didnโt feel excitement. I knew I was trapped. No going back.
โThe cracks in his kindness had already started to show. I knew I was never allowed to say no to himโnot about anything. If he ordered dinner for me, and I wanted pasta instead of steak, I never spoke up. If I did, heโd punish me later. Not in an obvious way. But with something subtleโlike closing the car door on my hand โaccidentally.โ Or forcing me to miss my sisterโs school play.
โThe first time he slapped me was over something so small . . . I was carrying a pitcher of lemonade out to his deck. He had a massive house out in the middle of nowhere. I had only visited it a few times then. I tripped over the ledge leading down from the kitchen to the deck. I dropped the pitcher and it shattered, spilling lemonade everywhere.
โHe slapped me across the face, hard. It hurt. But it shocked me more. My parents were addicts, but they didnโt beat us. I remember his pale blue eyes watching my face. Watching to see how Iโd react.
โI stood there stunned for a second. Trying to decide whether to cry or run away. And then instead, I said, โIโm sorry.โ And he smiled. Thatโs what he wanted to hear. He wanted me to accept fault, even for an innocent mistake. And he wanted me to accept my punishment.โ
Celia pauses to dampen a rag, so she can wipe down the countertops while we talk.
โAnyway,โ she says, โI donโt have to tell you every detail of what happened next. Iโm sure you can guess. Men like Ellis like to think that theyโre unique and original, but in fact they couldnโt be more predictable if they were operating out of a literal playbook. As soon as we were married, as soon as he had me alone in his house, as soon as I was pregnant and unable to leave
. . . he escalated. Day by day his restrictions tightened, and his violence increased.
โHe never left marks that someone else could see. But the rest of my body .
. . I was covered in burns. Cuts. Bruises. And sometimes worse. I begged him to be careful, not to hurt the baby . . . Thank god he didnโt. For his own reasons, not because he gave a damn what I wanted. He was excited about the baby. Another human completely under his control.
โOf course for me, the pregnancy was a time-bomb. A countdown to my greatest fear of allโthat what was being done to me might eventually spill over onto an innocent child.
โEllis was so excited when he found out we were having a son. I told myself that meant he would never hurt the baby. No matter how angry or violent he got, he never actually lost control. He never broke anything that mattered to him, or left a mark on me that might be visible in public. It was all so calculated.
โBut then one day he truly lost his temper. One of my brothers came to the house to check on me. It was the next-oldest of my siblings, Abott. He was only fifteen, but tall. Like Grady is tall.โ Celia smiles, faintly.
โEllis had cameras set up all around inside the house and on the property so he could watch me constantly, even while he was at work. He saw Abott come to the door, and he saw me open the door. Even though I didnโt let him inside and I made him leave immediately, Ellis was already on his way home.
โI saw a rage in him that night that Iโd never seen before. He hit me again and again in the face. Then he poured a glass full of bleach. He held it out to me, and he said, โDrink.โ I begged and pleaded, but it was like talking to a mannequin. His face was so still and blank. Only his eyes were glittering.
โHe grabbed my face and brought the glass to my lips. He was going to force it down my throat.
โI said, โPlease donโt make me. It will kill the baby.โ That was the only thing that shook him out of it. But it was closeโtoo damned close. I didnโt know if he would listen next time.
โI ran away the next day. I was terrified, of course. I knew heโd kill me if he found out. I never would have had the courage to go, if the baby wasnโt due a month later. I was out of time. And I never would have made it out, if I didnโt have help. As I mentioned, people here will handle things themselves, if it gets bad enough. Despite all Ellis had done to isolate me, I had one friend left . . . โ
She trails off. Iโm wildly curious about this part of the story, but after all sheโs told me, I know I donโt have the right to push for more.
โIโm sorry,โ she says, shaking her head. โI didnโt mean for this story to be so long. Youโre probably wondering why I even brought it up. But Iโm about to get to the point.โ
โI want to hear it all,โ I assure her.
โI got away,โ she repeats. โI had the baby. Not hereโover the border in North Carolina, on Cherokee land. It was the only place that felt safe. The only place Ellis couldnโt go.
โMy friend who helped me . . . his family took me in. His sisters helped me with the birth, and with the baby. I was afraid that I might not feel everything that I should for the baby after it was born. Because I thought it might remind me too much of Ellis. But from the moment I saw Raylan, I loved him like Iโd never loved anything. More than my parents or siblings or my own self.
โI stayed there for six years. My friend . . . became more than a friend to me. We were married. He had always treated Raylan like his own son. After we had two more children . . . it seemed wrong to make unnatural divisions between them. I always meant to tell Raylan the truth. But the truth was so ugly.
โAnd they adored each other. Even though Raylan wasnโt technically his son, they were more alike than Waya and his own blood children.
โWe were so happy; no day seemed like the right day to tear that happiness apart. To put such an ugly burden on Raylan. Especially because Ellis died. So there was no chance of him ever finding us.
I can see tears in the corner of Celiaโs eyes. Not tears of sorrowโtears of happiness, remembering that time when she was free again, and married to a man who actually loved her, with three beautiful small children running around.
โI waited too long,โ she says. โWe got this ranch. We moved here, all together. The children grew up so fast. Time flew away from me.
โRaylan found my old wedding certificate in a box in the attic a week before his 18th birthday. He did the math and realized the truth. He was so, so angry at us. He felt betrayed. I think, though heโs never said this, he felt like he no longer belonged to this ranch or to our family in the same way. We promised him it didnโt matterโthat all three of the children would inherit the ranch, as weโd always said.
โI donโt think he believed us. He enlisted right after.
โWaya said it was alright. Raylan would go and see more of the world, his anger would fade, and eventually heโd come back to us.
โBut then . . . โ now her tears are certainly tears of sorrow. โWaya was killed in a car crash. He was driving Bo home from a party. Another car ran them off the roadโwe never knew who. If it was intentional, or drunk driving, or a stupid accident.
โRaylan came home for the funeral. We hoped he would stay. But . . . โ
She breaks off, pressing her fingers into her eyes and taking a moment to compose herself.
โI think the guilt was too much for him. He never had a chance to reconnect with Waya. To tell him . . . that he knew Waya was his father. Regardless of blood. And that he loved him. Waya knew all that, of course. And Raylan knows it, too. But when you donโt get to say the words . . . โ
I understand that.
I often find it hard to say out loud what I actually feel. To tell people what they mean to me.
If Cal or Nessa or my mother or father died, or Uncle Oran, I would have many regrets. Things left unsaid that would eat at me.
Knowing that, youโd think Iโd call them right now and let it all be said. But thatโs not so easy, either.
My sympathy for Raylan is intense. For Celia as well.
Thatโs another thing thatโs hard to express. How can I tell her how much I appreciate her sharing this with me? How can I tell her that my heart hurts for her younger self? That I admire that she did manage to leave, and that she kept Raylan safe?
All the words that come to mind seem pithy and weak.
I swallow hard, and say only, โThank you for telling me that, Celia. I . . . care about Raylan. And you know when you care about someone, you want to understand them.โ
That doesnโt seem like quite enough, so I add, โYou were so brave to leave. Youโre very strong.โ
Celia squeezes my shoulder gently.
โI havenโt talked about that in a long time,โ she says. โBut I wanted you to understand why Raylan coming home again means so much to us. And to him, too, I think. He brought you here for a reason.โ
I donโt know exactly how to respond to that, so I just say again, โThank you.โ
Celia smiles. โGo on upstairs,โ she says. โYouโve got just enough time to wash up before this pie is done.โ
I scale the creaking staircase back up to my room.
The guest room is a beautiful space, like all the rooms in the ranch house: light, airy, and open. The walls and ceiling are white-washed wood, and the floor is dark oak, partly covered by a hand-woven rug. The pretty blue quilt on the bed, against the white walls, makes me feel like Iโm inside of a cloud, way up in the sky.
I can see an article of clothing laid out on the bedโa dress. Itโs light and summery, pale green with a prairie floral print. It looks too feminine to be something out of Boโs closet. Surely sheโs the one who put it here for me, though.
I take a shower, then try to battle with my hair, which is becoming less cooperative by the day. I usually straighten it with all kinds of expensive salon shampoos and serums, and an arsenal of tools. Here I donโt even have a proper blow dryer. I have to let it air dry while I borrow some of Boโs makeup.
We donโt share the same coloring, and Bo clearly leans toward the minimalist look, with a swipe of heavy black eyeliner. Still, sheโs got enough selection that I can add a little color to my pale face. I use her blush, and her lip gloss.
Then I slip into the dress, which fits quite nicely.
Itโs nothing I would wear usuallyโtoo girly and too country. But Iโll admit, itโs pretty, with a ruffled skirt and a row of tiny buttons down the front.
Right as I finish dressing, I hear Celia calling, โDinnerโs ready!โ from the kitchen.
I can hear footsteps hurrying from all corners of the house. Sounds like everyone else is as hungry as I am.
We all crowd in around the table, which is set with the mismatched crockery of several different generations. Grady has brought Shelby and the boys over for dinner again, and Bo is already seated, dressed up a little more than usual in torn black jeans and a sleeveless top, with beaded earrings dangling from her ears.
โHow come you look so fancy?โ Grady asks her.
โI donโt.โ Bo scowls.
โLeave her be,โ Shelby says. โYouโre the last person in the world to give fashion advice.โ
I go to the window, to check if Raylan is still out in the pen. โDonโt worry, he came in a while ago,โ Grady says.
โWhere is he now?โ I ask.
โProbably cleaning up. He was a mess.โ
Nobody else seems inclined to wait for RaylanโBo starts dishing up a hearty helping of the chicken pot pie, and Celia passes around a basket of warm rolls.
โDo you always eat together?โ I ask Shelby.
โMost nights,โ she says cheerily. โBut sometimes Celia and Bo come over to our place instead.โ
Raylan pointed out their house to meโit sits about a mile away, not visible from the front yard because of the birch trees all around. From what I could see, itโs a little smaller than the ranch house, but newer.
I understand that kind of family structureโmine is similar. You grow up and start your own family, but you all stay intertwined. This ranch is too large to be run by one person or twoโitโs an empire of its own type. Like my familyโs web of influence in Chicago.
โHey, save some for me,โ Raylan says, coming into the kitchen. His hair looks blacker than ever, still damp from the shower. I can smell the clean scent of his soap and see the flush on his skin from the hot water. Heโs actually shaved for once. It makes him look younger, and also reminds me that heโs quite startlingly handsome beneath the beard. Iโve gotten comfortable with him over the last couple of weeks. Now I feel thrown off- kilter, like heโs a stranger all over again.
He sits down right next to me. The sleeve of his flannel shirt brushes against my bare arm. It feels warm and soft and familiar. I relax just a little.
โYou want pot pie?โ he asks me. โIโll get it for you.โ
His voice is as low and drawling as everโas familiar as his shirt. Itโs funny to hear him talking the same, out of this face that looks leaner and sharper now that itโs shaved clean.
He dishes me up a huge serving of pie. โRiona helped make that,โ Celia says.
โDonโt give me any credit,โ I say, shaking my head. โI only chopped onions.โ
โThatโs the hardest part,โ Celia says, smiling at me.
The pot pie is delicious. It is similar to chicken and dumplings, but honestly Celiaโs cooking is better than my motherโs. Celia is a master at seasoning the food so that itโs rich and flavorful, but not over the top. Just like how Raylan cooks.
She urges me to have a second helping and makes sure everyone has whatever they want to drink.
Sheโs been tirelessly kind to me the whole time Iโve been here, making sure Iโve got fresh towels and any toiletries I need. Bo is the same. I guess thatโs southern hospitality. Specifically, the way they offer things with such warmth and genuine concern, so youโd feel worse declining the favor than accepting it.
โYou look stunning,โ Raylan says to me, eyeing the borrowed dress. โThat one of yours, Bo?โ
โYeah.โ She nods. โAuntie Kel gave it to me for my birthday. Iโve never worn it.โ
โKellyโs still trying to turn you into a little lady, huh?โ Raylan says. โI admire her persistence, if not her grip on reality.โ
โWell, all things work out in the end,โ Celia says. โBecause it looks beautiful on Riona.โ
I have a hard time accepting compliments, or warmth of any kind from people I donโt know well. Iโm always looking for the ulterior motive, the hidden agenda. But for some reason, maybe because I know Raylan pretty well by now, or maybe just because his family all has that same attitude of honesty and practicality, I feel relaxed around them. I can enjoy their friendliness and their interest without feeling like theyโre prying at me, searching me over for flaws.
โYou coming to the dance, too?โ Raylan asks Bo. โI guess,โ she says without much enthusiasm.
โWish I could go,โ Shelby says wistfully, resting her hand on her swollen belly.
โYou could still come,โ Bo says.
โYeah, but I canโt dance, so whatโs the point,โ Shelby pouts.
โIโll swing you around,โ Grady says, grinning and slinging a heavy arm around her shoulders. โWho knows, might make the baby come faster.โ
โThatโs true,โ Shelby says, perking up a little. โGo on,โ Celia urges. โIโll put the boys to bed.โ
We all coordinate in clearing the table, rinsing the dishes and loading them into the dishwasher. I participate in this as if Iโve done it a hundred times before. Nobody leaves the kitchen until the last crumb is wiped off the table. Itโs clear that in the Boone family, everyone works together until the job is done. No matter how small that job might be.
Then Raylan, Grady, Shelby, Bo, and me all load into a beat-up Ford truck so we can drive to the dance.
It takes us longer than I expected to get there. I forget that everything is spread so far apart in the country. The Wagon Wheel is almost forty miles away, and thatโs forty miles over winding bumpy roads where you canโt travel at nearly the same speed you would on a freeway.
Iโm not sure what I thought The Wagon Wheel would look likeโI guess I was picturing some pokey little rec center, with a handful of hicks in
attendance.
Instead, I see a large historic building, strung with lights and already bumping from the music inside. The lot is packed with trucks of all types, from gleaming Platinum models, all the way down to rusted-up Chevys that look held together with twine.
โI didnโt think that many people lived around here,โ I say in surprise. โThe dances are popular,โ Raylan says. โPeople come from all over.โ He leads me inside the building.
The dance floor is packed with people, as is the entirety of the room. Itโs a good twenty degrees hotter in here than it is outside. It smells like leather, sweat, liquor, and cigar smoke. Up on stage, a five-piece band plays at full volume. I have no idea what song theyโre performing, but itโs loud, upbeat, and raucous. Thereโs a fiddle and a banjo mixed in with the usual bass, guitar, and drums.
I hadnโt planned to dance. For one thing, I donโt really know how. Not to country music, at least. And Iโm not sure if I can look Raylan in the face after what we did this morning.
Still, I find my foot tapping to the swinging beat.
Dirt On My Boots โ Jon Pardiย (Spotify)ย Dirt On My Boots โ Jon Pardiย (Apple)
โYou want a drink?โ Raylan asks me. โSure,โ I say.
I watch Raylan head over to one of the beer stands. Itโs hard for him to push his way through the crowdโpartly because itโs so packed in here, and partly because he keeps bumping into people he recognizes, who want to slap him on the shoulder and ask what the hell heโs been doing the last few years. I see more than a few women greet him with particular friendliness. I feel a hot flush on my cheeks as a pretty brunette gives his arm a squeeze
and tries to keep him talking as long as possible. Raylan is cordial, but he keeps moving.
He waits in line and returns a couple of minutes later, carrying two plastic cups of foamy beer.
โThatโs all they had,โ he says apologetically.
I take a sip. I donโt usually like beer, but thereโs something about the sharp, effervescent taste that seems to pair well with the smell of leather and hay. The beer is nice and cold, refreshing in the hot, humid space.
Raylan drinks his down in a matter of seconds, then he crumples the cup and grins at me.
He always attacks his food and drink like that, as if it might disappear if he doesnโt swallow it down fast. As if itโs the most delicious thing heโs ever tasted.
He pulls me out on the dance floor the same way, like there isnโt a moment to lose.
Raylan has so much restless energy, so much active drive.
โI donโt really know how toโโ I start, but heโs already pulling me into his arms, one hand on my waist and the other clasping my right palm.
I know some basic ballroom dancingโyou pick it up going to fancy parties and events. As far as I can tell, country dancing doesnโt seem to have structured footwork in the same way as a waltz or salsa. Instead, thereโs a basic rock-step and then a whole lot of twirling and spinning.
Raylan directs me with his big strong hands, sometimes resting them both on my waist to spin me one way or another, sometimes switching his grip between my hands, or holding both my hands over my head as I twirl.
Iโm clumsy at first, stumbling a couple of times. But itโs a whole hell of a lot easier to dance in cowboy boots compared to the stilettos Iโd usually wear. And Raylanโs lead is truly flawlessโhe directs me effortlessly, shifting my momentum one way and another, dipping me down over his blue-jean clad thigh and then pulling me back up again.
He makes it all looks so easy. He moves with a kind of casual grace that belies the fact that heโs really fucking good at this.
Iโm not a great dancer. But I am a quick learner. Once he puts me through a particular move once or twice, I can anticipate it the next time around. Soon Iโm doing a kind of three-part spin where I duck my head under his hand on the third rotation, and a move where Raylan wraps my arms around my body, walks me around, and then flings me out to the end of his reach like a yo-yo, before pulling me back and wrapping me up in his arms again.
At first Iโm focused on learning the moves. But the more I can follow his lead without thought, the more I notice the heat coming off his body, and the tension of his arms when I press up against his chest. I can smell the spicy scent of his aftershave.
I find myself relaxing, melting against him like butter in a hot pan.
The dance floor is packed with people. All kinds of country boysโtanned, muscular, and charming. But none of them are as handsome as Raylan, not even close. And none can move like him. Iโm not the only woman who canโt take my eyes off him. Iโm sure plenty of these girls would love to cut in for a dance, but Raylan doesnโt pause for an instant between songs. Heโs grinning and brimming with energy, dancing faster and harder by the minute.
I canโt believe heโs got this kind of stamina, when I know he spent all afternoon breaking that horse.
Actually . . . the way he leads me through the dances reminds me of the way he rode that horse. Directing it so subtly and gently that the horse thought it had the freedom to run, while all the time it was doing exactly what he wanted.
Heโs doing the same thing now. Directing and training me, without me even noticing. Heโs got the lead, and Iโm totally under his control.
I stiffen up, resisting his motion.
Raylan puts his hand on the small of my back and pulls me closer, trying to swing me around in his orbit. But now Iโm pulling away from him, my pleasure in dancing evaporating.
I donโt want to be trained. I donโt want to be broken.
โWhatโs wrong?โ Raylan says, standing still, but still holding onto my hands.
โI donโt want to dance anymore,โ I say.
โAlright,โ Raylan says easily. โLetโs get another drink.โ
โJust water,โ I say. I blame the beer for the warm flush that made me think I could dance. It made me think it was a good idea to let Raylan spin me and dip me any way he wanted.
Raylan goes to get us a couple bottles of water. I lean against the wooden railing that borders the dance floor, looking around the room. I see Grady and Shelby dancing as best they can with Shelbyโs belly in the way. Theyโre mostly just swaying, Gradyโs hands on his wifeโs hips, and Shelby stretching up as high as she can reach to link her hands behind his neck.
I hate the idea of being pregnantโof being essentially debilitated, unable to walk or run like normal, my body stretched out and taken over by another living thing. I never get that vicarious excitement that other people seem to experience. Quite the oppositeโwhen I see a pregnant lady, I want to wince and look away.
Even when Cal and Aida had their baby, I felt discomfited. I was happy for them, but at the same time I felt like some kind of strange spell took hold of them both, changing them forever. It wasnโt a bad thing. But my brother is a father now. Heโs irrevocably a different person than he was before.
I can see Bo standing just outside the doorway, on the wraparound porch that encircles the building. I walk over to speak to her, drawn to her by the pensive set of her shoulders, and by my own desire to breathe fresh air for a moment.
Bo is looking out over the dark fields. Washed in moonlight, the fierceness has vanished from her face. Her dark eyes look wistful.
โItโs nice out here,โ I say to her.
The cool breeze feels lovely after the heat of the dance floor.
โI saw you dancing,โ Bo says. โDo you like to dance?โ I ask her.
She shakes her head. โI donโt like crowds.โ Then, with a half-smile, she admits, โBut I donโt really like being alone, either. So I guess thatโs why Iโm standing out on the porch like an idiot.โ
I laugh softly. I understand that feelingโsometimes I go to a club or a party, and the minute I get there Iโm annoyed by the noise and smoke. But then as soon as I get home again I feel a kind of blank emptiness.
โI wish I could enjoy things as easily as everyone else seems to,โ I say.
Bo glances over at me, her dark eyes glinting beneath her thick lashes. โSometimes I think theyโre just pretending to have fun. And other times I think it really is that simple for the rest of the world. Theyโre a bunch of clocks that run right, and Iโm just missing a gear somewhere . . . โ
The end of her sentence is drowned out by a retro-style motorcycle roaring into the lot. Itโs one of those old-school bikes that looks like it should be ridden by a mail carrier in WW2. Maybe it wasโthis particular bike is missing so much paint that itโs impossible to tell the original color, and the noisy engine spits out a plume of black smoke.
The rider is slim, dressed in torn jeans and a battered jacket that looks as old as the bike. When he pulls off his helmet, he shakes out a mane of black hair that falls below his shoulders. Heโs got high cheekbones, an aquiline nose, and dark eyes even fiercer than Boโs.
I see Bo tense up at the sight of him. She looks like she might run inside The Wagon Wheel, but then changes her mind and stays put.
โI thought you said you werenโt coming,โ the rider says, setting his helmet down on the bike seat and striding toward Bo.
โI changed my mind,โ Bo says, tossing her head. โI could have picked you up.โ
โI donโt need a ride from you.โ
The boy walks right up to Bo, so theyโre almost nose to nose. She stands her ground, refusing to step back, arms folded in front of her chest.
The air between them crackles with tension. Even though their sentences are innocuous enough, each word carries an undercurrent of challenge and resentment.
โWhoโs this?โ the boy says, without actually looking at me. His eyes are fixed on Boโs, furious and unblinking.
โRiona, this is Duke,โ Bo says, introducing us in a monotone.
โNice to meet you,โ I say. Duke totally ignores me, but I donโt care, because Iโm fascinated by the tension between these two. I donโt want politeness, I want to know what the hell is going on.
โYou promised to dance with me,โ Duke says, grabbing Boโs wrist.
She wrenches it out of his grip and shoves him hard in the chest for good measure.
โThe hell I did!โ she cries.
Duke makes a sharp hissing sound, like the noise you might make to correct an unruly animal. He shoves between Bo and me, stomping into The Wagon Wheel.
The silence he leaves behind him is thick and poignant.
Iโm torn between my desire to ask Bo for details, and the knowledge that she probably wants me to mind my own damn business.
โThere you are!โ Raylan says, handing me a bottle of water. โI was looking all over for you.โ
โWhereโs my drink?โ Bo says to him.
โI didnโt know you were out hereโyou can have my water.โ
โWater isnโt a drink,โ Bo says sullenly. She ignores the proffered water bottle and heads inside to get something more satisfactory.
I twist off the lid and gulp down the water, dehydrated from my long session of dancing.
Raylan cocks his head, watching me. โWhyโd you come out here?โ he says.
I slip the question, saying instead, โWhatโs the deal with Bo and Duke?โ
โOh,โ Raylan chuckles. โThey were best friends growing up. A couple of hellions, getting into trouble constantly. Now, I donโt know exactly what theyโre beefing about, since I havenโt been around lately, and I only got a few things second-hand. But I gather that Duke wants to be more than friends, and Bo is pissed about it.โ
โShe doesnโt like him that way?โ
Raylan looks over at me, dark eyebrow cocked. โWomen donโt always know what they like.โ
I feel the color rising in my face. โThatโs pretty sexist,โ I say.
Raylan shrugs. โOkay. People donโt know what they like.โ He grins. โEspecially women.โ
I frown at him, my temper rising. โI know what I like and donโt like,โ I tell him.
He keeps smiling at me in that infuriating way. โI donโt think you do.โ
I want to slap his smug face again, but I wouldnโt give him the satisfaction.
This is exactly what I suspected. He thinks he can manipulate me. He thinks he can break me.
โLetโs go back,โ I say coldly. โIโm tired.โ
Raylanโs expression clearly shows that he thinks Iโm pouting, not tired. But all he says out loud is, โAlright, Iโll go get the others.โ
As we step back inside The Wagon Wheel, the heat and humidity are higher than ever. The band is stomping the stage while they play, and the boots of
the dancers likewise thunder against the wooden floor. It seems to shake the whole hall.
Raylan heads over toward Grady and Shelby, who are still dancing together in the corner, away from the wildness of the other dancers.
I look around for Bo. I spot Duke instead, dancing with a pretty redhead. Heโs got his hands on her hips and sheโs looking up at him with a flirtatious expression, obviously pleased to be this close to him.
Bo is standing at the edge of the dancefloor, likewise watching them while she gulps down half her beer. Her eyes are narrowed and two bright spots of color flame in her cheeks.
Duke is not paying much attention to the redhead. He keeps glancing back at Bo. He looks defiant, but also slightly uncomfortable, like heโs regretting his strategy.
As the song winds down, the redhead reaches up to tuck a lock of hair behind his ear.
Seeing that, Bo whirls around and starts to push her way through the crowd, heading toward the exit. Duke abandons the redhead on the dance floor so he can chase after her. He catches up to Bo about five feet away from where Iโm standing, so I have a full view of what happens next, though I canโt hear what theyโre saying over the noise of the music and the crowd.
Duke grabs Boโs arm. She shakes him off angrily. He shouts something at her, waving his hands in frustration. She rolls her eyes and tries to turn away from him again. He grabs her shoulder and spins her around. Then she flings the remains of her beer in his face.
This has an effect similar to throwing a match in the middle of a pool of gasoline. Duke looks ready to strangle her, his face so full of fury that even Bo looks slightly abashed.
But the beer didnโt confine itself to drenching Duke. It splashed the back of the necks of the two men standing behind him. The two cowboys whirl around, fists already raised.
The cowboys donโt seem to care that Duke got hit with more beer than they did. Theyโre looking for somebody to blame, and heโs the obvious culprit. After a brief exchange of insults, the bigger of the two cowboys throws a haymaker right at Dukeโs face. He ducks under the punch with a speed and fluidity that shocks me, and shocks the cowboy too. The cowboy looks baffled, like he just witnessed a magic trick. His buddy reacts a little quicker, hitting Duke from the side with a sucker punch.
Even though sheโd been fighting with Duke five seconds earlier, Bo shrieks with rage and runs at the two cowboys. She kicks cowboy number two right in the gut with the heel of her boot, then cracks him across the jaw with a right cross. The bigger cowboy seizes her from behind, pinning her arms to her sides, and she kicks both legs out in front of her, hitting his friend again.
Now Duke is properly pissed, and he throws his arm around the big cowboyโs neck, choking him until he releases Bo. But the cowboys apparently didnโt come aloneโat least six other guys are joining the fight from all sides.
Iโm frozen in place, not knowing what the fuck to do. Itโs a melee of people, and Iโm not entirely sure whoโs on which side. Especially once Raylan and Grady jump into the fray. Raylan rips one of the cowboys off Bo and flings him over the wooden railing into the dance floor. Grady is throwing punches left and right, taking a hit to the face that would knock out a grizzly bear, but simply shaking his head and coming back for more.
The brawl spreads outward like a virus. Within seconds, it seems like everyone is fighting, and I canโt tell if thereโs teams or sides, or just a whole lot of people taking the opportunity to release their aggression on whoeverโs standing next to them.
Somebody grabs my arm, but itโs only Shelby pulling me toward the door, her arm cradled protectively around her belly.
โCome on!โ she shouts. โWhat about Bo?โ
โRaylanโll bring her,โ Shelby pants.
She pulls me outside to the porch, which is already crowded with the dancers who likewise wanted to flee the brawl. Some people are laughing and peeking in the windows, commenting on the riot within. Others are heading to their cars, obviously feeling like they had enough fun for one night.
I hear the wail of a single siren, distant but distinct. Somebody called the cops, though I donโt know how a single sheriff is going to break up this mess.
Raylan comes barreling through the doorway, half-carrying and half- dragging Bo along. Grady is right behind him. Together they frog-march their sister back to the truck. Raylanโs lip is swollen, and Grady has the beginning of an impressive black eye. But both are grinning.
โYou said you werenโt going to fight tonight!โ Shelby says, slapping her husbandโs arm furiously. He seems to feel it about as much as a moose feels a mosquito. Still, he pretends to be cowed.
โI didnโt start that!โ he says. โDuke did.โ
Bo looks mildly guilty. She knows that if anybody started the fight, it was her. But she doesnโt pipe up, and Iโm not going to rat her out.
Once Raylan has stuffed Bo in the backseat, he grabs my shoulders and looks me over.
โAre you okay?โ he says.
โYeah, of course. Iโm fine,โ I assure him.
โAlright. Just making sure you didnโt get hit by any stray shrapnel,โ he says. โYou know . . . solo cups. Tobacco juice. Cowboy sweat.โ
I smile, despite myself.
โNo,โ I say. โNothing like that.โ
โThank god,โ Raylan says. โYou get a drop of cowboy sweat on you, and youโre never getting that smell out.โ
โYouโre a cowboy,โ I say, low enough that nobody else will hear. โAnd Iโm pretty sure Iโve gotten your sweat on me . . . โ
Raylan grins. โThatโs different . . . โ
โSo howโd you like your first country dance?โ Shelby calls up to me from the backseat.
โIt was . . . pretty fun,โ I admit.
โYou got the full experience,โ Grady says. โNo good dance ends without a brawl.โ
โThereโs plenty of good dances without any fighting!โ Shelby cries. โName one,โ Grady says.
Shelby bites her lip, obviously at a loss for an immediate answer. โCarrieโs wedding!โ she blurts.
โUh uh. Jonny White beat the shit out of Carl Oakton halfway through the reception. Right before they cut the cake.โ
I can see Shelby scowling in the rear-view mirror, but she canโt seem to think of any other examples to prove her assertion.
Grady grins smugly, throwing his arm around his wifeโs shoulders and squeezing her tight.
Bo sits next to the pair, silent and frowning. Raylan glances back at her.
โYou okay, sis?โ he says.
โYeah, of course,โ Bo says. โIโm fine.โ
Raylan nods and turns back to the road, but I can see him thinking, probably piecing together what happened.