The Barefoot Summer Page 59

“Where is home?” Kate asked. “Is it where you hang your hat or where you park your checkbook?”

“Don’t mess with me,” Teresa warned.

“Okay, I’ll shoot straight. Either I get a year off, without pay, of course, or my resignation will be faxed to you in ten minutes,” Kate said.

“You are serious? What are you going to do? Drive a tractor for a living?”

“Maybe. That does sound exciting.” Kate pictured herself walking across a plowed field hand in hand with Waylon.

“I’m not giving you a year off, and if you resign, I’ll sell this company and you won’t get a dime of the money.” Teresa’s icy tone left no room for argument.

“I’ve never been poor. It might be an interesting adventure.” Kate could live for years on the interest from her own investments. She didn’t bother to remind her mother that she owned thirty percent of the stock in Truman Oil.

“I mean it, Kate. I’m not backing down one inch.”

“Then you’d better call Red Dirt and see what their offer is, or else get ready to sit on the throne awhile longer. I’m not coming back to Fort Worth.”

“Send me the resignation.” Teresa hung up on her.

Ten minutes later, Kate watched her two-line resignation with her signature at the bottom go through the machine in her bedroom. When it finished, she took a deep breath and let it out slowly. There were no regrets, and she felt freer than she had in her whole life.

“What does a godmother wear to a christening?” Kate asked, standing in the living room wearing nothing but her underpants, bra, and a short silk robe.

“Are you nervous about the godmother thing or about seeing Waylon as a totally free woman?” Jamie asked. Waylon had finally tied up all the ends in Dallas and come home the night before.

“Don’t go judging me until you walk a mile in my high heels.”

“High heels, hell!” Jamie laughed. “You aren’t that girl anymore, darlin’. You are a barefoot country girl now, so embrace it. It’s an August Sunday in Texas, so wear one of those cute little sundresses and sandals.”

She looked down at her bare feet and unpolished nails. She had taken the time to remove the last remnants of polish and promised Gracie that they would do each other’s toenails when Gracie decided on just the right color.

“I’m wearing fancy flip-flops,” Jamie said.

Amanda held up a foot. “My feet still aren’t skinny enough yet to get into my regular shoes. Which reminds me, Aunt Ellie is bringing a truckload of my things today. I told her to sell the furniture because we don’t need it.”

“Don’t you want a bigger bed?” Kate asked.

“I’m fine with the one I have. I shared the one in the apartment with Conrad and don’t ever want to see it again. She’s packed up my prebaby clothes and my other things, and the apartment lease is up on the first day of September, so now I don’t have to go up there and deal with it.”

“And you, Jamie?” Kate asked.

“House is for sale. I’m leaving the furniture in it, because the Realtor says that it helps sell the place. When papers are ready to sign, we can decide if there’s anything we want out of it,” Jamie answered.

“Are we ready? Y’all take forever!” Gracie sighed. “I haven’t seen Lisa in four whole days and she hasn’t even met my baby sister.”

“Give me five minutes.” Kate slipped her feet into a pair of sandals that matched a bright floral sundress with thin straps over the shoulders.

Waylon waited for her at the front of the church and walked inside with her hand tucked in his. His touch after two weeks made her want to drag him off to the hay barn instead of to a church pew, but today was the christening and she’d have to be good for a little while longer. The service lasted three minutes longer than eternity, but finally the preacher wound down and called Amanda, Jamie, Gracie, Kate, and Waylon to the front and the christening began. Kate tried to listen as he explained the duties of godparents, but she kept shifting her eyes and her thoughts to Waylon. The wink he shot her let her know he was also having trouble paying attention.

The ceremony ended, and as everyone in the church gathered around Amanda and the baby, Waylon maneuvered the other way and draped an arm around Kate’s bare shoulders. His breath warmed her neck as he whispered, “You sure we can’t sneak out of here?”

“We are the godparents. We have to stay.”

“A drive afterward?” He kissed her earlobe.

“Definitely.” She nodded.

She’d begun to think the party would never end and the congregation would never stop talking, but at three o’clock, Hattie pulled her to the side. “Why don’t you and Waylon sneak out the back door? I can see he’s getting antsy to talk to you in private, and I bet it’s got more to do with you than that nasty murder business.”

Kate made her way around the crowd and tapped Waylon on the shoulder. “We’ve been given the green light to leave this party.”

“Well, halle-damn-lujah!” He looped her arm in his and headed toward the door. “Let’s go before the thing turns red and stops us.”

Luckily everyone was either involved with the new baby or visiting about whatever gossip was new in town, because no one even tried to start up a conversation with either of them on the way out to the churchyard. The hot August sun burned brightly and there wasn’t even a hint of a breeze, but it didn’t take the truck long to cool down once they were underway.

“Where are we going?” Kate asked.

“Anywhere you want to go,” he answered.

“To the lake, where I can put my toes in the water and then curl up in your arms under that willow tree.”

“A wonderful place.” He grinned and made a turn to take them in that direction.

He parked beside her car and held her hand all the way down to the dock. Waylon was one of those cowboys who knew how to hold hands with a woman to make her feel special. Not too tight so that he was in control and she had no say-so over anything. Not so loose as to make her feel like he’d rather be anywhere else in the world other than beside her.

When they were settled down under the shade of the willow tree, he draped an arm around her shoulders, brushed her hair back, and kissed her. “I missed you so much this week, but I am officially just a Texas rancher now. When are you going back to Fort Worth?”

“I’m not. I’m looking for a job. I’m real good in a hay truck, and I can turn a tractor on a dime at the end of a field. Know anyone who might need a woman with those skills?”

“Are you teasing me?” Waylon asked.

“No, Mother is not happy, but she’ll come around. She’s decided to sell the business since I’m staying in Bootleg.”

“Why did you decide to make such a drastic change in your life? You had a fantastic financial future and a good life.”

“That was only existing. What I’ve chosen is living, and it’s far better.”

“In that case, I could use a good woman on the ranch.” He grinned.

EPILOGUE

One year later

The whole crew, including Hattie and Victor, waited in line that Saturday afternoon at the festival in Bootleg.

“We’re going to pass on the ride. I’m afraid it will scare Lia,” Amanda said.

“Well, both of us are still aboveground,” Victor said. “So we’re taking our traditional ride and then we’re going to have funnel cakes.”

The ride stopped and all the people got off, then the man who took the money let the next bunch fill up the buckets.

Kate looked at the three kids and all the adults. “How are we doing this?”

Johnny, Waylon’s right-hand man, kissed Amanda on the forehead. “You go help with the children. Me and Lia Beth will be fine right here. You’ll be able to see her the whole time. She loves the music, so I know she’ll be good. Besides, Victor and Hattie always ride together and”—he lowered his voice to a whisper—“something big is going to happen, so Kate and Waylon need to be together, too.”