Chapter One
Tyler Creed suppressed a grin as the old guy in the Wal-Mart parking lot
stared, dumbfounded, at the fancy set of keys resting in his
work-roughened palm. Blinked a couple of times, like somebody trying to
shake off an illusion, then gave the brim of his well-worn baseball cap
an anxious tug. According to the bright yellow stitching on the hat, his
name was Walt and he was the world's greatest dad.
Walt looked at his ten-year-old Chevy truck, the sides streaked with dry
dirt, the mud flaps coated, and then shifted to stare at Tyler's shiny
white Escalade.
"I thought you was kiddin', mister," he said. "You really want to trade
that Cadillac, straight across, for my old rig? It's got near a hundred
thousand miles on it, this junker, and every once in a while, a part
falls off. Last week, it was the muffler"
Tyler nodded, weary of Walt's prattle but not about to show it. "That's
the idea," he replied quietly.
The aging redneck approached the Cadillac, touched the hood with
something like reverence. "Is this thing stolen?" Walt asked,
understandably suspicious. After all, Tyler reflected, a man didn't run
across a deal like that every day, especially in Crap Creek, Montana, or
whatever the hell that wide spot in the road was called.
Tyler chuckled. "No, sir," he said. "I own it, fair and square. The
title's in the glove compartment. You agree, and I'll sign off on it
right now, and be on my way."
"Wait till Myrtle comes out with the groceries and sees this," the old
fella marveled, hooking his thumbs in the straps of his greasy bib
overalls, shaking his head once and finally cutting loose with a
gap-toothed smile. Walt needed dental work.
Tyler waited.
"I still don't understand why any sane man would want to make a swap
like this," Walt insisted. "Could be, you're not right in the head." He
paused, squinted up into Tyler's impassive face. "You look all right,
though."
Involuntarily, Tyler glanced at his watch, an expensive number with a
twenty-four-karat-gold rodeo cowboy riding a bronc inlaid in the
platinum face. Diamonds glittered at the twelve, three, six and nine
spots, and the thing was as incongruous with who he was as the pricey
SUV he was virtually giving away, but he'd never considered parting with
the watch. His late wife, Shawna, had sold her horse trailer and a
jeweled saddle she'd won in a barrel racing event to buy it for him, the
day he took his first championship.
"I don't know as I'm eager to trade with a man in a hurry," Walt said
astutely, narrowing his weary eyes a little. "You're runnin' from
somethin', and it might be the law. I don't need that kind of trouble, I
can tell you. Myrtle and me, we got ourselves a nice lifenothin'
fancyI worked at the lumber mill for thirty yearsbut the
double-wide is paid off and we manage to scrape together ten bucks for
each of the grandchildren on their birthdays"
Tyler suppressed a sigh.
"That's some watch," Walt observed, in no particular hurry to finalize
the bargain. The wise gaze took in Tyler's jeans and shirt, newly
purchased at rollback prices, lingered on his costly boots, handmade in
a specialty shop in Texas. Rose again to his black Western hat, pulled
low over his eyes. "You win it rodeoin' or somethin'?"
"Or something," Tyler confirmed. His own brothers, Logan and Dylan,
didn't know about his marriage to Shawna, or the accident that had
killed her; he wasn't about to confide in a stranger he'd met in the
parking lot at Wal-Mart.
"You look like a bronc-buster," Walt decided, after another leisurely
once-over. "Sorta familiar, too."
You look like a forklift driver, Tyler responded silently. He
looped his thumbs in the waistband of his stiff new jeans. "Deal or no
deal?" he asked mildly.
"Let me see that title," Walt said, still hedging his bets. "And some
identification, if you don't mind."
Knowing it wouldn't matter if he
did mind, Tyler fetched the
requested document from the SUV, pausing to pat the ugly dog he'd found
half-starved in another parking lot, in another town, on the long road
home.
"Dog part of the swap?" Walt asked, getting cagier now.
"No," Tyler said. "He stays with me."
Walt looked regretful. "That's too bad. Ever since my blue tick hound,
Minford, died of old age last winter, I've been hankerin' to get me
another dog. They're good company, and with Myrtle waitin' tables every
day to bank-roll her bingo habit, I'm alone a lot."
"Plenty of dogs in need of homes," Tyler pointed out. "The shelters are
full of them."
"Reckon that's so," Walt agreed. He studied the title Tyler handed over
like it was a summons or something. "Looks all right," he said. "Let's
see that ID."
Tyler pulled his wallet from his hip pocket and produced a driver's
license.
Walt's rheumy eyes widened a little, and he whistled, low and shrill, in
exclamation. "Tyler Creed," he said. "I thought I'd heard that name
before, when I saw it on the title to this Caddie of yours. Four times
world champion bronc-rider. Seen you on ESPN many a time. In some TV
commercials, too. Takes guts to stand in front of a camera wearing
nothing but boxer-briefs and a shit-eatin' grin the way you done, but
you pulled it off, sure as hell. My daughter Margie has a calendar full
of pictures of youtwo years out of date and she still won't take
it down off the wall. Pisses her husband off somethin' fierce."
Inwardly, Tyler sighed. Outwardly, he stayed cool.
"Myrtle and me, we'd be glad to have you come to our place for supper,"
Walt went on.
"No time," Tyler said, hoping he sounded regretful.
Walt looked him over once more, shook his head again and got his own
paperwork out of that rattletrap truck of his. Signed his name on the
dotted line. "Just let me fetch my toolbox out of the back," he said.
"I'll get my own gear while you're doing that," Tyler answered,
relieved.
The switch was made. Tyler had his duffel bag, his dog and his guitar
case in the Chevy before Walt set his red metal toolbox in the back of
the Escalade.
"Sure you won't come to supper?" Walt asked, as a woman emerged from
Wal-Mart and headed toward them, pushing a cart and looking puzzled.
"Wish I could," Tyler lied, climbing into the Chevy. If he drove hard,
he and Kit Carson, the dog, would be in Stillwater Springs by the time
the sun went down. They'd lie low at the cabin overnight, and come
morning, he'd find his brother Logan and punch him in the face.
Again.
Maybe he'd put Dylan's lights out, too, for good measure.
But mainly, heading home was about facing up to some things, settling
them in his mind.
"See you," he told Walt.
And before the old man could answer, Tyler laid rubber.
Five miles outside Crap Creek, the Chevy's muffler dropped to the
blacktop and dragged, with an earsplit-ting clatter, throwing blue and
orange sparks.
"Shit," Tyler said.
Kit Carson gave a sympathetic whine.
Well, he'd wanted to go back and find out who he'd have been without the
rodeo, the money and Shawna. This was country life, for regular folks.
And it wasn't as if Walt hadn't warned him, he thought.
With a grimace, Tyler pulled to the side of the road, shut the truck off
and scooted underneath the pickup on his back, with damage control on
his mind. Just like the bad old days, he reflected, when he and his dad,
Jake, had played shade-tree mechanic in the yard at the ranch, trying to
keep some piece-of-shit car running until payday.
Whatever Walt's other talents might be, muffler repair wasn't among
them. He'd duct-taped the part in place, and now the tape hung in
smoldering shreds and the muffler looked as though somebody had peppered
it with buckshot.
Tyler sighed, shimmied out from under the truck again and got to his
feet, dusting off his jeans and trying in vain to get a look at the back
of his shirt. Kit sat in the driver's seat, nose smudging up the window,
panting.
Easing the dog back so he could get his cell phone out of the
dirt-crusted cup well in the truck's console, Tyler called 411 and asked
to be connected to the nearest towing outfit.
Lily Kenyon wasn't having second thoughts about staying on in Montana to
look after her ailing father as she and a nurse muscled him into her
rented Taurus in front of Missoula General Hospital. She was having
forty-third thoughts, seventy-eighth thoughts; she'd left
second
ones behind about half an hour after she and her six-year-old
daughter, Tess, rushed into the admittance office a week before, fresh
from the airport.
Lily had remembered her father as a good-natured if somewhat distracted
man, even-tempered and funny. Until her teens, she'd spent summers in
Stillwater Springs, sticking to his heels like a wad of chewing gum as
he saw four-legged patients in his veterinary clinic, trailing him from
barn to barn while he made his rounds, tending sick cows, horses, goats
and barn cats. He'd been kind, referring to her as his assistant and
calling her "Doc Ryder," and it had made her feel proud, because that
was what folks in that small Montana community called
him.
In those little-girl days, Lily had wanted to be just like her dad.
Now, though, she was having a hard time squaring the man she recalled
with the one her bitter, angry mother described after the divorce. The
one who never showed up on the doorstep, sent Christmas or birthday
cards, or even called to ask how she was.
Let alone sent a plane ticket so she could visit.
Now, after seven long days of putting up with his crotchety ways, she
understood her mom's attitude a little better, even though it still
smarted, the way Lucy Ryder Cook could never speak of her ex-husband
without pursing her lips afterward. Hal Ryder, aka Doc, seemed fond of
Tess, but every time he looked at Lily, she saw angry, baffled pain in
his eyes.
Once her father and daughter were buckled in, Hal in the front and Tess
in the special booster seat the law required of anyone under a certain
age and height, Lily slid behind the wheel and tried to center herself.
The day was hot, even for July; the hospital had been blessedly cool,
but the vents on the dashboard of the rental were still huffing out
blasts of heat.
Sweat dampened the back of Lily's sleeveless blouse; without even
turning a wheel, she was already sticking to the seat.
Not good.
"Can we get hamburgers?" Tess piped from the backseat.
"No," said Lily, who placed great stock in eating healthfully.
"Yes," challenged her curmudgeon of a father, at exactly the same
moment.
"Which?" Tess inquired patiently. "Yes or no?" The poor kid was nothing
if not pragmaticstoic, too. She'd had a lot of practice at
resigning herself to things since Burke's "accident" a year before. Lily
hadn't had the heart to tell her little girl what everyone else
knewthat Burke Kenyon, Lily's estranged husband and Tess's father,
had crashed his small private plane into a bridge on purpose, in a fit
of spiteful melancholy.
"No," Lily said firmly, after glaring eloquently at her dad for a
moment. "You're recovering from a heart attack," she reminded him. "You
are not supposed to eat fried food."
"There's such a thing as quality of life, you know," Hal Ryder grumped.
He looked thin, and there were bluish-gray shadows under his eyes,
underlaid by pouches of skin. "And if you think I'm going to live on
tofu and sprouts until my dying day, you'd better think again."
Lily shifted the car into gear, and the tires screeched a little on the
sun-softened pavement as she pulled away from the hospital entrance.
"Listen," she replied tersely, at her wit's end from stress and lack of
sleep, "if you want to clog your arteries with grease and poison your
system with preservatives and God only knows what else, that's
your
business. Tess and I intend to live long, healthy lives."
"Long,
boring lives," Hal complained. Lily had stopped thinking
of him as "Dad" years before, when it first dawned on her that he
wouldn't be flying her out to Montana for any more small-town,
barefoot-and-Popsicle summers. He hadn't approved of her teenage romance
with Tyler Creed, and she'd always suspected that was part of the reason
he'd cut her out of his life.
"I'd be happy to hire a nurse," Lily said, shoving Tyler to the back of
her mind and biting her lip as she navigated thickening late-morning
traffic. "Tess and I can go back to Chicago if you'd prefer."
"Don't be mean, Mom," Tess counseled sagely. "Grampa's heart attacked
him, remember."
The image of a ticker gone berserk filled Lily's mind. If the subject
hadn't been so serious, she'd have smiled.
"Yeah," Hal agreed. "Don't be mean. It reminds me of Lucy, and I like to
think about her as little as possible."
Since Lily wasn't on much better terms with her mother than she was with
Hal, she could have done without that last remark. She peeled her back
from the seat and fumbled with the air-conditioning, keeping one eye on
the road. Her cotton shorts had ridden up, so her thighs were stuck,
too, and it would hurt to pull them free.
Another thing to dread.
"Gee, thanks," she muttered.
"Nana's a stinker," Tess commented, her tone cheerful and affectionately
tolerant.
"Hush," Lily said, though she secretly agreed. "That wasn't a nice thing
to say."
"Well, she
is," Tess insisted.
"Amen," Hal added.
"Enough," Lily muttered. "Both of you. I'm trying to drive, here. Keep
us all alive."
"Slow down a little, then," Hal grumbled. "This isn't Chicago."
"Don't remind me." Lily hadn't intended to sound sarcastic, but she had.
"Is your house big, Grampa?" Tess asked, bravely trying to steer the
conversation onto more amiable ground. "Can I have my mom's old room?"
Lily flashed on the big, rambling Victorian that had once been her home,
with its delightful nooks and crannies, its cluttered library stuffed
with books, its window seats and alcoves and brick fireplaces.
Remembering, she felt the loss afresh, and something squeezed at the
back of her heart.
"You can," Hal said, with a gentleness Lily almost envied. She felt his
gaze touch her, sidelong and serious. "Is there a man waiting in
Chicago, Lilyis that why you want to go back?"
Lily tensed, searching for the freeway on-ramp, wondering if the
question had a subtext. After all, Lily's mother had left her father for
another man, and he hadn't remarried during the intervening years. Maybe
he mistrusted womenhis only daughter included.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from "Montana Creeds: Tyler"
by Linda Lael Miller.
Copyright (C) by Linda Lael Miller.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.