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Kinsey breezed into the store while Sawyer was outside helping Verdie. She snapped her fingers and pointed toward the meat counter. “Granny needs fourteen pork chops and two pounds of thinly sliced ham.”

Jill slowly meandered through the store to the back, taking time to turn a couple of cans of corn around to show the picture better. Be damned if she’d hurry, when the bitch had snapped her fingers at her.

Kinsey tapped her high heel on the wooden floor. “I’m in a hurry. I’m running this errand on my lunch break.”

“We’ve got a sale on pork rinds. You want to pick up a few bags?” Jill asked.

Kinsey’s mouth set in such a firm line that it disappeared. Didn’t she know that her face could freeze like that? Aunt Polly used to tell Jill that all the time, and she believed it with her whole heart.

“That is not funny. I guess Verdie told you about our delivery?” she said through clenched teeth.

“She might have mentioned it. Fourteen pork chops, or was that fifteen?”

“Fourteen and two pounds of ham,” Kinsey said.

“You bitch!” Betsy Gallagher came in like a whirlwind with a tornado pushing it.

“Me? Your damn family is the one who sent the pork rinds.”

Betsy got right up in Kinsey’s face. “Well, that note you sent to our family with those chicken-flavored dog treats was damn sure rude.”

Sawyer hurried inside. “Hey, what’s going on in here? I’m tired of telling you that this is neutral territory. I think Jill is taking care of Kinsey. What can I help you with, Betsy?”

“Grandma wants ten pounds of flour and five pounds of sugar, and this is not over, Kinsey Brennan. You think you are so cute. Well, you tell that family of yours to be careful, because you’ve done pissed off the wrong Gallagher.”

Kinsey leaned forward, nose to nose with Betsy. “If you ever send another thing to River Bend, I’ll personally burn down Wild Horse and enjoy watching the fire.”

“That is enough,” Sawyer said. “Betsy, I’ll get your flour and sugar and carry them out to the truck for you.”

“Will you go home with me for supper?”

“No, I will not. I’m not taking sides or being a pawn in your games either,” he said.

Betsy flipped around to follow him to the counter, and Kinsey stuck a foot out. Trouble was that when Betsy was going down, she reached for something to hang on to and got a firm hold on Kinsey’s leg, taking her down with her.

The screaming and hair pulling began in earnest, and Sawyer started to wade in to stop it, but Jill put a hand on his shoulder. “Let Piggy and Chick alone. They need to fight and scream. Take this meat order to the front, and I’ll bring the flour and sugar. We’ll get it all rung up, and if they haven’t finished scratchin’ and yanking at each other’s hair by then, or if one can of food hits the floor, we’ll stop them. Can’t have the store wrecked, can we?”

“Little retail shopping, huh?” He grinned.

“It sure helped my mood,” she said.

They were still throwing punches and screaming obscenities after Sawyer put their orders in the right vehicles and returned to the store. “I don’t think they’re going to get tired and lie down together to sleep,” he said.

“Been at it five whole minutes. I reckon they’re tired and waiting on us to stop it so neither one of them will lose face,” she said.

“You care if they lose face?” he asked.

She shook her head.

He sat down in the chair, picked up his hat from on top of the cash register, and adjusted it over his eyes. “Call me if they start throwing cans of corn. Don’t want the front glass of the meat counter to suffer damage.”

Jill picked up her tablet to see if there was anything else of interest concerning chickens or hogs. She stole sideways glances at Sawyer as the fight wore on another two minutes. Sawyer was the man she’d waited for her whole life. The one who eased her fear, made her laugh, and stood beside her. Leaning back in an old metal folding chair, boots crossed at the ankles on the countertop, hat down over his eyes, he didn’t fool her one bit. That cocky little grin said he wasn’t sleeping or even dozing.

Two very rich men vying for my attention, and I’m interested in a rough old cowboy that I’ve known less than a month. Am I certifiably crazy?

Kinsey finally broke free from Betsy and ran out the front door, her hair a mess and one eye already turning color. One heel had popped off those fancy shoes and had scooted up under a shelf. A long rip up one side of that short skirt that barely covered her ass showed the edge of her panties. Scratches ran down the length of her jawline, and she’d best get out a scoop shovel to apply her makeup the next day to cover that and the black eye. The runs and holes in her black panty hose were icing on the cake. Her cute little sports car sped out of the lot, slinging gravel up on the porch.

Betsy didn’t look much better when she took off after Kinsey. She swiped away the blood from her lip and nose with the back of her hand, and she also had a black eye. At least her jeans and boots hadn’t suffered as much, so she might be the winner of the fight.

“Y’all come on back now, you hear?” Jill called after them.

Chapter 19

Kinsey chose the stool at the far end of the bar on Saturday night. After the grocery-store brawl, the families had retreated to their corners. Makeup couldn’t cover the yellow-looking bruise under Kinsey’s eye or the long fingernail scratch up across her face.

“What can I get you?” Sawyer asked.

“Two sticks of dynamite and a hit man,” she answered.

Sawyer picked up the bottle from the top shelf. “Double shot of Jameson, it is.”

Jill bumped him with her hip. “Here comes trouble.”

Betsy shot a few daggers down the length of the bar before she hopped up on a stool at the other end. “Coors, from the tap, and, Sawyer, I want a cheeseburger basket with extra fries.”

“Jill.” Kinsey crooked her finger. “Tell that hussy at the other end of the bar that we don’t need the preacher comin’ out to River Bend to talk to us. We know the Brennans have gone to talk to him, but we are not burying hatchets any time soon. We are not having a powwow with the Gallaghers, not even in the church. We’d rather kiss the south end of a northbound brood sow as give them the satisfaction of peace.”

“Sawyer,” Betsy said, “tell that bitch that he came to Wild Horse without an invitation, and that we told him that we take care of our vengeance. We don’t even trust God with it. And she might as well kiss a pig’s ass with those lips. They’ve kissed worse.”

Kinsey sipped her whiskey and looked at Betsy in the mirror behind the bar. “Jill, tell her that I beg to disagree. They’ve never kissed a Gallagher.”

Betsy cackled. “She wouldn’t be so lucky. There’s not a Gallagher who’d ever bend so low as to kiss her.”

Kinsey opened her mouth, and Jill slapped the bar with a wet towel. “Stop it, both of you. Either take your bitchin’ outside, or shut up. I’m tired of this constant shit between y’all.”

Sawyer flipped the burger on the grill and checked the basket of fries in the deep fryer. Three women within slapping distance of him. Out of the trio, he would have chosen the tall, willowy blond a few months ago. Two of the others were short redheads, and he’d have given neither of them a second look. But he had flat-out fallen for Jill Cleary. She could do better than a cowboy with barely enough money saved to put a down payment on a very small spread. Hell, she could be sitting pretty over on Wild Horse or River Bend, either one. But Sawyer wanted her like he’d never wanted another woman in his entire life. They were soul mates, and looking back, he had known it from the first time he saw her standing in the doorway of the bunkhouse. Even then, in her anger, he’d seen something that had attracted him to her.