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they came from, Miss City Girl, cows come from other cows. And a bull, of course.”

      “I see.” How could she ever explain about cows and bulls in a city newspaper?

      “Got any more dumb questions, Dusty?”

      Dusty? She must look a frightful mess for him to call her that. She wiped her sweaty, gritty hands on her shirtfront. “No, no more questions. But...but I, um, I find that I...I cannot walk,” she confessed.

      “Not surprised,” he said again. “Well, let’s get it done.” He reached down, grasped her under the arms and heaved her to her feet.

      “Ouch-ouch-ouch!”

      “Yeah,” he said, his voice dry. “Come on.” He swung her aching body up into his arms and strode away from the chuck wagon and past the roped-off horse corral. When he came to the stream, he paced up and down the bank and suddenly halted, stepped forward and dropped her, bottom first, into the cold water.

      “What are you doing?” she screeched. She tried to scramble to the bank, but he laid one hand on her shoulder and pressed down. “Stay there,” he ordered. “Cold water will help. I’ll be back in thirty minutes.”

      She had no choice. She could barely move.

       Chapter Four

      Zach tramped away from the stream where he’d dumped Miss Murray, or Dusty, as he now thought of her, and halted at the chuck wagon. “Save her some supper, Roberto.”

      “Si, boss. But she will not be much hungry.”

      “She’ll eat.” He left the aging cook chuckling over his pot of beans and settled himself at the campfire next to Juan.

      The young man leaned toward him. “The señorita, she is okay?”

      “She is okay, yes. Mad, but okay.”

      “Madre mia. She will not be smile tomorrow.”

      “Not much,” Zach agreed. Maybe not at all. He kinda felt sorry for her, but kinda not sorry at the same time. Damn Charlie for insisting she come along on this drive. It was no place for a woman. A fancy-assed, citified, back-East newspaper reporter woman was about as welcome as a swarm of locusts.

      The clang of a steel triangle announced supper, and the hands around the campfire stampeded to the chuck wagon and lined up with tin plates in their hands. Roberto slapped thick slices of beef onto them, ladled on beans and topped the pile with his special warm tortillas.

      Zach brought up the rear of the line, ate leisurely and mentally calculated when Dusty’s half hour would be up.

      “Hey, boss,” someone called. “Where’s our newspaper lady?”

      Zach laid down his fork and shoved to his feet. “Comin’ right up.”

      * * *

      Footsteps crunched over the sandy stream bank, and Alex clenched her fists as tall, rangy Zach Strickland came toward her.

      “I want you to get me out of here!” she sputtered. “Right now!”

      “Yes, ma’am!” He splashed into the water, grabbed her shoulders and jerked her upright.

      “Ow! Ow, that hurts!”

      “Roberto’s got some liniment in one of his secret cubbyholes. Might help some.”

      “Oh, yes, please.”

      He swung her upright and half dragged, half walked her onto dry ground. “Not so fast,” she pleaded.

      He propped her against a thick pine trunk and stood surveying her. “Look, Dusty, you shouldn’t be out here with us. A cattle drive is rough, even on a seasoned cowhand. For a greenhorn it’s suicidal.”

      She said nothing, just stared at the trail boss she was coming to detest. He had overlong black hair that brushed the tips of his ears and eyes the color of moss. Right now they were narrowed at her.

      “Tomorrow you’re going back to the Rocking K,” he announced. “I’ll send Curly with you, and he can catch up with us before we hit the river. Right now, though, supper’s on, and you don’t want to miss Roberto’s beans and tortillas.”

      “No,” she said.

      His dark eyebrows went up. “No, what?”

      “I’m not going back.” She tried to shove away from the tree trunk, but her legs still felt like jelly.

      He propped his hands on his hips. “In case you forgot, Miss Murray, I’m the trail boss on this drive. You do what I say.”

      “No,” she repeated. “I don’t work for you, Mister Trail Boss. I work for the Chicago Times. And that’s who I take orders from.”

      “Nope, don’t work that way, Dusty. On the trail you take orders from me.”

      She raised her chin. “When we’re ‘on the trail,’ I will take orders from you, but that does not include sending me back to the ranch. That is tantamount to firing me, and as I said, I don’t work for you.”

      He stared at her for a long moment with those unnerving gray-green eyes. “I don’t fancy nursemaiding you, whining and stumbling over your boots, for the next four hundred miles. Cattle driving is a tough business. You’re gonna get river mud up your nose and grasshoppers in your hair. By tomorrow night, you’ll have spent another ten or twelve hours in the saddle and we’ll just see what tune you’re playin’ then.”

      “Are you a betting man, Mr. Strickland?” She put as much frost in her voice as she could manage. “I will wager you one silver dollar I will be playing my own tune. And that means I will be riding on to Winnemucca with the rest of you.”

      Zach rolled his eyes. “I never bet with a fool, Dusty, but in your case I’m makin’ an exception.”

      He walked her back to camp and sat her down at the campfire. Roberto brought her a tin plate and a fork and settled it on her lap, then balanced a mug of coffee on a flat rock beside her. “There ees whiskey, señorita,” he whispered. “You wish?”

      “No, thank you, Roberto. I do not drink spirits.”

      “Long night tonight,” he murmured. “Long day mañana.”

      She shook her head. “I will manage.” Somehow.

      Zach looked up. “Roberto, after supper, give her some of that liniment you squirrel away.”

      “Si. Good idea.”

      “Hey, Miss Murray?” Jase called from across the smoldering fire pit. “You gonna write about us?” Jase was the one with the unruly blond hair. She wondered if he got grasshoppers in it.

      “Why, yes, I am.”

      “Whoo-eee,” he exulted. “You hear that, boys? We’re gonna be in the newspaper. We’re gonna be famous!”

      Curly sat bolt upright. “Yeah? How famous?”

      Alex studied the rapt faces around the fire. “Well...” She paused for dramatic effect and sneaked a look at Zach Strickland’s unreadable countenance. “More than twenty thousand people read the Chicago Times every day.”

      “No funnin’?” Curly asked.

      “No funning,” Alex assured him. “And I will want to interview each one of you for my articles.”

      She could scarcely hear herself think over the cheers. Yes, she would most certainly write about them. And she’d also write about the body-breaking punishment of a trail drive. That is, she would if she could get her tortured body over to the chuck wagon to retrieve her notebook and pencil.

      She groaned and stared at the plate of cold beans in her lap. She would

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