My Kind of Christmas (The Christmas Tree Ranch #1)
Janet Dailey
Chapter 1
Branding Iron, Texas, early November
Travis Morgan muttered a curse as he scraped the frost from the inside of his bedroom window. Last night’s storm had started as rain. But sometime after midnight, a brutal cold front had swept in, freezing the rain wherever it struck.
Ice had covered the windmill with a frigid glaze, freezing the vanes and connections solidly in place. Wind howled around the corners of the old frame house, shaking the bare cottonwoods along the road and sending showers of ice to the ground. The windmill, however, wasn’t moving.
With the cold spell expected to last the rest of the week, Travis reckoned there was nothing to do but climb to the platform of the windmill and free the apparatus.
Swearing under his breath, he layered on warm clothes, laced up his boots, and pulled on thick leather work gloves. Even after nearly a year on this run-down ranch, Travis didn’t know much about windmills—or a lot of other things that country-raised folks took for granted. He’d grown up with his mother and stepfather in a mid-size Oklahoma town. As a man, he’d planned to build a future there—until a career with the Oklahoma State Highway Patrol had ended with a botched arrest and a charge of involuntary manslaughter.
Freed after serving three years, he’d discovered that the stigma of being an ex-con would follow him for the rest of his life. Unable to find decent work anywhere, he’d turned to the only refuge he had left.
This small Texas ranch had been in his mother’s family for generations. He’d even lived here, in this house, for the first two years of his life, before his parents split up and his mother took him away from Branding Iron. Now that the other heirs had passed on, the long-abandoned place was his—every drought-ravaged, rock-strewn, snake-infested acre of it.
As he opened the door and stepped onto the rickety covered porch, a blast of cold wind hit him like a runaway freight train. He staggered backward. Maybe this wasn’t such a good idea. But the storage tank was getting low. If he didn’t get the windmill working, the house would soon be out of water.
The rusty bucket that held his tools sat next to the door. Whatever he chose to do the job would have to be small enough to tuck into his belt, freeing his hands to climb. After a moment’s deliberation, Travis chose a claw hammer. With luck, a few well-placed blows would shatter the ice and fix the problem. If not, he’d be in trouble. But he would cross that bridge when he came to it.
The front steps were glassy. Bracing against the wind, he took them one at a time. The ground was bare of snow, but everything in sight—the fields, the trees, the sheds, and even his battered ’99 Ford pickup—glittered with a patina of ice.
The windmill stood on the far side of the yard. Its height was about average for this part of the country. But right now, looking up from its base, it appeared as tall as a skyscraper. And every rung of the narrow ladder leading up one side was coated with ice.
This is insane! You’re going to break your damn fool neck!
Closing his mind to the thought of danger, Travis placed a foot on the bottom rung and began to climb. The soles of his work boots held fine, as long as he placed each foot securely. His hands were another matter. Even through his thick gloves, the cold was numbing. His fingers could barely feel the rungs he was holding. By the time he got to the top, he would have no feeling in his hands at all. But now that he was more than two-thirds of the way up, it didn’t make sense to quit.
Minutes later, he gained the platform and clung there, shivering and willing himself not to look down. He’d never been one for heights, but this had to be done. Fumbling under his coat, he managed to pull the hammer out of his belt. He could see where the rain had dripped and frozen in a solid lump, blocking the motion of the gears. He aimed at the spot, muttered a prayer disguised as an obscenity, and struck a sharp blow. The ice shattered, showering pieces over the platform. Slowly, then faster as the wind caught, the windmill began to turn—and Travis began to breathe again.
Thank God for small favors. Now all he had to do was get down.
Leading blindly with his feet was harder than he’d expected. More than once, his boot missed the rung, and he had to save himself by grabbing with his hands. But at least the job was done. At least he was on his way down.
He’d made it more than halfway when the sound of a motor caught his attention. A vehicle was coming down the narrow road that ran between the fence lines. Travis was used to seeing farm trucks out here. But this was no farm truck. Cruising along the road, moving a little too fast on the frozen surface, was a big, sleek, black Lincoln Town Car.
He kept easing his way down the ladder, stealing glances at the Lincoln as it came closer. Travis had an eye for cars. This model, which appeared to be in good condition, was about fifteen years old, the kind of vehicle a well-heeled senior citizen might own. Maybe the driver had taken a wrong turn and was lost. There was no other reason a car like that would be on this road.
He was about eight feet from the ground when the Lincoln hit an icy spot, spun in a half-circle, and slammed into Travis’s gatepost.
Distracted for an instant, Travis let his foot slip the barest inch too far. His cold-numbed hands lost their grip. He slipped down several rungs and fell backward, landing on the hard ground with a force that felt like being hit by a ten-ton truck. For the moment, all he could do was lie there and close his eyes until the world stopped spinning. Nothing seemed to be broken. But when he got his breath back and his legs under him, some old codger was going to catch hell!