working at young ages doing any jobs they could find to help support their family. Sheâd heard the edge to his words, and she studied him. Heâd done what heâd had to do to survive. Luke had started overcoming challenges early. Heâd learned to accept life as a challenge and to want to overcome it.
She was amazed by him. And she admired him. Talk about a complete turnabout on her part.
âHow old were you when you started working?â she asked.
âAbout tenâif you count small odd jobs I did for people. It was good for me. Thereâs nothing wrong with working. Weâmy brothers and me, are good at that.â
âI bet you were. Are.â
He gave a small grunt of a laugh. âYeah, Jess and Colt say we were due for retirement by the time we were in high school.â
She chuckled. âI guess thatâs one way to look at it.â
He gave that shrug that sheâd come to learn was his. No big deal, it said. âYou do what you have to do. Weâre the men we are today because of the kind of man my dad was. He was the worst role model around, and frankly, I could be bitter about it. And Iâve had my moments, believe me. Butââ he gave an assuring look ââweâve made peace with our childhoods. All three of us, in our own way. We each know what we donât want to beâmy dad drank himself into an early grave. I couldnât do anything about that. Mac Matlock opened the Bible and showed me Galatians 6:4. It says. âEach one should test his own actions. Then he can take pride in himself, without comparing himself to somebody else.ââ
He rubbed his thumb along the edge of the granite counter and studied it as he did it. âThatâs what Iâm trying to do.â
Montana didnât have the words. She was trying to process all heâd said when he reached for the plates and stood up, as if needing to move.
âThose are strong words,â she said. âYou are doing great.â
âIâm trying. My mother married a couple more times, then decided to give it up. She lives in Fredericksburg and manages a small restaurant. She loves her life now, and thatâs important to us. We tried totalk her into moving out here, when we bought the ranch last year, but she wouldnât hear of it. She has her church family there that sheâs involved in. She wouldnât budge.â
Placing her elbow on the counter and her chin in her hand, Montana marveled at his attitude. His mother had left him in charge of his two younger brothers and a drunk dad, and yet he was acting as though nothing out of the ordinary had happened. Wasnât he angry at her?
She was angry for him.
What kind of woman did that? Sheâd left her boys to fend for themselves, and now Luke was talking as if they were best friends.
It was hard to swallow, especially in light of what was happening with her dad. She reached for the collar of her shirt, feeling hot suddenly. Galatians 6:4 played in her head. It said test her own actionsâ¦
Her hand trembled slightly as she thought about that. She had to change the subject before she said something she would regret. He had moved on with no angerâshe was moving on, too, but she couldnât lose the anger. Not yet, anyway.
âCan I ask you something?â She got up and went to help clear the dishes away, hoping it would help her calm down.
âSure,â he said, opening the dishwasher.
âIf you and your brothers have a need to own this ranch so youâll have a legacy for your families, why arenât any of you married?â
He placed a glass in the dishwasher.
âI figure Jess and Colt just havenât met their matches yet. Sure, I want to leave a legacy, but for me that includes helping Colt and Jess build theirs for their family. Iâm not getting sidetracked until I do that. My brothers will fall in love, and Iâm determined that this ranch
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