behind.â
Anne thought this over for a moment, biting her lower lip. Shelley didnât have any friends, just like her. During recess, the kids at school called her the town drunkâs daughter and sheâd learned to play by herself. âThen that makes you half a dogie because you still have your dad. I guess Iâm a half dogie, too. My daddy died, but I still have Mom and she loves me lots.â
Tears glistened in Shelleyâs eyes. âMy dad loves me, too. Iâm sorry weâre both half dogies.â
âMe, too.â
And right then, Anne knew it wasnât Shelleyâs fault that her father was the forest ranger. They had a lot in common. It got so lonely here at the ranch with no one but Mom and an occasional work hand to talk to. The herders were always nice to her, but Mom never left her alone with them and they really didnât have anything incommon with her. Maybe it wouldnât hurt to be a little bit nice to Shelley Ennison.
âCome on. Iâll show you how to feed the lambs. But next time you visit, you should wear blue jeans and boots.â
âI donât have any boots.â
Anne shrugged. âThen just wear tennis shoes.â
She led Shelley into the next pen. Shelley held the bucket of milk while Anne used a funnel to fill seven bottles. Shelley seemed eager to help and Anne appreciated the company and the help with her chores. But she sure wished Shelleyâs dad was a rancher instead of a ranger.
Chapter Four
âW hat happened?â Melanie ran across the gravel driveway toward the barn.
Anne and Shelley hobbled toward her. Shelley howled in pain, her bare legs streaming blood.
âShelley! Are you okay?â Scott raced ahead, his face creased with concern.
âShelley tripped and fell on a bale of barbed wire. It cut her legs up real bad.â Anne had one of Shelleyâs arms draped across her shoulders as she helped the other girl limp to the house.
Without a word, Scott scooped Shelley into his strong arms, murmuring soothing words of comfort. Blood smeared his Forest Service shirt and name badge, but he couldnât care less.
Melanie moved into action, scurrying to the back door of the house. âIâve got a first aid kit. Bring her inside.â
Scott followed quickly and Anne held the door open while he stepped into the utility room.
âSit there on one of the kitchen chairs,â Melanie called over her shoulder.
Scott stepped into the kitchen and sat cradling Shelley on his lap. The girl continued to sob while Melaniehurried into the bathroom, retrieved the hydrogen peroxide, salve and bandages, then returned and knelt beside the girlâs injured legs.
Shelley buried her tear-streaked face against her fatherâs chest. He rubbed her back, soothing her in low tones. Anne stood beside the door in her blue jeans and work boots, looking helpless.
Melanie smiled at the injured girl. âYouâll be okay, sweetheart. Weâll get this taken care of and youâll be good as new. Did you like the dogie lambs?â
Shelley gave an almost inaudible nod. âY-yes.â
âDid Anne show you how to feed them?â
âUh-huh.â
âDid they almost knock you off your feet with their exuberance?â Melanie kept up a steady stream of questions, trying to take Shelleyâs mind off her injuries. It helped some as the girlâs tears faded to breathless hiccups.
While she cleansed the wounds, Melanie couldnât help glancing up at Scott. She wasnât used to tender displays of affection from a man. Sheâd grown up at Opal Ranch with a kind but gruff father whom sheâd only seen cry the day they buried her mother five years earlier. Dad had died shortly afterward, leaving her and Aaron to run the ranch alone.
Although heâd worked hard when he was sober, Aaron never offered her any comfort, not even when she went into labor with Anne. He hadnât cared for
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