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Wade Ryan felt the same way every year when calving season was over: proud and disappointed. There was still plenty of work left before summer. He and the neighboring ranchers would pitch in with branding, vaccinating, and earmarking, and then another summer would begin.

Wade closed the pen, letting his hands linger on the splintered rail. The cows and their calves made soft lowing sounds. Twilight swallowed the valley, and a bright moon rose over the Gallatin Range.

He should get inside to Maddy and relieve Greta. His stomach let out a rowdy grumble, reminding him he’d worked past suppertime again. Turning, he tried to tell himself he was glad that calving season was over and summer perched on his doorstep.

But summer meant Maddy was home, meant another nanny was coming, meant worrying about his daughter and how she spent her time. She was growing up, getting to the age where a girl needed a mom. Even he could see that.

Wade steered his thoughts a different direction. Today had enough worries of its own. He’d hired a young preschool teacher, who was off for the summer, to look after Maddy this year, and he was sure the girl would be good for his daughter. Well, as sure as you could be about anything, he reckoned.

Maddy burst through the front door, trotted down the porch steps, and met him in the yard. She curled her arms against the chill in the air.

“Get your hair cut, squirt?” Even in the dim light he saw it was pulled back as always.

“Can’t you tell?”

Should an eleven-year-old girl wear the same hairstyle every day? He wouldn’t know what else to do with it. He pushed back the guilt. “It’s not hanging in your eyes, at least.” He ruffled her bangs. She had Lizzie’s fine, soft hair, but the rich mahogany brown came from his mother’s gene pool.

They traipsed toward the house side by side.

“My bike got stolen in town,” Maddy blurted.

Wade frowned. “Stolen? You sure?” Not that bad things didn’t happen in Moose Creek, but these were neighbors. They worked together, worshiped together, celebrated together. Practically extended family, whether you wanted them or not.

“I parked it at the market, and when I came out it wasn’t there.”

He hated she’d lost her bike and figured chances of finding it were slim. Maybe he should buy her a new one—wasn’t like he didn’t have the money. But Greta said he spoiled his daughter, and maybe she was right.

“Need to file a report,” he said.

“Abigail already did. And she asked people questions and stuff too. She’s going to help me find it.”

“Who’s Abigail?”

“Miss Lucy’s niece. She’s visiting for the summer, and she said she’s good at solving mysteries.”

Probably would’ve seen her around if it hadn’t been for spring works season. He’d been gone dawn to dark for days. “A mystery, huh?”

“The Case of the Stolen Bike. She thinks we can figure it out pretty quick. Hope so. I don’t want to go all summer without it. We’re going to start looking on Wednesday.”

“What about school?”

“Dad. Tuesday’s my last day, remember?”

Had he told the new nanny that? It had been weeks ago. He couldn’t remember. Wade made a mental note to call her tomorrow after church.

He opened the door for Maddy, and she ducked under his arm. She was getting tall. He noted the frayed hems of her jeans as she passed through to the kitchen. Blame it all if they weren’t hanging three inches above the toes of her boots. The sleeves of her Western shirt were turned up at the cuff despite the chilly May weather, and the shirttail wasn’t long enough to stay tucked in.

Why was he always two days late when it came to Maddy? Why hadn’t he noticed she’d outgrown her clothes?

“Supper’s in the oven, Wade,” Greta said as he entered the kitchen. She tugged her thick sweater over her ample frame and flipped her gray hair over the collar.

“Smells great,” he said. Greta hadn’t noticed that Maddy had outgrown her clothes either. That made him feel a little better.

Greta and her husband, Pee Wee, lived in one of the camp houses. Pee Wee wasn’t much taller than Greta, but he was Wade’s cowhand, and a fine one too. Greta did the household chores a few hours a day, but she’d made it clear from the beginning she wasn’t a nanny. The couple had never had kids of their own, but neither one had said why, and he sure wasn’t asking.

“See you at church,” she said.

“Thanks, Greta.”

The back door clicked quietly behind her.

Wade hung his hat on the peg, then turned to help Maddy get the food on the table. She waited for him every night, no matter how late he was.

Once supper was on the table, he said grace and they dug into Greta’s roast beef. The woman could cook. Once the worst of his hunger was satiated, he slowed down.

“Homework done?” he asked.

“When I got home from school yesterday.”

“Grades okay?”

She shrugged. “I’ll make honor roll.”

Wade didn’t know what he’d done to deserve a daughter like Maddy.

“Can I help with branding when school’s over?” she asked.

He pictured the anxious calves kicking up a ruckus as they were heeled, held, and worked. He’d received more than his share of knots and bruises when they dragged calves. “Not this year, Maddy.”

Her sigh filled the quiet house. “You say that every year. I have friends at school who’ve been holding down calves since they were seven.”

Wade knew it was true. His neighbor’s kids, younger than Maddy, helped every year. Still, it only took once. One kick to the head, one blow to the face. “You can watch.”

Maddy pursed her lips, her gaze sliding down to her food.

Was he overprotective? Maybe so, but he wasn’t taking any chances with his daughter. She was all he had.

“Can we go somewhere this summer, Dad? Just you and me? Everyone at school is going somewhere.”

He shook his head.

“Just for a long weekend? Wouldn’t have to be far . . . just someplace else, like Seattle or Salt Lake City—”

“You know we can’t, Maddy. We might be recognized.” It broke his heart to say it, to see the light in her eyes go dim. But what could he do? They were trapped here, like it or not.

She looked down at her food, moved the roast beef around with her fork. A minute later she pushed her plate back. “I’m going to bed.”

He should insist she finish. A growing girl needed nutrition, and her height was stretching her out, making her skinny. But she was already putting her plate in the sink.

“Get a shower first,” he said.

She turned at the doorway, one hand on the wide woodwork. “Dad. I’m almost a teenager. You don’t have to tell me that anymore.” She said it with more patience than he probably deserved.

“Sorry.” He watched her turn the corner, heard her bare feet padding up the wood stairs, heard the shower kick on, and wondered if he knew anything at all about raising a teenage girl.

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Wade found the number on a scrap of paper in his desk drawer and dialed the old phone. The mammoth computer hummed on his desk, and outside the open window Maddy encouraged her horse.

Charlotte answered on the second ring.

“Hi, Charlotte. Wade Ryan from Stillwater Ranch, just checking in to make sure you’re arriving on Tuesday or Wednesday.”

“Oh. Hi, Mr. Ryan.”

Something in her tone of voice troubled him. Maybe he’d caught her at a bad time.

“Listen,” she continued. “I’m afraid I have some bad news. Well, I mean, good news for me, but not so much for you.”

He didn’t find her chuckle amusing.

“Thing is, my boyfriend, he’s like from Billings, and he asked me to move in with him. I mean he only asked me Friday night, and I should’ve called you right away, but I spent all day yesterday moving and—” She muffled the phone and spoke to someone else. “Sorry about that. And sorry I didn’t call yesterday. This probably leaves you in a lurch with Marley.”

“Maddy,” he said absently.

“I’m really sorry about quitting last minute, but he—my boyfriend— lined up a job for me at a day care in Billings, and well . . .”

Wade wanted to tell her she was inconsiderate, rude, and irresponsible. Instead he sent up a silent petition for patience, then cleared his throat. “I understand. Don’t suppose you know of another teacher needing a summer job?”

“Sorry . . .”

He could hear the cringe in her tone. Well, so what, he was cringing too. Cringing because he had two days to find someone to keep tabs on his daughter.

He wished Charlotte good luck and hung up the phone. Two days. He glanced out the window and watched Maddy set her boot in the stirrup and swing her leg over her horse’s back.

Maybe she could manage without a nanny. He tried to think back to eleven. He’d made plenty of extra trouble for his parents, he was ashamed to admit.

No, eleven wasn’t old enough. In another summer or two, maybe, but not yet. And he knew better than to ask Greta. He planted his elbows on the desk and scraped his fingers through his hair. Two days to find someone responsible, trustworthy, and available.

Where am I going to find a woman like that in two days, God?