Ty watched her leave like a hungry man who’d just been served a prime aged T-bone only to have it swiped out from under his nose. Ty was a ladies’ man from way back, but Zac recognized that his interest in Monica was different. Had Ty finally found a woman who could hold him for the long haul? It appeared so.
Zac felt a fierce stab of envy. In fifteen years on the circuit, he’d never wanted for female company, but in all those years there had only been one woman he’d ever truly wanted—Ty’s ex, Delaney. He and Ty had both met her at the Houston Livestock Show. He’d had his shot at her then but he’d blown it. Ty got the girl and Zac had to live with the worm of envy that ate a hole in his heart every time he saw them together. What made it all worse, Ty hadn’t made her happy.
Grabbing his glass, Zac straddled the stool beside his buddy, following Ty’s gaze with a fateful shake of his head. “Never thought I’d see you with another one like that.”
“What do you mean?” Ty asked.
“Big city. Big money. Didn’t exactly pan out for you the first time around.”
“That’s where the similarity starts and ends,” Ty said. “Monica’s nothing like Delaney.”
“If you say so,” Zac replied with a smirk and raised his glass to his lips.
“I mean it, Zac. There’s no comparison between ’em. Monica’s a successful investment banker who needs nothing from me. Delaney was a beauty queen who stole half my ranch.”
Zac raised his hand with a glare. “Look, ol’ boy. That ain’t how it was, and you know it.”
Ty hadn’t been any more ready to settle down back then than a bull in a breeding pasture, but he and Delaney had eloped anyway. Initially, Zac had thought maybe it was Delaney’s money Ty was after, but he’d proven that wasn’t the case. Instead of gaining from the marriage, Ty had lost half of everything. Zac still didn’t understand how it had all gone down, but the nasty divorce had left Ty embittered and disillusioned. But now, it was looking like Ty was considering giving it another go with Monica Brandt.
Delaney, however, seemed gun-shy as ever even eight years later. Their paths had crossed a few times over the past years, but no matter how hard he tried, she always turned a cold shoulder, as if her marriage break-up was somehow Zac’s fault. He understood in part, but wished she’d give him a chance. So far that hadn’t happened.
“All right. I admit I brought that shit on myself,” Ty said. “But that doesn’t give her the right to rub my nose in it for the rest of my life. You know that’s what she’s trying to do with the bucking bulls, don’t you? She’s sending two to the futurity this year and says she has a half a dozen more prospects for next year. She has shit-tons of money to put into a breeding program. I didn’t. She thinks I never wanted the ranch. That’s not true, but ranching takes money. That’s part of the reason I stayed on the road as long as I did. I’d hoped to win enough to keep the place going.”
“But now it’s done,” Zac said. “You’re here and she’s there. What’s the problem?”
“The problem is that she still wants something from me.”
Zac’s gaze narrowed. “Oh yeah? Like what?”
“A baby.”
Zac choked on his drink. “What the fuck did you say?”
“You heard me right.”
His chest tightened. “Are you saying she wants to get back together?”
“Hell no!” Ty laughed. “She wants a kid but doesn’t want another husband. It’s that whole bio-clock thing that seems to have pushed her over the edge. She even tried to bribe me with an interest-free loan in lieu of a stud fee.”
Was she still carrying a torch for Ty? There was that worm again. Zac’s gut twisted at the thought of Ty and Delaney together. “Why the hell would she do that?”
“’Cause she’s out of her ever-lovin’ mind. Gotta be one of those hormonal things.”
“Why you?” Zac asked.
Ty shrugged. “Beats the hell outta me.”
“You gonna oblige her?” Zac asked, keeping his voice slow and his gaze on his empty glass.
“Shit no! If I ever father a kid, I’m gonna be there to raise him up right.”
“There’s gotta be plenty of other men who’d be happy to help her out. Hell, they’d probably line up for miles.” And I’d be the first to buy a ticket.
Zac signaled Gabby for another drink.
Ty gave a dry laugh. “Delaney might be a lot of things, but easy ain’t one of ’em.’” He sat back, appraising Zac. “You did better than me in school. What’s your IQ?”
“I dunno. Hundred twenty-eight maybe.”
“Beats mine by at least five.” He was still regarding Zac as if he were a bull on the auction block.
“What the hell are you looking at?” Zac snapped.
“You, Zac. Just wondering what kinda breeder you’d be. She says she wants above-average IQ, tall, and athletic. Seems to me you got that part in spades. I’m just wondering if it’ll offset your lack of looks and nonexistent sense of humor.”
“Fuck you, Ty.” Zac snatched up the glass Gabby slid in front of him.
“I’m serious. You need money. Maybe you should volunteer?”