worked on her guilt and ground it in. He had ignored the fact that the woman hadbeen through a very harrowing experience. A bull the size of Sylvester was a terrifying sight from afar. Up close and personal, out-of-his-head angry like heâd been, Sylvester could tear through a person and never stop. As a rodeo bullfighter, Bob had seen plenty of bull riders mangled by the animalsâheâd been there a time or two himself. In those situations the bulls were only doing their jobs. Bull riders wanted a good ride. A mean ride. The better the bucking, the higher the score.
What had Molly been thinking? She could have lost her life all for a picture of his house. He knew facing a mountain of solid bull muscle just by crossing a cattle guard wouldnât have been a priority on her list of things to do for the day. Surely sheâd seen the big brute? Who could miss two thousand pounds of bull out in broad daylight? Or maybe Sylvester had been standing over the hill where she couldnât see him.
He wondered if she was having nightmares. Though sheâd seemed fine on the ride into town after heâd rescued her, he wondered. Sometimes adrenaline got a person through a close call. Lowering his hammer, he let his gaze wonder out across his pastureland.
A Christian man, no, any kind of man worth his salt, Christian or not, would step up and see if she was okay.
Especially the man who knew he had a bull with problems.
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Before church on Sunday morning Molly was sitting in her apartment lost in thought.
After her maddening encounter with Bob the brute on Saturday, sheâd met with his insurance adjusteralone. He had given her an assessment of the damage to her poor darling car. Her little Bug had taken a beating from that bull-headed bull on the hood and both side panels. The adjuster had assured her the news was good, that Sylvesterâs damage was actually minimal. Some new doors, a little bodywork, a new paint job and her car would be as good as new.
Easy for him to say. New paint jobs were never as good as the factory. Everybody knew that, but it served her right for trespassing. What had she been thinking?
About a story.
Everything in her life was about a story. It was true, but she liked it that way. Still, it seemed a sad fact that sheâd stood in the middle of the street taking pictures of her car as it was being towed away that day. But the photos were for âjust in case.â Just in case she got over her fright and an idea for a story should arise from this incident. That was the way she was wired. Many would argue that her wires were really messed up.
Who was she kidding? She felt no real desire to look for an article angle. Looking at the car had brought all the trauma of the experience back to her. She sucked in a long breath and forced the thoughts away. She refused to think any more about the bull attack. She couldnât. She had just a few days left to get her column in for the week, not to mention the magazine articles that loomed in a consecutive wave of deadlines. Sheâd scrapped the follow-up on Bob and now she had nothing.
Nothing.
For a girl with endless ideas, the fact that she had nodesire to write was unbelievable. She always wrote, had always created several ideas at once.
Specifically, sheâd been writing columns about Mule Hollow for almost a year. Now suddenly for the first time in her life she was drawing blanks.
She hadnât had an idea since the attack on Fridayâthe day Bob told her to stop writing about him.
For the past two mornings, as sheâd done most mornings since her arrival in Mule Hollow, sheâd risen at five oâclock, dressed quickly, strapped on her backpack and jogged to the edge of town. Sheâd taken the well-worn path sheâd created across the open field where town gatherings were held, past the grove of mesquite trees and finally stopping at her special spotâa flat rock on the top of a knoll