I took a break and glanced over at Dawson, who already had his hand in the cavity and was pulling out the guts.
Son of a bitch.
He flipped his buck over to drain the last of the blood, resting on his haunches.
I half expected him to throw up his hands like a tie-down roper.
Mason ambled over, and I still hadn’t gotten to the gut-removal portion yet.
“Lagging behind, Sergeant Major.”
I grunted, then made the cut across the esophagus that allowed my hand to get inside that still-warm cavity and start yanking out innards.
Point for Dawson that he didn’t offer to help.
Minus two hundred points that he started whistling “No Guts, No Glory” while I was shoulder deep inside my kill.
“It’s too damn warm out to let these hang once we get them back to the ranch,” he said. “We’ll have to get the meat cleaned up and frozen as soon as possible.”
“I’ll bow to your expertise. To be honest, I’ve never butchered my game.”
“Never? Why not?”
I rubbed the end of my nose. “My dad usually struck a deal with someone at Baylor Brothers Meat Processing.” That wasn’t the whole truth. For some reason, it hadn’t bothered my father to watch me kill something, but it’d bothered the heck out of him to watch me butcher it. In fact, counting this antelope, I’d only gutted a kill three times. My father had taken over, gutting the animal himself. Which seemed strange, because Dad never treated me like a girl who might be squeamish. I hadn’t been, but that hadn’t mattered. Every time we’d gone hunting, I made the kill shot; someone else cleaned up the mess.
It struck me, then, how I’d carried that mind-set with me during my sniper years.
Dawson made a disgruntled noise and pulled me back to the present. “It ain’t that hard to butcher. There’s not that much meat on antelope anyway.”
I finally scooped the last of the innards out and rolled my buck to let the blood drain out.
He crouched down and scrutinized my kill. “This is one plump little sucker. He’ll have more meat on him.” Then he said, “Hold still,” and took out a handkerchief. “You’ve got blood on your face.” He dabbed at it. “It’s gone.”
“Thanks.”
“You want that hacksaw now?”
“Yeah.”
Really didn’t take much effort to lob off the head.
We both pushed to our feet, and he handed me another hankie to use on my hands and arms. “Seems crazy that we both got our bucks on the very first shot.”
I shrugged and wiped at the blood. Didn’t seem that odd to me. The one shot, one kill mantra had been drilled into my brain during sniper training.
“Did you bring another gun?” Then he laughed. “Of course you did.”
“You wanna have a little shooting contest? I gotta redeem myself somehow since you whipped my butt in quick field dressing.”
“What’d you bring?”
“H &K P7. Nine mil.”
Dawson shook his head. “I’m not easily intimidated, but Christ, woman, you have a lot of guns.”
“Think of it as the equivalent of other women’s obsession with shoes.”
He laughed again. “Show me.”
I let him go first.
I still won.
By a lot.
Even with my bad eye.
Luckily, my man was a good sport-even if I was a much better shot. We wrapped and strapped up the kills, then started toward the ATVs. Packing out the animal was probably the worst part of hunting. I was surprised birds weren’t already circling above the two piles of guts, waiting for us to leave so they could fight over a quick-and-easy meal. The birds would get the first go, and then the bigger predators would come in and chase them out.
Circle of life and all that shit.
Dawson shouted, “Double time, Sergeant Major, you’re lagging behind.”
• • •
At the ranch, we had to lock up the dogs.
I watched Dawson part out the carcass. He’d rinse and cut and rinse some more. Antelope were hairy creatures, and nothing ruined a piece of meat like a bunch of hair frozen to it. But luckily, antelope hair was very fine, and once it floated to the top of the water, it could easily be skimmed or poured off.
His expertise didn’t surprise me, but his efficiency did. He had both bucks skinned, butchered, cleaned, and parted out in two hours. I helped as much as I could-or as much as he’d let me. I was secretly happy I wouldn’t have to walk past an animal kill for several days waiting for the meat processors.
As soon as he finished, he hit the shower. By the time I cleaned myself up, Mason was packed and anxious to go. It’d take at least seven hours to reach Denver.
“Are you sure you don’t want to come?” he asked.
“It’s best if you and Lex have time to talk, without his mother or me around.” I kissed his cheek. “Besides, you’ll be back in twenty-four hours. I can find something to occupy myself.”
He kissed me. Hard. “I’ll text you when I get there.”
“Drive safe.”
• • •
“What are your plans tonight now that the sheriff is gone?”
I tore my attention away from a riveting episode of Ice Road Truckers and looked at my sister. “Been a while since I’ve been to Clementine’s. Thought I’d catch up with the crew and the regulars.”
Hope swayed with Joy on her hip, softly biting her lip. I braced myself for the don’t-start-drinking-again plea. But she blurted, “Can I go with you?”
I think my jaw hit the floor. “What?”
“I never get to go out. I’d like to have a conversation with an adult that’s not Jake, Sophie, or you. No offense.”
Had Hope ever been to Clementine’s? The place had a bad reputation-deservedly so. Plus, I considered it my bar. Might be stupid, but I had the urge to protect it even from my sister.
“Of course, me goin’ would boil down to Jake watching Joy for a few hours.” She bit her lip again.
The fact Hope was willing to leave her baby, a baby she rarely let out of her sight, proved to me she needed a break. I smiled at her. “Sure, if you wanna come along, that’d be great. You can keep me from drinking until the wee hours so I’m not hungover when Lex gets here tomorrow.”
“Great. Umm… what should I wear?”
I checked out her outfit, a brightly patterned blue-and-black poet’s shirt paired with black leggings. “You look awesome. I’m not changing. I’m wearing this.”
“Can I borrow some makeup?”
“Knock yourself out. It’s in the top drawer on the right side.”
“Okay. Be right back.” Hope passed me Joy.
“Hey, Poopy.” When I smooched her crown, her little bitty pigtails tickled my nose. She smelled like graham crackers, apple juice, baby powder, and sweet innocence. I’d dealt with my fears-a butt load more than I’d first suspected-and let her become part of my life, which might seem like a no-brainer to most people, but I was at a dark place after I killed Anna. I thought by staying away from Joy, I was actually doing her a favor.
But Hope hadn’t allowed my distance from her child. It amazed me when I uncovered my sister’s pockets of strength.
The barking dogs alerted me to Jake’s presence right before he walked in. Joy squirmed and tried to jump from my arms to get to her father.
Jake only had eyes for her. He plucked her away and blew a raspberry on her neck until she squealed. Only then did he acknowledge me. “Hey, Mercy.”
“Jake. How did things go today?” He’d been dreading moving cattle. I didn’t know enough about what that entailed, except he did it multiple times a year.