Conviction Page 15
“Not exactly, but there’s definitely water in places it shouldn’t be.”
“How in hell did that happen?”
“I just told you—the hose was left on. I don’t know who did it—maybe one of the guests.”
He raised an eyebrow. “I’ll go get Jesse. And Garrett.”
Well, fuck. I’d been planning to work with Ditto for a little while, but that would have to wait. I grabbed a pitchfork and a wheelbarrow and went into the first stall and started forking out the wet shavings.
Garrett showed up a few minutes later, looking pissed. “What happened?”
“The hose was left on. I don’t know, maybe one of the guests used it and forgot to turn it off,” I said.
Garrett looked into the stall. “And there you are standing in an inch of water. That hose must’ve been left on for quite some time. Who did water today?” He looked at Ryan, and then the other wrangler, Jesse.
“I did,” I said. “But I shut the hose off. And I wouldn’t have left it out like that to begin with.”
He let out a noisy exhale. “Well, you and Jesse are going to have to deal with this. Ryan’s got a ride to do and I’ve got to take a group out fly fishing. You’re gonna have to make sure you get all the shavings out, I don’t know, maybe bring them out back, spread them around so they can dry out. No sense in wasting perfectly good shavings. And then use the shop vac to get the rest of the water up. You need to make sure this place is good and dried out.” He glanced out at the Mexican rug lying on the ground. “I see the tack room got wet, too. You need to make sure it’s especially dry in there; I don’t want any mold growing on the tack.” He shook his head. “It’s gonna take you a while to get it done, but it needs to be done, and it needs to be done right. I’ll help out when I get back.”
And then he turned and walked out.
“I’ll help out too,” Ryan said. “When I get back from the ride. Though I’m not sure when that’ll be.”
He left too, and then it was just me and Jesse, a young guy from Nevada.
“I’m sorry,” I said. “You probably weren’t planning on spending your morning like this.”
“It’s okay,” he said. “Glad it’s not any worse. I’ll get started on the next stall.”
Wet shavings were heavy as all hell, and having to clear out an entire stall of them was a workout. My shoulders burned but I ignored it. I had been the last one to use the hose, and I knew that I had turned it off, that I had coiled it back up and secured it on the holder. I played back the morning in my mind, and I could recall taking the coil of hose off the holder, turning the spigot, folding the hose over so it pinched the flow of water off until I got it over to the first trough, leaving it there to fill up while I went back and got the hay. Yes, I could remember that, and then I could also remember bring it over to the next trough, and the third, but when I tried to recall bringing it back to the barn and turning it off, I couldn’t. I knew that I had, yet for some reason, I couldn’t recall the memory, even though it hadn’t happened that long ago. Or I thought I was remembering it, but maybe that was yesterday.
But no. Just because I couldn’t recall it exactly as it happened didn’t mean it didn’t happen. I wouldn’t have just left it running like that. No way.
I worked through lunch, wanting to get as much of it done as possible before Garrett got back. If the whole thing could be complete, that’d be even better. But it wasn’t; I was working on the tack room when he returned. Unlike the stalls, which had shavings that had absorbed most of the water, there was about half an inch of water on the tack room floor. I had to take everything out that wasn’t hanging, use the push broom to push as much of the water outside as I could, and then finish with the shop vac.
“This is some mess,” Garrett said.
“I know. And if it was me who forgot to turn the hose off, then I’m truly sorry.”
“Was it you?”
“I don’t know. I don’t think so. But I was the one who filled up the water troughs. I don’t think anyone else used the hose for anything.”
He nodded grimly and then pulled his work gloves out of his back pocket. “I’ll let you get back to it.”
I turned the vacuum back on and started sucking up the remaining water.
I didn’t know exactly how long I’d been working to clean up the barn, but it felt like the entire day. The sun was already starting to get low in the sky when I was finally done. Jesse had helped for a while but then left to get started on the afternoon chores, and Ryan never showed up at all; maybe his group ride had taken more out of him than he’d anticipated. Either way, once everything was done, I was exhausted and my whole body ached. In a way, I was glad for the pain, because I felt as though I deserved it for having screwed up so badly in the first place.
I had just gotten back to my cabin and was sitting down to take my boots off when there was a knock at the door.
“Come in,” I said, not getting up from the kitchen chair.
The screen door swung open. I didn’t recognize him at first, this tall guy with short, styled hair, a bright red collared shirt, black shorts that stopped well above the knee. He had flip flops on his feet.
“Oliver,” he said. “Hello.”
It was Darren, my older brother. How long had it been since I’d last seen him? I couldn’t remember. He looked different—he looked like someone that I used to know who had gone out and cultivated a completely different life for himself. Which was probably true.
“Darren.” I kicked my other boot off and stood up. “What are you doing here?” I asked. He looked completely out of place, with his impeccable designer clothes that looked like they must have cost a fortune.
“I was in town,” he said. “And I heard that you were around. I didn’t want to leave without coming to see you first.” He walked over and stood in front of me and we hugged, awkwardly.
“It’s been a while,” I said.
“Yes, it has. But you look well. Ranch life has always agreed with you. Glad it was that way for one of us. Mind if I sit?”
“Not at all.” We both sat down at the kitchen table. “I don’t have too much to offer, but I think there’s some orange juice in the fridge.”
Darren smiled. “I’m good, thanks.”
“So, you’re just around for a visit?” It was so strange, sitting here with him, after he was gone for all those years.
“No, not just for a visit,” he said. “Mr. Hanlon died, so I came back for his funeral.”
“Who?”
Darren gave me a patient look. “Mr. Hanlon, the guidance counselor. Also known as the only reason I actually graduated high school and was able to escape from this hell hole. Trust me, Oliver, I wouldn’t be back here if I didn’t have to be. But it’s good to see you. I was wondering how you’d been. I figured you’d be out by now.”
“Did you,” I said. Darren had been one of the few people I knew for a fact had not tried to come see me. I figured he’d just written me off completely.
“Yeah. I might have considered trying to visit you, but I heard all about how well that went for Mom.” He frowned. “You were always the good one, you know? Her good little boy.” He left the rest of the thought unsaid, but I knew what he was thinking. You were always the good little boy and then you went and did this horrible thing and when she tried to visit, you refused to see her—your dying mother.
“It’s not like you were around all that much either,” I said. “She would’ve loved to hear from you. That’s what she was always talking about—Darren, who had moved to California—like California was some magical foreign land.”
“In a way, it is. If you’re not into the same shit everyone else is in this town, then yeah, it is like a magical place, because there’s people out there from all walks of life. And I was out there at the right place at the right time. Into the right stuff. I’m doing better than I ever thought I would be, financially, emotionally, physically—everything is a fucking dream. It’s incredible.”r />
“Happy to hear it’s all worked out for you.”
“You want to come out there? You want to start over? Get the hell out of this place? No one would blame you if you did.”
“I’m fine here.” I shook my head. “And even if I did, what the hell would I do in San Francisco? I don’t have a job. I’ve never lived in a city.”
“A change of pace might be good for you. And you could find a job. You can live with me until you get your own place. I’ve got a place in the Marina and then a loft in SoMa. Also a house in Bernal Heights, but the family there might be moving soon. Too big of a place for one person, but . . . .” He gave me a questioning look. “I heard there was a lady in your life?”
“Yeah, there is, but I don’t think she’s gonna want to move to San Francisco. You own all those places out there?”
“I do. And another place up in Sonoma and another down in Santa Cruz. It didn’t all happen overnight, but, like I said, I was in the right place at the right time.”
“Computers, isn’t it?”
He nodded. “The tech industry out there is . . . it’s unbelievable. You’ve got to see it to believe it. So, why not come check it out? At least for a visit. I’ll get your tickets, you and your girl, and you guys can come see what it’s like.”
“You don’t have to do that,” I said.
“I know I don’t, but I want to.” He took a step closer to me, a serious expression on his face. “Listen—I know it’s been a long time since we talked. We’re practically strangers. But I don’t want it to have to be like that. It shouldn’t, if you ask me. I’d like to fix it. And it would really mean a lot to me if you would come out to San Francisco. Think of it like a well-deserved vacation.”
“I’ll talk to Wren,” I said.
I had been planning to go over to the restaurant for a little bit in the afternoon, before I had to go back to the ranch for the afternoon chores, to learn how to cook something. After the morning I’d had, I didn’t feel much like learning anything, but I did want to see Wren, so I cleaned up and headed over.
“How was your day?” she asked. “We were crazy busy here today. But it was good.”
“I’m glad one of us had a good day,” I said, giving her the abridged version of my morning.
“Oh, boy,” she said. “That sounds like a mess.”
“It was.”
“Well, come on. Sounds like you need some comfort food.” I followed her into the kitchen. It was a bit strange being back there, everything quiet, the dining room completely empty.
“So, there’s cooking and then there’s baking,” she said. “I like them both, but some people prefer one or the other. I like to think of cooking as an art and baking as a science. You can mess around more with cooking, improvise, be creative. Baking is way more temperamental, and it’s a lot easier to screw things up.”
“I’ve screwed up enough things for one day,” I said.
Wren smiled. “Cooking it is. And really, don’t be too hard on yourself. Forgetting to turn the water off happens sometimes. I may have forgotten to do it a time or two myself. Never the stove, though. I’ve always remembered to turn the burners off. Anyway. Why don’t we make something simple, but good, especially on a hot day like this. It’s a variation of pasta salad, and the nice thing about this is you can alter it as you want, and use whatever you’ve got in the fridge.”
“Right now that would be about half a quart of orange juice. Oh, and the other thing that happened this morning is my brother stopped by. And he wants us to go out to San Francisco.”
She stopped rummaging in the fridge and looked at me. “Wait, what? Did you just say go to San Francisco?”
“Yeah. That’s where he lives now.”
“And he wants us to go visit him?”
“That’s what he said.”
“I’d love to go to San Francisco!” she exclaimed, with more enthusiasm than I’d been expecting. “I didn’t even know you had a brother! Have him come into the restaurant before he goes.”
“Sure,” I said. “I’ll tell him. And I guess you didn’t really know that I had a brother because we haven’t been that close. No bad blood between us or anything, he just ended up moving and he never wanted to come back here, which for him, I can understand.”
“Not a small-town guy?”
“No. And he’s gay, which some people gave him a hard time about in school, even though he wasn’t out of the closet yet. That’s a strange saying, isn’t it? ‘Out of the closet’?”
She shrugged. “Not when it’s something you feel like you have to hide.”
“That makes sense when you put it that way. Yeah, I guess I never really considered what things must’ve been like for him. It’s not like I wanted him to feel so out of place or anything. I’d just always felt so comfortable here; I assumed everyone else did, too. That was short-sighted of me.”
“I would love to go out there. I’d also like to meet him, so tell him to come by! Anyway, let’s get started on this.”
She had taken out a number of different vegetables: red and green peppers, cucumber, zucchini, red onion, a few leftover ears of cooked corn.
“We’ll get a pot of water boiling while we chop this stuff up,” she said. “Now, you can use any kind of pasta, but I like to use Israeli cous cous, which is bigger than regular cous cous.”
“Sounds good, I think,” I said. “I have no idea what either of those things are.”
“Well, you’re about to find out. And it’s delicious.”
She showed me where the pots were and I filled one with water, and then she said to add a dash of salt and a glug of olive oil. I turned the burner on high and the little blue flame caught and ignited, and there you had it, I had set my first pot of water to boiling.
“This is really the first time you’ve cooked for yourself?” Wren asked, one eyebrow cocked in disbelief.
“Pretty much. If you don’t count opening cans with a can opener. I’ve done that plenty.”
She laughed. “You’re doing a good job so far. Now, on to the chopping.”
We stood side-by-side at the counter, identical cutting boards in front of us. There was something soothing about getting into a rhythm, cutting the food into uniform pieces. I thought about my mother, then, and how much she had enjoyed cooking, and I wondered if it was for the same reason.
When the vegetables were chopped, the water was boiling and I dumped the Israeli cous cous in. Wren gave me a slotted metal spoon to stir it with, and when it was done, I drained it in the sink and ran cold water over the colander.
Then it was into a big ceramic bowl with everything, along with some more salt and black pepper, chopped parsley, lemon juice, and the house-made vinaigrette.
“Give it a good stir,” Wren said, once everything was combined. She got two bowls and I dished it up, and then we took it out into the empty dining room and sat at one of the booths.
“There you go,” she said, taking a bite. “It’s delicious! Good job.”
I took a tentative bite. I knew it couldn’t be that bad, because she’d been right there, but I was a little hesitant because cooking just wasn’t my thing. But it was good. The cous cous was chewy and soft, the vegetables crisp, everything coated in the mildly spicy, tangy dressing. It was the perfect sort of hot weather dish.
“Hey,” I said. “It’s not bad.”
“See? If I can ride a horse, you most certainly can cook something edible. And this is more than edible—it’s great!”
I went back and had seconds, and when Wren asked if I wanted to cook something else some other time, I was quick to say yes.
Back at the ranch, though, I knew I needed to be extra-diligent. For the next several mornings, I triple-checked to make sure that the hose was turned off after I was done filling the troughs. Today, I was supposed to lead a group ride, though part of me was wondering if Garrett was just going to tell me to forget about it. The ride was just one family of six; the youngest of the kids was about
nine. It’d be good to get out and go for a ride, and usually on rides like that, the people wanted to hear about the landscape, what types of trees those were, or what kind of bird that was.
I helped Jesse groom and tack up six horses. I went around and checked the cinches, made sure they were tight, and led the horses out to the wooden hitching post, securing their reins in a quick-release knot.
Garrett had said that one of the girls was nervous about riding, afraid of horses, but wanted to go with her family on the ride—just down to Hatchwood Creek and back—I’d gotten Sweetpea ready for her. I went back to the barn to get Bebop, and when I was leading him out, I saw the family standing by the post, talking with Ryan.
“Well, you folks enjoy the ride,” he was saying. “Here’s Ollie, he’s going to be the one taking you out. We can head out for some fly fishing around three o’clock this afternoon,” he said to the father.
After Ryan walked off, I introduced myself and then introduced them to the horses. The older two kids both said they’d been riding the day before and were eager to get back to it. I could tell right away who it was that was scared of horses though—Lisa, who was standing next to her mother, eyeing the animals with trepidation.
“We’re going to have you ride Sweetpea,” I said to her. “She’s this one right here. Sweetpea’s been on this ranch longer than most of the other horses here, so she knows all the ins and outs of the place. She’s a real good girl.” I patted Sweetpea’s neck. “Do you want to give her a pat?”
Lisa looked up at her mother and then at Sweetpea and gave an almost imperceptible nod. She inched forward until she was close enough to reach a hand out and brush her fingertips along Sweetpea’s shiny coat. The mare stood there, right rear leg resting on the tip of her hoof, her eyes half-closed, dozing.
“She liked that,” I said. “You’ve got a gentle touch, and that’s all Sweetpea needs. She’ll take good care of you, okay? And the saddle, it’s got the horn right here that you can hold onto.”
“You’re going to be just fine, Lisa,” her mother said.