This is a work of fiction. Although some of the action takes place at real places, all characters are figments of the author's imagination and not any real person. Any resemblance to any person living or dead is coincidental.
The Ranch
By D.O. Mann
Lisa Nelson placed a fourth large cola with light ice on the counter in front of the man who was finishing his fries while reading some forms that he had brought in with him. She had taken a measure of him when he first came through the door of the diner. With his hat in place, a western style with no adornments and as black as the beard he wore, he stood six feet five inches. That meant that his real height was probably six feet two or three. He wore a rugged black work shirt and blue jeans over a pair of western style boots.
The first thing she thought when she saw him was 'ranch hand.' After all, there were a number of ranches in the area, besides the Nelson Ranch which wasn't a working ranch anymore. But on second thought, he looked to clean for that. His hat and boots were relatively new. No more than two, maybe three months old. No, he couldn't be a ranch hand with that good of boots on his feet. And the shirt wasn't very old, either. Maybe he was a wannabe. Or more likely, he was trying to fool people into thinking that he was in ranching. He was probably trying to get someone to sell something to him or buy something from him and thought that if dressed like them, they would be more receptable to his proposal.
But she wasn't paid to speculate on the occupation or motives of the customers that came into the diner. She was only paid to serve them the meals they ordered. So, with her professional smile in place, she set the glass down and looked up as the bell above the door rang announcing another arrival. That smile drooped a bit as she saw the newcomer. Without a second glance, she turned back to the beverage station and poured a glass of sweetened tea which she took to the place at the counter where the woman sat, just three spaces away from the man.
"Hey, Lisa," the blonde said cheerfully.
"Nancy," she returned shortly.
Nancy gave a sigh. "When are you going to stop being mad at me?"
"I probably won't," came the answer. "You sold my home out from under me, Nancy. How am I to feel about that?"
"Your mom put it up for sale. She really didn't have any choice. Either she sold it, or the government would have taken it away. She couldn't pay the taxes on it."
The man clunked his glass that he had been drinking from on the counter and shuffled through his papers quickly. He gave out a slight whew as he found something and visibly relaxed. Neither Lisa or Nancy took notice off it as they continued their own discussion.
"It was still my home. The place I've lived at for my entire life. I don't want to just leave it, you know?"
"If your brother was still around, you might have been able to stay."
"Watch what you say about my brother."
"I wasn't saying anything against him, Lisa. But the fact is, your father wasn't much of a rancher. I don't know how he paid for everything over the last seven years, but when he died, whatever he was doing stopped. Jeremiah was the one who was keeping that place going after your grandfather died, but he's not here anymore. So, your mom had to sell. At least the buyer gave you time there after the sale went through. It's been four months and no one has seen him or heard from him."
"He's probably a developer. Did you think of that? He hasn't been here because he's been too busy tearing up land and planting houses and roads someplace else. Now, this, what's his name?"
"Turlow," Nancy offered. "John Turlow. I remember because it's such an unusual name."
"Yeah. Turlow. Now this Turlow character is going to tear up the Nelson ranch and turn it into some kind of development. Probably hundreds of houses and ten to twenty roads all through that area that used to be grazing land for our cattle."
The brunette noticed the man get up from his seat and slip his wallet from his back pocket. He placed a bill under the glass that had held his drink and made his way past the two women to the payment desk. She followed immediately to take his payment and wish him a good day.
"Was everything alright?" she inquired.
"Yes," he answered. "Quite good."
"That's good. I hope you'll come back again, Mr...."
"Turlow," he provided as he put his hat on. "John Turlow." With that, he gave her a mischievous grin and a wink of one of his ice-blue eyes, twinkling with amusement, and walked out the door towards a black Ford pickup with an enclosed trailer attached.
Lisa saw the amusement as well as the grin, but it was his eyes that really got to her. They were the same color as her brother's. But unlike her brother's eyes, his weren't sad or haunted. Even when he was in a good mood, Jeremiah's eyes had always retained that sullen haunted look. And, of course, he had a lot lighter hair than the man who had just left.
"Didn't look like a developer to me," Nancy declared. "Looked very much like a rancher."
"Then you were not very observant," Lisa countered moving to retrieve the tip. "His boots, hat and shirt were all recently acquired. It's a ploy to make people trust him while he slips in to develop more land. Obviously, he wants more than just the Nelson Ranch."
"Maybe he bought new because his old ones wore out."
"Doubtful. Ranchers don't tip ten dollars for an eight-dollar meal, either. I need to call mom."
Sarah Nelson was in her living room and was able to see when the black ford F-450 pulled into her driveway towing a sixteen-foot Haulmark trailer matching in color. She noticed that they were relatively new. Her daughter was right, she thought. This was no rancher. Which meant that he was here to develop the land and erect buildings or homes on it. But that wouldn't be any of her business. The man got out and glanced around the visible area, taking in the house, stable, and broken-down bunkhouse. As he reached back in the truck, she moved to open the door and go out to greet him. He came back out with his hat and a note pad. Putting his hat on, he withdrew what she could only assume was a writing implement out of his pocket.
"Mr. Turlow?" she asked.
"Yes," he answered matter of factly.