Lady Daisy, ch. 4

by: Sarah Stodola

“I don’t care. She’s my niece. I’ve raised her, with her mother of course, for the past five years. She’s hardly left these grounds! She’ll be lost out in Hicksville like that!” Roseanne Douglas wiped her eyes with her handkerchief, staring imploringly at her lawyer. “You have to get her back for me.”

“I’ll try, Miss Douglas,” the tall, thin man sighed, closing his briefcase. “But that’s all I can do.”

She stood as he did, her eyes narrowing slightly. “I won’t have my niece corrupted by hillbillies, Mr. Sanchez. Little Daisy Mae is a lady. That’s all she knows. I guarantee you she’ll be miserable out there. And…” she drew the word out, fingering her purse, “I could make it worth your while if you get her back.”

He stopped halfway through the door, turning to look at her. “If the price is right…”

Roseanne smiled. “It will be. I promise.”

The lawyer smiled back. “Consider it done, Miss Douglas.”

As he left, Roseanne nodded to herself, looking at the picture on her desk, a picture of a young girl in a Victorian-like dress, dark blue eyes wide and smiling almost shyly. No one was going to take her baby away. Certainly not some hick farmer from the back side of nowhere.

She would get Daisy Mae back. Whatever it cost. She had the money to spare, and she would use it.

###

“Daisy Mae Duke, come to the principal’s office please. The principal’s office, Daisy Mae Duke.”

The PA shut off and Daisy turned her head to stare at Bo, sitting in the next aisle almost even with her. He shrugged, making an “I dunno” face. She shrugged back, then slid away from her desk and headed toward the door, feeling all eyes on her back.

She wondered what she’d done wrong. She couldn’t remember anything. In the entire three weeks she’d been in school, she hadn’t gotten in trouble, except for that first day when she and Bo had shown that bully what was what. She grinned at the memory.

She was still half in day-dream land when she opened the door to the principal’s office, and stopped dead in her tracks. The thin man leaning on the desk, a man she knew, turned and straightened, staring at her. Slowly, one dark eyebrow raised. “Daisy Mae?”

Daisy swallowed hard, slowly shutting the door behind her. This man was her Aunt Roseanne’s lawyer, someone she had met numerous times. What was he doing in Hazzard? “Hello, Mr. Sanchez,” she heard herself saying automatically, then she raised her chin a little, the independence she’d learned from her cousins coming to the fore again. “Please, just call me Daisy.”

“But your full name…”

“I know. But just call me Daisy.” Yes, her aunt had always called her by her full name, and she’d grown up with that name. But just like Luke and Bo had with their names, she’d rather have a shorter version.

Mr. Sanchez frowned slightly, but finally nodded. “Very well… Daisy.” He looked her up and down, the disapproving frown deepening. “Why are you wearing boys’ pants, young lady?”

“Because I want to,” she said defiantly. “And cause they’re more comfortable than a dress, and let me run better too.”

“You run?”

Daisy grinned, enjoying the expression of disbelief on the lawyer’s face. “And I climb trees, and I play in the creek, and I’m on the softball team. Good enough for you?”

He straightened, eyes snapping. “Where’d you leave your manners, Daisy Mae? In the barn?”

“Just Daisy.” She shrugged. “And… I just don’t really wanna see you, is all.”

“And your grammar..! I wouldn’t have thought two months could do *this* to you! What happened to you?”

“I realized I’m a Duke,” she told him proudly, tossing her hair back. “And that’s all that matters to me.”

“Well, you’d better regain the manners you lost, young lady, before your aunt whips them back into you!”

Daisy faltered. “What?” She looked over at the principal. “What’s he talking about?”

The kindly man sighed and removed his glasses. “I’m sorry, Daisy, but this man has court approval to take you back to your Aunt Roseanne. They said that she can take better care of you than your uncle, since she has more funds.”

“But..!” Daisy spun to face Mr. Sanchez again. “But I don’t want to go back to the manor! I want to stay at the farm!”

“You have to admit, your uncle is poor,” he simply said.

She bristled. “Maybe we don’t have all the money Aunt Roseanne does, but we get by!”

“Yes, you get by.” He frowned. “Barely. Don’t argue with me. You have no choice. Now, go get your things. We’re leaving.”

“Now?!” She backed toward the door. “No!” Turning the knob, she spun and ran out, down the hall toward her homeroom. Bursting in, she interrupted what the teacher was saying with, “Bo! They’re taking me away!”

“What?!” He jumped up, knocking his chair over. “No way! Who?”

“My aunt!” Her eyes were blurring with tears. She felt lost, not knowing what to do. “Bo, I don’t want to leave Hazzard!”

“And you’re not gonna. Come on, we gotta find Luke!” He was already starting for the door.

“Don’t you dare.” The angry snap came from Mr. Sanchez, who was standing in the doorway. There was utter silence in the room. He looked straight at Daisy. “Get your things. We are leaving. Now.”

She looked helplessly at Bo, and he looked back, just as helpless.

“Daisy Mae, do as I tell you,” the lawyer ordered. She slowly walked to her desk, and picked up her notebook and pencil case.

She walked toward him, past Bo, and paused beside her cousin. “I…” Her eyes filled with tears. He was the only best friend she’d ever had. Bo bit his lip, then suddenly reached out and pulled her into a rough hug.

“Don’t let ’em get you down,” he whispered in her ear, so Mr. Sanchez couldn’t hear. “Uncle Jesse will know how to let you come home. Just hang in there.”

“I hope so,” she said earnestly, but quietly. “I love it here. And I love all of you.”

He colored slightly. “…Yeah. I love you too, Daisy.”

The cousins clung to each other for a few moments, then Mr. Sanchez cleared his throat loudly, glaring, and Daisy pulled away, trudging over to where the lawyer stood.

“Good. Now let’s go so we’ll be home in time for dinner,” he said, walking out the door.

Daisy met Bo’s eyes once more, then had to follow.

As they drove out of the school grounds in a shiny black sedan, she twisted to look out the back window. She saw Bo, with Luke right behind him, come running out the door and stop, staring, in the center of the yard. She waved, hoping they’d see her, then the car accelerated as it turned a corner, and her cousins were out of sight.

###

“Uncle Jesse!!”

The shrill urgency in Luke’s voice made him jump, and he stopped the tractor, turning in surprise to see Luke and Bo running through the freshly-plowed field toward him. “What is it? Ain’t you two supposed to be in school? And where’s Daisy?”

“She’s gone!” Bo cried, leaping up onto the tractor. His dark blue eyes shone with not-too-well hidden tears. “Her aunt from Atlanta came and took her away!”

“What?!” Jesse stared, then met Luke’s worried eyes. “Is it true?”

The older boy nodded. “I saw them leaving. Bo came and got me, but it was too late!”

The farmer swallowed hard, then squeezed his eyes shut, whispering a fervent prayer for help.

“Uncle Jesse, what’re we gonna do?” Bo asked.

He opened his eyes, trying not to cry himself. He put a hand on each of his boys’ shoulders. “Luke, Bo, what we ain’t gonna do is panic. What we are gonna do is go see JD Hogg about what we can do to get her back. He’s the one who knows the most about laws and stuff.” He climbed down from the tractor. “But first,” he met two pairs of worried dark blue eyes, “we’re gonna pray for some help, cause we’re gonna need a lot of it.”

Lady Daisy, ch. 3

by: Sarah Stodola

“I’m not really sure I want to go,” Daisy admitted to her uncle, watching him as he prepared three school lunches, tucking sandwiches into small paper bags. “I mean, I won’t fit in. I don’t know much about farming or fishing, or whatever the other kids are going to want to talk about.”

“First thing,” Luke smirked from the table, “drop the fancy city talk.” Jesse shot a glare at the boy, and he hurriedly rephrased. “I mean, you talk like a grown-up from the city. No slang or nothin’. That’s not normal.”

She shrugged, a little. “I was privately tutored. Besides which, my aunt wanted me to fit into society, not the *back side of the country*. And I’ve only been here just over three weeks.”

Bo grimaced as he came down the stairs, taking them three or four at a time. “Your aunt was really into the rich folks stuff, huh?”

“Yes.” Daisy sighed. “I almost wish I’d come to live out here instead. But my aunt was kind enough to offer us her home when Daddy died, and Mama kind of *had* to accept. She figured it’d be better for me, growing up with plenty of money and nice things.”

“But that ain’t what life is about,” Bo argued.

“I know that now.” Her eyes started to shine. “It’s a lot more fun to run around like you boys do, or climb a tree. And it’s a whole lot nicer to be able to laugh, and to know I’m really loved, too.” She gripped Jesse’s hand tightly, then giggled slightly. “You know, if my aunt could see me now, she’d have a heart attack!” She gestured to her jeans and boots. For the occasion of school she’d put on a nice blouse for the first time in a month, but she’d left the skirt for the more comfortable jeans.

Luke shrugged wordlessly, his mouth full of blueberry muffin. But his opinion of her mother’s sister was evident in the way he rolled his eyes at the ceiling.

“Yeah,” Daisy smiled agreement. Then she turned to her uncle. “You know what, Uncle Jesse?”

“What?”

She hugged him happily. “I’m glad that I came here to live with you instead of staying in Atlanta.”

“Me too.” He hugged her back, then pointed to the wall clock. “Hadn’t you kids better get going? You’ll miss the bus.”

“Yikes!” Bo snatched up his lunch bag on the way out the door. “C’mon Daisy, you don’t wanna do that!”

She reached for her own bag and ran after him, letting the screen door slam behind her, something she would never have dared do back at the manor. “Wait up, Bo!”

She heard Jesse’s voice faintly from inside. “Hurry up, Luke!”

“Okay, okay,” came the reply, then the screen slammed open a third time, and pounding feet followed her own down the driveway.

Daisy looked up at the sky, autumn blue, with the trees turning orange and gold above her, and jumped up into the air, arms raised above her and laughing out loud in the sheer joy of being alive. Oh yes, she liked this life much more than the manor!

Luke shoved her shoulder as he went past. “Hurry up, kid, or we’re all gonna be late.”

“It won’t be *my* fault!” she insisted as she put playing around aside to run after her cousins.

It was at lunchtime that Daisy realized just how tough she was going to have to be, just because she was a Duke. She’d just found a tree to sit down under when a football hit her in the side. “Ow!” she protested, rubbing her smarting ribs and looking around for the owner of the offending ball.

“Hey, gimme my ball back!”

“Huh?” She looked up, shading her eyes against the noon sun. “I didn’t take it, it hit me!”

“Hey!” The boy laughed out loud. “Listen to the little girl from the city. You talk all proper!”

“So?” she started to bristle. For a moment she felt guilty about it, then she shook that feeling aside and glared up at the boy. She was a Duke now, and nobody messed with the Dukes! “Take your ball and leave!”

He just laughed, then snatched up her lunch.

“Hey..!” she protested, reaching to get the bag back, but the boy shoved her backwards.

“I don’t got to listen to girls.”

Daisy scrambled to her feet. “Give me back my lunch!”

“Why?” he sneered.

“Cause she’s my cousin, that’s why,” a new voice broke in. The bully spun around to see Bo standing there, hands on his hips, scowling.

“You again, Duke?” the bigger boy sneered. “Why don’t you just split?”

“Leave Daisy alone, Ricky!” the blond boy insisted defiantly.

Ricky sneered again. “Oh yeah. Like I’m so scared of you. Baby.”

Bo’s eyes narrowed, and he lashed out, striking the bully in the jaw. But the other boy reached out and grabbed him by the front of his shirt, lifting him up slightly.

“Take off, Duke,” Ricky said menacingly. “Before I pound you into tomorrow!” He tossed the lighter boy aside. Bo landed sprawled on the ground, coughing. Then Ricky hefted the lunch sack and started away.

Daisy couldn’t stand to see Bo, her friend, treated like that. She was almost more mad about that than about her lunch. She leaped to her feet and ran after the muscular boy. “Hey you!” she shouted. When he turned, she plowed into him, driving her shoulder into his stomach like she’d seen the boys do in play. Only she knew that Luke and Bo were careful with each other. Daisy wasn’t being gentle. The air came out of Ricky’s lungs, and he gasped, dropping the sack and half doubling over.

Then he snarled at the girl. “I’ll get you for that, kid!” He leaped for her, and knocked her to the ground. He reached down and took her shirt in his fist to lift her back up, just in time for a lanky blond boy to come springing through the air and land on his back, sending Ricky to the dirt again. Bo reached down for Daisy’s hand.

“You okay?”

“Yeah,” she gasped out, then turned to glare down at the bully. “But he…”

“I know.” Bo grinned mischievously. “Hey, we did it together, cuz!” He raised one hand up.

Slowly, she smiled back at him, and raised her own hand to meet his midair in a high-five. “Yeah. We sure did.” She bent to pick up her lunch, deliberately turning her back on Ricky, who was lying there looking as though he was still trying to figure out what had happened to him. Then she glanced over at the other side of the schoolyard, where a group of girls was standing, watching her. Her shoulders sagged. “But I think I just lost my chance of making any friends. I mean, I know girls aren’t supposed to get too rough, even around here…”

“That’s not true!” Bo said vehemently, and she stared at him. “I mean, ’bout your having no friends! I’m your friend! And so’s Luke, or at least he will be!” At her skeptical glance, he shrugged. “He’ll come around. I really think Luke cares, down deep. He’s just never liked having new kids around. He didn’t like me when I first came to Hazzard, either!”

“I guess,” she sighed, starting to walk away.

Her cousin came up beside her, slinging an arm around her neck. They were almost exactly the same height, she noted, surprised that it was the first time she’d noticed that. “Hey, Daisy, know what?”

She glanced at him. He was grinning again. “What?”

“You just got in a fight! Wonder what your aunt would think about that?”

The mental picture of her aunt doubling over in a coughing fit, then fainting, made her laugh out loud. It wasn’t a lady’s soft giggle at all, but she didn’t care. She put her arm over his shoulders, too. “Yeah! That’d be so funny!”

“Got that right!” His dark blue eyes met her own. “Daisy, you’re a Duke. That’s all that matters. We stick together. Besides, I like you acting like a boy! You’re more fun!” They both laughed again, then he sobered a bit. “We’re in the same class, too, and know what? Nobody’s gonna push my cousin around while I’m there.”

“Yeah. Thanks. Same here.” She smiled at him, and for the first time in her life felt like she had a best friend.

Bo let go of her and started jogging away. “C’mon! Let’s find a shady spot to eat before they’re all taken up!”

“Okay!” She ran after him.

###

About a week after school had started, Luke was sitting in the barn on the floor, scowling at a model car that wasn’t going right. He looked at the instruction page, then back at the car, trying to figure out how to attach something that wasn’t in the instructions.

And trying to stay away from Daisy. She was entirely too nosey, that girl, always trying to see what everybody was doing. He felt kind of like Bo was desrting him, turning to the enemy side, the way the blond boy seemed to be making friends with her. Uncle Jesse was always making the boys spend time with her, let her go places with them. It wasn’t fair! Luke could hardly go anywhere with his friends anymore, cause if he did, she’d tag along and he’d get made fun of.

It just wasn’t fair.

Lost in his brooding, it was a few seconds before he realized he had company. He looked up, then glared at Daisy, the one standing there and intruding on his private space. “What do you want?” he snapped.

The girl’s eyes widened slightly, and she pointed to herself. “Who, me?”

Luke rolled his eyes. Bo was rubbing off on her. He returned most of his attention to the model instructions. “Why don’t you go away?”

“Why?” Then she breathed in sharply, a sound of admiration. “Wow!”

He glared at her as she crouched down beside him and reached out a hand toward his half-finished model. “Hands off. The glue ain’t set.”

“I’m not going to hurt anything.”

He snorted inwardly. Yeah, right. Why couldn’t she just leave?

“That’ll be a real pretty car,” Daisy continued, apparently oblivious to his discomfort and bad mood.

“Not pretty.” He scowled. “That’s like saying it’s sissy. It’s gonna be a racecar.”

“It still looks really nice. You’re a good builder.”

“What do you know?” he threw out a challenge.

She tossed her hair back indignantly, placing her hands on her hips. “It so happens, Luke Duke, that I once helped the cook’s son build a model rocket.”

“Your aunt let you?”

“No, she never found out.”

Luke sighed explosively, throwing the papers to the floor. “Well, this one ain’t goin’ too great.”

“Why? What’s wrong?”

He shot another glare in her direction. “Uh-uh. Hands off! I don’t need the help of a girl to build a boy’s model!”

Daisy glared back. “You think you’re so smart, don’t you? And that girls are so dumb! Well I’ll let you know, I’m getting A’s in school!”

“So’m I. Doesn’t mean you know about cars!”

“Maybe I don’t know about cars, but I’d like to learn!” Both were standing now, practically shouting at each other.

“A girl mechanic? Just great!” Luke said sarcastically. “Instead of bugging me, why don’t you go help in the kitchen?”

“Cause I may not know much about cars, but I know plenty about models!” she snapped out.

The boy scowled, then folded his arms, shifting his weight to one foot arrogantly. “Okay then. *You* figure out how to do it, hotshot.”

Her chin lifted coolly, just as arrogant and self-sure as his. “Maybe I just will.” She knelt down beside the model, looking it over from all angles. “What’s wrong with it? Looks pretty nice to me.”

He crouched back down too. “Nothin’s wrong yet. I’m tryin’ to figure out how to add some spoilers to the thing. You know, like NASCAR racers have. I thought it’d be really easy, but with the way the car’s built, I can’t figure out how to attach the extra plastic and have it stay on.”

“Hmm.” Daisy bent over and studied the toy car intently from floor level. He had to admire her bravery, Luke thought. Not many kids stuck around when he got mad, much less yelled right back. Maybe she was a Duke after all.

But that still didn’t mean he had to like her.

Finally she sat up and looked at him. “Luke, it’s easy. Just… here.” She took the glue tube and proceeded to break off some tiny bits of plastic. She glued the triangular bits carefully to the spoiler he’d cut out, her older cousin looking over her shoulder despite himself, then attached the whole thing to the tail end of the car. “Just brace it, that’s all. The more surface space there is for the glue to stick to, the better it’ll stay.”

Luke felt like slapping himself upside the head. He should have seen that. Making a face, he said, “Why didn’t I think of that?”

Daisy stood, looking down at him coolly. “Cause when things don’t go right, you get too mad to think.” She spun and left the barn.

Luke watched her go, unsure of whether to be insulted or not. Finally he sighed, and, slowly, smiled ruefully. Daisy might be a girl, but she sure was plucky.

He looked back down at the model. And she was smart, too. Whether he liked it or not. Maybe it wouldn’t be quite so bad, having her around. As long as she stayed out of his business, and didn’t get in the way.

He picked up another piece of plastic and started in on more trim.

Lady Daisy, ch. 2

by: Sarah Stodola

A few days later, Daisy sat in the barn, up in the loft. She’d watched the boys come up here before, though she didn’t think they knew that she had. She was leaning back against the wall, avidly buried in a book she’d found left there, when she heard a soft gasp. She jumped and glanced up, eyes widening guiltily.

“Don’t let Luke catch you up here,” Bo whispered, then clambered the rest of the way up the rope ladder. Daisy smiled, slightly. She liked Bo. He was the same age as her, eight, and didn’t seem to mind her company nearly as much as Luke did.

“I was just reading,” she whispered back.

“Readin’? Readin’ what?” Bo settled himself into the hay beside her, brushing back his blond hair. She showed him the cover of the book, and his eyes widened. He whistled, low. “You like cars?!”

She blushed, and nodded, looking away.

“Hey, neat!” She glanced back up to see him grinning, his eyes sparkling. “It must run in the fam’ly or somethin’. But, a girl likin’ that kind of stuff? Cool!”

Daisy couldn’t keep back a grin at that. She tossed the book to her cousin. He caught it with one hand and jumped forward, tackling her and knocking her backwards into the hay. She giggled, unable to keep quiet any longer, and threw a handful of hay at him.

Bo laughed out loud, a carefree sound that seemed contagious. Daisy laughed back, and scrambled to her feet, rushing her cousin like she’d seen the boys do when they wrestled. He wasn’t expecting the move from a girl, and so was off-balance enough for her to knock him down.

“Whoa!” He stared up at her, still grinning, but now with admiration shining in his dark blue eyes. “You’re pretty fast for a girl! Hey, you’re fast, period!”

“Really? Honest?”

“Aw, sure. I wouldn’t lie to my cousin.” He sat up and punched her in the shoulder lightly, more of a gesture normally used from boy to boy than the way someone would normally treat a girl, especially a young lady.

And for some reason, Daisy’s heart leapt for joy. She really was going to belong here. She knew that now. “Thanks. Hey, wanna show me what some of these cars are about? You probably know more than I do.” She used the slightly incorrect grammar on purpose, saying it just like the farm folk here in Hazzard would, and not the proper way of an Atlanta rich girl.

“Sure thing.” Bo flopped down on his stomach beside her, and she slid down next to him as he opened the book to page one and started talking animatedly about his favorite subject.

###

“You gotta be careful,” Luke warned as he, Bo, and Daisy waited for the trap they’d set to fill with crawdads. “These things pinch.”

“Hard!” Bo grinned. He leaned over the side of the rowboat. “Ain’t it been almost long enough, Luke?”

The older boy shook his head. “You’re too impatient. Not yet.”

Daisy peered into the clear water beneath. She could almost see bottom, in places. But not quite. “They’re like little lobsters, right?”

“Sorta,” Luke answered. “I’ve never seen a lobster except in books, but they look pretty close.”

“Kinda,” Bo chimed in, still balanced over the edge of the boat.

Daisy eyed his precarious position warily, wondering if he was going to fall in. “What do we do with them?”

“Eat ’em, of course.” Luke made a face. “Don’t you know nothin’?”

She glared back at him. “I’m learning!”

He just shrugged and looked away.

“Uncle Jesse’s crawdad bisque is great!” Bo laughed. He looked at Daisy with a mischevious glint in his eyes, then splashed some water up at her. “Gotcha!”

“Oh yeah?” She reached her hand over the side of the boat and splashed him right back. “Got you too!”

“Be careful, you two,” Luke warned.

Daisy nodded, looking away from Bo just in time to receive a faceful of water. Shaking it off, she glared in his direction. “No fair! I wasn’t looking!”

“What’s not fair?” The blond boy just kept grinning, infuriatingly.

She sat up and placed her hands on her hips. “You aren’t!”

He shrugged a little. “Just come and get me, then.”

“Bo..!” Luke started protestingly, but it was too late. Daisy stared as the younger boy leaped out of the rowboat, cannonballing into the pond with a big splash. He came back up, shoving hair out of his eyes.

“C’mon, guys!”

Daisy stared. “We don’t even have swimsuits!”

“We don’t need ’em,” Luke shrugged. “Why spend money on somethin’ you don’t need? Our shorts’ll work well enough.”

Bo whistled shrilly after coming up from a dive, calling out, “Are you two comin’ or not?”

“We’re coming,” Luke called back.

Daisy eyed the water. “It’s deep.”

“So?”

“But I can’t swim.”

“You not serious!” Luke stared at her, wide-eyed. “Now you really gotta jump in! It’s dangerous not to know how to swim around here!”

“I… I don’t know…”

“It’s easy!” Bo encouraged, treading water and splashing toward the boat. “Aw, c’mon, Daisy! You ain’t scared, are you?”

She drew herself up. “Of course not!” Which was anything but the truth; she was terrified.

“Then jump!”

Daisy crawled to the side of the rowboat, tensing. Could she do it? The boys wouldn’t want her to drown. But were they capable of helping her? She started to back away.

“Jump!” She heard Luke’s voice behind her, just as he shoved her, hard, into the water.

She plunged down, down. Panicked, Daisy stroked for the surface, and finally came through, gasping a breath of air.

“Hey!” Bo was beside her, coming up from below again. “Nice dive!”

She glared at him, but couldn’t spare any breath for words, too occupied with struggling to keep afloat. She saw Luke make a clean dive into the pond, then the dark-haired boy came up near the boat.

“Come on, Daisy!” he shouted. “Swim to me!”

“I can’t!” she managed.

“Sure you can.” Bo shoved her from behind, toward the oldest cousin. To keep from sinking, she had to move forward, and with much gasping, finally reached the rowboat’s side.

She grabbed the wooden siding with a white-knuckled death-grip, shaking. The water was too heavy! It caught in her shirt and shorts, dragging her down. She couldn’t do it!

But Bo and Luke were both laughing, playing in the pond. Daisy watched enviously as Luke made a dive almost straight down. How did they do that? Well, she thought, swallowing hard and bracing herself against the side of the boat, if they could learn, then so could she!

“Hey guys!” she shouted, then launched herself out from the boat. She almost went under, but made it back out to her cousins. The boys cheered and whistled as she turned, slowly, and fought her way back to the boat. Daisy gripped the edge again and grinned to herself. She would do it! She would prove she could! She would prove she could do everything the boys could! Then maybe they’d accept her, really accept her.

“C’mon!” Bo yelled as he scrambled out onto the bank and squirreled up an oak tree. She watched, fascinated, as he took a flying leap into the air, landing with a loud splash in the water. As Luke followed the younger boy up the tree, Daisy struck out for shore. She just had to learn how to swim! They were having too much fun for her not to want to join in!

Jesse smiled as he heard laughing children’s voices coming up toward the house. Daisy was finally starting to fit in. The cousins had gone crawdad fishing earlier, but they’d sure been gone a long time. They’d probably ended up swimming.

His suspicions were proved correct when the kitchen door swung open and three rather wet, and somewhat muddy, kids trooped in, talking all at once.

“Uncle Jesse, we caught a whole bunch of crawdads!” Luke announced happily.

“Uncle Jesse, I learned how to swim!” Daisy laughed, leaping across the kitchen. Jesse put out hands to grip her shoulders just in time to keep her from spattering mud all over the place, and all over him.

“Well, sort of,” Bo amended.

The girl spun to glare at both boys. “I did too swim! All the way from the boat to the shore and back again! Twice!”

“Well now, that’s a mighty fine feat!” their uncle smiled. “All right, I’ll take the crawdads.” He gingerly took the just-as-muddy bucket from Bo and dropped it in the sink. “You kids need to take a bath!”

“But we can’t bathe together!” Daisy protested.

“No, you can’t, but the boys can. All right, no mud on your feet?” At three nods, he ushered Luke and Bo up the stairs and down the hall to the bathroom. He waited just long enough to make sure that the two boys got into the shower together, clothes and all, then headed back downstairs to tend to Daisy.

Smiling, he shook his head slightly. It was time to get out the old bathtub!

Some time later, finally clean and dressed in jeans and a t-shirt, Daisy peered out from around the blanket her uncle had hung up for privacy across a corner of the kitchen. “Uncle Jesse?”

“Hmm?” He turned around from his place at the counter, and smiled.

“Where do I put the dirty clothes?”

“Well,” he washed his hands off in the sink and shook the water off, “they’ll need some real washin’, so how about in that tub you were just in?”

Daisy glanced behind her. “Huh?”

“You have to soak most of that mud out before you can stuff the clothes in that old washer. That thing’s about as ancient as they come; it don’t do a great job on its own.”

She giggled slightly. “Okay.” Pulling the blanket aside, she picked up the muddy shirt and shorts gingerly and threw them in the soapy bathwater.

“There!” Jesse smiled. “Beats scrubbing ’em anyday.”

“What are you doing?” Daisy changed the subject, coming over and craning her neck to try to see what was in the sink.

“Well, I’m done cleanin’ the crawdads, but I still have to cook them. Want to help?”

Daisy almost backed off, but, curiosity getting the better of her, she pulled a chair from around the table and climbed up on it. She made a face at the mess in the sink, poking it with one finger. “Yuck.”

Her uncle chuckled. “Now, sure. But wait till you taste them.”

“What are you making?”

Jesse started picking up the pieces of crawdad and washing them off under the faucet. “Crawdad bisque. Your Aunt Lavinia’s recipe. The best in the county,” he smiled.

Daisy tilted her head at him, leaning on the counter. “Who’s Aunt Lavinia?”

“She was my wife.” The smile grew softer. “Died just before Luke came to live with me. He came six months before Bo.”

“Oh.” She wasn’t sure what to say to that. “She was a good cook?”

“The best.” Jesse nodded at her. “She always wanted a little girl of her own. Wish she was here to see you now.”

Daisy returned her uncle’s smile slowly. “Didn’t you have kids of your own?”

“No.” He shook his head, dumping the last handful of diced meat in a pot. “We never did. It’s just you, Luke, and Bo. You three are the last of the Duke clan.”

“Really?” Her eyes widened. “Gosh.” She peered into the pot as Jesse lifted it to the stove. “What was she like?”

“Who?”

“Aunt Lavinia.” Jesse’s smile slowly left, and she wondered if she’d said something wrong. “Uncle Jesse?”

The smile was back now, but somewhat sad. “It’s all right, Daisy. I just miss her, that’s all. What was she like? Oh…” He trailed off, looking into the distance. “She was very kind. Loved children. She would have been delighted to have known you three. The prettiest girl in Hazzard. Every boy in town was after her.” Jesse chuckled. “But I got lucky, didn’t I?”

“I guess so.” Daisy straightened from her leaning position on the counter, and climbed down off the chair. “What else?”

Her uncle started cutting up and tossing other ingredients in the pot as he spoke. “Lavinia loved music. Had a voice like a bell, too.” Daisy was startled when he looked straight at her. “She looked an awful lot like you.”

Her eyes widened slowly. “I thought I looked like my mama.”

“You do. Marion and Lavinia were friends in high school, and everyone thought they were sisters ’cause they looked so much alike. It was after we married that your parents met each other.”

Daisy grinned. “Marion and Henry.”

“Uh-huh. Marion and my brother Henry.”

They were both silent for a few seconds, then Daisy looked back up at her uncle. “Did it hurt when she died? Aunt Lavinia, I mean?”

He froze, then nodded, slowly. “A bit.” He smiled at her. “Don’t worry about me, Daisy. It really don’t hurt that much anymore. I have you three to look after, and the farm to keep up, and crops to sell. I have too much to do to sit around and be all sad. I know I’ll see her in heaven, when the good Lord says it’s time for me to go, and that’s enough for me.” He returned to chopping celery.

“It hurt when my mama died too,” she whispered. “A whole lot. It still hurts.”

“I know, honey. I know.”

Daisy bit her lower lip, then reached out to wrap her arms around his waist, leaning her head against his chest. “I love you, Uncle Jesse,” she whispered.

He put down the knife and returned the hug, sighing deeply. “I love you too, Daisy. And I promise, I always will.”

She tightened her hold, then glanced over at what he was doing. “Can I help?”

Jesse leaned back and looked down at her, surprise in his eyes. The look quickly melted into a pleased expression. “Course, honey. How about makin’ up some biscuits to go along with the bisque?”

“Sure!” Somehow, it felt good to be here, talking like this, learning about her aunt. “How?”

He chuckled kindly. “You don’t know?”

“I’ve never cooked *anything* before!”

“Okay then.” Jesse wiped his hands on a small dish towel before opening a drawer under the counter edge and rummaging around. “There should be a recipe here somewhere… my Lord, I haven’t been through these in years. Aha.” He pulled out a small card with handwriting on it. “Here.”

Daisy took the card handed to her and studied it, trying to make sense out of the scribbles.

“You can’t read handwriting?”

“Not very well,” she admitted.

“All right,” her uncle smiled, taking the card back. “I’ll help you. He held the card out a little ways. “Let’s see… first, the flour.”

“Where’s that?”

“In the pantry.” He pocketed the card and headed for the small walk-in closet in the corner of the kitchen. “Everything’s in here… flour, baking powder…” He said the names of the ingredients as he handed them out to her. Daisy carried an armload to the table, then ran back for more.

“Now then,” Jesse said as he closed the pantry door, “let’s see what’s next…” Daisy, hovering at his elbow, could only grin.

Jesse smiled at his little girl. She was trying so hard to learn and experience everything all at once. He set about helping her make the dough, then put handfuls of it on a cookie sheet.

About thirty minutes later, Luke burst into the kitchen, Bo on his heels. “When’s dinner?”

“Soon.” Jesse handed the boys plates, bowls, and silverware. “Set the table.”

Bo stopped halfway there to make a face at Daisy. “Gosh, you’re as bad a mess as you were when you came out of that pond.”

“Am not!” She placed her hands on her hips, standing to her full height indignantly.

“It’s only flour,” Jesse said, waving the blond boy to finish his job. “It’ll brush off.”

“Why’re you covered in flour?” Luke asked.

“Cause I’m making biscuits!” Daisy grinned.

“You?”

“Sure,” Jesse came to her rescue again. “Leave her alone. Now let’s see…” He glanced at the clock on the wall. “They should be almost done. Let’s check.”

“Aw, just call us when it’s dinnertime,” Luke grumbled, walking out into the living room. Bo paused for a moment to arrange the dishes on the table, then followed his older cousin.

Jesse opened the oven door and studied the biscuits. The smell of warm baking drifted through the kitchen.

“They smell good!” Daisy exclaimed from beside him, dark blue eyes shining.

“They’ll taste good too,” he told her, wrapping his hands in towels then pulling the sheet out of the oven. His eyes widened slightly at the weight of the sheet, but he didn’t let his surprise show. Instead, he smiled inwardly, and setting the sheet down, poked at one of the biscuits. Yep. Hard.

Oh, well. His first batch had looked about the same. But he didn’t want to quell the girl’s excitement. How to soften them..? “Daisy,” he said thoughtfully, smiling down at her, “I bet these would taste even better covered in gravy, what do you say?”

“Okay!”

And when dinner was finally set on the table, Jesse had made good and sure that the biscuits on the plates were soft, practically smothering them in white country gravy and giving it plenty of time to soak in.

“Hey, somethin’ smells good!” Luke’s voice came from the doorway, and the two boys leapt into the kitchen, scrambling for their seats. Daisy beamed and turned proudly to go get the pan of gravy.

Bo poked at one of the biscuits still on the platter. “Hey!”

“Shh,” Jesse warned very quietly. “Be quiet. Just don’t take seconds. I made sure we can eat the ones on our plates.”

Luke made a face. “Can’t she do nothin’ right?” he whispered.

Jesse gave him a quick glare, and the two boys subsided as Daisy came back to the table. Their uncle said grace, and they all started in on the food. The boys were a little wary of the biscuits at first, but Jesse’s gravy trick had worked, and the former lumps of stone were actually good. He just hoped that the boys wouldn’t mention the ones still on the platter, still hard as rock.

As it happened, they did, but at least waited until the end of the meal, after Daisy had run upstairs on an errand for Jesse. Bo picked up one of the biscuits and pantomimed throwing it across the kitchen to Luke, who pretended to catch it. “We could play baseball with these things,” the blond boy laughed.

“Yeah. Hey, curve ball comin’ to your right!” Luke cocked his arm back with another biscuit in hand.

“No throwing food in here,” Jesse admonished.

“But what’re we gonna do with ’em?” Luke asked. “We can’t eat them.”

“No way!” Bo nodded.

Jesse glanced at the back door, then spoke quietly. “Take a hammer to them and feed ’em to the chickens, in with their regular grain. Just be sure to make the pieces small enough so the birds don’t choke. I wasn’t planning on chicken dinner tomorrow.”

The boys grinned and giggled at that, then took off outside with the platter. Jesse looked at the ceiling, shaking his head and smiling. *Lord, please don’t let Daisy do that one again.*

Lady Daisy, ch. 1

by: Sarah Stodola

**Even a girl can belong… if she gets a chance.**
_________________________________________________________________

LADY DAISY

“Hey, look at this!” Daisy Duke bounded down the stairs, hair flying behind her. Her dark blue eyes were shining with excitement.

“What?” her Uncle Jesse smiled, looking up from the peas he was shelling for dinner.

The slender young brunette was clutching a large leather-bound book, which she put down on the table. “I was looking through the old trunks up in the attic, to see what we could send to the church rummage sale, and look what I found!” She opened the book, running her hand over a plastic-covered page.

Jesse took the book, staring at it, then slowly smiled. “It’s the old picture album, from when you kids were just little tykes.”

“Uh-huh!” She brushed hair out of her face, and bent over his shoulder. “Look, there’s when I first came to the farm. Didn’t I look silly?” she grinned.

Jesse couldn’t help but smile. The photograph pointed to was of a small, very serious-looking girl, looking a bit uncomfortable in faded jeans and a blue plaid shirt. “You were somethin’ else,” he agreed. “A little lady to the core.”

“Yeah. And look here.” She pointed to another photo, one of two boys, one dark-haired and one blond, struggling with a large fish. “I didn’t know what to do when I caught that thing. Remember, it pulled me into the pond?”

“Luke and Bo had to fetch both it and you out,” Jesse recalled.

She looked a bit embarrassed. “I couldn’t do anything right, could I?” she admitted.

“Well, that depends on the point of view. To your Aunt Roseanne, you did everything right.”

Daisy made a face. “Yeah. I sure remember that. At least I didn’t stay that way.”

Jesse chuckled. “Yeah, you got real country real quick-like. A fact your aunt didn’t appreciate one bit.”

She shuddered dramatically, purposely overdoing it. “I sure do remember that. I thought I’d never get back home to the farm.”

“You almost didn’t. It was just thanks to those two cousins of yours that you did.”

“Yeah.” She hugged her uncle, smiling fondly. “But I’m sure glad I did.”

A roar-growl from a powerful car’s engine sounded from outside, and the two looked up from the old album. “Speaking of which, I think they’re home,” the farmer commented.

After a few seconds, the sound of the front door closing came to their ears, and a tall young blond man wandered into the kitchen. “Hi, everybody,” he said cheerfully, making a snatch at the bowl of peas. “What’s for dinner?”

“Get out of that, Bo.” Jesse batted his hand away, but not before his nephew had managed to grab several pods. “Those are for dinner, and it won’t be ready until I’m done here, so why don’t you all either help or get out of the kitchen?” He handed Daisy the picture book. “Why don’t you show them this? Out there,” he pointed.

“Show us what?” Bo asked, peeling one of the stolen pea pods open as he and Daisy went back out into the living room, and popping the peas into his mouth.

“An old album I found in the attic,” she replied, handing it to him and sitting down on the couch beside her other cousin, a tired-looking dark-haired young man older and shorter than Bo. “Move over, Luke, so we can all sit here.”

“What?” He scooted himself up from his slouching position and moved over, taking one of Bo’s pea pods. The blond cousin sat down on Daisy’s other side, and both boys looked over her shoulders as she opened the book to the first page.

Luke chuckled. “What a little lady you were,” he pointed to the first picture.

“Yeah,” Daisy admitted. She turned the page, and grinned delightedly.

“Hey, look, there’s the tri-county fair hayride!” Bo announced the picture she pointed to. “You got so mad at Tyrone Miller when he knocked me off that you tried to punch him out, ‘member?”

She blushed, embarrassed. “Yeah. If it hadn’t been for Luke, I would have been in serious trouble. That kid was twice my size!”

“At least it proved you had some honest Duke spirit under all that city-girl stuff,” Luke commented, grinning. “Boy, was your aunt mad when she saw how you’d changed!”

“I remember.” She looked up from the photo album, her gaze unfocusing. She remembered it all…

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“Hey, comin’ your way!”

“Move it!”

“Stop them!”

“Gotcha!”

“Enos!! The game’s over here!!”

“Sorry…”

Loud chatter and shouts rose from the gang of boys fighting for possession of a rather beat-up looking basketball. There were at least fifteen boys there, maybe more. It was hard to tell, just as it was hard to tell who was on which team. They were all just too quick, too confused as well, to keep track of.

Finally one blond boy managed to get his hands on the ball, and he ran for the opposing team’s hoop, uncoiling himself into the air and throwing the ball with all his young strength. It went through. Both teams screamed, one in victory, the other in frustration at losing.

A whistle blew, the only indication besides uniforms that this was at least a somewhat official game. “For once,” the announcer smiled, “Chickasaw loses!”

The losing team, decked out in yellow, shook fists in the air angrily, and their coach could be seen to toss his hat to the ground and stomp on it. Chickasaw County was a poor loser.

Of course, the other team, dressed in red, was pleased as punch. They hardly ever won a game. They leaped into the air, screaming for joy. They almost drowned out the announcer, who was saying, or at least trying to say over the noise, “And Hazzard County wins!”

Needless to say, the festivities were wildly triumphant, and the boy who’d thrown the winning ball made much of by his team, until he wandered away, blushing.

Another boy, a little taller than him and dark-haired, ran up behind him. The first glanced back, then took off sprinting. The other followed, then leaped in a tackle that sent both sprawling to the ground, where they rolled around in the dirt, laughing as they wrestled, rough-housing as only two energetic boys can do.

The man watching them sighed, and pulled the note out of his pocket once again, wiping tears from his eyes as he read one more time the news of his late brother’s wife’s death. Now he was the only Duke left. Except… His eyes wandered again to the playing boys, and he smiled, then shook his head. They were the future. Not only for him, but for the whole clan. But, then again, that didn’t really matter. What mattered was them having a family to grow up with. The two boys had both been orphaned at early ages, and their uncle had proudly raised them. Now, it looked like he would have yet another child to bring into the fold, now that Henry’s wife had followed him.

Jesse Duke sighed. But the boys would not be pleased when they found out who it would be.

###

“A *girl* at the farm?” Ten-year-old Luke Duke grimaced. “Are you kidding? Does she have to come *here*?”

“Yeah,” grumbled his two years younger cousin Bo, kicking at the ground. “A girl will spoil everything.”

“Pick up this, be nice to her, keep her safe.” Luke’s jaw clenched in stubborn, youthful anger. “A girl!”

“Hey!” Jesse’s angry voice quickly pierced through their grumbling. The two boys looked up almost as one, and Luke swallowed, stepping back a little. “Look,” his uncle demanded, “I took you in! How can I do less for your cousin?”

“But she’s a *girl*,” Bo attempted a last protest, which was silenced by Jesse’s stare. The blond boy looked down and away.

“She’s a Duke,” Jesse said, as if that settled everything. “You will watch out for her and take care of her, if for no other reason than that she’s family. And,” he added, a sudden twinkle hidden deep in his eyes, one that Luke almost missed, “you might find that she’s not so bad after all.”

“Fat chance,” Bo whispered to his cousin, who privately agreed with him.

This was going to spoil all their fun. They wouldn’t be able to go fishing or climbing, or jump in the pond with their friends. They’d have to take care of a little girl! The two boys’ dark blue gazes met, both saying the same thing — *This is gonna be one boring summer.*

###

Alone. She didn’t want to accept her mother’s death, but she still knew it to be true. But she didn’t want to believe it. Life was so much better if she didn’t.

She bit her lip, hard, and curled tighter into the chair. She squeezed her eyes shut, trying to shut out the world around her. But it was no use. She *was* here. And her mother *was* dead. Gone. Forever.

A hand touched her shoulder, and she jumped, glancing up with wide dark blue eyes. The lady who ran this orphanage — the girl didn’t know her name — smiled gently. “Your uncle’s here.”

She nodded, slightly. She wasn’t sure if she wanted to go with him. She didn’t know her uncle; she’d been raised in the city on a fancy manor, and he lived all the way down in farm country.

“Come on,” the lady chided kindly, crouching down on her level. “He seems a kind man. And he is your guardian according to your father’s will, so you sort of have to go with him.”

The girl stared at her. “You…” she managed, “you sure it’ll be nice, living on a farm? I don’t know anything about farms.” Her mother’s family had wanted her to be a part of their society, and not a “hillbilly”.

“You’ll love it,” the lady assured her. “From what I hear, you have a couple cousins there, too. About your own age.”

The girl brightened a little, uncurling slowly. “Any girls?”

“Well, I don’t know. Maybe.”

The girl thought about it, then finally nodded, slowly. “Okay. I’ll go.”

“Good girl.” The woman patted her shoulder, then stood, holding out her hand. “Shall we go meet your uncle?”

“Okay.” She climbed out of the chair, looking up at the other. But she didn’t take the proffered hand. She preceded the lady out of the room and down the stairs.

Jesse turned as the door squeaked open. The woman who ran the orphanage came through, then turned and beckoned. “Come on,” she encouraged. “It’s okay. Hey, you can’t stay here,” she said lightly.

The farmer raised his eyebrows slightly. Then a small hand came around the edge of the door, and a young girl peered out, obviously nervous. Wide eyes flitted around the waiting room, then up to meet his. Jesse smiled. She had dark blue eyes, just the same as he and the boys.

“Come on,” the lady encouraged again. The girl finally stepped around the door and to the center of the room, stopping a little ways away from her uncle and looking him up and down. He was doing the same.

She was pretty. Very pretty. Long brown hair was neatly combed and tied back, but a few curls strayed out of the smooth ponytail. She was wearing a blue dress, probably a Sunday one. She was slender, maybe even as much as the boys, and maybe about the same height as Bo. From what he’d been told, she was the same age as his younger boy, too, eight, though a couple of months younger. Her eyes came up to meet his, and he saw fear and pain there, but an undying curiosity, too.

The woman smiled and put a hand on the girl’s shoulder. The girl looked up at her. “This is your uncle Jesse,” she said softly. Then, looking at Jesse, she told him, “And this is Daisy Mae.”

Jesse glanced back down at his young niece to see her staring up at him, very seriously. Then something seemed to break through the mask of the perfect young lady, and she ran for her uncle. Jesse caught her as she leapt into his arms, and picked her up, hugging her. “Hello, Daisy,” he said gently, fighting back tears.

She buried her face in his shirt as he let her slip back to the ground. “Uncle Jesse,” she whispered.

###

Daisy Mae watched the scenery go past, eyes wide with amazement. She’d never seen the country before, at least not country like this. She’d been on picnics in the local meadows, sure, but this was wild land. Forest grew up around the road, which had turned to dirt some time ago. It made for a bumpy ride, but it was fun, too, in its very difference from all she’d known. They rattled over a bridge, and she looked down to see a creek running swiftly over rocks; the water was so clear that she could see to the bottom. She saw a fish leap out of the water, and jumped back involuntarily. Then she spun to grin at her uncle. “I saw a fish!”

“Yep,” he smiled. “There’s good fishing ’round here.”

“Are we almost there?”

He nodded. “Almost.”

“Then I’m really going to live out *here*?” She couldn’t keep excitement out of her voice if she tried, which she didn’t.

“You don’t mind?” he smiled, seeming to tease, much as a friend of hers, the gardener at the manor, had. A friend her aunt had disapproved of, saying he was below their rank’. But he’d been fun to be around.

“No! It’s so… so pretty!”

“Yes, it is,” he said softly, and she glanced over to see him unobtrusively wipe tears out of his eyes. She wondered why he would be crying.

Daisy Mae finally shrugged slightly, trying to regain her composure, and turned to look back out the window. She saw horses running free, and a boy called a goat out of the road just before they drove past. The mountains were starting to lower into hills, and there were more open spaces. She could see fields behind the line of trees that went on either side of the road. They were in farm country now, and she felt excitement bubble up inside of her again, despite herself. She was almost to her new home. She wondered what her life would be like now.

Then the pickup turned to follow a dirt road that went off to the side. They went up the road, then around a corner, and she saw a medium-sized house, not very large, but nice-looking. There was a porch, and the door was covered by a screen, so fresh air could come in but insects could not. Off to the side, a swing made out of an old tractor tire hung from a tree.

They stopped in the middle of the large dirt yard. No grass here, but high weeds and wildflowers sprung up all around. The girl turned to her uncle. “Uncle Jesse, is this it?”

“Yep.” He nodded and undid his seatbelt. Daisy Mae copied his actions, then something caught her eye. Actually, someone.

Just coming out of the barn was a dark-haired boy a bit older than her, carrying a pail of something… she thought it was milk. He stopped halfway to the house and put down the bucket, straightening to stare at the truck. Then he turned and put two fingers in his mouth, letting out an ear-piercing whistle that made Daisy Mae wince.

In response, a dog came running, a mutt that looked at least half hound. Right behind the dog was a blond boy, leaping over the bushes as he ran out of the field. Fascinated, she watched him come. He was bounding almost like a deer, maybe the fastest runner she’d ever seen, not that too many people had run at all back at the manor. She noted the dirt coating his faded jeans with almost wicked delight. She’d never been allowed to get really dirty back at home.

She looked around for any girls, and was slightly disappointed not to see any. She’d hoped. Now she opened her car door, when she realized that her uncle wasn’t going to do it for her, and slid down to the ground, bending over to try to straighten her dress.

Then she stood up again, and met two sets of dark blue eyes, just like hers. It surprised her a little; her mother had said the color was unusual. The boys’ eyes were just as nervous as hers, but there was hostility there, too, and she backed toward the truck. Why didn’t her cousins like her?

The girl was wearing a dress. Luke noted that with a frown. She was a city kid, that was obvious. So what was she doing out here? He could just imagine it — she wouldn’t want to get dirty by playing in the woods, or go swimming or fishing, or anything. Just great.

Bo came up beside him, panting from his run. “Oh, wonderful,” he grumbled.

“Yeah, I know.”

“Hey, boys.” Uncle Jesse came from the other side of the pickup with a small suitcase, and the girl moved toward him. He put an hand on her back. “Bo, Luke, this is your cousin Daisy. You’ll need to show her around, cause I’ve got to go into town.” He looked both in the eye, warning them to be nice.

Luke nodded, kicking at the dirt, and Jesse squeezed the girl’s shoulder, putting down her luggage, then turned and climbed back into the pickup. The truck did a tight U-turn and headed back down the road.

Luke met his new cousin’s eyes, studying her. She studied him, too, unashamedly. Then he looked her up and down, noticing first her dress, then her long, nicely-brushed hair. He couldn’t keep from smirking a little, feeling a bit superior. “First,” he started, “you’re gonna have to lose the clothes.”

Her eyes flashed.

“I mean,” he backtracked, trying to obey his uncle and be nice to her, “a farm is no place for a dress. You’re gonna have to get some other clothes for out here. You could still wear nice stuff in town, if you wanna.”

“Oh…” She frowned, slightly. “But nice things are all I have.”

Bo rolled his eyes toward the sky, and Luke elbowed him. “You’re sk… not real big,” he noted. “Maybe you could wear something Bo or me’s outgrown.”

“Maybe.” She looked toward the house. “Want to try?” She sounded almost eager. Maybe there was a real person under that city-girl get-up after all, Luke thought. But he wouldn’t hold his breath on it.

“Yeah. Come on.” He turned around and started for the porch. He heard a put-out sounding sigh from behind, and risked a quick glance backward to see her pick up her suitcase and come after him. Apparently she’d thought he’d carry her stuff for her!

Hah! he snorted to himself. Not! She was going to carry her own stuff, and do her share of work around here, just the same as him and Bo. Daisy Mae Duke might be a dainty little lady, but she’d have to learn to be otherwise! ‘Cause he wasn’t going to cater to her!

###

“Luke! Wait up!”

He turned, groaning, to see his little cousin bounding up behind him. Her brown hair flew out behind her, loose and tangling in the breeze. Her hair was shorter now, just to below her shoulders. Jesse had had to cut it when she’d gotten it caught in the ice cream freezer. She also wore a shirt and pair of jeans that Jesse had had Bo give her, as she was certainly skinny enough to wear boys’ clothes. Which did cut down on costs, their uncle had reminded Bo when he’d complained about giving up what was his.

She skidded to a halt, eyes shining as she looked up at him with what seemed almost adoration. “Where are you going?”

It was almost a week since Daisy had come to live on the farm, and she’d been getting more annoying every day, always following him around. And his patience was about to snap. “It’s none of your business,” he told her. “Go home.”

“Why?” She scowled. She sure had the Duke temper down right, Luke thought.

“Look, I’m gonna go fishing with my friends, and I don’t need a girl cousin followin’ me around, so beat it!”

“Why?” she persisted stubbornly. “Uncle Jesse said you have to let me play with you.”

“Why do you want to play with a bunch of boys, anyway?” Luke demanded. “Go home! Find some dolls or something!” With that, he ran away, knowing she couldn’t keep up.

“Luke!” she called, and he glanced back to see her trying to chase him. Then she tripped, and fell into the mud of the newly-plowed field. He made his getaway before she could get up and try again.

Stupid girl! he thought angrily. Why couldn’t she just find some other girls to be friends with? Why follow him and Bo around?

Daisy picked herself up out of the dirt, sniffing back tears as she tried to scrub the mud off her face. Why didn’t Luke like her? She knew that her cousins weren’t really happy with her being there, but Bo at least was nice to her, sort of. But Luke…

She watched him run off, then turned and trudged back to the farm.

###

Jesse came in from the fields to wash his hands for lunch, and noticed the mud smearing the kitchen sink almost immediately. “Oh, Lord, what have those boys gotten themselves into now?” he muttered, half to himself, half to God. He studied the mess and saw no blood stains, so apparently no one was hurt.

So all there was was a big clean-up job. But why hadn’t the boys cleaned up after themselves? Sighing, Jesse reached for the dish towel to dry his hands. And that was when he noticed that it wasn’t where it should be. It was lying in a crumpled mess on the counter, mud on it as well. His eyes flashed. What had gotten into the boys to leave this in such a mess? They knew better!

He turned and climbed the stairs, stalking down the hall to the boys’ room. But something caught his attention before he got there. The sound of a child crying. Jesse opened the shut door to his niece’s room, more worried now than mad.

Daisy looked up as he came in, and sat up, wiping her eyes with the back of her hand. Her hair was wet and tangled, and she was wrapped tightly in a towel.

“What happened?” he instantly wanted to know.

She shrugged, looking away.

Jesse went over to the bed and sat down beside her, reaching out a hand. She didn’t move for a second, then scrambled over, forsaking the damp towel for her uncle’s hug. She was really crying now, softly, not in pain but more… heartbroken. “What is it?” he asked gently.

She shook her head wordlessly, not looking up. He leaned back and raised her chin with one hand. Her eyes finally flitted to his, and he was struck once again by how pretty she was. *Just like her mama*, he thought sadly.

“Daisy, you aren’t hurt?”

She shook her head, sniffling. “No.” He smiled slightly to himself. She’d acted surprised at first at the shortening of her name from Daisy Mae to just plain Daisy, but she’d taken to the change like a duck to water.

“Here.” He handed her his handkerchief, and she wiped her face and eyes, still biting back tears. “Now, what happened?”

“I… I can’t tell you,” she sniffed.

He took her shoulders in his hands, staring at her firmly. “Tell me.”

She looked away, then whispered. “I can’t. Luke would get mad at me, and I don’t want him to get mad at me.”

Jesse’s eyes widened slightly. He had a sneaking suspicion what this was about. The girl looked up to the two boys almost to the point of hero worship. He also knew that Luke’s patience with his little cousin was wearing thin. “Did Luke hurt you?”

“No, not really…”

“What *did* happen?” he asked. “Tell me. That’s an order.”

She shivered. “He… he went fishing with his friends.”

“And?”

“I wanted to go too, but he wouldn’t let me.”

“How’d you end up covered with mud?”

“I… fell down.”

“Fell down?” he asked sharply. If the boy had pushed her…

“Yes. He ran away and I was chasing him.”

Jesse relaxed slightly. “Well, Daisy, maybe he doesn’t want to always play with a girl, did you think of that?”

“Well, sort of, but…” She trailed off.

“But what?”

Daisy’s dark blue eyes met his again. “Uncle Jesse, why not?”

“Huh?”

“Why wouldn’t he want to play with me?”

“Well…” He thought, then smiled, just a little. “It’s just sorta a boy thing, Daisy. I guess he feels that maybe his friends will look down on him if he brings a girl with him when he goes places. But that still doesn’t make leaving you behind right.”

“I just want him to love me, Uncle Jesse.”

Her sad plea tore at his heartstrings. He hugged her close and ran a hand through her hair, gently starting to untangle the knots. “I know, baby. I know.” Then he sat back a little, brightening. “Maybe Bo will play with you.”

“He went swimming. I couldn’t go because it was just the boys.”

“Oh.” Jesse understood. He’d been on more than one skinny-dipping trip to the creek himself when he was a boy. Then he frowned a little, curious about something. “Daisy, why don’t you find some girl friends? I’m sure some of the girls in town would like you just fine. Especially once you start school.”

“Yes. But…” She bit her lip, looking a little embarrassed.

“What?”

“I… I just want to play with Bo and Luke,” came out in a sudden rush.

“Why?” he smiled.

She shrugged a little. “Their games look like a lot more fun. I… in the city, I’ve always had to be careful, be a lady.” She made a face, the first time that Jesse had ever seen her express discontent with her old life. “You know. Walk, don’t run; play quietly; don’t get dirty.”

“Oh?” he said carefully, suspecting that he was getting ready to see into the tight-locked heart of his young niece.

Daisy nodded, her eyes meeting his seriously. “Yes. Those have been my aunt’s rules ever since Mama and I went to live with her. She wanted me to be a lady. I’ve always done girl things, played with dolls and stuff. When I came here, you said you’d let me play in the fields, or climb trees. You let me wear pants, not just pants but jeans. And Luke and Bo could teach me to fish, and to play baseball… I wish they would.”

“I think I get the picture,” Jesse said softly.

She nodded, hard, the words now pouring out of her. “I’d like baseball and fishing and stuff. I’d like playing with their toy cars, even. It just seems… that boys have so much more fun.”

“Well, honey, that’s not always true in Hazzard,” he said slowly. “This ain’t the city, mind you. Girls can play rough here just as much as boys can.”

“But I just want to play with Bo and Luke.” Her voice and eyes were earnest.

Jesse sighed inwardly. She had her heart set on making her cousins her friends, and she had her teeth into the idea as stubbornly as any Duke could, despite her ladylike demeanor. “Well, maybe Luke just needs time.” Then, remembering why he’d come up in the first place, “But you shouldn’t leave a mess like you did.”

“Huh? Oh.” She bit her lip. “I’m sorry, Uncle Jesse. I was trying to clean up… I guess I forgot.”

“Well,” he stood, “if you come down and clean it all up, we’ll just consider it not done, all right?” He had too much work of his own to do; she had to clean up her own messes. He couldn’t coddle her, any more than he could the boys.

She scrambled to her feet. “Okay. Just… Uncle Jesse?”

“What?”

“Don’t tell Luke I was talking to you about it, okay? I… I don’t want him to call me a tattletale.”

Jesse shook his head, smiling slightly. Sometimes he could just not understand the logic of children. “Well… all right.”

“Thank you.” She ran out the door.

And ten minutes later, as she picked up the last of the dirty towels that she’d used to clean the counter with, carrying it and the others off to the laundry room, he smiled slightly. Daisy was a one-of-a-kind girl, that was for sure. The way things were going, the perfect young lady from Atlanta just might be a rough-and-tumble tomboy before the year was out!

Grey Seal, Part Three

by: RebelYank

 

Anna found herself tugging nervously at her uniform jacket as she stood just outside the door of Rosco’s room. She adjusted her sleeves, straightened her shoulders and made sure her badge was in it’s proper place. She looked up at her mother who was grinning at her.

“Getting ready for inspection?” Laura teased.

Anna smiled. “I’m being silly, ain’t I? But I’m nervous!”

“That’s okay. I’ll admit I’m nervous too.”

Anna chuckled and then the door of Rosco’s room opened. Dr. Bedford stepped out and smiled at the two women.

“Good morning,” he said. “I’ve finished poking and prodding Rosco for now, you can see him.”

“Thank you, Doctor,” Laura said and she and Anna stepped inside the room.

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