Golden Filly Collection One

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Golden Filly Collection One Page 27

by Lauraine Snelling


  “Remember when we saw the eagle flying up the gorge?” Marge said, taking the bird from David and handing it back to Hal. “Looking at this, I can almost hear it screeching. Thanks, Trish, for something we can all enjoy.”

  Trish rested her elbows on the arm of the chair and watched her father study the bird again. A smile flitted from his eyes to mouth and back again. “So wild and free,” he murmured as he finally set his gift on the table by his chair. Light from the brass reading lamp made the burnished wood glow even more.

  “Merry Christmas, everyone.” Hal’s smile lingered a bit longer on Trish. “And thank you all.” He stroked the soft wool of the heather green sweater David had given him. “And now, are there any refills on that delicious chocolate, Marge?” He hoisted his mug. “All this makes a man thirsty.” Eyeing the platter of cookies he said, “And hungry.”

  “Why don’t you pick up in here, Trish, while I get the refills going?” Marge caught Trish’s glance at the fireplace. “And don’t throw it all in there. We don’t need another chimney fire.”

  “That one was David’s fault.” Trish pulled herself to her feet and followed her mother into the kitchen. “Do you think he really liked it?” she whispered as she pulled two folded grocery bags from the rack under the sink.

  “Oh, Trish, how can you doubt it?” Marge shook her head as she reached to hug her daughter. “He—I almost cried too. The eagle was absolutely perfect.” Marge leaned back so she could look Trish in the eye. “Did it take all your money?” she whispered.

  Trish shook her head. “Not all of it. It’s just a good thing I’ll have more coming from the track next week. But once I saw it, I just had to buy it. I’d been praying for that special gift and there it was.” A grin turned up the corners of her mouth. “And besides, it was twenty-five percent off.”

  “So you got a bargain, then.” Marge smiled as she filled the teakettle at the sink.

  “Well, you taught me to be a careful shopper.” Trish ducked away from the playful swat aimed at her.

  After they’d straightened the living room, and the presents were neatly arranged under the tree, Hal finished his hot chocolate and stretched his arms over his head. “How about the two of you letting the horses out in the pasture to play in the snow. They’ll enjoy it as much as you did the snowball fight last night.”

  “Miss Tee too?”

  “Of course. Give her a taste of winter. And, David, keep an eye on that mare. She isn’t due until about the tenth but she’s a sneaky one. She’ll head for the far corners when she’s ready to foal. I think I’d better keep this chest out of that cold. I’ll help your mother with dinner.”

  Marge rolled her eyes. “Thanks a whole lot.”

  David and Trish looked at each other and laughed. Everyone knew that Hal was not a cook. “See if you can keep from burning the potatoes this time,” Trish called as she headed down the hall to change.

  Caesar barked a welcome when they opened the sliding glass door. Puffy snow blanketed the deck and pillowed on the hanging baskets. A blue spot peeked from between the low-flying clouds, but to the west, heavy gray clouds promised more snow.

  “We’d better hustle.” David nodded at the sky. “I’ll feed the outside stock while you let the racing string out.” With the collie bounding through the snow beside them, the two followed their early morning tracks to the stables.

  “I’ll let Miss Tee out first and then the others.” Trish gave Caesar a push, then tried to leap ahead of him. When he bounded back at her, she tried to sidestep but slipped and fell on her back in the snow. The collie put both feet on her chest and swiped a couple of licks across her nose.

  She grabbed his white ruff and rolled him off her. With her laughing and Caesar’s barking, the entire stable erupted with whinnies and hoof slammings.

  David quit trying to be heard. He put two fingers in his mouth and blew hard. A piercing whistle split the icy air.

  Trish started to giggle. Caesar quickly licked her chin. The giggle turned to a hoot. When she finally quit laughing, she could hardly get her breath. She raised up on her elbows, shaking the snow off her stocking cap. Caesar sat beside her, his tail feathering the snow, and like a perfect gentleman, he extended one paw.

  Trish crashed again, overcome by giggles.

  Spitfire whinnied, a high, demanding cry for some of the attention she was wasting on the dog.

  David stood over her, arms crossed, trying to either keep or regain a straight face. “Do you think you could come help me before dark, at least?”

  Trish scooped a handful of snow and tossed it at him. When another caught Caesar full in the face, she crossed both arms above her head to protect herself, both from her brother and the dog.

  David reached down and hauled her to her feet. “Come on, snow bunny, we’ve got work to do.”

  “Want to make angels?” Trish punched him in the side. “Or are you too grown up for snow angels?”

  Old gray Dan’l stretched his neck out as far as the closed stall door would allow. He nickered, a plea for attention impossible to ignore.

  “Nope, but explain the wait to your friends there.”

  Trish dug pieces of carrot out of her pocket and gave each horse both a treat and a pat as she went down the line. “Be right back,” she promised before she headed across to the old barn.

  Miss Tee plowed to a stop when her hooves hit the snow. She bent to sniff, then tossed her head when the cold touched her muzzle.

  “Come on, silly,” Trish called as she led the mare out to the paddock. Miss Tee raised each foot high, trying to step over the cold powder. She leaped but still found herself up to her knees when she came down. Then the filly discovered the best way was to follow her mother’s trail.

  Trish gave her baby an extra pat as the filly finally tiptoed through the gate. The mare immediately buckled her knees and rolled back and forth, grunting in pleasure.

  Miss Tee stood stock still. If horses could talk, her look said it all; she was sure her mother had lost her mind.

  Trish laughed her way back to the row of stalls where the racing string waited. One by one, she led them out to the board-fenced pasture. And just like the mare, each of them rolled and scratched, then shook all over upon standing up.

  They snorted and blew, tossed their heads, and charged across the snowy field, just like a group of kids let loose from school on a snow day. Trish leaned on the fence, enjoying their antics. If only you could see them, Dad, she thought. You need a good laugh too.

  You can be thankful he’s alive, her nagging little voice said as if perched on the snow-capped fence post beside her. You know he…

  “Oh, shut up.” Trish spun on her heel and headed up to the barns. “Mucking out stalls is better than listening to you.” Caesar cocked an ear. “No, I’m not talking to you.” She tugged his ruff. “And I’m not going crazy either.”

  Snowflakes began drifting down again by the time they had all the stalls clean and the animals back in and fed. The twinkling lights of the Christmas tree in the front window beckoned them back to the warmth. The aroma of baked ham met them at the door, along with their mother’s voice.

  “Dinner in about fifteen minutes. I’ve made spiced cider to warm you up.”

  Trish hung her jacket in the closet and laid her gloves and hat on the warm air vent to dry. She glanced in the living room. Her father’s chair was empty. “Where’s Dad?”

  “Sleeping. He’ll be up in a few minutes.”

  “Sure smells good in here.” David pulled off his boots at the jack by the door. “Here, Tee, hang up my jacket too.”

  “Did you ever hear the word please?” She stood with her hands on her hips.

  David dumped the denim coat over her head. “Please. And thank you. In advance.”

  Trish pulled the thing off her head, muttering around the grin she tried to keep hidden. “Muck the stalls, hang up my coat; you don’t want a sister, you want a slave.”

  “Oh, and could you pour me a m
ug of that cider?”

  David sidestepped her punch and laughed his way down the hall to his room.

  That night, after spending nearly an hour on the phone with Rhonda, Trish snuggled down in her bed. No homework, a day that can never be topped, extra rides coming up to pad my bank account, and best of all, no school for nine days! And tomorrow she and Rhonda were going shopping and to a movie. That is, if the roads cleared.

  If only Dad didn’t have to go to the hospital tomorrow for another treatment.

  Chapter

  05

  Mom says I can’t drive.” Rhonda moaned over the phone the next morning.

  “I know. The roads are just too slick. David’s taking Mom and Dad to the hospital in the four-wheel drive.”

  “Another treatment?”

  “Yeah. About the time he’s feeling pretty good, they knock him down again. Just going outside in the cold air made him start coughing.” Trish slid to the floor so she could lean back against the cupboard. “Why don’t you walk over and help me and Brad with the chores.”

  “Thanks a lot. I wanted to go shopping.”

  “Mm-mm. You coming or not?”

  “All right.”

  Trish didn’t mind staying home. She didn’t have much money left, and now she didn’t need to buy a jacket. “And you don’t really need anything else,” she reminded the face in the mirror as she brushed her hair. A movie and lunch out would have been nice. And who knew when they’d have time for that later.

  She finished straightening up her room, tossed the dirty clothes in the washing machine, and shrugged into her jacket. A quick check outside and she switched from leather boots to rubber ones. It had begun to rain.

  “You be careful out there,” Brad cautioned as he boosted her into the saddle on Spitfire.

  “No problem. We’re just walking today. Rhonda’s coming over, so why don’t you saddle Firefly for her. If you’d like, you could work Anderson’s Final Command.”

  “That’s okay. I’ll get the stalls cleaned out. Then we’ll all be done about the same time. Maybe we’ll get to that movie yet, the way the snow’s melting.”

  Spitfire shied when a load of snow swooshed off a fir branch and thwunked in the snow. He spooked again when another tree dumped its load. Trish hunched her shoulders to keep the drizzle from trickling down her neck, but she never took her attention from the frisky horse. She stroked his neck with one hand and kept up a running commentary on all she saw. He settled after one round of the track and seemed as relieved as she when they turned back to the stables.

  “Better late than never,” Trish teased her friend who’d arrived while Trish stripped the saddle off Spitfire in his stall. “You want Gatesby or Firefly?”

  Rhonda gave her a have-you-lost-your-marbles look.

  Brad chuckled as he boosted the slender redhead into the saddle. “So you don’t want a blue-and-green from Gatesby, eh?”

  Rhonda stared down at him from Firefly’s back. “A blue-and-green?” She started to laugh. “That’s a good one, Brad. No, I don’t want a Gatesby bruise, or to get dumped either. I don’t know how Trish puts up with him.”

  “With who?” Trish stopped Final Command in front of Firefly’s stall.

  Gatesby nickered in the stall next to them. To look at the blaze down his long face and the soft eyes, no one would guess him to be ornery, until he laid back his ears and reached for Trish’s jacket.

  “Him!” Brad backed up the gelding so his back was out of range of Gatesby’s nipping teeth. He gave Trish a leg up. “You should have put him on the hot walker to work off some of his meanness.”

  “I’m starved.” Brad closed the door and shot the bolt on the tack room when they were finished. “I’ll go home and change, then we can go.”

  “I gotta call my mom first. She’ll probably say okay now that it’s warmed up and I’m not driving.” Rhonda sniffed. The cold had made her nose run too.

  “Well, we better hurry. I have to be home in time to feed, in case David doesn’t get back. We could get hamburgers at the drive-in window at Burgerville. That way we can make the matinee.” Trish pushed open the sliding glass door. While they waited for Rhonda to call home, she slipped out of her jacket and hung it over the back of a chair to dry. “Want a cookie, Brad?”

  “Just one?”

  “No, you nut. The whole plate. I don’t care how many you eat. Help yourself. Mom musta known you were coming. She left some of each kind.”

  “Man, oh man!” Brad popped a brownie in his mouth while he picked out several other kinds. “Your mom is the best baker.”

  “Hey, she didn’t do it all. I helped.”

  Brad pretended to gag.

  “Don’t worry. She made the brownies. Just don’t try the Rice Krispies bars. I did those.”

  “I can go!” Rhonda gave a little skip as she entered the room. She looked down at her wet jeans. “You got some clothes I can borrow?”

  “See you in fifteen minutes.” Brad swallowed the last of his cookies and grabbed a couple more. “To keep me from passing out.” He laughed as he went out the door.

  They slid into their seats just as the opening scenes of the matinee appeared on the theater screen. Brad passed the popcorn tub over to Trish and pulled off his jacket. After propping his knees on the seat-back in front of him, he pushed up his sleeves and reached for some popcorn.

  “You think you can settle down now?” Trish whispered.

  “Sure, who’s got the Coke?” He popped a handful of popcorn in his mouth. “Anybody get napkins?”

  “Shush.” Rhonda giggled as she handed him the tall drink. “We should never let you out in public”

  “Hey, I’m driving, remember?”

  A woman in front of them turned to frown at Brad.

  Trish was afraid to look at Rhonda for fear they’d never be able to quit laughing. It was a good thing the movie was a comedy. It was a giggly kind of afternoon.

  But that night Trish didn’t feel like laughing. Her father had been throwing up for five hours straight. In between that he had coughing spells.

  By the time Hal finally fell into an exhausted sleep, Trish felt like her own throat was raw. “I thought they’d found some medicine that would keep him from being so sick.” She slumped in her dad’s recliner with her feet across the arm so she could warm her toes by the fire.

  “This time none of that seems to help.” Marge leaned her head back in the rocking chair. “I think the cold air made things worse because it started the coughing.”

  “Just when he was finally feeling better too.”

  “I know. But at least he is getting better. We’ve got to be thankful for that.”

  “Mm-mmm.” Trish bobbed her toe to the beat of “The Little Drummer Boy” on the stereo. “It just doesn’t seem fair.”

  “I think that storm is hitting earlier than they predicted,” David said, entering the room to rub his hands in front of the fire. “I’ve just been down to check on the animals. I think it’s dropped about twenty degrees out.”

  “Is it still raining?” Marge asked.

  “More like sleet now. I turned the light on in the pump house and blanketed all the racing stock.”

  “We’d better store up some water in case the electricity goes out. Trish, you could fill the bathtub. I’ll fill some jugs in the kitchen. Want some hot chocolate, David, or coffee?”

  When Trish tiptoed in to kiss her father good-night, she had to hold back a sob. His gray look was back—in fact, his face looked almost green. Dark shadows shrouded his eyes and hollowed his cheeks. The curved plastic basin on the nightstand was a grim reminder of hospital days.

  “I love you,” she whispered as she dropped a kiss on his forehead. Her father’s eyelids flickered and he nodded ever so slightly, as if any movement might bring on the vomiting again.

  Trish met her mother in the doorway of the bedroom.

  “Don’t worry, Tee. He’ll be better tomorrow.”

  Trish wished her mothe
r’s words carried more conviction. And who was she to say not to worry?

  Trish chewed her bottom lip as she entered her own bedroom. Her gaze went to the verses printed on the cards she’d pinned on the wall: “…on eagle’s wings.”

  She spun out the door and back to the living room. The carved eagle stood on the mantelpiece, its wings spread wide over the pine boughs. Trish carefully lifted it down and went to the door of her parent’s bedroom. Marge was holding a straw to Hal’s mouth so he could sip a drink. The room was dim with only the light of a small lamp on the nightstand.

  Trish tiptoed around the end of the bed and made room for the eagle near the lamp. A smile lifted the corners of her father’s mouth as he whispered, “Thanks.”

  Trish awoke sometime during the night to put another blanket on her bed. She closed the small crack in the window that she always left open. No more snow fell in the circle of the yard light. At least that was good news. She snuggled back into her bed and fell into a deep sleep.

  The next day was dark and foreboding. Clouds hovered, shading from gun-metal gray to pussy willow. A biting wind whistled through the bare trees as David and Trish took care of the animals. All racing had been canceled due to the weather.

  “Dad looks terrible,” Trish blurted, slamming the bucket down in the tack room.

  “At least he’s not coughing or throwing up,” David tried to console her.

  “Yeah, thank God for small favors.”

  “Knock it off, Trish. Mom said—”

  Trish spun around and glared at her brother. “I don’t care what Mom said. She should have left him at the hospital where someone could help him.”

  “She tried. Dad wouldn’t stay.”

  “Oh.” Trish felt like crawling under a tack box.

  “If you’re through with your temper tantrum, maybe we should go up for dinner, before Mom comes down to see what happened to us.”

  “Sorry.” Trish closed the door behind them. A few minutes ago she would have slammed it. And that would have startled the horses. They didn’t like having both halves of their doors closed any more than she did. And right now Trish felt like all kinds of doors were closing on her.

 

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