Judas Horse_ An FBI Special Agent Ana Grey Mystery - April Smith [69]
“He wants to suck,” Megan explains plaintively.
McCord’s attention is still on Sara. “What do you think?”
“He looks all right.”
“He is all right,” McCord replies, cheery.
Megan: “Will he ever get his sight back?”
“Afraid not, Miss Tewksbury. The vet says it’s difficult to determine exactly the cause of the blindness, but the corneas are permanently scarred.”
“Poor sweetheart.”
“He’ll do fine with the right care. You’d have to keep his environment consistent, in a corral where he always knows where’s his water and feed. But his other senses will become more accurate, and he’ll be able to get around, maybe as a companion animal to another horse.”
“Like Sirocco?” Megan gazes up at McCord with the expectant look of a wife who really wants that washing machine.
“That’s what I was thinking. How long since she lost her baby?”
“She had that accident on the track and came to us…maybe three months ago?”
“Then she could still lactate.”
“Really? Nurse Geronimo?”
“It’s possible.”
He slides off his horse.
“So, Sara, do you like him?” he asks.
She shrugs. “He’s cute.”
“Like to keep him?”
“Keep him?”
“Look after him awhile, you and Sirocco, help him along. He needs a lot of TLC, and Dave Owens’s barn is full.”
Sara blushes. Her shoulders collapse with doubt. “Me?”
“You’re the one who found him. In my book, that gives you claim.”
McCord offers the rope.
Lifelong skepticism does not allow me to believe that Sterling McCord has traveled down the road this dusty summer afternoon simply to give Sara Campbell exactly what she needs, but as he patiently holds the lead out to her, whatever dark possibilities I conjure just don’t seem to hold. Whether McCord is an FBI agent on my tail or a cowboy doing a job, he is offering the girl what has been missing from her life.
Something to love.
Sara reaches out and her fingers close around the rope. The blind foal’s head comes up to her chest and his spindly legs match hers. She tentatively strokes his neck and fingers the fluff hanging off his chin.
“Let’s take him to Sirocco,” Megan says hopefully. “See if she’ll nurse.”
We walk in procession toward the barn—McCord leading his horse, Sara and the herky-jerky foal, Megan and I—passing the white cat, the ducks, and the wire cage, now empty.
Someone has stolen all the rabbits.
“We’re having a party,” Megan tells McCord. “A midsummer festival. Please come. I’d like to buy you a drink for taking care of Geronimo.”
“Not necessary but much appreciated. Especially if this lovely young lady’s gonna be there.”
He is talking about Sara.
Sirocco is standing placidly in the pasture when Megan leads the foal inside. She unsnaps the lead rope and withdraws, latching the gate. They approach and sniff each other. Sirocco dodges away. The baby chases her, and she wheels in the dust. He follows, absolutely desperate, but she won’t let him near, making little nips and kicks. Abruptly, when she’s ready, she just stops, and after a moment, he finds the teats.
Megan, leaning on the fence, quietly thumbs the tears from her eyes.
The gun that killed Sergeant Mackee is a single-shot bolt-action sniper rifle about fifty inches long, weighing between fourteen and eighteen pounds. Not the kind of thing you can hide in a sugar bowl.
Every day, with quiet urgency, I search another part of the house. Every night, lying in bed, I perform a mental inventory of the rooms, noting anything missing or out of place. I visualize the porch. Grasses have grown tall around the rusted sink. Thick stands of lavender and wild daisies remain unbroken around the crawl space underneath the steps, and the basement windows show an untouched glaze of dust, meaning nobody’s been creeping around down there, hiding weapons. The narrow windows at ground level look in on Dick Stone’s workshop, which is always locked, and I have never rubbed the dirt away to spy inside. Stone is likely checking his own inventory every day.
The front hall is a staging area of floating possessions—jackets, umbrellas, junk mail, Slammer’s skateboard—but there is also a closet jammed