![]() |
| James Bates |
James Bates
Mike McCormick
loved his horse. He was a Tennessee Walker of such a deep, rich chestnut color
that it made Mike’s eyes hurt sometimes if the sun hit the stately animal’s
coat just right. In preparation for his ride, Mike gently placed the worn, blue,
and red Navajo-patterned wool blanket onto the horse's back as the animal
quivered in anticipation, muscles rippling. Then he picked up the saddle,
admiring for the thousandth time the ornate, floral carving in the leather, and
with a practiced, confident motion, lifted the saddle, settling it perfectly in
place.
"There you go, old boy," Mike
said, taking a moment to run his hand over the horse's withers before
tightening the cinch and securing the end through a ring on the skirting.
"Looking forward to going for a ride?" The horse's name was Paint, a
name given to him by a previous owner, one who thought the white blaze on the
animal's forehead looked like someone had painted it on. Mike didn't mind the
name, and it seemed Paint didn't either, so it stayed.
Mike smiled when
Paint nodded his head in the affirmative. Whether it was in answer to the
question or to get rid of a persistent horsefly, it didn't matter. There was a
connection Mike felt with his horse that began the moment he'd laid eyes on the
animal four years ago. Four years and two months and sixteen days to be exact.
The day he’d been driving his family home from the funeral of Jessie, his seven-year-old
son. He’d spied the For Sale sign on a fence post next to a country road
and the horse standing by himself out in the pasture. The sleek animal had
turned its head, watching as Mike slowed his car, pulling off onto the grassy
shoulder where he coasted to a stop. He got out and walked toward the fence,
the brown expressive eyes of the big horse following his every movement. The
day was warm for April, and a light breeze blew from the south, ruffling the
horse's black mane and tail.
Suddenly, it
started walking toward Mike. Their eyes met, and in that moment, it seemed like
fate was suddenly intervening, driving a wedge into Mike's grief and sending a
wave of warmth through him that he was unable to explain.
" I think it's something Jessie
would want me to do," he tried to explain to Lauren, his wife, who, along
with their two daughters, was waiting patiently in the car. "It's like
he's trying to communicate with me. I think our son would have wanted me to
have this horse."
Lauren, who was grieving in her own
way and really didn't want to deal with her husband at that particular moment,
waved a hand at him to end the conversation. "Then go ahead and get him.
Just be careful."
‘Being careful’ became her mantra
from that day forward, and who could blame her? Jessie had died after being hit
by a car while riding his bicycle. He'd been on one of the many quiet, tree-lined
neighborhood streets in the area, only a few blocks away from home. He
shouldn't have been riding where he was, but Jessie always had a mind of his
own. 'Willful,' some would say. 'Independent' was how Mike looked at him. But,
whatever the term, his son was gone, gone for good and Mike began to use his
time on his horse to help alleviate his grief which, now, after four years, was
still there but much less so, thanks, in no small part, Mike felt, to the time
he spent riding his cherished horse.
"Let's go, boy," Mike
said, stepping into the stirrup and lifting himself up into the saddle,
wiggling his butt, enjoying the feel of the leather through his jeans. He was
fifty-five years old, clean-shaven, with a slight paunch and a stocky build. He
had short-cropped dark hair, speckled with gray, a narrow chin, and droopy dark
bags under his brown eyes. His appearance was unremarkable, and he knew it, but
when he rode Paint, well, he felt on top of the world. Something about being on
the horse made him feel happy and carefree. He loved the muscular motion of the
animal, the warm mixture of horse sweat and leather that filled his nostrils,
and the freedom of movement, pretending when he rode that he could head off in
any direction he wanted, and go anywhere in the world he felt like going. And
even though he knew he was only pretending it felt good to go somewhere,
anywhere, in his mind and escape, if only for a little while.
"Let's
go," he said, making a clicking sound, tapping the horse with the heels of
his cowboy boots. Off they went, Paint breaking into a smooth trot, the trot
Tennessee Walkers were known for.
The horse kept a
steady, almost metronome pace as Mike steered him down the driveway. It was
paved with crushed red limestone and easy on the horse's hooves. Little puffs
of dust hung in the still air as the horse trotted along, the early evening sun
reflecting off soft clouds of red like a colorful, floating mirage. At the end
of the drive was Old Orchard Way, a paved secondary road that ran north and
south through the county. He took a left, careful to stay off the gravel
shoulder. Paint moved happily at a steady gait as Mike acknowledged with a nod
and a tip of his hat the few cars that sped past, careful to keep off to the
side, 'Being careful,' just like Lauren had asked.
In five minutes,
they met up with the Lucie Line Trail, a state-maintained, ten-foot-wide, hard-packed
dirt track that ran east two miles to the town of Orchard Lake and then twenty
miles further on toward Minneapolis. In the other direction, the trail ran west
out one hundred and fifty miles to Blue Heron Lake in the middle of the state.
Usually, Mike turned left, heading back toward town, but today he was feeling
adventurous. He checked the traffic and then turned to the right onto the trail
toward the west, finally allowing himself to relax, slowing Paint to a walk and
feeling himself unwind and start to enjoy the serenity that came with riding
his beloved horse.
June blooming wildflowers of white
Campion and purple Dain's Rocket adorned the sides of the trail, vying for
space with purple vetch and yellow trefoil. Wild cherry blossoms filled the air
with a scent so sweet it made Mike's mouth water. Off to the left, in a thicket
of wild cranberry bushes, a finch sang a warbling song. From a clump of wild
sumac, a wren chattered back, as if in accompaniment. The sky was cloudless
blue, and the sun was moving down toward sunset, nearly level with the tree
tops and leaving a burning orange glow on the horizon. The day had been hot,
but now it was cooling, and Mike was glad he had chosen to wear a red plaid,
long-sleeve, pearl snap-button cowboy shirt. He waved a few deerflies away from
himself and Paint with his old, straw cowboy hat, and concentrated on enjoying
the horse's easy saunter as they made their way down the trail, careful to stay
toward the center.
The Lucie Line Trail was an old
railroad bed that had been reclaimed by the state in the early 1980s. It passed
through five counties and a mixture of forests, fields, and marshland, and was
elevated, with thick, brushy sides dropping away nearly ten feet in some cases.
The trail was popular for walking, jogging, and bike riding, but was rarely
crowded. Only a few used it for horseback riding, and that was fine with Mike.
He liked to get out and enjoy the peace and quiet, listening to the birds
singing, immersing himself in the natural world, and letting his mind go
wherever it wanted. He rarely thought about work. (He had an office job as an assistant
sales manager for Heartland Controls, an international electronic controls
manufacturing company.) Today, instead of thinking about work, he used the time
on Paint to unwind and relax. Lauren had taken the girls, Emma, fourteen, and
Chrissie, twelve, to their evening lacrosse game. Ever since Jessie's death,
she had thrown herself into raising their daughters. She had quit her job at
Mount Olivet Hospital in Minneapolis, where she had been head of
Administration, telling Mike that they could use her savings to help make ends
meet. Money wasn't a problem. His job paid him well; they had bought their home
nearly twenty years earlier for a fair price, a few years before housing values
had begun to shoot up. They lived in the western part of the Hennepin country
in an area that was nearly rural with rolling woodlands, marshes, and small
ponds as the predominant features. Like most of the homes in the area, they had
three acres, enough property to have a corral, and a small barn built for
Paint. On paper, life was good. However, Mike was often plagued by vague
feelings of unease, sometimes even mild depression. But he wasn't one prone to
considering using drugs or drinking to escape his problems. Instead, he chose
to be alone and spend time with Paint and get away from what he sometimes
referred to as “life” for a while.
Like he was doing
now, not thinking about if it was the right or wrong thing to do, but rather,
that it was something he had to do. So, to that end, he sat back in his saddle,
soaking in the sights and sounds of the oncoming evening. There were only a few
people on the trail. He let Paint have the lead, and the horse walked along
with an easy, undulating motion that was almost like a narcotic. Time slowly
slipped past, Paint's hooves clip-clopping down the trail, the sun moving
further below the horizon, twilight turning to ever-increasing shades of dark purple.
Mike awoke with a start from a deep
sleep. Night had fallen completely, the sky above nearly blocked by the tops of
tree branches forming a high arching cathedral over the trail. There were stars
out, but any starlight was dim due to the thickness of the leaves; he could
barely see where he was going.
"Whoa, boy," he said,
shaking himself alert and reigning Paint in. "We need to get back to home
base. Lauren will be worried."
Mike was upset
with himself; his wife didn't need more worries due to his negligence. The
Lucie Line was running through a thick forest. Up ahead, he could just make out
an opening to the left, probably a marsh or pond. The trail at this point was
straight as a stick, but he could only see a little way due to the near-complete
darkness, sight being more of an impression of things than true vision. The
forest on either side seemed intent on hemming him in, trapping him. He fought
back a vague feeling of claustrophobia as he turned the horse around.
Paint nodded his head as he made the
turn, chomping the bit in his mouth. "Come on, boy," Mike said,
touching the horse's sides with his cowboy boots. "Let's head for
home." They were just straightening out, and Paint was about to break into
a trot when, unexpectedly, up out of the brush popped a coyote, right onto the
trail and only ten feet in front of them. The scruffy animal planted its paws
and stopped dead. It took a second to stare at the horse and rider before it
snarled, baring canines that gleamed in the low light. It looked like it might
leap at them. Mike froze in the saddle, fear taking hold. Then the coyote
barked a few short, yipping bursts and snarled once more before sinking into a
crouch and running across the trail, where it dropped into the underbrush on
the other side and scurried to safety.
The movement
startled Paint so badly that he snorted and reared high on his hind legs,
whinnying and baying out of control, eyes wild. Panic caused the horse to step
backward, his hooves flailing, looking for purchase in the air. There was none.
He lost his balance, falling off the trail, tumbling down the embankment, and
sliding and twisting through twenty feet of brush all the way to the bottom.
When Paint finally came to rest, Mike's left leg was crushed and pinned beneath
the big animal.
It all happened so
fast that both horse and rider were momentarily stunned. Then Mike became aware
of a sharp pain in his leg at the same moment Paint instinctively made a sudden
move to stand up, his body pushing off of his rider's leg, magnifying the intensity
of the pain, ratcheting it up to an unbearable level. Mike screamed in agony as
a wave of nausea overwhelmed him. It was probably fortunate that he passed out.
Paint rose to his
feet, shaken but unhurt, reins hanging loose. The horse shook his head, stomped
his hooves, and looked around, snorting once or twice, distressed. The night
was deep and dark, the woods silent. After a minute, he got his bearings,
settled down, and moved to the prone body, stepping carefully on the uneven
ground. He bent down and nuzzled his rider. Mike didn't move.
It was probably the mosquitoes
feasting on his face that finally caused Mike to regain consciousness a few
minutes later. "Damn!” He slapped them away and then immediately screamed.
The pain in his leg nearly made him throw up. He'd never felt anything like it
before - sharp pulses surging through him like a tide of burning needles.
Stupidly, he tried to move, ratcheting up the pain to an unbearable level. He
nearly passed out again. "God..." His breath was labored. He closed
his eyes, but the mosquitoes buzzing around and feeding on any exposed skin
forced him to stay awake. He feebly waved at them. He was on his back, his head
facing down the slope, his crushed leg at an odd, unnatural angle. He had cuts
on both his hands, and it felt like something like a stick had punctured
through the skin under his right shoulder blade, where his shirt felt wet
against his back. Blood, no doubt.
He adjusted
himself as comfortably as he could and was closing his eyes again when there
was a loud snort, startling him back to reality. Panicking, he remembered the
coyote, wondering if it had come back to try to feed on him, a thought too
gruesome to contemplate. There had been rumors of black bear sightings in the
area, too. Frantically, he raised his head, trying not to move his leg, and
looked around, eyes slowly adjusting to the darkness, readying himself to fight
to the end if need be. With his fingers on his left hand, he groped through the
leaves and plant debris on the ground, looking for a stick or anything he could
use as a weapon. A movement over his shoulder caught his eye, and he dared to
look, expecting the worst. He immediately calmed down and smiled. It was Paint.
His old horse was standing right behind him at the bottom of the slope,
swishing his tail and shaking his head to keep the bugs away.
Mike couldn't help
but be touched. The animal had stayed with him rather than run off. "Hey
there, boy," he said affectionately, gritting his teeth, trying to ignore
the unrelenting pain. He reached his hand up to pet the horse. "How are
you doing?" Paint nodded his head and snorted again, stepping closer until
he was near enough that Mike could reach out and touch his leg. The connection
felt good. Mike ran his eyes over the horse's body as best he could in the
dark, judging him to be uninjured. "You look good to me, boy," he
said. "You look real good." He patted the horse’s leg again and then
lay back down, exhausted by the effort. He closed his eyes and passed out
again.
***
Lauren put the
phone down with an exasperated sigh and said to her friend, Kali, "Still
no answer." She shook her head, resigning herself to her husband's
uncharacteristic behavior.
"What's up with him,
anyway?" Kali had invited Lauren and her daughters back to her home for
lemonade after their lacrosse game. She didn't have a high opinion of Mike,
thinking him at best inattentive, and at worst, selfish and self-centered. "Why
doesn't he answer?"
"I don't know," Lauren
sighed again. "He's probably busy." With what she had no idea. He was
supposed to be on the trail with Paint, but should be back by now. "Maybe
he's out in the barn. He should at least have his phone with him." She was
tired and wanted to relax with her best friend and not think about Mike right then.
The girls were on the same lacrosse team as Kali's daughter, Heather. They were
letting off steam after the game, playing tag in the pool, laughing, and
shouting. The night air was cool and refreshing, the sky brushed with a white
wash of stars. Lauren leaned her head back in the lounge chair, put her feet up,
and closed her eyes with a grateful sigh. She could stay like this forever.
"I'll call him again in a little while," she said.
Kali was concerned for her friend.
Lauren was just over five feet tall and wore her auburn hair cut so it was just
long enough to pull behind her ears. Her eyes were brown and her complexion
dark. Over the last four years, ever since the death of Jessie, her expression
had taken on a more severe look; frown lines had formed around both sides of
her mouth, and she rarely laughed anymore.
Kali reached over
and patted her friend on the arm. “You just relax. I'll go freshen up our
drinks. Do you want something to munch on? Veggie's and hummus?"
Lauren opened her eyes and looked
gratefully at Kali. She shook her head. "No, thanks. Just the lemonade is
fine." Lauren watched her blond, tall, slim friend walk slowly toward the
sliding glass patio door that led inside the sprawling ranch house. Kali was a
confident, no-nonsense person - someone who Lauren depended on to talk with and
confide in. What would I do without her? Lauren thought to herself, not for
the first time today, or any other day for that matter. Then she turned back to
the pool and waved at Emma and Chrissie goofing around in the water, tossing an
oversized blue and white beach ball.
Lauren smiled a
rare smile. She loved to see her girls having fun and secretly wished she could
join them. But she didn't. Instead, she lay her head back and allowed herself
to close her eyes again, except her mind wouldn't shut down. Sure, she and Mike
had drifted apart somewhat after Jessie's death, but she still loved him and
was convinced he still loved her. All couples had to find ways to cope with
tragedies, didn't they? She and Mike were working through their grief in their
own way and in their own time. She had the girls, and Mike had...what? Well,
work and Paint, a horse she really did adore. She knew others felt she and Mike
should be focusing on their own relationship, working toward reestablishing the
bond they once had. Sometimes, though, like now, it was easier to make the best
of things the way they were, letting time heal their wounds, to paraphrase the
old adage.
They'd been to
couples counseling off and on, and Lauren felt they were making progress,
moving ahead with their lives. She had nothing to complain about and could cope
with her husband's occasional distance. In truth, though, she longed for them
to be closer and for him to communicate with her more. To that end, she was
planning a surprise. She had recently been thinking about getting a horse so
they could go riding together. She'd found a pretty little mare for sale at a
ranch just west of them. Her color was a mixture of warm honey and cream, and she
was named Butterscotch. The owner was willing to hold her for a least another
week.
She could picture
herself and Mike going for long, relaxing rides together, following their whims
and riding wherever they wanted, being spontaneous for a change. The image came
into her mind of her on Butterscotch riding next to Mike on Paint out on the
Lucie Line. The thought made her smile. She'd plan to talk to him about it
tonight. Why didn't he answer his phone?
"Here's some more
lemonade," Kali said, interrupting her thoughts. She walked across the
flagstone apron of the pool and plopped down on her lounge chair, handing over
an icy glass. "Drink up and relax."
"Thanks." Lauren glanced
at her watch and took a refreshing sip, appreciating the icy, sweetly sour taste of the drink. It was a few
minutes after 10:00 pm. She was starting to get worried about her husband.
Where was he? Then a splash from the pool caught her attention. Chrissie had
exploded into the water with a huge cannonball off the diving board. Lauren
laughed and applauded. She turned to Kali. "This is nice. The girls are
having so much fun. It's just the kind of evening we all need." She
settled herself more comfortably on the lounge and took another sip from her
glass. Just a few more minutes, she told herself. Then we'll get
going.
***
A young boy was
standing next to him when Mike regained consciousness.
"Geez!"
he yelled, startled, trying unsuccessfully to sit up, pain shooting through his
back and leg again. "What the hell are you doing here?" He lay back,
groaning.
"I heard your horse, mister,
and then saw you." The kid eyed Mike quizzically. "What happened to
you? Are you OK?" he asked. Then he carefully stepped past Mike and moved
over to pat Paint on the nose. The horse stood still, accepting the boy's
gesture, lowering his head, encouraging him to continue. "Hi there."
He started petting the horse, now using both hands, working up around his ears
and under the straps of his bridle. Paint whinnied softly in obvious pleasure.
"Coyote scared my horse," Mike
said, answering the boy’s question. He forced the words out and raised his head
to get a closer look at the boy. From what he could tell in the dark, he was a
skinny little kid dressed in a white T-shirt and baggy, dark colored basketball
shorts. He had on a baseball hat (Mike assumed the Minnesota Twins), worn
backwards, and he appeared nearly five feet tall. Mike guessed that he was
maybe ten or twelve years old. Suddenly, his vision fogged over momentarily,
then cleared, and he started to have trouble breathing. He realized there might
have been more damage done to him that he wasn't aware of. The unrelenting pain
was dulling his senses.
The kid kept petting Paint, moving
now to run his hands over the horse's shoulder and through his mane. "I
like your horse. What's her name?"
"She's a he and his name is
Paint," Mike panted. His back hurt, and his leg felt like it was asleep,
which was good, he figured. The pain was less, but still a constant throb. He
lay his head down and closed his eyes.
The kid moved over to him, swatting
away misquotes. "Mister, mister." The kid shook Mike's right
shoulder, causing him to scream “OW!” in pain. "Sorry," the boy said,
backing away, looking scared.
"Hold on, there." Mike had
come to and was holding up his hand as best he could. "Don't leave
me."
"I'm not. I'm just going to get
some bug spray."
Thank God, thought Mike. The
mosquitoes were swarming all over him, hungrily feeding. He watched the kid
shuck off a small backpack and take out a can. "What have you got
there?"
"Northwood's Off with
Deet," the kid said. "Best stuff in the world." He shook the
can, the aerosol rattle strangely comforting, and moved closer. "Close
your eyes, mister." Mike did as he was told, and in a moment the cool mist
of the spray drifted over his face. It felt wonderful. The kid then sprayed Mike's hands. Then
himself. When he was all done, he put the can in the pack and sat down on his
heels, peering into Mike's face. "You alright, mister? You don't look so
good. Do you have a cell phone to call for help?"
Mike shook his head, groaning. He'd
intentionally left the damn thing on his dresser at home. So he could have some
uninterrupted privacy. Stupid. The pain in his back now seemed to encompass the
entire upper part of his body. He felt the kid carefully move some leaf debris
and dirt from his clothes and then gently caress Mike's right leg, the one that
was undamaged. The touch was remarkably soothing.
"Where are you from?" Mike
finally asked. "From around here?" Speaking was getting exhausting.
"Naw," the kid responded.
"Not from around here."
"How old?" Mike could
barely speak. The pain was returning, but something about the kid made him
curious.
"Eleven," the kid said.
"Just finished sixth grade."
Geez, Mike thought to himself, he's
the same age as Jessie would have been. Then he had a thought. "What the
hell are you doing out here this time of night, anyway?" The effort to
speak sapped his strength. He lay his head down, closed his eyes, and started
to drift into unconsciousness.
Dimly aware, he heard the boy say,
"I just went for a bike ride and ended up here."
"Really?" Mike asked
skeptically, senses on alert. Despite his pain and ever-diminishing capacity to
think clearly, at heart, he was still a father. Something didn't ring true.
"At this time of night?” He stared at the kid. “Where are your
parents?"
"Oh, they're around," the
kid responded quietly. He looked into the forest, avoiding eye contact.
"They're busy with some other stuff," he added evasively.
Right, Mike thought to
himself. It sounded exactly like what the girls would say or even Jessie would
have said when pushed for the truth. He might be severely injured, but he'd
been a parent long enough to easily see through the kid's lie.
Right now, though,
he was too exhausted to argue. Instead, he played along, thinking it was
probably good to keep talking. Besides, having the kid around was giving him
hope that he was going to come out of this okay. He changed conversational
gears, getting more to the point. "So are you going to help rescue me or
what?"
"Sure!" The kid almost shouted.
He was enthusiastic and happy to be needed. He opened his pack again and took out
a bottle of water. "Here, mister," he said, unscrewing the cap. He
held it to Mike's lips. "Drink this."
The kid tilted the
bottle, cupping the back of Mike's head as he drank thirstily, excess water
running down his chin. The cool liquid felt wonderful on his overheated body.
The kid seemed to sense this, and he poured some into his hand and washed
Mike's forehead and face. Mike sighed a silent, grateful thank you. The
kid then took a drink before capping the water and putting it back in his pack.
With the water
washing off the mosquito spray on Mike's face, he went through the spraying
process again. By now, they both could see pretty well-their eyes finally
having adjusted to the darkness. "What else do you want me to do?"
the kid asked.
"Go get help," Mike said,
shifting up on his elbow. He could tell shock was setting in: the pain had come
back into his left leg and was now a throbbing, dull ache that was never-ending.
He needed to do something quick. "How'd you get here anyway?"
The kid pointed up onto the trail.
"My bike."
"Can you ride and get someone
to help me?"
The kid looked around. "Maybe
me and Paint can pull you up to the trail. They do stuff like that in the
movies all the time."
In spite of all the pain he was in,
Mike grunted out a laugh. "And then what? I get on the horse and ride
home?"
"Damn, mister. I was just
trying to help."
The kid got up and made a move up
the slope. "Hold on, hold on!" Mike, after him, "Don't get all bent
out of shape."
He stopped and spat out.
"What?" He was angry.
"Look, we need to work
together..." Suddenly, Mike screamed. He had moved just slightly to try
and get more comfortable and was leaning back when the point of a dead branch
went right into the wound under his right shoulder blade. "God damn
it!" was all he was able to say. Sweat popped up all across his forehead,
beads of it running down his face.
The kid quickly bent down to help
him, looking at what little of Mike's back he could see. "Man, mister,
you're bleeding a lot. I'll see if I can help." He pushed the sharp branch
out of the way. Then he reached into his pack and pulled out a tee-shirt.
"Here, let me see if I can stop the bleeding." Their argument was
forgotten.
Working together over the next few
minutes, the kid was able to use the shirt to staunch the flow of blood. He
took off one of his shoes and used the lace to wrap it around Mike's chest to
hold the shirt in place. The effort exhausted the injured man, and he lay back
with a groan, grateful for the padding of the kid's shirt. But the pain was
still there. They needed to do something fast. “You’ve got to go for help,"
Mike groaned. He was lying flat out on the ground, gasping for breath. God,
maybe he'd punctured a lung.
"Where should I go?"
"Do you live around here? Can
you go to your home?"
"No, I'm from back toward
Minneapolis."
Well, that answers part of the
mystery, thought Mike. "Fine. Go back the way you came.” Despite his
labored breathing, he was able to explain how to get to his house.
When he was done,
the boy asked, "Why don't I just take Paint? Wouldn't he know the
way?"
Smart kid. "Maybe. First, you
have to get up onto the trail." He was losing the strength to talk.
"I'll do my best," the kid
said. He spit on his hands and rubbed them together in preparation.
Just like in the
movies,
Mike thought, as he struggled to maintain consciousness, mentally crossing his
fingers that the plan would work.
It took about two minutes. The kid grabbed
hold of the reins like he was born to the task. Together they scrambled up the
slope, clods of dirt flying from the big animal's hooves, both of them slipping
and sliding and fighting through the brush until they finally reached the
trail. Paint shook himself, took a moment to get his bearings, and then
immediately turned to the right and started walking toward home.
"Whoa,"
Mike yelled, using the last of his strength. Yet as he watched the whole
process, he was impressed beyond words. "Tell him to 'Whoa'," he
gasped to the kid.
Between the two of them yelling,
"Whoa," Paint finally stopped. The kid positioned himself on the side
of the horse, grabbed the saddle horn, and jumped up, scrambling and kicking
his legs, fighting himself into the saddle, his feet dangling above the
stirrups. Paint, to his credit, stayed standing perfectly still through the
whole process.
"I'm ready, mister," he
said. At the sound of the boy's voice, the horse started walking down the
trail, heading for home.
Mike suddenly had a thought.
"Hey, kid," he yelled, using the last of his strength.
"What?" They were
beginning to move away at a steady pace.
"I'm Mike. What's your
name?"
"Jacob," came the reply,
fading into the distance. "They call me Jake."
Geez, thought Mike. That was
Jessie's middle name. Then he passed out, but not before saying a silent prayer
that the kid, Jake, would make it down the trail okay, find where he lived, and
bring help.
***
"Come on,
girls, time to head home!" Lauren waved to get their attention. Emma was
just diving into the pool.
"Aww, Mom," Chrissie
complained. "Can't we stay a little longer?"
"Nope. Go inside and change. We
leave in five minutes." Honestly, she didn't want to go and said to Kali,
"The girls always have such a good time here."
The cooler
temperature brought out the scent of a Japanese Lilac, its sweet aroma filling
the air. The night was so quiet that when the girls weren't yelling and
laughing, she could hear a chorus of frogs down in a nearby marsh. Off on the
edge of Kali's property near where the forest started, fireflies were out.
Lauren had spent the last fifteen minutes distracted in her conversation with
her friend, watching as they blinked trails through the darkness, trying to
guess where the next flash of light would appear, never successful, but not
caring either. It was a silly little game, but it was fun to play. Plus, it
took her mind off her worry: she had been unable to get a hold of her husband.
"Want to stay overnight? The
kids would love it if you did," Kali leaned over, smiling in
encouragement.
"Tempting as it sounds..."
Lauren checked her watch. "It's nearly eleven thirty. Mike will be
wondering where we are."
"You think? He could always
call you, you know." Kali not too successfully tried to keep her low
opinion of her friend's husband out of her voice. "All he seems to care
about is that stupid horse."
"Yes, well..." Lauren's
voice trailed off. She could see her friend's point. Lots of people felt Mike,
even though it’d been four years, wasn't handling the loss of their son too
well. But from her perspective, he was doing as well as could be expected. If
you haven't ever lost a child, don't be too quick to judge how parents cope,
was how she looked at it. She began to shake off her relaxed mood, gearing up
to head home."At any rate, we should go. I'll call you tomorrow."
Lauren pushed herself out of the lounge chair
and stood up, taking in the quiet, peacefulness of the night one more time. But
thoughts of Mike were now intruding. It was time to get home and find out what
was going on. In a few minutes, the girls returned, dried off, and changed into
shorts and T-shirts. Lauren pulled a white cotton cardigan closer to ward off
the night's chill. "Let's go, girls," she called to them. She and
Kali embraced goodbye as Emma and Chrissie waved to Heather and then joined
their mom. The three of them walked side by side to their Suburban.
"Is Dad home?" Emma asked.
"He should be."
"But is he?" Emma was a
persistent, exacting child.
"We'll find out, honey."
They got in, slamming doors, and Lauren started the engine. She carefully
turned around and drove down the long driveway, thankful for the illumination
of her headlights. She paused where the driveway met the dark county road and
looked both ways before turning onto the night. She switched the headlights to
high beam and accelerated cautiously to twenty-four miles an hour. Then she
carefully drove home.
In five minutes, they were pulling
into their driveway, headlights cutting a path through the darkness. Up ahead,
a few soft lights from inside the house shone the way. Off to the right was the
barn with an outdoor security light on over its double wooden doors. Lauren was
concentrating on driving the car up to the garage, wondering to herself where
Mike was, when suddenly Chrissie called out, "Mom! There's Paint!"
Lauren stopped the car and looked.
Standing next to the barn was Mike's horse. He was nosing at the closed door,
trying to get in, stomping his feet, and impatiently shaking his head. Probably
hungry, Lauren thought to herself. Then, a more immediate thought hit her, and
a rising panic set in. Where was Mike?
She jammed the car into park, turned
the engine off, and got out, running to the horse. Paint turned and took a step
toward her. He was comfortable with the members of the family; they all rode
him. He nodded his head up and down and snorted, loose reins flopping. He was
sweaty, dirty, and had burrs sticking to his tail and mane. Otherwise, though,
to Lauren's eyes, he appeared to be alright. As she approached him, she saw
something attached to a leather lace on his saddle. Emma raced ahead and got
there first.
"Mom, it's a note," she
said, opening it.
"What's it say?" Lauren
was worried about her husband but tried to hold her emotions at bay, not
wanting to upset the girls any more than they were. A tiny part of her hoped
this whole thing might be some kind of joke. But she was a realist. It couldn't
be. She had a strong feeling that something was very wrong. She was right.
"It says ‘On the trail to the
west. Hurt, " Emma said, handing the note to her mom, who quickly scanned
the tattered piece of paper, concurring with what her daughter had said. It
didn't look like Mike's writing, but if he was hurt...
"Girls, go and check the house
for your dad," she commanded. As they ran off, she took out her phone and
dialed 911. It was 11:45 pm. Her feeling was that something was horribly wrong.
By 12:20 am, Hennepin County Search
and Rescue was on the Lucie Line Trail, heading west, looking for Mike. One guy
was driving a county pickup truck, headlights on high beam, while four officers
rode in the back, scanning the sides of the trail with high-intensity
flashlights. Behind the truck, a line of hastily assembled volunteers spread
out on foot, carefully peering into the underbrush, their flashlights in
constant motion.
Lauren sat in her living room with
Kali. "Mike's gone missing. I'm scared," was all she had said into
her phone when she had called earlier. Kali came right away, prepared to hear
her friend's husband had left home or something. Anything idiotic Mike would do
at this point wouldn't surprise her in the least. She immediately downplayed
her opinions, however, hearing Lauren's tearful telling of her story. "I just
hope he's alright," Lauren said, sobbing when she'd finished. "The
girls and I need him safe and sound and to be here in our home. Where can he
be?"
Kali moved close and rubbed her
friend's back. "He'll be home soon. He'll be fine, just wait. Mike's
pretty strong." The words spilled out in a rush. Whether that last
statement was true or not, only time would tell. Kale hoped for Lauren and the
girl's sake, it was. She moved closer to console her friend and hugged her
tightly.
Emma and Chrissie were out in the
barn, their concern for their dad's safety running on overdrive, adrenaline
flowing. They were cleaning Paint, their nervous pacing back and forth, making
the job take twice as long as it normally would. "Do you think Dad's going
to be OK?" Chrissie asked. She had sprayed the horse off with a hose and
was now wiping him down with a towel, rubbing it over his coat and rinsing it
in a bucket of clean water. After a few minutes, the repetitive motion began to
have a calming effect on both her and the animal.
"I don't know, how would I
know?" Emma spit the words out. She was mad that her dad was causing them
grief, but, more than that, she was worried. Losing Jessie was hard enough, but
the thought of losing their father was too much to bear. "Let's just get
Paint cleaned up, alright?" She was running a curry comb through the
horse's mane, taking out the burrs and smoothing the stiff hairs with her
fingers as she worked. Working on the orderly task of cleaning the horse was
calming her down as well.
When Chrissie was done washing
Paint, she hung the towel on a post to dry, picked up a soft-bristle brush, and
started working it over Paint's coat. She stood on the opposite side of the
horse from her sister. After a minute, they both made eye contact. The barn was
silent except for Paint occasionally stomping one of his hooves. Outside of the
open door of the barn, darkness seemed to spill in. It had a sinister feel to
it. Where was their father?
Tears welled up in
Emma's eyes. Chrissie saw them, and then she too started crying. Something made
them join hands and lean across the horse's back. The heat of the big animal
warmed them. The closeness felt good. In a few minutes, their tears subsided,
and they both went back to work in silence, bonded by the mutual hope that
their father was going to be home soon and that he was going to be fine and
life, as they knew it, would get back to normal.
They worked into
the night until, much later, the job was done. Then they put Paint in his stall
with a bucket of fresh oats and clean water, and went inside to join their
mother. Exhaustion had finally set in.
At 3:10 am, Lauren's phone buzzed.
She hadn't been asleep, but, instead had been talking to Kali non-stop about
how much she loved her husband how much Mike meant to her, and how she couldn't
live if something had happened to him, not after what had happened to Jessie,
and what would happen to the girls if their father wasn't there with them...
And on and on.
When the phone
buzzed, Lauren fumbled once but was able to get a hold of it, her hands
shaking. Kali watched as her friend nodded her head. Then she smiled, sighing
with relief, covering the phone. "They found him! He's going to be OK!"
On the floor where they had fallen asleep, the girls stirred, coming awake.
"Mom?" Emma asked, rubbing
her face.
"Dad?" Chrissie said, not
taking her eyes off her mother.
Lauren held up a finger, 'one
second,' and listened some more. After a minute, she hung up and held out her
arms. "Come here, girls," she said. Her two daughters crawled quickly
across the floor, came to her, and were enfolded into their mother's arms.
"They found your dad out on the trail. He's injured, but he's going to be
OK." She grinned over the heads of her daughters at Kali, who smiled back
at her, thinking that it was about time her friend had something good happen in
her life. She obviously cared about her husband and, hopefully, one day, he
would reciprocate the feeling.
"What are you going to do
now?" Kali asked.
"The girls and I are going to
the hospital," Lauren said, standing up. She pulled the girls, who were
instantly wide awake, with her. She was happy and excited. "I guess Mike's
been asking for us."
Kali got to her feet, catching
Lauren's energetic mood. "Let's go, then," she said, grabbing her
purse and leading the way to the door. "I'll drive."
***
Two days later,
Mike was home from the hospital, recuperating. Lauren had set up a bed for him
on a couch in the family room: a big, open area, with the kitchen at one end
and the living area at the other, separated by the couch Mike was on and an
informal sitting area in between. A double set of sliding glass doors along one
wall let him see the backyard. Before he'd come home, the girls had talked
Lauren into going to a local garden store where they'd purchased overflowing
pots of red and pink geraniums, white trailing bacopa, orange and yellow
marigolds, and bright blue cascading verbena. They'd carefully placed the pots
on the patio outside the glass doors so Mike could see them.
All the colorful
flowers lifted Mike’s spirits, which were pretty high anyway. When the sun was
shining, like it was this morning, the family room was the most cheerful place
in the house. The open floor plan made it easy for Mike to see everyone and be
a part of the day-to-day activities of Lauren, Emma, and Chrissie. Which is
what he wanted more than anything.
"I don't want to be away from
any of you ever again," he kept saying, over and over again, both in the
hospital and once he was home, obviously shaken by his experience.
Lauren thought it was sweet for him
to be talking like that; something he hadn't done in the last four years.
Nevertheless, the sentiment was starting to lose some of its punch after
hearing it so many times. "Honey, we aren't going anywhere, are we,
girls?" Lauren had told him time and time again, hoping he'd eventually
believe her.
"No, Dad, never," Chrissie
would say to him, rushing to hug him.
Emma was by nature somewhat reticent,
but still thankful her father had returned from his accident safe and
relatively unscathed. His left leg tibia had a hairline fracture, and he'd
strained some tendons. The puncture in his back only did muscle damage and
would heal nicely. Mike’s oldest daughter had appointed herself an entertainment
coordinator and had been enjoying some much-needed quality time with her dad.
They had been playing cribbage almost non-stop since his return, chatting and
laughing like old times.
There was a definite change in him, that was
for sure. A change for the better as far as Lauren was concerned.
"I love how nice the walls look
in here," Mike remarked. It was his first morning back home, and it was as
if he was seeing the color of the room for the first time. He had slept well
the night before, felt rested and ready to put the “ordeal,” as he put it,
behind him. "What would you say, Lori, light green?"
Lauren smiled at him, calling her “Lori”,
a term of endearment he hadn't used since Jessie had died. "Don't you
remember?" she chided him. "It's sea-green. We picked it out last
year."
Mike shook his head, grinning.
"I've been kind of in a fog for some time, now, haven't I?"
That's certainly an
understatement, Lauren said to herself. Try for four years. But she
kept her thoughts to herself, preferring instead to enjoy the novelty of having
her husband more like himself than he'd been since Jessie had passed away.
"We've all been trying to deal with Jessie's death in our own ways,"
she told him.
"But you've been doing such a
good job holding things together," he countered. "The girls are doing
great," he shook his head, chagrined. "I haven't been much help, have
I? I'm going to try to do better, starting right now." As if to prove the
statement, he made a move to get up and suddenly grimaced, the pain still
evident. "Well, maybe I'll take a rain check," he groaned, lying back
down.
Lauren smiled to herself. She had
been sitting in an easy chair next to him, keeping him company, having a cup of
tea, and glancing through a home improvement magazine. She was enjoying the
homey sensation of starting to feel like a complete family again, and, even
though it had only been a couple of days, she was daring to let herself think
that maybe their situation had turned around. Maybe Mike would become more of
the man she needed him to be: more involved in raising the girls and more of a
husband who helped rather than hindered around the house. She allowed herself
to hope Mike really was changing and that it would be for the better and that
it would last. She set her magazine down, stood up, came over, sat on the couch,
and ran her fingers through her husband's hair. It was thinning, had been ever
since Jessie's death, but the intimate gesture felt good to her.
Mike responded, looking into her
eyes. He took hold of her hand and kissed it, "I love you so much. I don't
know what I'd do without you."
Lauren smiled and lay her head on
his chest. She could feel his heart beating. She felt the warmth of his body.
Suddenly, all of the chores she had planned: getting the laundry going, dusting
and sweeping the first floor, and vacuuming the upstairs, didn't seem so
critical anymore. She stretched out next to him. "I'm not going
anywhere."
Mike sighed and smiled, looking up
at the vaulted ceiling with its rough beams, giving him a sense of security. He
felt relaxed and was happy to be spending time with his wife. He put his left
arm around her shoulder and kissed the top of her head. "I was wondering,”
he said. “Have you ever thought about getting another horse? Lately, I've been
thinking it would be nice for us to go riding out on the trail. You know, do
something fun together." He ran his fingers gently through her hair.
Lauren laughed, thinking he was
wondering about something else. She reordered her thoughts. "Funny, I've
been thinking the same thing, you know, about getting a horse." She
briefly told him about the little mare Butterscotch she’d been looking at. When
she was done, she asked what he thought. Mike nodded and grinned in approval.
Before he could say anything, she asked, "Where'd you get your idea?"
"I've been thinking about it
for a while, but it really started coming together when I was out on the Lucie
Line waiting for help." Then he stopped and slapped his forehead.
"God, I forgot to ask you! What about Jacob? Jake? The kid. Where is he?
What's happened to him?"
Lauren sat up, perplexed,
"Jake? What in the world are you talking about?"
"Jake. The kid who rode Paint
home. Skinny, little guy, but pretty friendly. Wore a baseball hat. Resourceful,
too. He was the one who put that T-shirt bandage on my back."
Lauren smiled at him and went back
to her chair and her tea and her magazine. She'd heard an automobile drive up
and car doors slamming, the girls getting dropped off from lacrosse practice by
Kali. They'd be coming through the door any second and would probably give
their parents no end of grief about being intimate together on the couch, as
good as it had felt.
She smiled at
Mike. “Sorry, honey. There was no Jake, no little kid, no nothing. Just the
note you wrote, stuck in the saddle, telling us where you were. You were
probably hallucinating seeing someone. The doctor said that happens sometimes
if you're in a lot of pain." She opened her magazine and took a sip of her
tea, chamomile, appreciative of its flavor and relaxing effect.
Mike wasn’t ready to let it rest. He
sat up the best he could. "I never wrote any note, he stated emphatically.
“I couldn't. I was in so much pain I could barely stay conscious, let alone
think to write something. The kid rode off to our house on Paint. I swear he
was there with me ."
"Well, I never saw
anyone." As far as Lauren was concerned, Mike was still suffering some
sort of hallucinogenic after-effect from his accident. A little part of her
wondered about what he'd said, though. Could it have happened? Too bad
they'd lost the note in all of the confusion of that night.
Just then, Emma
and Chrissie bounded into the room and interrupted her thoughts, their
strawberry blond long hair tied back in ponytails, faces glistening with sweat.
They were laughing and joking, obviously in good moods. Whether it was from
practice or having their father home, Lauren couldn't tell. She hoped it was
both. "Girls, did either of you see anyone around Paint when he came back
the other night? You were out at the barn with him. Your dad thinks there might
have been a boy around somewhere."
Emma rolled her eyes, chiding her father.
"No Dad, no one. I think you're making the whole thing up." Then she
smiled a big smile and ran over to the couch and hugged him, putting that awful
night out of her mind. "I'm so glad you're back and are going to be OK."
"Me, too," Chrissie added,
plopping on the couch and hugging her dad as well. "Double glad." She
looked at her sister, gave her a high-five, and they both started laughing.
Lauren was amazed at how, in just a
day, the girls had suddenly become more relaxed and less tense. It must have
to do with how Mike is behaving, she thought. He's being more attentive
and thoughtful, talking to them, talking to me. It's a start. I hope he keeps
it up.
From Mike's point of view, all he wanted to do
was whatever he could to bring his family back together again. He quickly
decided to put the thought of Jake out of his mind, putting the arguments aside
and willing to accept that the kid was only in his imagination. After all, he'd
been pretty banged up and had lost a lot of blood. It made sense that he
imagined the boy, who really did look a little like Jessie, might have looked
like if he'd grown to that age.
Stop it! Mike shook his
head to get rid of that kind of thinking. He made a silent vow right then never
to let thoughts of what may or may not have happened on the Lucie Line Trail
ever cloud his mind again. It was time to put the entire experience behind him. All he cared about right now was his family
and being home and safe with them.
He turned to his daughters. "Hey,
girls," he said, giving Lauren a wink. "Your mom and I have been
talking. What do you think about us all getting another horse?"
And he smiled,
then, at the response to such a simple idea when both the girls jumped up and
down and clapped their hands, cheering and joyfully echoing each other. ”Yes,
yes, and YES!"
Mike watched as the girls danced around the
room. He grinned a wide grin and looked over at Lauren, who gave him a wink
back and an encouraging smile. She was all on board. "Well, girls,"
he called out, "Let's do it then!"
***
That same day,
when Mike and his family were talking about getting another horse, out on the
Lucie Line Trail, right where Paint had reared up and fallen off the side,
there was a movement in the underbrush. Suddenly, a coyote jumped up onto the
trail, paused, and looked both ways. In an instant, he realized he was all
alone. He relaxed, sat down on his haunches, and bit at a tick crawling across
the top of its paw. The coyote was a male in its third year and not yet
attached to a pack. He roamed the woods and fields around the town of Orchard
Lake, every now and then venturing into the well-kept, manicured yards common
to the homes in the area, looking for any inattentive cat or small dog. He was
always on the lookout for food and getting to be a good hunter; rarely did a
day pass without him being hungry.
He chomped down
the tick and took a survey of the trail and the woods around it. Then he
sniffed, catching the faintest whiff of horse and human. In his brain, the
memory came back of the commotion a few nights back with the truck and all the
humans with their lights and all the racket they'd made. He remembered the
encounter with the horse and the human. He had escaped the horse's hooves and
scurried for safety into the brush, but he hadn't run away. No, instead, he'd
circled back across the trail and hidden pressed himself to the ground nearby
under a thick tangle of grapevine. He'd been curious and had watched the horse
and the human.
After waiting for
a while, he saw the little human come along, and a while later, he and the
horse left and went down the trail back toward town, and, a while later, he'd
seen many humans come around and the big human get taken away. He'd stayed
crouched out of sight after the big machine had left and the humans had gone
until, finally, the night had become quiet once again. Then he'd come out of
his hiding place and go to where the big and little humans had been with the
horse and look around, taking a few minutes to thoroughly sniff the ground.
Finally, he had relaxed. The forest returned to normal with the night sounds of
the measured hooting of an owl and the quiet murmurings of frogs and other
amphibians in the nearby swamp. Satisfied all was well, he had left the area
and gone on with his hunting.
But now, on this
pleasant summer morning with the sun shining brightly in the sky, curiosity was
starting to get the better of him. He put his nose to the ground and sniffed in
the dirt. He picked an aroma, a scent of something familiar. He turned and looked
away from the rising sun, out to the west. There was the faintest mark on the
hard-packed surface. Narrower than his paw, the mark was nearly smooth with
little bumps in it. The coyote bent and sniffed again. It had a faint odor,
like the smell on the roads with the fast machines on them that he so carefully
avoided, crossing over only now and then. There was the faintest scent of a
human, too. Not an old human, but a young one. Experience had taught him the
difference. It brought back the memory of the other night when there had been
all of the commotion and the young human had been there. It was his scent.
The coyote thought
for a moment about following it to see where it went, but decided not to. He
knew the dirt trail went away for a long distance, out toward where the sun
would set later that day. Many miles. Today, he wanted to stay close to the
woods he called home. He'd picked up a trace scent of a female earlier that
morning, just after sunrise. She was traveling alone, unattached like him.
Maybe they could join up and start hunting together. If she were good, they
could perhaps start a pack of their own.
Suddenly, his ears caught a sound. Something was down in the brush on the other side of the trail. A rabbit, maybe. He crouched and ever so quietly made his way to the edge, sniffing, his nose to the ground. He paused, watching, his eyes quick to catch any movement in thick undergrowth. His heart beat rapidly, and his muscles tensed. He was ready. He made his move and pounced. In an instant, he’d disappeared into the underbrush.

No comments:
Post a Comment
We welcome your comments related to the article and the topic being discussed. We expect the comments to be courteous, and respectful of the author and other commenters. Setu reserves the right to moderate, remove or reject comments that contain foul language, insult, hatred, personal information or indicate bad intention. The views expressed in comments reflect those of the commenter, not the official views of the Setu editorial board. рдк्рд░рдХाрд╢िрдд рд░рдЪрдиा рд╕े рд╕рдо्рдмंрдзिрдд рд╢ाрд▓ीрди рд╕рдо्рд╡ाрдж рдХा рд╕्рд╡ाрдЧрдд рд╣ै।