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Authors: Nikki Tate

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BOOK: Jo's Triumph
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I chewed on that thought for awhile as we followed the trail along the side of a creek. Flame had slowed down again and I had to urge him on, hissing into his ear and squeezing my boots to his sides.

Up ahead, half a mile or so, I saw smoke rising from the chimney of Mountain Springs station.

“Git up, Flame. Go on! Your dinner's waiting.” I scooped my hat off my head and whacked him on his rump.

“Haalloooo!” I jammed my hat back on and squinted to see two figures and a horse emerge from behind the low building. The waiting horse whinnied and Flame's ears twitched.

We slid to a stop in front of the cabin at Mountain Springs and I half jumped, half fell to the ground, my legs wobbly.

“Jo,” I said.

“Trail's clear?” the stationkeeper asked, not concerned that I could hardly stand. If all the other riders got off and back on with no trouble, then so would I. I straightened up.

“Yup. No problems.”

“Very good. Hope you don't have no trouble from here on.”

As he talked, the stationkeeper pulled the mochila from Flame's back and threw it across a big roan's saddle.

“This is Bear. Faster than he looks.” The horse was big-boned and lanky, with a soft expression about the face.

The second man had already led Flame away to walk him until he had cooled down. I stood at Bear's head, rubbing the horse's face, gulping down the mug of coffee the other man had handed me. The new horse puffed warm breath against my neck and I turned and blew gently into his nostrils. Pa had told me once that the Indians greeted their horses that way because that's how horses greet each other.

Bear puffed back at me and I grinned,
forgetting for a moment how badly my legs ached.

“Sixty-four minutes. Not bad for a first ride from Ruby.”

Sixty-four minutes? If he'd said sixty-four hours I would have believed him.

Still, when he nodded up at the saddle I handed him my half-empty cup and climbed aboard, using Bear's mane and the saddle horn to heave myself all the way up.

The stationmaster jotted down the exact time we had taken to switch horses. “Two-o'-four. A bit slow here at the station. Git going.”

And off we went, charging down the track leading to Cherry Bend some ten miles away.

Bear's gallop strides must have been full twice as long as spunky little Flame's. Soon we drew even with the big dead pine at the bend in the trail. I looked back just in time to catch a last glance of the station. “Big dead pine just past Mountain Springs,” Smokey had said. “Turn slightly south and then pick up the trail again a quarter mile on.”

Almost without thought I adjusted to the bigger horse's different movement, keeping my back and hips loose so as not to work against him. In turn, Bear lengthened his stride even more and dropped his head. I patted his neck and an ear twitched back toward me, listening.

“Good boy,” I said.

Once again I was alone with a good horse and my thoughts. As we galloped on, my thoughts grew as sticky as the mud on this part of the trail. Difference was, I could dodge around the worst of the muck, but I couldn't do a danged thing about what I was thinking.

I'd been lucky so far, sure enough, but the men at the stations along the trail only cared about their pocket watches and keeping the mail moving. What would happen during my days of rest between runs? The men would have time to get to know me then. Somebody was sure to notice that I didn't walk quite right, or that I had no Adam's apple and really didn't need to shave at all. Ever.

Bear thundered along, carrying me closer to the next change of horses at Cherry Bend. We were soon covered with mud and the horse was tiring quickly because of the poor footing. Without Bear under me, both the mail and I would be in deep trouble.

“Whoa, now,” I said, stopping him so I could dismount to let him slither down a steep hillside without my weight in the saddle.

Once at the bottom, I scrambled back up as fast as I could and urged Bear on. Pa would have been proud, though Ma would have thought her only daughter a fool — an ungodly fool out in the middle of nowhere, instead of learning how to stitch samplers.

“My Lord! Bear!” I grabbed for the saddle horn when Bear gave a great leap sideways, nearly losing me in a puddle. A jackrabbit bounded away and I cursed the horse for being so foolish as to think a rabbit could have hurt him. Then I cursed myself for not paying attention.

After that, I watched more carefully.
Anything could be hiding in the bushes along the side of the trail. Coyotes. Wolves. Bandits. Miners mad with the fever. Indians at war. The more I thought about what might lurk around every bend, the more frightened I became.

“I'm real sorry, sir,” I'd say to the stationmaster at Butte. “I won't be doing another run. I just remembered a very important meeting in California with my brothers.” Or, “You see I can't possibly keep this job because I'm a girl.”

That would give them a turn! Dang it, Joselyn. Stop thinking that way! You ain't stopping what you've started.

Pa didn't like quitters. I was going to the gold fields whether or not I ever found my no-good brothers. Besides, there was the small problem of the money I had to pay back for the gear I'd bought. A man's only as good as the debts he pays, Pa used to say. Pa wouldn't have quit before he paid back every penny and neither would I.

Chapter Seven

The sun rose higher and higher. About mid-morning, maybe a mile before Cherry Bend, I saw four wagons and about a dozen men and boys on horses up ahead. I knew better than to stop to say
hello
, but I fully intended to tip my hat as I rode past.

I never had a chance 'cause as we drew even with the settlers, a sharp
crack
sent Bear skittering sideways. The loud noise was followed by an ear -splitting
bang
. The settlers were shooting at me!

“Hey! Stop! Mail coming through!” I screamed, looking frantically for a place to hide. “Stop firing!”

My hand went to my pistol, but I was already moving so fast that I figured I'd best not slow down, draw, and aim.

As I flashed past the sorry-looking group, I saw two men and a boy no bigger than I was, reloading their guns!

“Lord Almighty, help me!” I hollered to the high heavens. “Git up!” I hammered my heels against Bear's sides and the poor horse, exhausted though he was, plunged down the trail.

One last crack exploded behind us and then we were too far past them — unless they decided to come after us. Hunched forward over the big horse's withers I urged him on.

He tried, I know he tried, but Bear stumbled hard and this time, I came off.

I lay flat on my back on the trail not able to move, not able to breathe.

After a moment, I lifted my head and tried to suck in a little air.

“Whoa, Bear,” I whispered. All I needed was for my horse to take off and those crazy settlers to come after me. But Bear wasn't going anywhere. His head hung low and his eyes were no longer soft and gentle. They were glazed with pain.

Joselyn, git on up. You're just winded. I rolled over onto my side, drew my knees up to my chest, and lay there in the dirt counting slowly to five. Every breath I drew hurt like the dickens. Now. Git up now. I pushed up onto my knees and stood.

Bear stayed where he was, blowing hard.

“Easy there, boy. What's wrong?”

Ignoring the ache in my own back I touched his neck and then moved slowly around to his other side. “Oh, Bear!” His haunch was split wide open. Blood oozed along the length of the wound and dribbled in dark red streaks down his hind leg.

We'd come around a bend and down a small hill so I couldn't see the wagons any more, but I knew the fools who'd
shot my horse weren't far behind. I pulled my gun from its holster. Judging by how long we'd been riding, Cherry Bend had to be close by. With any luck, I wouldn't have to shoot anyone before I arrived.

I pulled at the mochila and slung it over my shoulders. Then I lifted off Bear's saddle and hid it behind some bushes at the side of the trail. Someone could come back for that later. Slipping the reins over the horse's head, I gave a gentle pull. Reluctantly, Bear followed me.

His head jerked with each painful step. Over and over we stopped. Over and over I made him walk on again.

I kept shifting the heavy mochila, but the stiff leather chafed against my neck. It was all I could do not to drop the danged thing and leave it for someone else to find.

With each step my back felt a bit better and I was able to breathe easier, but poor Bear was not so well off. It was harder and harder to get him going again after our little rests.

What a welcome sight it was when I finally spotted the peaked roof of the cabin at Cherry Bend. I let out a whoop loud enough to wake the dead and near dragged Bear off his feet trying to hurry him along.

Two men outside the cabin shouted back. When they saw I was on foot, they ran down the trail toward me, leading the fresh horse.

“Good Lord, son! What happened?”

“Would 'ya look at this?” the second man said from the other side of Bear. He held up his hand, fingertips crimson with fresh blood.

Bear's flanks heaved and white foam covered his neck.

“I got shot at,” I said. “Is he hurt bad?”

The other man shook his head. “Don't look like it's too deep. We'll clean him up, stitch that wound, and give him some extra rest.” He patted Bear's neck. “Come on, boy. You done good.” The man took Bear from me. My heart tugged. I wanted to stay with the horse, make sure he was all right.

The first man, who I presumed to be the stationmaster, looked me up and down.

“Indians?” he asked.

“No, sir. Settlers.”

“Settlers? For Pete's sake. What in tarnation do they think they're doing unloading buckshot into our good horses?”

“Don't rightly know,” I said. My hands shook and I pressed them to my sides. “Their wagons are stuck in the mud back down the trail a mile or so. I reckon you could ride back and find out.”

“Take my dog and my gun with me,” he said grimly. Then he turned to me. “You all right to keep on going?”

I didn't feel right at all. My legs trembled and I felt queasy deep in my gut.

We both looked back in the direction of the settlers and then I nodded. Who knew when those crazy folk might just get it in their heads to come to the stationhouse looking to rob anyone they might find?

“Good. This here is Blackie.” He helped me up onto the big, black
thoroughbred whose white blaze gleamed as if someone had polished it up. The horse shifted uneasily and I patted his neck as much to calm myself as anything.

“Go, then,” the stationmaster said. I turned Blackie and he knew just what to do.

“Godspeed!” the stationmaster shouted after me as we galloped away. I was beginning to understand just what the oath I had sworn really meant.

Mail first. Horse second. Rider last.

About half an hour past Cherry Bend, Blackie took a bad step and nearly went down.

Now what? I wondered, choking back tears.

“Whoa. Easy boy.”

I tried to pull him up, but he kept trotting, limping badly.

“Whoa now,” I insisted. The minute I was off his back, Blackie snaked his head out, and snatched a mouthful of grass.

“Sure. Think of your belly first.”

He shifted his weight to ease the pressure on his left foreleg. “Easy, fella. Stand still. Let me have a look.”

I squinted back along the trail, shielding my eyes against the sun's glare. An injury here meant a long walk back to Cherry Bend and, close as I could figure, just as far on to Butte. I chewed my bottom lip. Truth be told, if I didn't exactly feel happy riding fast along the trail, I felt real uneasy standing around just waiting for someone to come by and pick me off.

“Pa, what should I do?” Sure as day, Pa would not just stand around feeling sorry for himself. He'd look after his horse.

“How does that feel, boy?” I asked as I ran my hand down Blackie's leg. No heat or swelling — that was good.

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