Rodeo Rocky Read online




  © 2008 by Jenny Oldfield

  Cover and internal design © 2008 Sourcebooks, Inc.

  Cover photo © Mark J. Barrett & Kimball Stock

  Internal illustrations © Paul Hunt

  Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks, Inc.

  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

  Published by Sourcebooks Jabberwocky, an imprint of

  Sourcebooks, Inc.

  P.O. Box 4410, Naperville, Illinois 60567-4410

  (630) 961-3900

  Fax: (630) 961-2168

  www.sourcebooks.com

  Originally published in Great Britain in 1999 by Hodder Children’s Books.

  Cataloging-In-Publication data is on file with the publisher.

  Printed and bound in the United States of America.

  VP 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2

  With thanks to Bob, Karen, and Katie Foster, and to the staff and guests at Lost Valley Ranch, Deckers, Colorado

  Contents

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  The Horses of Half Moon Ranch Series

  Wild Horses

  Crazy Horse

  Johnny Mohawk

  Midnight Lady

  Third-Time Lucky

  About the Author

  1

  “… Yup, I guess over the years I broke just about every bone in my body,” Hadley Crane told Kirstie Scott.

  The head wrangler at Half Moon Ranch leaned on the fence at San Luis Competition Grounds to reminisce. His white Stetson was pulled well forward to shield his lined, brown face, his gray eyes were alert to the activity in the arena.

  Kirstie, too, watched the team-roping competition with mounting interest. The next steer was made ready, prodded and pushed into the narrow wooden chute. Two riders entered chutes to either side. They sat astride tough, well-built quarter horses—horses that had been trained to round up cattle on the ranches that nestled in the foothills of the Colorado Rockies. The nerves of both riders and horses were strung tight as the steer barged and kicked inside its narrow trap, demanding to be released into the arena.

  “I broke my left leg three times,” Hadley went on. “My hip got trampled, I dislocated this right shoulder more times than I can count …”

  “All in rodeo accidents?” Kirstie stood on the bottom bar of the white fence to get a better view. The barrier went up, the steer charged into the dusty ring.

  “Sure thing. Mostly bulldogging; that’s a mighty risky event, when you have to land on eight hundred pounds of bullock and wrestle him down. And bronco riding; that’s bad too.” Hadley watched the red steer raise the dust as it skidded to a halt across the arena, turned right around, and charged back the way it had come.

  After a ten-second delay, the two cowboys were let loose too. Whooping and yelling, digging their spurs deep into the horses’ flanks and with the cries of a sizeable San Luis crowd in their ears, they swung their ropes and headed for the bullock.

  Kirstie winced as the first rope circled the bullock’s head and the noose tightened. The frightened animal was dragged to a sudden halt. Now it kicked and writhed as the second cowboy swung his lasso. She glanced up and read the bold words printed on the banner that fluttered in the breeze over the entrance to the arena: “Keeping the Dream Alive!”

  “I always feel sorry for the steers,” she told Hadley quietly.

  The ex-rodeo man shrugged and smiled briefly. “Yup. But I reckon you’re soft on any critter with four legs. Seems to me you like ’em better than the two-legged kind.”

  Kirstie didn’t deny it. She watched the second cowboy, the heeler, lasso the steer’s back legs and jerk it to the ground. The poor animal lay bound and helpless in the dust as the horses pranced and the riders dismounted.

  “Nine point six seconds!” the voice on the loud-speaker announced. The crowd of two thousand people roared and cheered.

  Quickly they untied the defeated animal and cleared the arena, ready for the next team. Scores flashed up on the electric scoreboard.

  “Hey, Kirstie.” Lisa Goodman sidled up to her friend to watch the closing stages of the competition. She wrinkled her nose at the gray dust that blew out of the arena, then brushed her white sweatshirt and ran a hand through her curly red hair.

  “Hey,” Kirstie replied, eyes narrowed and fixed on the next steer lined up in the chute.

  “Tell me never to wear white to the rodeo,” Lisa grumbled, squinting down at her grubby sweatshirt.

  “Never wear white…” Kirstie began.

  Lisa jostled her sideways. “Not now—next time!”

  “What next time?” As Kirstie turned to glance at her best friend, the wind blew her fair hair in wisps across her hot face. There was grit in her eyes and a growing sensation that this would be her last visit to the competition grounds. “Tell me never to come to another rodeo again,” she countered.

  “OK: never come…” Lisa’s voice was drowned by the cheers of the crowd as the final bullock was released.

  “Isn’t this great?”

  “Wow, did you see that last team? Nine point two seconds to rope that bullock!”

  “It came out of the squeeze like a black bullet! Those guys sure knew how to rope a steer!”

  Eager voices commented on the team-roping event as the crowd waited for the result.

  “OK, Kirstie?” Sandy Scott joined her daughter, Lisa, and Hadley at the ringside. A taller, older version of Kirstie with the same fair hair and large, gray eyes, she wore a pale straw Stetson and light denim shirt over her blue jeans and tan cowboy boots and was followed by a bunch of guests from Half Moon Ranch.

  “Hmm.” Kirstie chewed her lip and said nothing, knowing that the rodeo wasn’t her mom’s favorite thing either. It was the ranch guests whose eyes had lit up when they heard about the regular San Luis event. They’d asked Sandy to drive them the fifteen miles into town so they could cheer, clap, take photographs, and enjoy the hustle and bustle of the July show day.

  “What’s next?” one hyped-up kid asked Hadley. The dark-haired, eleven-year-old boy climbed up on the fence and sat kicking his heels against the wooden rails. He looked eagerly across the arena toward the empty chutes.

  “Wild horse race,” the wrangler mumbled, low and slow. “You have teams of three men trying to get a saddle on a wild mustang and ride him around that track, see?” He pointed toward a race course that ran for half a mile around the perimeter of the competition grounds. “’Course, the mustang don’t wanna know. He was out on the plains of Wyoming a couple of days back, before they drove a truck out there to rope him in and drive him here specially for the competition.”

  “Cool!” Brett, the young kid, was impressed.

  “After that, it’s the bulldogging event, and last of all comes the bronc riding,” Sandy told him. “Then back home to Half Moon Ranch for a cookout by Five Mile Creek.”

  Brett Lavin nodded and switched his gum from cheek to cheek. His father, Dale, told him to stay put while he went to place a bet on his favored team for the wild horse race.

  Amidst the excited chatter and the people milling about, Kirstie kept her eyes on the empty corral beyond the arena. “What happens to the musta
ngs after the race?” she asked Hadley in a quiet voice. It was a question she’d never considered in the four years she’d been living at the ranch.

  “They end up down at the sale barn,” the wrangler explained as he nodded to a couple of old friends—tall, skinny men in checked shirts and Stetsons like Hadley himself. “If they’re lucky, a rancher like Jim Mullins at Lazy B or Wes Logan up at Ponderosa Pines will pay good money for them, break them in, and use them as working horses on the cattle roundups in spring and fall.”

  “And if they’re not lucky?” Lisa cut in.

  Hadley shrugged. “Some of these ex-rodeo horses are real mean. There’s not a lot you can do with ’em.”

  As Kirstie weighed up his answer and the uncomfortable silence that followed, she frowned. “They wouldn’t be mean if they were allowed to stay out in Wyoming where they belong. No horse is born mean!”

  Brett Lavin had latched onto what he sensed might be an argument between the old ranch hand and the boss’s daughter. He clicked his gum between his teeth and stared intently.

  Sandy caught Kirstie’s eye and gave a small shake of her head. “Not now!” she whispered.

  “Hey, why don’t we go over to the corral to watch them unload the horses from the truck?” Lisa suggested brightly, linking arms with Kirstie and dragging her away.

  “Am I right?” Kirstie insisted as the two girls threaded their way through the crowd. “Do you know any horse that’s born mean?”

  “OK, OK, don’t yell at me!” Lisa cut through a group of cowboys who stood waiting for the result of the team-roping event. When the scoreboard flashed up the winners to another loud cheer, the men turned to shake hands. “I’m on your side, remember.”

  Though she had lived all her life in the small town, and her mother, Bonnie Goodman, ran the End of Trail Diner on San Luis’s main street, Lisa spent a lot of her time at her grandfather’s place in the mountains.

  It was there, at Lone Elm Trailer Park, that Kirstie had first met and made friends with the red-haired girl during the Scotts’ first summer at Half Moon Ranch. They’d been nine years old and had swapped friendship bracelets at the end of the school vacation, before Kirstie had started her first term at San Luis Middle School.

  Since then, at exactly the same point in the year, when the aspen trees were silver-green in the mountain valleys and the clear lakes sparkled under deep blue skies, the girls had ridden out to Hummingbird Rock and exchanged new bracelets. Four bracelets for four years of friendship.

  “Sorry,” Kirstie told Lisa now, as they arrived at the corral where a large truck was backing in. Two men ran to the rear of the truck to lower a ramp, and before the girls had time to take in what was happening, a bunch of horses clattered down the metal slope.

  Noise, sudden light, strange smells. The mustangs emerged from the trucks with nostrils flared and ears set back. They wore rough rope head collars and trailed lead ropes after them. There were grays and blacks, tan horses and sorrels, Appaloosas and paints, all with long, flowing manes and frightened eyes. They kicked and bucked as they came out of the truck, rearing up in the bright sunlight, their hooves flailing and thudding into the dust.

  Holding her breath, half in horror at the conditions in which the horses had been kept, half-fascinated by their wild strength and beauty, Kirstie stared.

  Soon a second truck backed into the corral to deliver more horses for the race. The ramp went down with a clatter and the mustangs fled from their dark prison. They squealed and whinnied, heads thrown back, eyes rolling in fear. And this time, Kirstie fixed her gaze on one particular horse.

  He was a beautiful bay stallion with a jet-black mane and tail, bigger than the rest and first out of the silver truck. And he was crazy. He bucked and kicked, twisted, spun around on the spot, head down, thumping the ground. The sun shone on his rich, brown coat; his strong shoulders and rump rippled with muscle as he screamed out his protest at being torn away from his endless plains, his sea of grass, his wilderness, to be dumped here, inside this circle of wooden barriers and curious, staring faces.

  “Say!” A spectator whistled and sighed at the sight of the magnificent horse. “That’s where I’d put my money if I was a betting man!”

  “A real rodeo champion,” his neighbor agreed.

  The horse reared and threw back his head just feet from where Kirstie and Lisa stood.

  Kirstie couldn’t take her eyes off the bay horse. She heard the men’s amused talk and wondered how they could treat him so lightly. She gasped as a wrangler darted toward the horse, seized the fifteen-foot lead rope, and began to drag him across the corral. The horse fought back, pulling his head away and almost wrenching the rope out of the man’s hands. But he was hemmed in by other mustangs, all led by wranglers who crowded them toward the wooden chutes that led into the main arena. He was forced to go with the flow.

  Then he was in a chute, a barrier came down behind him, and he was trapped once more.

  “Look at him kick!” The man next to Kirstie had followed the progress of the big bay horse.

  “Rodeo Rocky!” his friend added, chuckling at the wild horse’s antics inside the squeeze. He gave him a name that seemed to suit his bucking, kicking tricks. “Yeah, I’ll put five dollars on that horse. Five on Rodeo Rocky; make no mistake!”

  The starting pistol had fired and the wild horse race had begun.

  Kirstie’s attention was glued on Rodeo Rocky as he bucked and kicked his way into the arena. She ignored the teams of men standing with saddles inside the ring, the fresh cheers, the announcements over the loudspeaker. She had eyes only for the bay.

  Between her and Rocky was a fence. Men with numbers on their backs were running to catch hold of trailing lead ropes as other horses charged and twisted, skidded and spun. Dust was rising, there was a terrible heat and a feeling of fear.

  “Rocky was a lead horse,” she whispered to Lisa through gritted teeth. “You can tell he was in charge of the herd by the way he handles himself.”

  The stallion stood his ground amidst the chaos. His ears were flat, his eyes were hard. Kirstie saw him curl back his lip and snake his neck to bite the cowboy who approached him. The man leaped back just in time.

  “Grab the rope, Jake!” he yelled to one of his partners.

  A thickset wrangler in black T-shirt and jeans managed to take hold of the end of Rocky’s lead rope and twist it around his waist. He dug in his heels and leaned back with all his weight as the horse reared and pulled.

  “Jake Mooney’s the anchor man in black,” Sandy Scott told the girls. “He’s the best there is.”

  Kirstie hadn’t heard her mother approach as the race began, but she didn’t turn around. Instead, she nodded and kept her gaze fixed on Rodeo Rocky.

  “He’s got Gary Robbins on his team as mugger.” Kirstie’s mom put one foot up on the bottom rail of the fence and leaned forward.

  The mugger was the man whose job was to take hold of the taut rope and ease his way along toward the struggling horse. Kirstie knew what would happen next; Robbins would soon grasp the horse around the neck in a headlock, then reach out and pinch the top lip hard. The horse would squeal with pain and, while the hurt was bad, the third team member would dart in with the saddle. Before the horse knew it, the cinch would be buckled under his belly, and the rider would be on his back.

  “Gee, d’you see that?” a spectator cried.

  Kirstie gasped and gripped hold of the fence.

  Rocky had twisted his head free of the mugger’s lock and strained against the anchor man. By now, other teams had saddled and mounted their horses. Robbins swore and moved in to try again.

  This time he grappled and succeeded in squeezing the bay horse’s lip. Almost buckling at the knees from the pain, the stallion didn’t resist as the saddle was slapped over his back. Kirstie closed her eyes for a second, then forced them open. Now the rider, Fenney Brooks, was up in the saddle, the mugger had released his grip, and the anchor man flung the lead rope into Fenn
ey’s outstretched hands.

  “He’s off!” the bystander yelled. “Man, see that bay horse go!”

  Man and rider were almost last out of the arena onto the track, but they were catching up fast. Fenney was digging in his spurs, the horse’s stride was long. They ate up the ground between them and the leading horses.

  “This is awful!” Kirstie groaned at the sight of the rider’s spurs. She left her spot by the fence and ran along the front of the crowded stand to the spot where the horses would thunder across the finish line. She heard Lisa coming after her. “Did you see that?” she cried.

  Hundreds of yards away, across the far side of the dirt track, the wild horses bunched together around the bend. The riders steered with the lead rope, wrenching their horses’ heads to the left and right, spurring them on. One rider on the outside of the bunch lost his balance and crashed to the ground, curling up to protect his head from the thudding hooves. The crowd oohed and aahed. Then a brown horse went down, kicking up dirt as he went, falling onto his knees and rolling sideways.

  “I know; I can’t look either!” Lisa hissed. Like Kirstie, she’d hidden her face behind her hands. “Was it Rocky?”

  Kirstie shook her head and squeezed forward for a view of the finish. She jumped up and down, dodged heads, slipped to the front of the crowd. “Here they come!” she breathed, almost choking at the sight of the horses thundering toward them. “Rocky’s leading… He’s gonna win…Yes, yes, he is!”

  Horses and riders flashed by in a blur of faded color behind a cloud of thick dust. Kirstie glimpsed bay and black, silver spurs cutting into the flanks, the creak of saddle leather, the raised arm, the whip …

  There was a deafening cheer, more shouting and spurring as the slower horses finished the race. Riders slid from the saddle, muggers and anchormen ran to join them. Mooney and Robbins slapped Fenney Brooks on the back as he stood by his sweating, bleeding horse.

  Slowly Kirstie released her pent-up breath. She fought back the sob that rose high in her throat as she stared at the trickles of blood from the cuts in Rodeo Rocky’s heaving flanks. Then she glanced up at the fluttering banner above his head as Brooks took the lead rope and dragged him back into the arena to receive first prize.