Changes of Heart

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Authors: Paige Lee Elliston

BOOK: Changes of Heart
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© 2005 by Paige Lee Elliston

Published by Revell
a division of Baker Publishing Group
P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287
www.revellbooks.com

Ebook edition created 2011

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the prior written permission of the publisher and copyright owners. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

ISBN 978-1-4412-3923-5

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright Page

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

A Note on Barrel Racing

About the Author

Maggie tugged the heavy sheepskin coat around her body as she hustled from her house to the barn. There wasn’t much wind, but what breeze did exist had cruel, arctic arrogance that numbed her face and made her gloveless fingers tingle. Her western boots made the snow squeak as she walked on it, and the cold penetrated her jeans.

In spite of the temperature and the shiver that had already started her teeth clattering against one another, Maggie stopped ten or so yards from the barn and took in a deep breath. The air was achingly cold in her throat, in her lungs, but it was so pristine and so unsullied by civilization and its contaminants that it made her think of the air eight, ten, and more miles above the earth, where Rich flew—the foothills of outer space, as he called it.

She took another breath and looked to the sky. Stars were said to be much bigger in Montana than anywhere else—they gleamed and shimmered with a pure white radiance that was almost painful to the eye—and they seemed close enough for her to reach up and touch them.

“Maggie! Come on—we need you!”

The front sliding doors of the big barn were open a foot or so, and through the gap Maggie saw Rich, her husband of six years. He stood at the support beam that had the intercom attached to it, his thumb pressing against the button that created a raucous buzz in the house. Next to him stood a standard fifty-five-gallon polyethylene barrel painted a sparkling and flawless white. On it were emblazoned the letters NBRA in eye-searing Day-Glo red. Under the letters, in a smaller font, was the line “National Barrel Racing Association.”

Maggie watched Rich for a moment, a grin breaking across her face. He still hadn’t figured out how to use the intercom properly, apparently not realizing that every time he pressed the button, the buzz sawed away any words he may have been speaking, and all that could be heard in the house was incoherent, excited gibberish.

He flies forty-seven million dollar test aircraft, and he can’t figure out a basic Radio Shack communications hookup
, she thought. Her grin became a full smile. The cockpit of the X-417 flashed in her mind; it had more dials and gauges and flip switches and buttons than a nuclear power plant. Rich knew precisely what each one was for, and his fingers found them as unerringly as a skilled surgeon finds a bleeding artery. But a simple intercom...

She watched Rich for a bit longer. His hair, blond as a fresh bale of prime straw, was disheveled, as if he’d been running his hands through it. He wasn’t tall for a man—standing five foot nine—but he gave the impression of height
because of his lean, whipcord-tough body and his almost military posture. Her husband looked, Maggie believed, like a recruiting poster for the Boy Scouts of America.

Maggie pushed through the door. “What’s up?”

Rich spoke into the microphone of the unit. “Hurry! She’s—” Then he realized that his wife was standing behind him and spun to face her. “She’s pacing around the stall a lot, and she seems nervous or scared or something. I offered her a carrot, and she hardly sniffed it. I don’t like this. Her eyes aren’t right. Suppose...”

“Of course she’s nervous and excited, Richie. It’s her first foal. All this is brand new to her.” She put her hand lightly on his arm. “This is all natural stuff, honey. I appreciate all your concern, and I know you love Dusty, but your hovering over her is probably making her more nervous than she needs to be. Besides, God did a great job when he arranged how horses are born; he really doesn’t need you supervising.”

Their eyes met. “She... she wants me there, Maggie. She really does.”

It was a little boy’s remark, and it made the back of Maggie’s throat suddenly sore with the love it expressed. She could feel tears beginning in her eyes. She stepped forward and hugged her husband. “Of course she does,” she said, her voice husky. “Let’s go take a look.”

The barn wasn’t quite three years old, but it had already taken on the scents of a well-maintained equine structure. The smell of the creosoted beams—for the first year, strong and acrid with the taint of kerosene—was now barely noticeable,
and what remained was a rich, full odor that spoke of the strength and permanence of the wood. Maggie took a deep breath and took in the scent of oiled leather, a unique aroma, and to horse people such as herself, as delicate and sensual as the most costly French perfume. Adding to the distinctive scent of the barn was the fresh, springlike smell of healthy horse hides, and the crimped oats and molasses, timothy hay, and new straw.

The smile returned to Maggie’s face as she followed Rich down the center aisle. A dozen and more curious horses watched the two people pass from individual box stalls, and many of the animals nickered for a treat or a scratch behind the ears. The sheer joy of the moment—her loving and beloved husband’s concern for first-time mother Dusty, the wonders of the Montana prairie, the barn and the house—brought a frequently used prayer to Maggie’s mind:
My cup runneth over, Lord. Thank you for all this
.

The birthing stall was at the end of the barn, separated from the main section and the other horses. Unlike most of the stalls, this one had no window and was slightly smaller than the others. Maggie had explained to Rich that many pregnant mares pace as their time comes closer, and too much room could allow them to move too quickly, tangle their hooves because of the unbalanced foals they carry, and fall, hurting themselves and their babies.

Two heat lamps perched in the corners of the birthing stall cast amber light on the bay quarter horse mare that stood facing the stall gate. Maggie stepped around her husband. “You know, Richie,” she said with a laugh, “if you
call me out here again on a false alarm, our Christmas Eve dinner is going to turn to ash, and we’ll be late for...”

Maggie stepped closer to the stall and looked into eyes that were wide and unfocused, the usual glinting chestnut now flat and dull. “Oh, Dusty,” she exclaimed, fumbling with the latch on the stall. She swung the gate open and rushed to the horse, her right hand feeling for the pulse point at the mare’s throat. Dusty’s skin was much warmer than it should have been, and a slick patina of sweat coated her chest and neck. Her pulse was rapid but erratic, throbbing insanely fast, stopping for a moment, and then racing again. A hissing, spattering sound came from the rear and under the mare, and her body began to tremble. A metallic, foul smell reached Maggie, and she crouched, peering under the horse. It wasn’t urine Dusty was voiding—it was blood, great spurts of scarlet liquid that issued from her birth canal, saturating the white gauze that wrapped her tail and spraying against the boards of the back of the enclosure.

“Richie, call Dr. Pulver now! Tell him it’s an emergency—life and death—and that Dusty is fevered, her pulse is bouncing and very accelerated, and that she’s spraying uterine blood. Run, honey—or we’re going to lose Dusty!”

Danny Pulver, DVM, weary after a long day of barn calls, tossed a Milk-Bone to his collie, Sunday. Christmas music—some carols but primarily longer symphonic pieces from the small Coldwater FM station—wafted through his
small home as he leaned against his kitchen counter and gnawed on a ham sandwich.

His cell phone vibrated in his pocket. “Merry Christmas,” he said, “Dan Pulver speaking.”

Rich’s voice was rushed, his words running together. “Dusty’s in trouble. She’s bleeding terribly. Maggie said we need you, Dan.”

The smile left the vet’s face as if it had been suddenly slapped away. “Easy, Rich. Slow down and take me through what happened. Is Dusty standing? How much blood is she losing? From where?”

Rich took a breath, but his voice remained shaky. “It’s coming from her birth canal. She’s standing and tries to bite at her gut and she’s groaning. Her chest is all sweaty. She’s—”

“OK, Rich. Look—tell Maggie that if the mare wants to go down to let her do so, but try to keep her from writhing until I get there. Maggie’s a good hand with horses. She needs you to calm down and be ready to help. Do what she tells you. I’m on my way.”

Dr. Pulver grabbed his medical satchel from its place by the door and ran to his GMC 4x4. Sunday ran next to him, but Danny waved the dog back. He put his key in the ignition, hauled on his shoulder belt, and tromped on the gas pedal. The big V-8 engine hurtled the vehicle forward, knobby tires smoking as they clawed for traction.

Danny calculated the time it would take to get to the Lockes’ little ranch. During the day it was an easy twenty-minute drive. On Christmas Eve, with traffic essentially
nonexistent this far out in the wilds, he could make it in ten. There’d been some light snow earlier in the day, but the road was clear and there wasn’t much danger from ice—the temperature hadn’t gone over eight degrees in several days and there’d been almost no snow—and the moon was full, with good visibility. Danny glanced down at his speedometer—a bit over sixty miles per hour—and applied some more pressure to the accelerator.

He’d met Rich and Maggie Locke a little more than a year ago at a church festival when he’d first opened his practice. New clients were hard to come by in the area. Most of the cattlemen and the horse people seemed satisfied with the veterinarians from the established vet hospital in Coldwater, the nearest town. The folks who ran barrels or roped from their mounts in competition or showed their animals at halter or in pleasure classes were very particular about who took care of their horses’ health. Danny’s specialty was equine medicine, but he’d been seeing mostly dogs, cats, birds, and the occasional snake before Maggie gave him her business.

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