The GPS blinked, the signal jumped, and the horse trailer turned off the highway onto a narrow dirt road in rural Montana. Frank Miles tightened his hands on the wheel as the road dropped into a little valley of cottonwoods and worn fences.
This was not what he expected.
He had been told to deliver a premium show horse to a fancy ranch.
Instead, the place ahead looked tired and small, like it was holding on by a thread.
Frank slowed to a stop beside a weathered barn.
The paint was peeling, and the sign out front was so faded it looked like it had been sunburned for years. It read:
Metabrook Healing Stables.
A few small paddocks sat in the mud.
A couple of gentle-looking horses stood near a water trough. In the distance, an older woman in mud-stained overalls guided a tiny pony along a path as if it was part of a lesson.
Frank stared at his delivery papers again.
“Metabrook Ranch.”
Same county, same name.
His stomach sank.
“You have got to be kidding me,” he muttered.
The woman noticed the trailer and walked over.
She moved slow but steady, like someone who had done hard work her whole life.
Her face was lined from sun and wind, and thick glasses sat on her nose. She stopped by the cab window.
“Can I help you, young man?” she asked.
Frank stepped down and held out the papers.
“I’ve got a delivery for Metobrook Ranch. One gelding, name’s Midnight’s Verdict.
Says here he’s a premium show jumper worth about $200,000.”
“Tess.” The woman’s eyes widened.
“Son, I think you’ve got the wrong Metobrook. This here is Metobrook Healing Stables.
We work with kids who need extra help. The fancy place you want is probably Metobrook Estates about 40 miles north.”
Frank looked back at the dirt road behind him.
The sun was already dropping.
His truck had been making ugly noises for the last fifty miles, and he could feel the transmission shudder every time he shifted. He shook his head.
“Ma’am, my boss told me this delivery had to be done before dark. My paperwork says this is the place.
Once I unload him, it becomes your problem.
You can call whoever sent him. Quote.”
Dorothy opened her mouth to argue, but Frank was already walking to the trailer door.
“I’m just following orders,” he said like that ended the conversation.
He swung the door open, and the horse stepped out.
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