Uncle Ten is my fave.
You can read Part One and Part Two of this little future-set Dartmoor story in previous posts.
It was
alarmingly easy to get spoiled for life’s normal drudgeries when your honorary
uncle was filthy stinking rich. The club leaned on Ian when necessary, but
tended to push back against some of his more lavish offers of assistance. Vi
was glad Walsh’s stubbornness had given ground in this instance; even gladder
that a miserable twelve-hour car ride turned into a quick, cushy flight back on
the jet, laid out on a plush leather seat with a movie playing half-watched in
the background.
Eden met
them at the airport with the Rover and, to no one’s surprise, Abbie spent the
whole ride out to Briar Hall talking nonstop, from an in-depth analysis of all
the ladies’ race day hats to her five-star review of the chocolate-frosted
yellow cake at the hospital cafeteria. She didn’t mention the race itself, or
Rally, or the fall, because despite being a hyperactive demon, she wasn’t, in
fact, as stupid as Tenny liked to say.
At the
house, she tried valiantly to walk all the way from the car up to her old
bedroom on the second floor, but her busted arm made it impossible to use
crutches, and so Dad carried her. She had tears of frustration in her eyes by
the time he set her down on the bed, and he wisely made no mention of them.
That first
night was…hard. Luna had foaled, and Emmie shared photos of the new colt – a
chestnut with a star and snip like his mother – from her phone. Dinner was
fried chicken and roasted veggies and sparkling water, because her meds came
with an alcohol warning. Becca and Shane came over, and Abbie wanted to stay to
eat with them, so that meant Eden did, too, and Fox showed up with a cake sent
from Maggie. Tenny and Reese showed up late, well after ten, tired and rumpled
from traveling.
Vi, asleep
on the sofa thanks to her latest round of pain meds, woke as she was being
lowered into her bed, this time by Tenny.
She
floundered and jerked in his hold, disoriented.
“Easy,” he
said, in the same voice he used on the horses, and it was instantly soothing.
The lamp
clicked on, and there he stood, in his battered jeans, hair falling across his
forehead; face creased with worry and eyes sharp as ever as they scanned her.
“You okay?” he asked, and it wasn’t the way her parents or anyone else had
asked. It was no bollocks, now, I can tell if you’re lying.
Exhausted,
hurting, dizzy and fuzzy and so utterly not herself, her meager composure
collapsed and she clapped her hands over her face before the sudden tears could
fill her eyes and spill over.
At least,
that was what she tried to do. Her bum arm, wrapped in a cast and secured in a
sling, wouldn’t cooperate, and so she only covered one eye with her good hand,
and tears coursed hot down her other cheek, the kind of ugly, messy tears that
dripped off your nose and left you with an awful case of the hiccups.
“Thought
so.” Tenny nodded and fetched the tissues off her dressing table. Plunked the
box in her lap and then perched on the side of the mattress. He sat silent,
watching her with a calm expression, for the long minutes it took her to
quietly sob it out, mop her face, and blow her nose one-handed. When she was
done, and down to sniffles and hiccups, he plucked the dirty tissues from her
hand.
“Gross,”
she accused in a still-watery voice.
He shrugged
and effortlessly sank each into her wastebasket all the way over in the corner,
perfect three-point shots. “You’re forgetting I was there for the Night of
Excess Pineapple.”
“Oh, God. I
was four.”
“Yes, and I’m
now immune to your disgustingness.” His haughty, superior tone dragged a croaky
little laugh up her throat, and she felt better.
But not good.
She flopped backward onto the pillows and stared up at the ceiling, eyes achy
from crying; another pain to add to the list. “Two years,” she said, defeated.
“Come
again?”
“I couldn’t
hack it two years on the track.”
Despite
Walsh’s history with it, racing hadn’t been the obvious career move for a girl
born into both a successful boarding and training barn, and a motorcycle club. Her
equestrian career had begun early: perched in front of Mom or Dad’s saddle;
spending every moment not wasted on school at the barn, feeding apples and
mucking stalls and perching on the rail to watch every lesson. It was her whole
life, as essential as eating and sleeping and breathing. She’d started the pony
club circuit when she was eight: walk/trot/canter and crossrail classes. Had
begun jumping more seriously at twelve, possessed of a daredevil streak that
Emmie attributed to Walsh, her own equitation pursuits firmly jumpless. At
sixteen, she took on her first client horse: a young, hot thoroughbred the
owner wanted to three-day event. That was when she’d begun galloping in earnest…and
when she’d decided maybe she wanted to gallop all the time.
Through his
many moneyed connections, Ian landed her a job at Keenland, straight out of
high school, working, cleaning tack, stepping and fetching…and, once she’d
proved herself, breezing horses before dawn. It had proved a potent drug, those
morning workouts. “You get that from your daddy,” Emmie had said, a little
choked up, because her baby had eschewed higher education and was addicted to
the slap of wind in her face and the churning power of a horse running flat out
beneath her. God knew if a love of racing was genetic – she hadn’t gone to
college, after all – but the more the industry tried to beat her up, the harder
she clung to it, determined, stubborn, ruthless in her pursuit of excellence.
It had been
two years of living out of hotels, barely eating, working out until she nearly
passed out; up before dawn and up too late nights watching track footage and poring
over Racing Form. She moved from state to state, track to track, never
any one place too long. Some of the other riders were friendly – she still
needed to call Steph up in Saratoga and let her know what had happened, if she
hadn’t already heard – but many were not. It was cutthroat and threatening and
stressful. It’ll get better, she kept telling herself. She had to pay
her dues. Always forced a smile when Emmie called, and didn’t voice her doubts
to anyone save Uncle Ten, when he called and told her to knock off the
bollocks.
Well, there
was no bollocks, now. Only a dead horse, and her broken body, and her childhood
room, just as she’d left it two years ago.
Tenny made
a dismissive sound, and she shifted her head on the pillow to get a look at his
face. “Please,” he said.
She frowned
at him, and sniffled some more.
“You couldn’t
‘hack it.’” He rolled his eyes. “Is that it, then? Hanging up your spurs? Two
years is nothing – it certainly isn’t failure. And every jockey worth his salt’s
been in the hospital at least a dozen times, I’d wager.”
She couldn’t
stop the face she made, the little shudder of horror that moved through her.
And of
course he noticed, because he noticed everything. Face softening, tone
gentling, he said, “But there’s no shame in deciding you’d rather train horses
like your mum instead of, you know, doing the most dangerous thing you can do
on the back of a horse.”
She frowned
again. “I’m not afraid.”
He patted
her leg and stood. “I know you’re not. But just because you’re Walsh’s kid
doesn’t mean you have to be so bloody dramatic about things.”
She stuck
her tongue out at him. “I’m telling him you said that.”
“Oh no,
what will I do when he gives me a disapproving look?” He made an
over-the-top frightened face, and that inspired another laugh. He sobered,
after. “It doesn’t have to be all or nothing, love,” he said, seriously. “And
that’s a lesson coming from someone who took a long time to figure that out.”
Simple
words – but true ones. Words that left her eyes burning again.
He rested
his hand on the doorknob, halfway out the door. “Racing’s a shit industry,” he
said. “If you want out, that’s not quitting or failing. Figure out what you
want your future to be like with horses, and don’t worry so much. You have a
stupidly large family and a whole pack of idiot friends cheering you on.”
She dashed
at her eyes. “See? Ugh. This is why you’re my favorite uncle.”
He grinned.
“I’m telling Shane. Maybe he’ll cry.”
~*~
“Remember
those idiot friends I mentioned?” he asked in a stage whisper three days later.
She was at the barn – because Tenny had found her moping in bed and carried her
down here – sitting beneath her favorite tree and watching Emmie teach a class
of youngsters. An overturned bucket served as a makeshift foot stool and the
folding camp chair was fairly comfortable. A warm breeze toyed with her hair,
the air smelled of good, horsey things, and she was glad Ten had ignored her
earlier protests about staying inside. “Well,” he continued, “the most idiotic
of all is coming up on your six.”
“My what?”
but she already knew, could tell who it was by that laugh threaded through his
voice. She turned her head, glanced back over her shoulder, and there he was:
Asher Teague.
LOVE this so much, thank you!
ReplyDeleteThank you!! Love this!!!
ReplyDeleteLove this x Thank you 😊
ReplyDeleteThank you!!! Love this future generation stories!!!
ReplyDeleteI have stars in my eyes when we I read about Uncle Tenny…thank you so much
ReplyDeleteThank you ,made a cold winters morning warm .
ReplyDeleteOh wow! Love this! But where's Reese?
ReplyDeleteCan't wait for more.
ReplyDeleteAwesome!!
ReplyDelete