When Her Deadbeat Dad Tried To Steal Her Victory, Her Real Dad Stepped In-lbsuong

The mud in the center of the arena was the kind that swallowed shoes.

It had been churned all afternoon by hooves, rain, and the nervous pacing of riders waiting for their scores.

Under the bright stadium lights, it gave off the sharp, earthy smell of wet hay and feed.

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Emily Sterling barely noticed it at first.

She was eighteen years old, sitting on the back of a rescue Appaloosa named Finnegan, with a silver trophy pressed against her thigh and tears she had not planned on crying sliding beneath the edge of her helmet.

The announcer had just called her national champion.

For a few seconds, she had looked like she did not believe it.

Finnegan shifted beneath her, breathing hard through flared nostrils, his spotted neck damp with sweat.

He was not the expensive horse everyone expected to win.

He was not bred for elite show-jumping.

He was the anxious Appaloosa people had written off as useless, dangerous, too skittish, too old in the eyes, too strange in the body.

Emily had heard all of it.

She had also been called too much.

Too quiet.

Too intense.

Too attached to a horse that would never take her anywhere.

But she had taken him anyway.

Michael Vance had watched the whole ride from the front row with his hands locked together in front of his mouth.

He had seen Emily clear the last jump.

He had seen her land.

He had seen the scoreboard flash her time and penalties, and he had felt the sound leave his own body before he remembered to breathe.

Michael was not a horse guy by birth.

He was a tech millionaire, the kind of man who spent weekdays in high-rise offices, sitting through meetings about numbers, scale, investors, and risk.

But ten years earlier, he had married Emily’s mother.

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