A Draft Horse Stood Between A Bruised Girl And The Man With A Rope-lbsuong

The trailer door screamed on its hinges when I opened it that night.

Cold air rushed past me, carrying the smell of diesel, wet hay, and the kind of frozen asphalt that makes every sound travel too far.

I had pulled into an interstate truck stop to check on Gideon before the next stretch of highway.

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Gideon was my black Shire, a two-thousand-pound draft horse with a calm eye, a stubborn streak, and hooves that could shake the floor of a loading dock.

I expected to find him standing in his usual place, bored and half-asleep.

Instead, he was kneeling.

For a second, I thought something was wrong with him.

His massive front legs were folded beneath his chest, his head was bowed low, and his dark mane spilled across the wooden floorboards like a curtain.

Then the curtain moved.

A small hand appeared against his leg.

I froze with one boot on the ramp.

The girl hiding under him could not have been more than ten.

She wore a torn sweater, no coat, and her hands shook so badly she could barely keep them tucked beneath Gideon’s warm breath.

There was a bruise forming high on her forehead, dark enough that my stomach turned before my brain had words for it.

Gideon blew gently across her fingers.

Not nervous.

Not startled.

Careful.

I had hauled that horse across enough states to know his moods, and I had never seen him lower himself like that for anyone.

He had made himself into a wall.

I took one slow step forward.

The girl flinched so hard her shoulder hit the trailer wall.

Her fingers wrapped around Gideon’s front leg, and the horse shifted only enough to block more of her from me.

“Easy,” I said, keeping my voice low.

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