Deadly Heritage: a horse mystery: a horse mystery Read online




  Deadly Heritage

  Toni Leland

  Copyright 2008 All rights reserved

  Someone is stalking Quarter Horse breeder Kellie Sutton, and the one person who can protect her is the man whose heart she broke 15 years ago. Horses and land hunger brew into a rip-roaring tale of depravity, deceit, and family tragedy in this romantic suspense equestrian novel.

  A prize stallion savaged. A beautiful daughter snatched. An ex-husband with a dark side.

  Will Sheriff Ed Campbell be able to put his broken heart aside and help the woman he never forgot?

  Equestrians and history buffs will love the setting, an historic ranch on the outskirts of Guthrie, Oklahoma site of the first land rush of 1889. Not only is Kellie trying stop the villain who's trying to put her out of business, she's battling the encroaching real estate developers that are gobbling up every available acre of land.

  As more horses are attacked, Kellie's desperation and heartbreak comes vividly to life as she fights an unknown enemy with nothing to lose. The mystery unfolds on the scorched, drought-stricken fields between Kellie's ranch and the home she grew up in.

  ~~~

  For every horse

  that ever suffered

  at the hands

  of man.

  Chapter 1

  A sickening odor clung to the still morning air and fear curled through Kellie Sutton's chest.

  Dr. Hyde Browning's eyes darkened with compassion. “I won't kid you-he's going downhill fast.”

  Taking a deep breath to quell the nausea churning through her stomach, Kellie forced herself to look down, and another wave of revulsion rolled through her. The stallion's left front foot was a volcano of angry red flesh, with thick yellow pus oozing from the ruptured skin.

  Her voice cracked. “Do you have anything else that might work better?”

  “Without knowing what happened to him, I can only make guesses on treatment. Based on the extensive tissue damage, I'd say it's a staph infection, but he doesn't seem to be responding to the antibiotic. I can try a different type, but...”

  The unfinished sentence held little optimism.

  Kellie stroked Dancer's sleek coat, brilliant as a newly minted penny. His skin quivered beneath her touch, the elegant head hung low, and his large brown eyes, usually so alert and curious, were dull as dry river pebbles. In the space of three days, what she'd thought was a simple stone bruise had escalated into a nightmare.

  “Would an x-ray show anything? Could it be a fracture? Or something embedded in his foot?”

  The veterinarian shook his head. “I've ruled those out, plus a few you haven't thought of.” He touched her arm. “I know this is hard for you, but the medication needs time to work.”

  She struggled with emotions that threatened to overwhelm her. “You do whatever it takes to save him.” Her voice broke again. “He's my best stallion.”

  Hyde depressed the plunger on a syringe and a tiny drop of liquid squirted from the tip of the needle. “I'll photograph the wound, and take a tissue sample over to Stillwater. Maybe the university lab can give us some answers.”

  “What about a spider bite? Or a scorpion-I got stung once when I was a kid, and it hurt like hell!”

  “Neither of those would cause this much damage.”

  He deftly slipped the long needle into the horse's bulging heel, and Kellie flinched. Focusing on the vet's ministrations, she pushed away all thoughts of the possible outcome of the disaster in her barn.

  A few minutes later, she followed Hyde out into the morning sun. His expression revealed nothing, but his tone was cautious.

  “I gave him a shot of Butazolidin to keep him comfortable. You can dose him again with the paste in eight hours. I'll be back in the morning-hopefully, with some answers. If anything changes in the meantime, call me.” He walked toward his truck, then turned back. “I checked the palomino mare. She should deliver her foal tonight.”

  A cloud of red dust churned behind his tailgate all the way to the end of the lane. The strong spring sun beat down on Kellie's bare head, but despite the temperature, she shivered with apprehension. Nothing in Hyde's demeanor gave her any confidence that world champion Docs Dirty Dancing would recover.

  For long moments after the truck had disappeared from view, she stared at the endless pale yellow fields spreading across acres of flat land. A cobalt sky slammed into the horizon and a few wispy clouds drifted above, with no promise of rain. Scattered mesquite trees punctuated the skyline, and the steady up-and-down movements of several oil pumps brought to mind the image of giant birds pulling the rich black treasure from beneath Oklahoma's parched crust. Her home. Her heritage. Red soil that flowed through her veins.

  She turned and stared at the round corral behind the barn. Dancer might have injured his foot on something while he was turned out. Resolve lengthened her stride as she headed that direction. Her life and livelihood depended on the stallion's recovery, and she couldn't idly stand by, waiting for someone else to come up with answers. She slowly walked the inside fence perimeter, examining the base of each post and scanning the ground for anything that could have caused the horse's wound.

  Fifteen minutes later, she'd made the full circle, finding only a beer bottle top. She leaned against the rail, running her thumb over the sharp ridges of the metal cap, trying to imagine how it might have caused Dancer's wound. She shook her head and pushed away from the fence, stuffing the cap into her pocket as she walked toward the main barn. The university lab would have answers.

  Inside the spacious office, she passed by the ranch manager's desk. His papers were neatly stacked, pens and pencils tucked into a mug, his to-do list squared up with the edge of the desk. A sharp contrast to her own jumbled workspace in the corner. Once upon a time, Frank Frazier's attention to detail had made him the perfect choice for ranch manager, leaving her free to pursue the business of building her Quarter Horse herd. She set her jaw. Once upon a time, a lot of things had been different.

  She settled into the comfortable leather chair behind a dark mahogany desk, an ornate relic from her Grandfather Sutton's ranching days. The antique seemed out of place in the new modern building, but she didn't care. History and family heritage were precious commodities to be guarded with a passion.

  A ranch hand rapped on the doorjamb.

  “Boots is limping.”

  Kellie jumped up and followed him down the barn aisle. At the stall door, she closed her eyes tightly.

  “Aw, you have to be kidding!”

  Boot Scootin Doc, the best reining horse on Rocking S Ranch, stood in a corner of the stall, holding his left front foot off the ground.

  Kellie smoothed her hand over his shoulder, then kneeled in the wood shavings to get a closer look. Angry red skin glowed through the sparkling white hair on the horse's ankle, and swelling had forced the flesh into a puffy ridge along the top edge of the hoof. She touched the foot lightly to confirm the heat of infection.

  “Where was he yesterday?”

  “In the east grazing pen.” The young man sounded nervous, and hastened to add, “He seemed fine when I brought him in last night.”

  Rocking back on her heels, Kellie focused again on the distorted foot. Could they be dealing with a bite? She knew nothing about spiders, but she'd grown up sharing the land with scorpions and had always given them the respect they deserved.

  She pulled out her cell phone and dialed Hyde's number. “We have another one. Same foot, same beginning signs.”

  “I have two more farm calls to make, then I'll swing back. In the meantime, check all your horses' feet, see if any others have similar symptoms.”

>   She snapped the phone shut and turned to the ranch hand. “Find Frank and tell him I need him.”

  Kellie had checked three horses by the time Frank appeared.

  He leaned against an upright and shoved a hand in his pocket. “What's up?”

  “We have another lame horse. I want you to check the outside stock.”

  “Can't-I'm headed into the city.”

  Kellie mentally took a deep breath. “This won't take long.”

  Frank pushed away from the post, his features hardening. “We pay the hired help to do this stuff, so let's get our money's worth.”

  She carefully controlled her tone. “Frank, this is serious. Please do your job.”

  Anger darkened his hazel eyes and a muscle twitched along his jaw line. “Yes, Ma'am!” He turned on a heel and strode down the barn aisle.

  The unpleasant exchange burned through Kellie's thoughts. His nonchalance about the critical situation bothered her deeply. She glanced toward the doorway where he stood talking to the stable manager. What had triggered this sudden attitude?

  Putting the troubling thoughts out of her mind, she worked her way down the row of stalls, further considering the idea of scorpions as the source of her problem. During the past few severe drought years, the population of strange-looking-but-timid creatures had exploded. Normally, the creepy little spider relatives were considered harmless, but hidden in the dark corners of a stall, they most certainly could attack a poorly placed foot.

  An hour later, Hyde picked up Boots's foot and leaned in close, brushing his fingers lightly over the heel area. He released the hoof and straightened up.

  “I don't like what I'm seeing here.”

  ~ ~

  Anger still snapped through Frank's thoughts as he barged through the squeaky door of the Sooner café and headed for the corner booth where his coffee pals waited. He slid across the cracked red vinyl seat, wedging his thick thighs under the edge of the low table, settling himself into the morning din of the popular meeting place. No women, just the guys catching up, savoring the brief chance to be themselves. Ranchers, merchants, retired men with nothing to do-all equal for an hour each morning.

  Across the table, an overall-clad man grinned and stubbed out his cigarette. “Yer late, Frankie. Boss Lady got you doing extra chores this morning?”

  “Fuck you.”

  The local mechanic cackled and shook his head. “Boy, I sure don't understand how you can work with her.”

  “Business is business.”

  “I guess...Did ya hear the fire department's havin' equipment problems again? That damned old military brush tanker keeps breakin' down. Bad timing, too, what with the dry weather.” He stopped to wheeze and clear his throat. “I'm tellin' ya, we're gonna get caught with our pants down one of these days.”

  The café door creaked and Sheriff Ed Campbell ducked through. He greeted a couple of patrons, then his gaze drifted to Frank, and the pleasant expression disappeared. He nodded, then turned back to the waitress and paid for a cup of coffee to go.

  Frank scowled. Pompous sonofabitch.

  A moment later, Campbell left the café and the mechanic chuckled. “Whoo-ee! No love lost between you two!”

  Frank bit back a nasty retort and grinned smugly. “Only on his part. I got the girl, remember?”

  “Yeah, but that didn't last long...I wonder who convinced ol' Ed to come back to Guthrie.”

  Frank carefully controlled his expression. Campbell's recent return bothered the hell out of him, but he'd be damned if he'd let anyone know it.

  Beside him, a portly man stirred three sugars into a cup of coffee. “Frank, you ever buy another racehorse after that accident at the track?”

  Another path Frank didn't want to follow. “No, I'm still looking at prospects.”

  “Sure was a shame. I couldn't friggin' believe it when I heard. That was some nice looking horse.”

  Frank's gut tightened at the recollection. Nice looking and worth half-a-million dollars. Gone in a heartbeat.

  The mechanic chimed in. “I heard some Texan offered to buy him before the race.”

  For about the millionth time in the past two years, Frank kicked himself for not accepting the generous pre-race offer to buy the colt. Greed had commandeered that decision. But on the up side, the horse's death had set the wheels in motion for something much bigger, a business operation now earning a hell of a lot more money than racing.

  He ignored his friend's fishing expedition, and glanced at the clock above the door. “Gotta go, I have an important meeting.”

  “Break a leg. Oops-sorry!”

  ~ ~

  Kellie could not control the waver in her voice. “Deputy White, please.”

  She chewed her lip while she waited, Hyde's words looping over and over in her head. Who would do such a thing? And why?

  A soft drawl hummed through the phone. “Sheriff Campbell. Can I help you?”

  Stunned recognition snapped through her brain and familiar images crowded in, forming a vise-grip around her chest.

  The voice took on more authority. “Hello? This is Sheriff Ed Campbell.”

  She took a deep breath. “It's Kellie Sutton. I have an emergency out here.”

  A taut silence filled the line. “What's going on?”

  “Please, just send someone out.”

  She closed the cell phone and swallowed hard, struggling with the echo of Ed Campbell's voice in her head. How could fifteen years have evaporated in the space of a phone call?

  Hyde stepped out of the stall and latched the door. “I'll drop this sample off at OSU this afternoon. We'd better get some answers soon-this stuff is moving like wildfire.” He stopped and peered into her face. “Hey, what's wrong?”

  “I just got off the phone with the new sheriff.”

  Hyde raised an eyebrow. “And...?”

  “I wasn't ready to talk to him yet.”

  Hyde patted her arm. “That's ancient history-time heals most wounds. Let's go take a look at your young stock.”

  Outside, Hyde moved to the center of a grazing pen filled with yearlings, and the youngsters crowded up close, eager for his attention. He raised his arms to shoulder height and the milling crowd melded into an attentive group, all ears pricked forward. The way he communicated with horses seemed almost mystical, a subtle body language that only the animals recognized. The talent had never ceased to amaze Kellie, but Hyde shrugged off the skills as being part of his Osage heritage. Squatting beside each horse, he carefully examined the small feet. The young horses stood quietly while he worked and, when he'd finished, the formation dissolved into playful pushing and rearing. Class was dismissed.

  He strode across the grass toward her, his long legs covering the distance quickly. Dark eyes gazed from beneath heavy eyebrows, and his wide high cheekbones accentuated a rugged classic face. Kellie's heart warmed. He'd been the best friend anyone could have-loyal and sympathetic, supporting her in everything she tried, and always there to pick up the pieces when she failed.

  He pushed his hat back off his forehead. “The kids are fine.” He gestured toward two sheep dogs stretched out in the sun. “You oughta get some watchdogs instead of those worthless mutts.”

  The old dog, Buck, raised his head to stare indignantly at Hyde, and Kellie laughed.

  “Working dogs need their sleep.”

  Hyde's phone beeped and he turned away, lowering his voice. Within minutes, he closed the phone and shook his head.

  “Your neighbor's horse has a swollen foot. Sounds like the same symptoms.”

  ~ ~

  Kellie sat in her office, lost in thought about Dancer. More than all his national and world championships, or his prowess in the breeding barn, she treasured his friendship. They'd been a team for over ten years. Her eyes misted at the terrifying possibility he might die. The emotional tussle lasted only seconds. It will not happen. It can't. Hyde will save him.

  In moments, her usual calm confidence returned and she reached acr
oss the desk for a scheduling calendar. A shiny reflection caught her eye and she picked up a snapshot from amongst the papers strewn over the desktop. The scene was almost ethereal, looking as though it might have been taken from outside a stall, since the only light in the photo came through a small screened window in the background. She stared with growing curiosity at her own image standing next to Dancer, her cheek resting against his large jaw, her red hair almost the same color as his coat. She drew the photograph closer to inspect the details. Must be a shot for one of the farm ads. The phone rang and she set the picture aside.

  Her brother's hearty greeting sounded a little too cheerful. “Hey, Sis, how ya doin'?”

  She pursed her lips. “I'm good, Cliff-and you?”

  “Can't complain, other than Houston's a steam bath again today.” He cleared his throat. “I'm gonna be up to Guthrie next week on business. Thought I'd come by and catch up on the news.”

  An alarm sounded in Kellie's head. Cliff Sutton wouldn't just drop by from Texas unless he wanted something.

  “I'm judging a horse show this weekend, but I should be around after that.”

  “I'll give a holler when I get to town. See ya.”

  The line went dead, and Kellie set the portable phone back into the base. I hope this isn't about the land developers again.

  She glanced once more at the snapshot, then pushed it out of the way to make room for a three-panel calendar. June, July, and August were booked with competitions almost every weekend, and she'd blocked out the first three weeks in October for the American Quarter Horse Congress-the largest breed show in the world, and one that had been the setting for many of Dancer's triumphs.

  Her index finger trailed down the list of horses slated to go to Congress, and an uneasy thought formed. She'd planned to take Boots, but unless his injury was unrelated to Dancer's, he wouldn't be competing. She leaned back in the chair and stared at the raftered ceiling. Why did things seem to be going sour lately? Ever since the blow up with her brothers, she'd felt as though she controlled nothing. Now this with the horses.