Joan Kilby

Home to Hope Mountain


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propped the bike against a tree. “I’ll walk.”

      She doubted he would want to do that for long, either. Well, he would find out. With a nudge of her heels she turned Bo toward home.

      Adam kept pace, making sure there were a couple of yards between himself and Bo. “That’s a big horse.”

      “He’s half Clydesdale. Eighteen hands and as comfy as a couch.” She patted the smooth golden coat below the white mane. “You’re a good old boy, aren’t you, Bo.” Poor beast had been a mess when Ian, the Horses for Hope coordinator, had sent him to her. Bo’s coat had been falling out from mange, and he’d been so skinny his ribs had showed. With a lot of TLC, he’d recovered.

      They ambled along in silence for a few moments. Hayley tilted her head, listening to the clear, ringing call of a bellbird. Leif’s favorite. Adam, struggling to watch where he put his feet, didn’t even seem to notice. “Have you found a therapist for Summer?” she asked.

      “No, I’m still looking.” Adam avoided a muddy puddle in a depression between the ruts. “Have you changed your mind?”

      “No one’s dropped out of the program, if that’s what you mean.” He didn’t seem the kind of man to go for alternative practices. Maybe he didn’t realize certain things about her. “I’m not a qualified psychologist, you know. I didn’t go to university, and I don’t have any letters after my name.”

      “But you get results.”

      “Yes, I get results,” she conceded. “Why don’t you buy her a horse? It might not fix all her problems, but it would help. Give her something to focus on besides herself.” She didn’t know what she would do if it weren’t for Shane and her horses. She’d probably need therapy herself.

      “Can’t do that. We’re not staying in Hope Mountain,” Adam said. “I hope to sell Timbertop and move back to the city before Christmas.”

      Good. She didn’t want him bringing his city ways and his handsome face into her woods. But if she felt like that, why did she also feel disappointed?

      “Summer’s not happy about the idea,” he went on, a troubled frown creasing his forehead. “I don’t understand why, really. She’s only been here a year or so.”

      “She’ll miss her friends. And maybe she’s fallen in love with the area.” He looked skeptical. Hayley shook her head. “You haven’t actually lived in Hope Mountain, have you? I understand you used to come out on weekends occasionally, but that’s not living here, that’s just visiting.”

      He threw her a glance filled with suppressed annoyance and chagrin. Had she hit a sore spot?

      Diane had thrown a divorce party last year. Hayley and Leif had been the only locals, and she’d felt uncomfortable. But Diane and her friends regularly went on trail rides, so she supposed Diane was being polite.

      “Even if you don’t want to live here, Diane will be back eventually, when her mother gets better,” Hayley said.

      “I’ll have to discuss it with her. She hinted before she left that she may not want to come back.”

      “Seems a shame to take Summer away, though.”

      Adam stopped walking and planted his hands on his hips. “Yes, but this is where my sweet, smart, sunny little girl has inexplicably gone haywire and turned dark and miserable.”

      “She’s, what, about fourteen? That’s a tough age.”

      “I don’t believe it’s typical teenage blues. I know I haven’t been around much, but I’m her father. I can tell something is eating away at her.”

      “Losing her horse to the bushfires?” Hayley still felt the ache in her own heart when she thought of her dead horses—Ranger, Lady, Sham, Smokey and Bella. They’d been part of her family. Even after nearly a year she still missed them.

      “Maybe it’s that. I don’t know. She won’t talk to me.”

      “Patience,” Hayley said. “Maybe you just need time to reconnect with her, get her to trust you.”

      “What do I do in the meantime when the police catch her shoplifting? Next time that might not be enough for her. She might...do anything.”

      Hayley’s first instinct was to offer help. Her opinion of Adam had improved slightly. He wasn’t just looking to off-load a problem; he was genuinely concerned about his daughter. She probably could carve out a couple of hours a week for Summer if she really wanted to.

      Then the bellbird called again, reminding her of Leif. She owed Adam and his daughter nothing. Let them leave Hope Mountain. What was it to her?

      The creek, when they came to it, was swollen with rain and rushing, overflowing the near bank and forming a large boggy area stretching ten yards toward them. On the other side of the creek, the coursing water had carved the bank into an undercut.

      “Still need that sugar?” Hayley asked.

      “No worries. I’ll take my shoes off and roll up my pants.”

      “I wouldn’t take my shoes off if I were you. There are broken branches and stones in among the muck. Might even be snakes.”

      That gave him pause, but only for a moment. “I didn’t like these runners much anyway.” He started rolling up his jeans.

      “You must really want that barbecue sauce.”

      Adam startled and gave a shamefaced grin. “To tell you the truth, I almost forgot what I was after. I just knew I had a goal and had to reach it. I guess that sounds crazy to you.”

      “No, not really.” She understood goals, even crazy ones. Her goal was to rebuild her house on the spot her great-grandparents homesteaded and where she’d grown up and had lived as a married woman. She was going to do it despite everyone telling her she was wasting her time and despite what little money she had.

      Sell the land, her city-dwelling divorced parents said. Use the proceeds to buy a house closer to the town, or better yet, in a Melbourne suburb close to one of them. She wouldn’t consider it. So, yes, she understood a man who’d walk through muck for something he wanted.

      Where she and he differed was that she would never ruin a brand-new pair of shoes. When her house had gone up in flames, so had all her possessions. She clothed herself with donations and the odd new item. With so little to her name, everything she owned was precious.

      “Stay here,” Hayley said. “I’ll ride back to the house and bring the sugar to you.”

      “How long will that take? I don’t want to put you out.”

      “Twenty minutes or so, round trip.”

      “I couldn’t ask that of you. It was my bad for not checking the pantry before I started cooking. I’ll take my lumps.”

      Before he stepped into the mud, she raised her hand to stop him. “Wait. I’ll double you.”

      “Beg your pardon?”

      “You can ride behind me. Bo can handle it.” She’d carried an extra passenger plenty of times on the big old carthorse.

      “Well, all right. Thanks.” He studied the problem. “That is one very large horse. How do I get up there?”

      “Over here.” She manoeuvred Bo to a fallen log. After a couple of tries Adam hoisted himself up and swung a leg over the back of the horse. Hayley moved forward to accommodate him. “Don’t sit too far back or you’ll be on Bo’s kidneys. Have you ridden before?”

      “When I was a kid, on my grandfather’s farm.” As he found his balance his hands hovered near her waist for a second before settling on his own legs.

      She gave Bo an encouraging pat and nudged his sides with her heels. “Let’s go home, boy.”

      Bo lifted his