Rodeo terms: Performing in the Show = performing during the rodeo. Performing (or a run) in the Slack = roping or riding outside the rodeo performance (slack is usually run after the show or in the morning before the next show). A run is an attempt to rope/wrestle the steer/calf or to ride the horse/bull. Average = aggregate (the aggregated points from the runs: for timed events, less is better; for judged events, more is better). Go-round = when all contestants in an event have completed their run; there may be two or more go-rounds, with or without a finals decided by high points or low times in each event. The short go is the common name for the finals.
No sex occurs between persons under 18 in this story.
"Daddy, I'm so hungry! Can we stop soon? I'm REALLY hungry!"
"Yes, Baby, I'm getting off at the next exit that shows food and fuel. We're coming up on Phoenix, so it should be real soon. Do you need to go potty before we get there?"
"Daddy, I'm not a baby! I don't go potty; I go to the restroom, and no, I don't need to...right now. But I'm so hungry!"
"Here we go, Sweetheart: see the sign? We'll take the next exit and get you some food before your belly button eats your backbone!"
"You are so silly, Daddy!"
Zane put on his right turn indicators to let Brad know they were getting off, and Brad flashed his lights in return. The first few offerings were fast food and none had a parking lot big enough for their rigs, so he continued toward town to a café he had been to before that had good food and plenty of parking. He found room for his truck and horse trailer on the deserted north side of the lot, with room for Brad to park his rig beside him.
Zane climbed down out of the cab of the Customized Mack Anthem and waited for his long-legged six and a half year old daughter to scramble out of the sleeper, across his seat, and hop down into his arms. He caught her, twirled her around, kissed his on the cheek, and set her on the ground, loving her inevitable giggle when they twirled.
She darted around the front of the truck to find her 'best friends in the world', Brad and Carole Simpson's daughters Stacy and Sammy. They greeted each other with hugs and complained in unison about never getting to eat until they are starving! Carole interjected, "It's only been a few hours since you gorged on junk food at the carnival, girls. I'm pretty sure none of you are starving. Stay put -- we're going to wait right here until your daddies check the horses and we'll all go in together."
The complained, but waited impatiently for all of three minutes before their dads appeared, took their hands, and led them across the parking lot to the brightly lit café. As they neared the door, Casey suddenly froze. She was looking at a poster in the window beside the door.
"That's her, isn't it?" she asked her dad, who, along with everyone else, stopped and looked more closely at the poster. It was quiet for a moment as they stared at the beautiful young woman on a golden horse racing through a rodeo arena. She was wearing a shirt trimmed with rhinestones and sequins, boots the color of her horse, and a golden hat with a bejeweled band; her long, wavy blonde hair flew behind her.
The lights glittered off the jewels on her shirt and cast a golden glow around her hair and face. The poster read "Prescott Frontier Days Queen -- Champion Barrel Racer Cassie Collins riding Goldie."
Zane's heart skipped a beat, and then raced as he looked at the "Sweetheart of the Rodeo" in her chosen element. Even though his emotions were raging, he calmly replied, "Yes, Honey, that's your mommy. She's almost as beautiful as you, isn't she?"
Still staring at the poster, Casey asked in a tiny voice, "Daddy, why doesn't she love us?"
Hearing the pain in her voice and seeing the stricken look on Zane's face, Carole picked Casey up and held her. "Honey, your Mommy loves you. She really does; famous people like your mom have so many commitments it's hard for them. And she lives in California; you and Daddy live in Texas, and..." She stopped speaking, knowing there was no explanation. She hugged the little girl tightly, and let the tears in flow silently down her cheeks.
Stacy and Sammy recognized the anguish of their friend and mom, and hugged their mom's legs tightly while reassuring Casey that THEY loved her!
Zane turned his head away and wiped the tears from his eyes. He felt Brad's arm encircle his shoulders, and pat him on the back. Casey saw the torment on her daddy's face; she wiggled free of Carole to go to him, climbed into his arms, and hugged him with all her might. Carole picked up Stacy, Brad picked Sammy up, and they held each other in group hug that lasted for several minutes.
"I'm sorry, Daddy; please don't cry. I shouldn't have asked about her; I know it always makes you sad! I just saw her and thought that girl looked like the picture you keep in my room, so wanted to know if it really is her. I don't care if she doesn't love us! I have the bestest daddy in the world, I love you, and you love me! We don't need her!"
Carole choked back her tears; "You do have the bestest daddy in the world, Casey, and he loves you enough for two people!" Pausing for a second, she added, "And Stacy and Sammy have the bestest daddy in the world too!"
Casey clung to her daddy, and sat in his lap when they found a table. Stacy sat on her daddy's lap, Sammi on her mom's.
Stacy looked up at her dad and asked, "Daddy, I don't want to make everyone sadder, but I have one more question. Why does the rodeo poster have a big picture of Casey's mommy in the middle and little pictures of all the cowboys around her? And why is she all glittery?"
Carole saw the look on her husband's face, and interjected, "Stacy, Sammi, Casey, do you remember when we were at the ghost town near Reno and we panned for gold?" The girls all nodded. "Remember that we found some shiny flakes that we thought were gold in the sands, and we were all excited? What did the man tell us when we showed it to him?"
Casey answered, "He said ever'thing that glitters is not gold. He said the flakes were Fool's Gold, and then he showed us real gold and told us that it didn't shine until it was cleaned up and polished!"
"That's right, Casey. Now I am not saying your mommy is Fools Gold, or anything bad about her. She was my best friend before she left and went on the tour full time, and she was a good mommy to you. What I'm saying is, just because you see a picture of her that is all pretty and glittery, it doesn't mean she doesn't make mistakes, and she made a big one leaving you and your daddy, sweetheart!"
Zane was afraid that would only stir the pot, but by the time the waitress left with their orders, the girls had moved on. They asked if they could have their own table and moved to a table next to the adults, who had not moved on.
"Damn her!" Carole hissed to Zane and Brad. "How could any decent human being abandon that precious little girl? Don't get me wrong, Zane, you've done the best job anyone could possibly do! She's an absolute angel, smart as a whip, and sweeter than sugar! I just don't understand how Cassie can just completely ignore the two of you like she does! The Bitch doesn't call, she didn't even send her a birthday or Christmas present last year!"
Zane had no answer; he shrugged, looked at his daughter and her friends chatting happily at the table closest to their booth, and changed the subject. "We should be at Cal's ranch in another hour. If he's awake he'll make us come stay in the house; if not, let's bunk in the trailers tonight. We can drink coffee with him in the morning and catch up."
Carole gave him a disbelieving look, shook her head to clear her mind, and joined the planning session. Oh, she was still steaming inside, but if everyone else could move on so could she! However, this was the first rodeo where their paths collided since she abandoned her family and friends, and if she got her hands on her "best friend", she planned to yank all that golden hair out by the roots, cussing her the whole time!
The girls were holding hands as they walked back to the rigs when Stacy turned around and declared, "We are so happy your new sponsor got us these rigs with the pretty pictures of the coast and seagulls on them!" Carole told the girls she agreed, and the men beamed.
The wrap was a coastal scene complete with breaking waves, sand dunes, and their sponsor's trademark seagull featured on both the living quarters and the cab of the Mack diesel. "Gotta thank you again for that one, buddy," Brad told Zane. "Your new connections in the oil business are really paying off! We may not win the rodeo, but we always win the drive up!"
***
Casey fell asleep within minutes after the diesel engine began to hum, and Zane's mind wandered back to the poster, and then to the woman on the horse that had been his love since high school.
They were sixteen again and getting ready for prom. Cassandra Collins had moved to their little town in west central Texas from Tennessee mid-way through their sophomore year, causing quite a stir. Her beauty caught everyone's eyes; the boys swarmed her like bees to a sweet flower, which meant she bore the ire of the jealous girls. It was her personality, however, that ultimately won over the girls and kept the boys interested, but at arm's length.
Adhering to the pecking order, the top senior boys all took their best shot, and then the junior boys took theirs. Zane sat back and watched them swing and miss, but he was more smitten than anyone, so he learned from their strikeouts. His break came because, as smart as she was, the curriculum in Tennessee was not equivalent to Texas', so she needed help in her classes. He knew it was dangerous to be parked in the friend zone, but he was the top student in the class, so he volunteered to help her.