In spite of the warning bells going off inside his head, Josh decided to stop. He knew a woman, even one with a young girl with her, who was hitchhiking, could have a man somewhere near her; a man with a gun or ill intent. Still, it was cold and getting dark, and there was no way he wasn't going to at least offer them a ride.
He pulled the F-250 that was towing a horse in the trailer hitched behind the truck over and put on his emergency blinkers. He rolled the window down and asked the woman, "Where are you headed?"
"Away from here?" she answered in the form of a question.
"I'm headed to Florida. Is that far enough away from here?" he asked her.
"Florida? Florida is warm so...sure. Sounds good to me."
"All right. Climb on up," he told her.
She helped the girl in first and Josh saw she was maybe eight or nine give or take a year or two.
"Hey there, young lady," he said as she sat next to him in the large cab. The girl didn't speak as her mom piled in behind her.
"Oh, it feels so good in here!" she said as the warmth enveloped her. "It's freezing cold outside. Oh, and thank you very much." She helped her daughter with the seat belt, fastened hers then said, "Okay. We're good."
Josh flipped off the emergency blinkers and hit the left turn signal to merge into traffic.
"I wanted to let you know, Florida is warm-er than Virginia, but it isn't exactly warm this time of year. More like pleasantly chilly," he told the woman.
"I'll take it," she said again expressing her gratitude.
Josh only looked at the girl once and her mom twice, but none of this made sense. The mother was a very attractive blonde and her daughter was as pretty as they come. Something was obviously wrong, but Josh had no intention of prying. It wasn't his business and it was a free country. As long as the girl was with her mother by choice—and that appeared to be the case—it wasn't his place to judge.
Moments later they turned off the backroad they'd been on in middle-Virginia horse country and headed toward I-95 where they headed south and drove along through the rest of Virginia, the Carolinas, Georgia, and finally into the Sunshine State.
"Do you have a horse in the trailer?" she said breaking the long spell of silence. The girl was sound asleep and leaning against her mom.
"Yes, ma'am," he said. "I just bought one at the ranch a few miles where I picked you up."
"Ah, yes. I know it well," she said. "I rode there for many years."
"No kidding?" he said glancing over at her in the dim light of the truck's cab. "What do you do now?"
"Well, I was teaching elementary school, but it's time for a change of venue," she told him.
Even in the dim light he saw the reflection off of a very large diamond ring on her left hand which only added to the mystery. The way she looked and the way she was dressed spoke of money and class, not the kind of poverty and problems one typically associated with a mother and her daughter out hitchhiking at dusk on a very cold night.
Curiosity welled up inside him, but he fought it back and kept driving.
"You hungry?" he asked her.
"No, I'm fine. Thank you, though." In fact, she was hungry and she was sure her daughter was, too. But she also knew if she didn't wake her up, she'd be fine until morning.
"How about a cup of coffee then?" he asked her.
"Well, I guess that would be okay," she told him. "I have money so..."
"Forget it. I can afford a couple of bucks," he said with a smile as he pulled off the freeway.
He went through a McDonalds which, at some time a few years back, had gone from having some of the world's worst coffee to some very drinkable joe at an affordable price. He ordered two cups with cream and sugar, which neither he nor the woman next to him used.
He'd also ordered some pastry just in case then said, "You know what? I'm not as hungry as I thought. Why don't you go ahead?"
"Are you sure?" she said hoping he meant it.
"Yep. Help yourself."
The woman saved half for her daughter then enjoyed the rest with her coffee.
They'd been back on the freeway for a while when the woman said, "My name is Aspen and my daughter's name is Jennifer. Well, everyone calls her Jenny. You know, like the girl in the Forrest Gump movie."
The driver laughed and said, "I'm Josh. Nice to meet you, Aspen." He extended his hand without looking at her and her very soft hand told him she most definitely didn't work outside.
"May I ask what you do?" she said as she finished her coffee.
"I work at the Diamond D ranch which is just outside of Jacksonville. I do a little bit of everything which means pretty much whatever my mom, who owns the place, needs me to do. I took a four-year break to go to college and had big plans of doing some new and totally unrelated—and of course, very exciting—thing, but horses are in my blood and in then end, there's nowhere else I'd rather be."
"I understand. I really miss riding. I rode until I was 17. I also went off to college and got a degree in elementary education but never got back to riding." She sat quietly for a minute then when she spoke again, the enthusiasm in her voice was gone. "I ended up getting married right after graduation, and a year later Jenny came along so after just two years, I quit teaching, too."
He was dying to ask what in the world she was doing out here late at night with her daughter whom she was willing to take to Florida with a total stranger but assumed at some point she'd tell him.
A few minutes later she offered a clue. "Things got pretty...tense recently. It wasn't a sudden thing. Well, at least not until last night. It had been building for years. My husband is a lawyer...or he was, at least. I'm pretty sure he's going to be disbarred but that's totally separate from why we're, you know, on the road."
"I'm a pretty good listener if you ever feel like talking," he said and left it at that. Yes, something was definitely very wrong in paradise.
Aspen had no idea what time it was when she woke up, but she quickly noticed they were on I-295 which looped around Jacksonville. A few miles later, she saw Josh turn West onto I-10. A few miles later he headed south on Route 301 then turned onto a an unmarked paved road that led out into a secluded area with houses here and there before ending up on a bumpy dirt road where a sign read: Diamond D Ranch straight ahead.