Read an Excerpt
  Snow Melts in Spring 
 By Deborah Vogts  Zondervan 
 Copyright © 2009   Deborah Vogts 
All right reserved. ISBN: 978-0-310-29275-3  
    Chapter One 
  Red lights flashed like fire in the murky shadows of the  night. Mattie Evans slid from the seat of her truck and made her  way to the accident scene, tuned to the shrill, intermittent static of  the emergency radios.  
     What a way to start this early Sunday morning, not even a week  into the new year. Lord, give me strength.  
     As she neared, the crushed sedan came into view. A ghostly chill  crept up her spine. She noted the shattered glass, a trail of blood.  Paramedics worked to pull the driver from the car and transferred  the motionless boy to a stretcher.  
     At the sight of the victim's marred face, Mattie pressed her hand  to her mouth. Another body lay covered on the ground.  
     "Thanks for getting here so quickly, Doc." The county sheriff  met her on the dirt road, and Mattie forced herself to regain control.  "Got ourselves a bad one. Two drunk teens hit a horse with their car.  One's dead, the other ... well, it don't look good. As for the horse, I  doubt you can save him."  
     With his flashlight, he cleared a path through the dense fog, and  Mattie followed to the edge of the road where her patient lay. Blood  stained the gravel.  
     "They probably didn't even see the animal until it was too late,"  he said. "Don't know why the horse was on the road-must have a fence down." He shined a beam into the dark pasture. "Likely  spooked and jumped toward the vehicle, then smashed into the  windshield. Still breathing, though."  
     Mattie knelt for a closer inspection. Someone had tried to stop  the massive bleeding with towels, to no avail. She stroked the horse's  neck, and the gelding raised his head. The white of his eye showed  pure terror, dilated from shock.  
     "He's lost a lot of blood." The sheriff drew the light over the  animal's body.  
     Mattie took a deep breath and reached into her bag for a syringe.  Once she had the horse sedated, she removed the towels to examine  him. Her heart sank at the extent of the damage.  
     The impact of the windshield had lacerated his right shoulder,  withers, and limb. Corneal rupture of the right eye and massive  skull fractures. A quick check of his mouth revealed his old age. She  noted the paleness of his gums.  
     At times like this, she hated her job. Such hopelessness. Angered  by the senseless destruction, she fought back tears, her teeth  clenched as the horse lay wheezing his every breath. Despite her  oath to save animals, Mattie knew the horse would require extensive  treatments, and even then, his chances for a full recovery were  slim.  
     "He's in a lot of pain." The nagging worry from her recent loss  caused her to doubt her abilities. "There's no reason to make him  suffer. I recommend putting him down."  
     "Can't do that, Mattie," a gruff voice answered close by.  
     Her gaze jolted to see her friend John McCray slumped over his  cane. "Didn't you just get out of the hospital? You shouldn't be out  on a night like this."  
     "That's my fault." Another man stepped from the darkness, and  Mattie acknowledged John's hired hand, Jake. "When I heard the  car horn blaring and realized what had happened, I called the ambulance.  Figured the boss would want to be here."  
     "This is Gil's horse." John gripped her shoulder. "You have to  save him."  
     Mattie had heard stories about Gilbert McCray from her older  sisters, though John hardly spoke of his son. Some said he could  have been a professional team roper, but he'd left it all to become  a football hero in California. A stupid move, as far as she was concerned.  Why would anyone give up being a cowboy for a football  career?  
     She shook her head. "I don't know if I can." She studied the  horse's wounds again, then glanced up at John McCray. Mattie recognized  the look of regret, the kind that left people empty. She also  acknowledged the uncomfortable tightening in her stomach. If she  tried to save the horse and he died, could her business or her heart  handle another fatality?  
                           * * *   
  The team manager for the San Francisco 49ers opened the  door to the trainer's room, and the musty stench of sweat crept in  and mingled with the odor of medicine and bandages. "Gil, your  dad's calling on your cell. I figured you'd want to take it." His booming  voice broke through the racket of the locker room next door as  he tossed the phone to Gil.  
     Gilbert McCray slid off the table and apologized to the attendant  taping his ankle. He checked the caller ID and couldn't imagine why  his dad would be calling just hours before a playoff game-unless  it was an emergency.  
     He flipped the phone open. "Hey, Dad, what's up?"  
     A raspy cough sounded on the other end. "I have some bad news  for you, Son."  
     Gil stepped into the hallway for better reception. "Is everything  okay?"  
     "It's Dusty," his dad said. "He was in an accident early this morning.  I hated to call you, but they're not sure if he's going to make it.  I thought you should know."  
     Gil frowned at the mention of his chestnut gelding. "What  happened?"  
     "He was hit by a car. Got through the fence and must have been  on the edge of the road. Too foggy. The driver didn't see him."  
     Dusty. Gil swallowed the emotion threatening to clog his throat  as the memories whooshed back. He and the horse had been a team.  Gil trained Dusty from a colt, learned some great techniques on his  back, and won plenty of high school championships with him. The  old boy was dying? Though he hadn't ridden the horse for two years,  the news caught him off guard.  
     "Is he in much pain? If we need to, I'll hire the best vet in the  country. Fly him in." The familiar catch in his voice reminded him  of his boyhood when he'd asked for simple favors, believing his dad  could do anything.  
     "We've already got the best, Son. I just thought you should be  prepared."  
     After he said good-bye, Gil slammed his fist against the wall. A  burning sensation shot through his shoulder to his palm. He'd give  anything to see Dusty one last time. Unfortunately, two hours from  now, he had a date with destiny, an appointment at Lambeau Field.  If his team won the Division Championship against the Green Bay  Packers, they'd be one game closer to the Super Bowl. If they lost,  this would be the last game of Gil's career. Funny, he was about to  retire from a game he loved, and his old friend was retiring from the  game of life.  
                           * * *  
  Gil waited on the sideline while the defense played the field.  In all his years as quarterback, he'd never experienced the chaotic  feelings tumbling over him this first half. Two decades ago, he'd left  everything for the game of football. Rodeo. His dad. With no regrets.  Or maybe he'd never allowed himself that luxury until now.  
     He stared out at the field and watched as one of their linebackers  intercepted Green Bay's pass.  
     Offense's turn.  
     The lights glared down as Gil blocked the roar of the spectators  from his mind. Silence. His offensive line crowded around, waiting  for his call.  
     "Go on two." His breath turned into a puff of vapor in the  brisk night air. Gil walked to the line of scrimmage, adrenaline  pumping.  
     "Down, set, hut, hut ..."  
     The ball snapped into his hand. He dropped from the line of  scrimmage and looked for his primary receiver. Covered. The defense  had his running backs blocked as well.  
     No clear path-either throw or run.  
     No time for debate.  
     He tucked the pigskin into his arm and faked a sweep, rolling  over the first lineman coming his way. His legs careened him up  and over the defense as they'd done a hundred times before, and he  flew down the field like a horse after a steer let out of the chute. A  cornerback charged him from the side. Gil slid to the ground.  
     "First down," the referee called out.  
     Gil saw the official's signal and should have been thrilled. Instead,  he stole a glance at the hostile Packer crowd and caught sight  of a man who looked like his father. His breath stilled.  
     Impossible. His dad didn't attend his games. He didn't care  enough to.  
     "Do you even see what's happening out here?" Johnson jammed  his fists into Gil's padded shoulders. "It's like you're in another  world."  
     Gil stared up at the lights.  
     Concentrate. Keep your mind in the game.  
     He went to set up another formation and listened for the radio  signal in his helmet. Receiving his coach's instructions, Gil pitched  his hands into the huddle, felt the determination of his teammates  as the heat rose off their bodies. He refused to let them down. "This  time we'll go for a 40/50 sprint draw. On one."  
     He moved into position behind his center.  
     "Red, blue, 40-50, set hut."  
     The ball swept up into his hands. Gil sensed a blitz and passed  to his wide receiver. Missed. Incomplete.  
     He tried again. This time when Gil got the ball, he maneuvered  it to feel the roughened leather of the seam and pedaled back. He  snaked to the left to hand off to Johnson, his halfback. The ball  barely left his hand when three defensive linemen dropped him to  the ground.  
     Everything went black.  
  (Continues...)  
  
     
 
 Excerpted from Snow Melts in Spring by Deborah Vogts  Copyright © 2009   by Deborah Vogts.   Excerpted by permission.
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