afraid!
Frustrated, Bird tried a new approach.
Whatâs your name?
Bandito.
Good boy, Bandito.
Bird tried to remain calm and unhurried.
Iâm Bird. I live next door. Itâs time to go outside now.
Hello, Bird. Outside now, is it? Okay.
To Birdâs amazement, Bandito trotted out of his stall, down the hall and into his field. That was easy. Bird wondered if it might work again.
Did you hear, horses? Itâs time to go outside now. Outside.
One by one, the horses stumbled out of their stalls and staggered outside, heads to the ground and drooling. Bird was stunned. By calming herself down and simplifying the message, sheâd made it possible for the animals to respond. Only two more to go and theyâd all be safe.
But as Bird turned to the next stall, the stable swirled around her. Her knees weakened and began to buckle. She thought of the horses still trapped and fought hard against oblivion. Then it was dark.
Bird awoke to the sounds of sirens. She coughed. Then she coughed harder and harder, until she vomited. Rolling herself over onto her stomach, Bird retched into the grass. Now up on her knees, she trembled and shook and vomited again until there was nothing left in her stomach. When she finally lifted her head, she saw green through the slits of her puffed eyes. She was outside, hidden in a grassy little dip in the land, far from the barn. The last thing she remembered was being inside it.
With no strength left, Bird let her head flop back down, trying to avoid her own mess. Did she hear someone calling her name? She strained her neck. Her vision was blurry, but she began to count the horses through squinted eyes. They were lined up along the fence, staring at the burnt rubble that used to be their home. One, two, three, the pony, five, six, the grey, eight, nine, the bony old thoroughbred. All ten had gotten out. Theyâd all made it.
Bird welled up with tears of relief, and the salt stung her eyes sharply. Salt heals the human body better than anything else, Bird remembered, so she tried to ignore the pain. She sank back into the green grass and let her mind wander.
Sheâd once heard the story of a horse named Atticus, a strong young Dutch warmblood whoâd fought his way out of a burning barn. The owner had arrived too late. He stood helplessly watching the fire eat up his barn. Tears rolled down his face as he thought of his eight beautiful horses dying inside. Then he felt a nudge on his shoulder, and when he turned to look he saw an amazing sight. Atticus, singed all over, with blood pouring down his face from a wound caused by a falling beam, stood there behind him. Alive. The only horse to survive. The man fell to his knees in thanks. Atticus became a legend that day. Nobody knows what kind of courage, ingenuity and strength heâd needed to get out of that burning barn. The owner claimed it was a miracle. There was even an article written about it in
Horse Sport
magazine.
Wait a minute, Bird thought, snapping back to the present. I
did
hear someone calling. She caught a glimpse of her body as she attempted to lift her head. Am I lying here in my underwear? Memories of hot metal and searing smoke came flooding back, but how had she gotten outside? Whoâd closed the gate to the horsesâ field? When had the fire trucks arrived? Whoâd gotten the last horses out? Nothing made sense.
She peered at the barn â or what was left of it. Black smoke billowed up from an unrecognizable heap of charred timbers, broken windows and jagged steel posts. The firemen held hoses that gushed streams of water, and debris hissed and smoked as the water evaporated almost before it hit the heat. A shiver passed through Birdâs body.
I might have died in that fire.
I wouldnât let that happen, Bird girl.
Cody. Bird looked around. There, standing behind shrubs and a fence post, was the small coyote. He was singed from head to toe.
You saved me, Cody?
It is my