i ii iii iv v KAREN KINGSBURY NEW YORK BOSTON NASHVILLE vi Copyright ©2005 by Karen Kingsbury All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review. Center Street Time Warner Book Group 1271 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020 Visit our Web site at www.twbookmark.com The Center Street name and logo are registered trademarks of the Time Warner Book Group. Printed in the United States of America First Warner Books Edition: April 2005 10987654321 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A thousand tomorrows : a novel / Karen Kingsbury.-- 1st Warner Books ed. p. cm. Summary: "A young couple faces the challenge of falling in love, while seemingly doomed to repeat the negative patterns they have established for most of their lives"--Provided by the publisher 1SBN 0-446-52967-2 1. Self-destructive behavior--Fiction. 2. Psychological fiction, lcsh I. Title. PS3561.I4873T48 2005 813' .54--dc22 2004026371 Book design by Giorgetta Bell McRee vii Dedicated to... Donald, my Prince Charming: The dance is a beautiful one; I only wish the music would play forever. Kelsey, my forever laughter: Thanks for letting me into the most tender places of your heart. Tyler, my sweetest song: When the spotlight hits you, honey, your dad and I will be there in the front row. Sean, my silly heart: It feels like you've been in my heart forever. Josh, my gentle giant: Our plan was two adopted Haitian boys; God's plan was three. I'm so glad He brought you to us. EJ, my chosen one: Watching you come into your own, growing and stretching with the years, has been one of my greatest blessings. Austin, my miracle boy: Your days are speeding by, precious youngest child. I can't slow the march of time, but you remind me I can savor every beat. And to God Almighty, the Author of Life, who has--for now--blessed me with these. viii ix acknowledgments Novels do not come together without a great deal of help. For that reason, I'd like to thank several people who helped make A Thousand Tomorrows possible. First, a special thanks to Maureen Egen and Roll Zettersten for taking me under your wing at Center Street and believing that maybe the whole world needed to know about this story. Your encouragement and faith in me have made all the difference. I appreciate you more than you know. Also, a thanks to my other friends at Center Street, especially my editor, Leslie Peterson, and my publicist, Andrea Davis. You are amazing in the way you think outside the box. I'm grateful beyond measure to be working with you. Also, thanks to the people who helped lend credibility to this novel. A year ago, I shared a cross- country airplane ride with professional bull rider Ross Coleman. That four-hour conversation became the inspiration for Cody Gunner, the main character in A Thousand Tomorrows. Since that conversation, Ross Coleman and his family, along with dozens of rodeo competitors, cowboys, and professional bull riders x viii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS including the all-time great Tuff Hedeman, helped make the world of rodeo real to me, and for that I am grateful. You lent accuracy to this story; any errors in detail are mine. In addition, a thanks to those who shared their cystic fibrosis stories and information. I join you in praying for a cure for this disease, and for believing that in time research and funding will continue to add tomorrows every day. Thank you to my family, especially Donald and the kids, who don't mind tuna sandwiches and quesadillas two weeks straight when I'm on deadline. You're the best support system I could ever have! Thanks also to my mother, Anne Kingsbury, who is my assistant and best friend. And a thanks to my dad, Ted Kingsbury, who continues to be my greatest encourager. In addition I'd like to thank my friends and family who surround me with love and prayer and encouragement, especially Susan Kane, Trish Kingsbury, Lynne Groten, Ann Hudson, Sylvia Wallgren, Sonya Fitzpatrick, Teresa Thacker, Kathy Santschi, Melinda Chapman, Christine Wessel, Vicki and Randy Graves, Marcia Bender, and so many others. A special thanks to my agent, Rick Christian, at Alive Communications. You are brilliant at all you do, acting in so many roles as you lead me in this writing adventure. You care deeply about my career, but more than that, you care about me in my role as a wife and mother. Thanks for working out the details with that in mind. You're amazing, and I'm the most thankful author in the world to be working with you. xi a thousand tomorrows xii 1 Mary Williams never saw it coming. She became Mike Gunner's wife the summer of 1972, back when love was all the world needed enough to solve any problem. So big no one minded it might end or die or drop off suddenly into the muddy Mississippi River did ten yards of The wedding was small, held on a hill Oxford not far from Ole Miss, a stone's thro the grassy football field where Mike had Marriage, they told themselves, wouldn't losing their independence. They were just another layer to their relationship, somethir diverse, more complex. As a reminder, during the ceremony they each held something that syn themselves--Mary, a book of poetry; Mike, a t A football. Looking back that should've been a sign, football was Mike's first love, and what sort could be married to two lovers? But at the with half the guests in flowing tie-dyed gm flower wreaths--holding a football and a 2 poetry seemed hip and new, a spit in the face of tradition and marital bondage. No three-piece suits and starched aprons for Mike and Mary. Mike had an NFL contract with the Atlanta Falcons, and a pretty new house a few miles from the stadium. Mary was a runaway, so leaving Biloxi meant cutting ties that were already frayed. They would live as one, him in a Falcons uniform, her with a pen and paper, ready to capture the deep phrases and rhymes that grew in the soil of her heart. Babies? They would wait five years at least. Maybe ten. She was only nineteen, a child herself. Marriage would mean finding new and heightened ways to love each other. Sundays cheering from the stands while her husband blazed a trail down the football field, and lazy Tuesdays, barefoot and sipping coffee while she recited to him her latest creation. That was the plan, anyway. But God didn't get the memo, because Mary was pregnant three months later and gave birth to a baby boy shortly before their first anniversary. Cody William Gunner, they called him. Little Codester. Mary put away the pen and paper and bought a rocking chair. She spent her days and most nights walking a crying baby, heating up bottles, and changing diapers. "Sorry I'm not around more," Mike told her. He wasn't used to babies. Besides, if he wanted to keep up, he needed more time at the field house, more reps with the weights, more hours on the track. Mary told him she didn't mind, and the funny thing was, she really didn't. Life was good at home. 3 Mike was happy about being a father, because Cody was all boy from the moment he was born. His first word was ball, and Mike bought him a pair of running shoes months before he could walk. The years that followed were a blur of vibrant reds and happy yellows. Mike was coming into his own, each season showing him faster, more proficient at catching the long bomb. There had been no warning, no sign that life was about to fall apart. In the spring of 1978, when Cody was nearly five, Mary learned she was expecting again. Still, it wasn't the coming baby, but a bad catch one October Sunday that changed everything. Mike was all alone, ten yards away from the nearest defender, when he reached for the sky, grabbed the ball and came down at an angle that buckled his knees. A torn anterior ligament, the hospital report showed. Surgery was scheduled; crutches were ordered. "You'll miss a season," the doctor told him. "To be honest, I'm not sure you'll ever run the same again." Six weeks later Mary gave birth to Carl Joseph. From the beginning, Carl was different. He didn't cry the way Cody had, and he slept more than usual. His fussiest moments were during feeding time, when milk from the bottle would leak out his nose while he was eating, causing him to choke and sputter and cough. Mike would look at him and get nervous. "Why's he doing that?" "I'm not sure." Mary kept a burp rag close by, dabbing at the baby's nose and convincing herself nothing was wrong. "At least he isn't crying." 4 KAREN KINGSBURY Either way, Mike wanted to be gone. As soon as he could, he got back in the training room, working harder than ever to make the knee well again. By the next fall, he was cleared to play, but he was more than a second slower in the forty. "We'll try you at special teams, Gunner," the coach told him. "You've got to get your times down if you want your spot back." His future suddenly as shaky as his left knee, Mike began staying out with the guys after games, drinking and coming home with a strange, distant look in his eyes. By the time Carl Joseph was two, Mike was cut from the Falcons. Cut without so much as a thank you or a good-luck card. By then they knew the truth about Carl Joseph. Their second son had Down syndrome. His condition came with a host of problems, feeding issues, developmental and speech delays. One morning Mary sat Mike down at the breakfast table. "You never talk about Carl Joseph." She put her hands on her hips. "You act like he has the flu or something." Mike shrugged. "We'll get him therapy; he'll be fine." "He won't be fine, Mike." She heard a crack in her voice. "He'll be this way forever. He'll live with us forever." It was that last part that caught Mike's attention. He said nothing significant at the time, nothing Mary could remember. But that summer, he was gone more than he was home. Always his story was the same. He was traveling the country looking for a tryout, getting a few weeks' look in one city and then another, 5 working out with a handful of teams, trying to convince coaches he hadn't lost a step, hadn't done any thing but get stronger since his injury. But one weekend morning, when Mike was still asleep in their bedroom, Mary found a Polaroid picture in his duffle bag. It was of him in a bar surrounded by three girls, one on each knee, one draped over his shoulder. When Mike woke up, Mary was in the kitchen ready to confront him. He would have to stop traveling, stop believing his next contract was a tryout away. Bars would be a thing of the past, because she needed him at home, helping out with the boys. Money was running out. If football had nothing more to offer, he needed to find a job, some other way to support them. She had her speech memorized, but it was all for nothing. He took control of the conversation from the moment he found her at the kitchen table. "This..." He tossed his hands and let them fall limp at his sides. His eyes were bloodshot. "This isn't what I want anymore." "What?" She held up the Polaroid. "You mean this?" Anger flashed in his eyes. He snatched the picture from her, crumpled it, and slammed it into the trash can. The look he gave her was cold, indifferent. He gritted his teeth. "What I do outside this house is my business." She opened her mouth, but before she could tell him he was wrong, he slid his wedding ring from his left hand and dropped it on the table between them. 6 "It's over, Mary. I don't love you anymore." Carl's cry sounded from upstairs. Slow and monotone, the cry of a child who would always be different. Mary looked up, following the sound. Then she found Mike's eyes again. "This isn't about me." She kept her tone calm, gentle. "It's about you." A loud breath escaped his lips. "It's not about me." "It is." She sat back, her eyes never leaving his. "You were on top of the world before you got hurt; now you're out of work and afraid." Compassion found a place in her voice. "Let's pull together, Mike." She stood, picked up his ring, and held it out to him. "Let me help you." Carl's crying grew louder. Mike closed his eyes. "I can't..." His words were a tortured whisper. "I can't stay here. I can't be a father to him, Mary. Every time I look at him, I... I can't do it." Mary felt the blood drain from her face and the cheap linoleum turn liquid beneath her feet. What had he said? This was about Carl Joseph? Precious Carl, who never did anything but smile at Mike and long to be held by him? Mary's scalp tingled, and the hairs on her arms stood straight up. "You're saying you can't stay married to me because of... because of Carl Joseph?" "Don't say it like that." He pinched the bridge of his nose and hung his head. Carl's crying grew still louder. "But that's it, right?" The truth was exploding within her, spraying shrapnel at her heart and soul and leaving scars that would stay forever. "You 7 want out because you can't be a father to Carl Joseph. Or because you're embarrassed by him. Because he's not perfect." "I'm already packed, Mary. I called a cab; I'm flying to California and starting over. You can have the house; I'll send money when I get a job." In a small, less important part of her mind, Mary wondered where Cody was, why he was so quiet. But she couldn't act on her curiosity. She was too busy reminding herself to breathe. "You're leaving because your son has Down syndrome? Do you hear yourself, Mike?" But he was already headed back up the stairs. When he left the house ten minutes later, he mumbled a single good-bye to no one in particular. Cody came tearing into the entryway from the living room, his eyes wide, forehead creased with worry. "Dad, wait!" Cody ran out the door, his untied tennis shoes flopping with every step. Carl Joseph in tow, Mary followed, horrified at the scene playing out. The cab waited out front, ant without turning back, Mike helped the driver loac both his suitcases into the trunk. Cody stopped a few feet away, chest heaving "Dad, where are you going?" Mike hesitated, his eyes on Cody. "Never mind.' "But Dad--" Cody took a step closer. "When'r, you coming home?" "I'm not." He looked at Mary and back at Cody. "This is it, son." Mike moved toward the passenger door. "Be good for your mama, you hear?" "But Dad... I got a baseball game Friday; you 8 promised you'd be there!" The boy was frantic, his words breathless and clipped. "Dad, don't go!" Mike opened the door of the cab. "Wait!" Mary stormed barefoot across the damp grass toward the cab. Carl Joseph stayed behind, rooted in one spot, watching, his thumb in his mouth. Mary jabbed her finger in the air. "You can't leave now, Mike. Your son's talking to you." "Don't do this, Mary." Mike shot her a warning look. He lowered himself a few inches toward the passenger seat. "I have nothing to say." "Dad!" Cody looked from Mike to Mary and back again. "What's happening; where're you going?" Mike bit his lip and gave a curt nod to Cody. "Good-bye, son." "Fine!" Mary screamed the word, her voice shrill and panicked. "Leave, then." She bent over, her knees shaking. Tears ran in rivers down her face. "Go ahead and leave. But if you go now, don't come back. Not ever!" "What?" Cody looked desperate and sick, his world spinning out of control. He glared at his mother. "Don't say that, Mom. Don't tell him not to come back!" Mary's eyes never left Mike's face. "Stay out of this, Cody. If he doesn't want us, he can go." She raised her voice again. "Do you hear me, Mike? Don't come back!" What happened next would be a part of all their lives as long as morning followed night. Cody's father looked once more at the three of them standing on the lawn, then he climbed into the back- seat, shut the door, and the cab pulled away. 9 "Dad!" Cody screamed his name and took off running. The sound frightened Carl Joseph. He buried his face in his hands and fell onto his knees, rocking forward and calling out, "Mama... Mama... Mama." Mary went to him. "Shhh. It's okay." She rubbed his back. Why was this happening? And why hadn't there been any warning? She was dizzy with shock, sick to her stomach and barely able to stand as she watched Cody chase after his father's cab. Never did the cab slow even a little, but all the while Cody kept running. "Dad! Dad, wait!" Five houses down, seven, ten. "Don't go, Dad! Please!" Each word hit Mary like a Mack truck. When she couldn't take another minute, she screamed after him, "Cody, get back here!" But he wouldn't come, wouldn't stop running. All the way to the end of the block, with a speed he'd gotten from his father, he ran until the cab was long gone from sight. Then, for ten minutes, he stood there. A dark-haired eight-year-old boy, standing on the corner staring after a cab that wasn't ever coming back. In some small way, Mary was almost glad Mike was gone. Sure, a few hours earlier she'd been willing to fight for their marriage. But that was when she thought things were simpler. She could understand his confusion, what with his football career in limbo. But to be embarrassed by Carl Joseph? Carl was her son, a part of her. Because of his 10 KAREN KINGSBURY disability, he'd never be capable of the kind of low, mean-spirited act his father had just committed. No, Carl would always have a kind, simple heart, but Mike would miss that--the same way he'd missed everything about Carl Joseph since the day he was diagnosed. Even as she stood there, willing Cody to turn around and come home, not quite believing her marriage was over, she felt her resolve building. There was no loving a man who didn't love his own son. If Mike didn't want to be a father to Carl Joseph, she'd love the boy enough for both of them. She would survive, even if she never heard from Mike Gunner again. She focused on Cody once more, his little-boy shoulders slumped forward as he waited, facing the empty spot where the cab had disappeared. He was crying, no doubt. She could almost see his smudged, tearstained cheeks and the slack-jawed look on his face. Was he feeling the way she felt? Abandoned? Overcome with despair? A strange thought hit her, and suddenly fear had the upper hand. Because the thought was something she hadn't considered until that moment. Yes, she would survive, and certainly Carl Joseph would be okay without Mike. But Cody adored his father; he always had. And if the boy's slumped shoulders were any indication, Cody might not bounce back the way she and Carl would. Rather, he might never be the same again. 11 chapter two Cody's sides hurt from running. He dug his fingers into his waist and stared down the empty street. "Dad!" The picture filled his mind again. The cab slowing down, stopping for a minute, then making a gradual left turn. "Dad, come back." A breeze hit him in the face and he realized he was crying. "Dad!" Cody gasped, grabbing at any air he could suck in. Why did he leave? Where did he go? Dad took trips all the time, but he always came home. Always. What had he said? He wasn't coming back; was that it? His dad's words rumbled around inside him, making his chest tight, filling his heart and soul and lungs with hurt. Every breath was a struggle. His dad was gone. He was gone and there was nothing Cody could do about it. Come back, Dad! The words stayed stuck in his throat this time, and he stared down. Stay, feet. Don't move. He'll come back; be will. 12 KAREN KINGSBURY Cody lifted his eyes to the place where the cab had turned. Any second, right? He'd turn around, come back home, tell them all he was sorry for getting so mad, right? Cody waited and waited and waited. And then he remembered the thing his dad had said about Carl Joseph. I can't be a father to him... Eight years was plenty old enough for Cody to understand the problem. Carl Joseph was different. He didn't look right or talk right or walk right. He was happy and really good at loving everyone and he almost never got mad, but their dad maybe didn't notice that. That's why, this time, having his dad leave was more serious. Because he didn't want to be a daddy to Carl Joseph. Cody stared down the street. Come back, Dad... turn around. He waited and watched for a long, long time. Nothing. No movement, no sounds of cars turning around and coming back. No yellow cabs. Just the quiet dance of twisty green leaves above him and the hot summer song of unseen crickets. Or something like crickets. Later his mother would tell him that she cried for him, standing there all that time, waiting for his father to come back. But after a while, Cody wasn't just standing there waiting; he was swept up in a feeling he'd never known until that day. It started in his feet, almost as if it were oozing up through the cracked bumpy sidewalk. A burning that flooded his veins and pushed higher, past his 13 a thousand tomorrows knees and thighs, into his gut, where it swirled and mixed and grew until it filled his heart and mind, and finally his soul. Not until it fully consumed him, not until it took up every spare bit of his young body, did he realize what had come over him, into him. Cody knew what hate was because of Billy Bloom in his second-grade class. Billy was bigger than everyone else. Bigger and meaner. He tripped kinder gartners, and stole the ball from the kickball game at recess, and laughed at Cody when he got a wrong answer in math. Cody hated Billy Bloom. But what he was feeling now, this was something new, something so powerful it burned in his arms and legs and made him feel heavy and slow and trapped. All the other times Cody had used the word hate, he'd been wrong. Because this--what he felt for his father--was hatred. Cody never told anyone, but that morning he felt his heart shrivel up and die, all except the piece that belonged to Carl Joseph. His little brother thought Cody was Superman and Christopher Robin all rolled into one. As the weeks passed, every morning was the same routine. Carl Joseph would scamper down the hall to Cody's room, slip inside, and stand next to the bed. "Brother..." He would pat Cody's shoulder. "It's a new morning." Cody would stir and blink his eyes and find Carl Joseph there. "Yep, buddy. A brand-new morning." 14 KAP,.E N KIN GSBUP,.Y "Is Daddy coming home today?" Cody would grit his teeth and sit up some. "Not today, buddy. I don't think so." For a minute worry would cast shadows on Carl Joseph's face. But then a grin would fill his round cheeks and he'd make a funny chuckling sound. "That's okay, 'cause know why, brother?" "Why?" " 'Cause I have you, brother. I always have you." Cody would hug him around the neck. "That's right, buddy. You always have me." The two of them were inseparable. Carl Joseph followed him around the house, waiting for him at the front window on school days. He didn't talk as clear as other kids, and he had those puffy bunches of skin under his eyes. But he was the happiest little guy Cody ever saw. He loved with abandon, and after a few months he walked into Cody's room one morning and didn't ask about when Daddy would come home. That day Carl Joseph worked his way into the deepest part of Cody's heart. He still wasn't sure exactly what was wrong with Carl Joseph, but what ever it was, Cody had a feeling there wouldn't be many people in his little brother's life. If their dad didn't want Carl Joseph, maybe no one would. No one but Cody. Whatever else happened, Cody would love Carl Joseph, and maybe that was all he'd ever love. He had no use for his mother; she was a grown-up, the only one with the power to keep Cody's father home. Instead, she'd stood right there on the grass and told him to go. Told him to go and never come back. 15 a thousand tomorrows The rest of that year, Cody would wait until Carl Joseph was asleep, then he'd creep up to his room without saying good night to his mother. He'd lie on the bed and stare at the wall. Sometimes tears would come, sometimes not. Always he would start at the beginning. Hearing his dad talk to his mom about leaving, about not wanting to be with Carl Joseph. Then seeing his dad with a suitcase and following him out into the front yard and watching him head for the yellow cab. "Good-bye, son. Goodbye." The story would run again and again in his head, playing out on the blank wall beside his bed. Almost always his mother would find him there. Most of the time she didn't ask about why Cody went to bed early or why he was lying on his side staring at the wall or why he never told her good night or what he was feeling about his dad being gone. But once in a while she would try. Cody remembered one night the next spring when his mom came up to talk to him. She opened the door and took a loud breath. Then she moved a few steps toward him. "I hate that you hide up here, Cody. You're not the only one hurting." "Yes, I am!" Cody turned over and sat up. IRis heart skittered around in his chest. "Carl Joseph doesn't remember Daddy." "I miss him, too." She sat on the edge of his bed. Her eyes were red and swollen, and her voice was tired. "I love him, Cody. It's not my fault he left." "It is too your fault!" Cody closed his eyes and remembered his father leaving. When he opened 16 KAREN KINGSBURY them the anger inside him was bursting to get out. "You told him to go!" "Cody." His mom touched his foot. Her fingers were shaking. "I didn't mean it." "Yes you did!" His voice got louder. "You told him to go and never come back." "Because I was mad. I didn't really want him to go." But nothing she said that night or any other time was enough to convince Cody. She told his dad to leave, and not only that, she did nothing to make him stay. Maybe if she'd been nicer to him, helped him find another football job. Made him better dinners. Any thing to make sure he didn't walk out the door. Even when it no longer made sense, long after his childhood days blended into middle school, Cody blamed her. Because it was easier to dole out blame than it was to unravel the knot of hatred and sort through the loose ends of a lifetime of bitterness. By the time Cody was in seventh grade, the foot ball coach approached him. "You're Mike Gunner's boy, right? Atlanta Fal cons back a few years ago?" Cody bristled, his spine stiff. "Yes, sir." "Well." The coach gave a few slow nods. "I've watched you out with the other boys." The man hesitated. "You're good, Cody. You play just like your dad. The varsity coach over at the high school wants you to join 'em for practice a few times a week. How does that sound?" Cody made a hurried attempt at trying to sort through his emotions. Just like my dad? He swallowed, not sure what to say. 17 a thosand tomorrows The coach raised his brow, as if maybe he expected a different reaction. "What can I tell 'em, Gunner? You interested?" "Yes, sir." He coughed and his words got stuck in his throat. Was that why he loved the game, loved the way the ball felt in the crook of his arm, tucked against his ribs, the way his feet flew down the field? Because he was Mike Gunner's boy? The anger that lived and breathed in that dark closet of his heart roared so loud it took his breath away. If football was his father's legacy, he wanted nothing to do with it. The coach started walking away. "Okay, then. I'll tell him you'll be there." "Sir?" Cody's face grew hot. He waited until the coach turned around. "What I mean is, no, sir. I won't go; I'm not interested." The coach gave him a strange look. Then he laughed. "Of course you're interested, Gunner." He twisted his face. "Football's in your blood." "No, sir." Cody's mind raced, desperate for an answer. "I'm... I'm going out for band." "Band?" The word clearly left a bad taste in the coach's mouth. "You're kidding, right?" "No, sir." Cody tried to look serious. "I... I love band." He hesitated. He would no sooner go out for band than dye his hair pink. Cody felt himself relax; he stood a little taller. "Band's what I live for." The coach studied him, a frown deepening the lines in his forehead. Then he shrugged and took a step back. "Suit yourself, Gunner. I'll tell 'em you have other plans." As Cody watched the man leave, a certainty filled 18 KAP.E N KINGSBURY his soul. He would never pick up a football again as long as he lived. No matter his feelings for the game, if seeing him with a pigskin reminded people of his father, he wanted none of it. Later that year he fell in with a group of 4-H kids, guys who needed help with their farming or live stock. Cody was a quick study, and after a few months he could handle a horse as well as the kids who'd been on them for years. One night just before summer, he and the guys met at the fairgrounds to watch the high school rodeo team practice. They moved close to the fence and Cody breathed it in, the heavy smell of bull hides. Cody knew about bull riding, but that night was the first time he ever saw a cowboy ride. The guy was a junior, a scrawny kid Cody had seen around town. Slow and careful, the cowboy lowered himself onto a jet-black bull, and in a blur the gate flew open and the animal burst into the arena. Wild and out of control, the bull bucked and jerked and reared his head back. It was all the cowboy could do to hold on, and after six seconds, he slid to one side of the animal's back and fell hard in a heap to the ground. "No good!" an older cowboy shouted. The man was in his late twenties, maybe. The rodeo coach, no doubt. "You need eight, Ronny. Eight seconds." The kid picked himself up, dusted off his loose- fitting jeans and pressed his cowboy hat onto his head. His voice held a type of respect Cody admired. "Yes, sir. Eight seconds." Five bulls stood together in a stock pen. The black one, two brown, one gray- and white-spotted, and 19 a thousand tomorrous one that was broad and yellow with a hump between its shoulders. One after another Ronny and a handful of high school cowboys took on the bulls while their instructor shouted out advice. "Find the seat, Taylor, find it and keep it!... Move your legs, Ronny .... Kevin, bring your hand up higher over your head! Okay, good." Cody barely heard any of it. He was too busy watching the bulls, studying them, hypnotized by their fury. Those eight seconds, while the cowboy was on the bull's back, were the picture of a battle he knew intimately. The war he waged every day against the anger and rage within him. The way the rider struggled to stay on through the violent bucking, looking for the center of a ride that was never even close to controlled. It was the same way he fought to stay on top of the emotions that boiled inside him. Before he could voice what he was feeling, without saying a word to his buddies, he followed the fence around the arena and walked up to the man still barking orders at the cowboys. "That's better, Ronny; can you feel it? Keep it centered!" "Sir?" Cody squared his legs and crossed his arms. The man gripped the crown of his hat and looked over his shoulder. "Whadya want, kid?" Cody didn't hesitate. "I want to ride." "Yeah?" The coach smiled and a sarcastic chuckle sounded deep in his throat. "What are you, eleven?" "Thirteen." The anger grew a few degrees hotter. He straightened himself. "I'll stay on any bull you've got." 20 KAtLEN KIN GSBUI.Y The man leaned into the fence and sized him up. "What grade you in? Seventh?" "Yes, sir." "Another year before you can ride for me." He turned toward the action in the arena. Cody stared at the man's back and clenched his teeth. He didn't need anyone's permission to ride a bull. It was his own thing; between the bull and him. He continued around the arena to the chutes. One of the cowboys shot him a look. "Hey, kid, get lost. This is for cowboys only." "I'm a cowboy." He nodded the brim of his hat toward the coach. "He wants to see what I can do." The kid frowned, but then his expression eased. He raised one shoulder. "Okay. Take the next one." He should've been scared, at least. The bulls had no horns, but the animals were massive. One slip beneath those muscled legs, and there wouldn't be any ride to remember. Cody worked the muscles in his jaw. As long as the coach didn't see him in the chutes, he'd be all right. When it was his turn, he glanced at the coach and felt himself relax. The guy was talking to three riders, his back to the chute. Cody held his breath. He wasn't leaving the arena without getting on a bull. "Take your ride, little man," one of the bigger cowboys shouted at him. "We're waiting." Cody bit down hard and steadied himself. Then he did what he'd seen the other cowboys do. He climbed into the chute, one foot on either side of the bull, and fumbled with the rope. His hand had to be wrapped to the bull somehow, right? He flipped the rope around, trying to make a loop. 21 a lhousand Wmorrows "Oh, brother. Ain't you ever done this?" The cowboy on the gate leaned over. "Which hand you ridin' with?" Which hand? Cody gulped and thrust his right hand out. "That'll do." The cowboy set to work wrapping Cody's hand, palm up, until it was tight against the bull's back. "Slide forward." Cody did as he was told. That's when he noticed the look in the bull's eyes. Lifeless, hard eyes, trying to catch a glimpse of whichever mortal had dared climb on his back. Cody stared at the beast. The anger in the animal's expression was rivaled only by his own. "Ya hear me, cowboy? You ready?" Cody blinked. What was he doing, sitting on a bull? Was he crazy? Fear tried to say something, but anger kicked it in the shins. Come on, bull, give it all you got. Your fury's nothing compared to mine. He nodded. "Ready." The chute was open. Stay centered, wasn't that what the coach had told the other riders? Keep your seat; stay centered. He focused on the animal's back, and suddenly he wasn't fighting to stay on a bucking bull. He was taking on his father, battling the loneliness and rejection and abandonment, focusing all his rage on the beast. How many times had thoughts of his dad made him want to punch his hand through a wall or rip a door from its hinges? Running helped some, but nothing eased the rage in his heart. Nothing until now. 22 KAREN KINGSBURY The buzzer sounded. Cody pulled his hand free and swung his legs over the side of the bull. Some thing was making its way through his veins, but it took a few seconds to realize what it was. Relief. For the first time since his father walked out, his heart didn't feel paralyzed with rage. The reason was obvious: he'd left every bit of emotion on the back of the bull. Only then did he hear the coach bellowing in his direction. One of the cowboys herded the bull back into the chute, and a hush fell over the arena. Cody turned and stood frozen, facing the man. His bud dies had moved closer. They were clustered outside the fence, eyes wide. "Stay there, kid. Don't move!" Even in the shadowy arena lights, the coach's cheeks were bright red. He stormed up to Cody until their faces were inches apart. His voice fell to a dangerous hiss. "I told you to go home." "Sorry, sir." Cody swallowed hard, but he didn't break eye contact. "I ... I had to ride tonight. I load to." The man twisted his face into a sneer aimed at Cody. Then, bit by bit, his face unwound and he took a step back. "Where'd you learn to ride like that?" He couldn't lie to the man now; not if he wanted to ride again. "That was my first ride, sir." "Your first..." The coach narrowed his eyes. "That was your first time on a bull?" "Yes, sir." Cody pulled himself a bit straighter. "I'm sorry, sir." 23 a thousand tomorrows The man hung his thumbs on his belt buckle. "What's your name, boy?" "Cody. Cody Gunner." "You going to Jefferson High, Gunner?" "Yes, sir." He looked at the ground for a moment. "When I'm old enough." "You wanna be a bull rider, is that it?" A bull rider? Cody hadn't considered the idea before. But he wanted to climb back on a bull more than he'd ever wanted anything. Cody exhaled, still catching his breath, his eyes on the coach again. The rush from the ride was wearing off. "Yes, sir. I want that." The coach hesitated. This was the part where he'd kick Cody out of the arena and tell him he'd never ride for Jefferson's rodeo team. Not ever. Cody waited, unable to blink under the man's stare. But instead of ordering him home or threatening him for his actions, the coach gave a single nod. The hint of a rusty old smile tugged on his lips. "You know something, Cody Gunner? I think you'll be a pretty good one." After that, there was no turning back. Cody's birthday was three weeks later, in June. He wanted just one thing--tuition and transportation to a bull-riding school in Colorado. "Bull riding?" His mother frowned. "Cody, that's the craziest sport on earth." She crossed her arms and tapped her foot. "You can do anything but that." She turned back to the dishes she'd been doing. "Play football like your daddy. At least then you'll go head-to-head with a boy your size. Not a bull." 24 KAREN KINGSBURY Football like his daddy? Cody felt his gaze harden. He had nothing but contempt for his mother. After all this time she still didn't get it, didn't understand him. Sure, she was easy on him. She didn't give him rules the way other boys had rules from their parents. Instead she gave him whatever he wanted, and peppered him with questions. "Cody, how are you?" "Cody, what're you thinking?" "Cody, what are you feeling?" "Cody, what's wrong?" He was sick of her questions, sick of her trying to make up for the fact that he didn't have a dad. She never hassled him about his attitude or lack of kindness, even when he secretly wished she would. But if she could suggest football, she didn't even know him. Carl Joseph must're heard the conversation because he pushed his way between them. He was eight by then, as sweet and simple as he'd been at two. "Cody, brother, c'mere!" The heat in Cody's anger cooled. Carl Joseph was his best friend, the only one he could trust. Cody couldn't count the times he'd wished it were he and not Carl Joseph who'd been born with Down syndrome. Because at least Carl Joseph was happy, too simple to understand even that their father had gone away, let alone the reasons why. Carl Joseph's eyes were honest and full of light, and his enthusiasm knew no limits. He called Cody "brother," and Cody called him "buddy." Carl Joseph grabbed his hand and pulled. "C'mon, brother, talk to me." "Just a minute, buddy." Cody glared at his mother. "It's Mom's turn." 25 a Thousand tomorrows "No, Cody!" Carl Joseph grinned big and tugged a little harder. His voice was loud, excited. This time Cody couldn't resist. He gave his mother a look and let himself be pulled into the next room. When Carl Joseph thought they were alone, his eyes sparkled. "You gonna ride a bull, Cody?" Cody's heart swelled at the transparent look in his brother's eyes. A look of thrill and pride and expectancy. "Yes, buddy. I'm gonna be a bull rider." "Remember, brother? We watched bull riding on TV?" He rocked back and forth, nervous, anticipating. "We sure did, buddy." Cody put his arm around Carl Joseph's shoulders and gave him a sideways hug. Carl Joseph let out a whooping victory cry. He slid from Cody's grasp, marched his feet up and down and moved in a tight winner's circle around Cody. His arms punched at invisible targets. "Bull riding! Brother's gonna be a bull rider!" As Cody watched Carl Joseph that familiar fierce protection reared up in his heart. Once, a few years after their father left, a kid in his class pointed at Cody and laughed. "His brother's a retard! He lives in my neighborhood." Never mind that the kids were taking a spelling test. Cody had the guy pinned before he had time to cry for help. It took the teacher and a passing custodian to pull Cody off the boy. It was the last time anyone at Davis Elementary said anything mean about Carl Joseph. Watching him now, the determination in Cody's 25 26 KAREN KINGSBURY heart grew. No one better ever harm Carl Joseph, not ever. His brother stopped, drawing loud, exaggerated breaths. "I'm tuckered out, brother." Cody smiled. "Yeah, you look like it." So what if his mother didn't approve? He'd already made up his mind. The fact that Carl Joseph was excited only made him that much more sure. Cody brushed his knuckles along the top of Carl Joseph's head. "We'll talk later, okay?" He made a face. "Mom's waiting." "Right." Carl Joseph nodded, and did his best imitation of Cody's grimace. "Mom's waiting." Cody grinned. What wasn't there to love about Carl Joseph? He turned and found his mother waiting in the kitchen. Her arms were crossed. "What was that all about?" "Carl's happy for me." Cody stuck out his chin. "I'm fourteen in a few weeks, Mom. I wanna go to bull-riding school. That's all I want." Her look said everything her words didn't. She wanted to be mad, wanted to tell him all the things any mother would tell her son if he came home wanting to be a bull rider. People were killed riding bulls; trampled and maimed and paralyzed. A body could age four decades in as many seconds in a sport that violent and unpredictable. But she must've seen the determination in Cody's eyes, because she blinked. And that single blink told Cody he'd won. The arrangements came together quickly, and by the time he arrived home from bull-riding school, he couldn't think of anything but getting a seat on the next bull. 27 a Thousand Tomorrows Quickly Cody learned something about bull riders. The very good ones rode because they loved the sport, because they'd loved it since they were old enough to jump on the back of a sheep. For those riders, every go-round was an unequaled adrenaline rush, an addictive high that knew no match. Cody was nothing like those cowboys. Through middle school and high school, past his eighteenth birthday when he qualified for his Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association card; through event after event when sheer fury drove him to stay on bulls that couldn't be ridden; through the first two seasons when he first noticed Ali, the first two seasons when people started whispering that maybe there was no better bull rider than the independent Cody Gunner and no better barrel racer than the untouchable Ali Daniels, through all the travel and women and rank rodeo stock, he couldn't get one thought out of his head: His father walked out of Carl Joseph's life because the kid had Down syndrome, because something was clearly wrong with that son. Cody had heard him say so. But what about the other son, the older son? What about him? The man had left Cody, too, and the thing Cody could never quite figure out was this: What, exactly, was wrong with him? It was this question that stoked the coals of his anger, even when his past seemed forever behind him. No, Cody didn't ride bulls because he loved the rush. The rush was there, and it was real enough. Cody rode because battling a two-thousand-pound bull for eight seconds was the only way to live with the rage. 28 KAREN KINGSBURY And as Cody Gunner moved into the public lime light, as he became the talk of the Pro Rodeo Tour, the invincible, undefeatable cowboy, it was that part he kept a secret. The fact that he didn't ride for the love of the sport; he rode because he had to. 29 chapter three Ali Daniels sat in her trailer, not far from her mother, and stared out the window. "This is my year." She gripped the arms of the swivel chair, her eyes unblinking. "Yes." Her mom stood. "I can feel it." She opened a cupboard next to the miniature sink and pulled out a bulky vest. "Here." She handed it over. "Let's go, Ali. It's time." A slow breath eased across Ali's lips. "Okay." She took the vest, slipped one arm through, then the other, and zipped it. A few more snaps and she was ready. She looked out again and saw a group of bundled-up cowboys making their way across the snow-covered parking lot toward Stadium Arena. They laughed, listening to the shortest one in the group, hanging on to whatever story he was telling. Not far back, three couples followed, headed the same way. This was Denver in late January, the season opener; festivities at the National Western Stock Show and Rodeo would start early and end late. Ali 30 KAREN KINGSBURY didn't mind missing the hoopla, as long as she was ready for her ride. The ride was all that counted. She sat at the edge of her chair and kept her eyes on the people; so many people. Good for them for coming out, for cheering on the deserving professional rodeo riders and wranglers. But Ali didn't need them. She would've competed in an empty arena. Anything to fly across the dirt, power and grace, an extension of the horse she'd spent years training. Sometimes she wasn't sure which of them loved the ride more, she or the muscled palomino horse she'd raised from birth. "Ali?" Her mother touched her shoulder. "You okay?" "Yeah." Her answer was quick. The walls of her chest ached, tighter than usual. Every breath was difficult, intentional, but what else could she say? How she felt wasn't a part of the equation; it never had been. "I'm fine." "All right." She hesitated. I'll get ready." Familiar thoughts swirled about in Ali's heart. Her popularity was building, not only because she was winning rodeos. She was a mystery, someone they'd dubbed beautiful and unreachable. She leaned forward and winced; the vest was tighter than usual. Yes, the public, the media, all of them held her up and examined her in the limelight. But there was very little she let them see. She kept to herself, in her trailer with her mother or in a quiet corner of the locker room just long enough to change into her riding clothes. Friendships would be nice, but the less time she spent in the 31 a thousand tomorrows arena the better. She arrived in the tunnel minutes before each ride, and after the event she gathered her things and gave her horse a quick cooldown. Then she changed and headed back outside. The other barrel, racers thought her distant, haughty, too good for them. That wasn't it, but she couldn't explain herself. Not without giving away her secret, not without solving the mystery. Her routine, her last-minute entry and quick exit from the arena, meant no time for cowboys, either. Just about all the single rodeo men and a few of the married ones had tried to hit on her in the past two years. Once in a while she would catch a smile or a glance from a cowboy who seemed nice enough. But there was no point, nothing she could offer in return. Not when she was singly focused on two goals: staying healthy and being the best barrel racer in the world. But the thing that really set her apart was something no one on the tour would ever know about. At least not while she was still competing. People wouldn't understand; they'd ask questions and make pronouncements about the risks and dangers. Before long the story would be out, and everyone would stop seeing her as the most promising barrel racer in rodeo. Instead, they'd see her for her battles. That would never happen; Ali was determined. Pro Rodeo would never know about her battles, her secret. They would never find out that she did something no other barrel racer did: 32 KAREN KINGSBURY She held her breath when she rode. From the tunnel around each of the three barrels, and back, she didn't draw a bit of air. The hooves of her horse would keep time with her heartbeat as the seconds played out, one after another. By the time she hit the tunnel again, she was desperate for air, her lungs screaming for relief. Small wonder that she regularly clocked in at less than eighteen seconds. Whether she was riding at the arena back home or racing for the national championship, every bit of her strength--even the energy it took to breathe--was focused on the ride. The fact that Ali held her breath when she raced was something only her parents knew about. Given the circumstances, they agreed that not breathing during the ride was her best chance of remaining a competitor. It would be their secret. So after two full years on the tour, Ali Daniels remained a curiosity, a blue-eyed rider with a thick ponytail of pale blonde hair, black hat and jeans, blazing across the arena on a horse as fair as she was. Reporters would ask her questions after a win, but her answers were never more than a few words. The details of her life went unknown. The way they would stay. Ali drew a slow breath and adjusted the vest. It was never comfortable; especially just before a ride, when all she wanted was to break free, run outside, saddle up Ace, and ride like the wind around the outside of the arena. 33 a thousand Tomorrows She bit her lower lip. Patience. There was no riding without patience. The truth was, she shouldn't have been here at all--not her, and not Ace. Ace was a quarter horse so small at birth his owner was willing to give him away. Only Ali had seen the horse's potential, rearing him and coaxing him and hand-feeding him until he was as big and strong as any horse on the tour. That alone was shocking, because Ali's parents never wanted anything to do with horses. Ali and her younger sister, Anna, grew up on a cattle ranch in Colorado, where her father made the rounds on an ATV quad-runner. Horses were off- limits, too much dander and dust, too many allergens, too great the chance that Ali and Anna might get sick. Because of their allergies, the sisters took their lessons at home in rooms cleaned by air purifiers. They were taught to read and sew and play the piano. Outdoor time was kept to a minimum. But in the evening, when their parents were busy, Ali and Anna sat by the bedroom window and dreamed of another life. Ali remembered one time more clearly than the others. "You know what I wanna do?" Anna's eyes sparkled that evening. "I wanna race through the forever hay fields and play hide-and-seek out by the tallest pine trees, and jump on that palomino horse next door." Anna was eight that year; Ali nine. The idea seemed wild and outrageous and terribly exciting. "Wouldn't that be something?" "Yes." Ali squinted at the world beyond their sterile confines. "One day we will, okay, Anna? One day." 34 KAREN KINGSBURY But the chance never came. One afternoon when Anna was ten, she caught a cold. Something must've blown into the house from the garden, their mother always guessed. The cold became bronchitis, quick and fast. An asthma attack sent her to the hospital, and by the next day she had a respiratory infection. Within forty-eight hours her fever raged out of control. Pneumonia set in and because of her situation, no doctor or antibiotic could do a thing to help her. All their attempts at safety, all the years spent watching life through a window, had done nothing to save Anna. Three days later she was gone. Anna's death changed everything for Ali, and she made up her mind. She would not watch life from a window; she would live it to the fullest, doing everything Anna had dreamed of doing. The memory dissolved and Ali adjusted her vest again. She tried to draw a deep breath, but it wouldn't come; not fully. She still had a few hours before her ride, so remembering helped pass the time. The season opener always stirred up the past, bringing reminders of how fortunate she was, how hard she'd fought against the odds and how easily this season- or any season--could be her last. The pretty horse next door had a foal, and the foal became Ali's closest friend. He was the color of caramel custard with a mane the same pale blonde as Ali's long hair. She named him Ace, and against the odds, against the doctor's warnings, she spent every spare moment with him and grew stronger for it. With the neighbor's help, she broke him and 35 a thousand tomorrows trained him and learned to fly across the fields behind her parents' home. Eventually she discovered barrel racing, and her father built an arena and a barn, with a custom air- filtration system to reduce the allergens from damp hay and horse dander. Ali remembered once when her aunt and uncle asked how her parents could be a willing party to something that might shorten their daughter's life. Ali never forgot her father's answer. "Riding horses is Ali's life," he told them. 'It's that simple." So it was. On Ace she not only had a purpose to round the barrels faster than anyone had beforewbut she felt vibrant, all of life bursting within her. And that feeling defied any sense of reason, because doctors and medicine and statistics said she should be dying. The mystery was this: Ali Daniels had cystic fibrosis. Cystic fibrosis--with all its terrible limitations and its lifetime sentence of having her back pounded two hours each day so she could cough up the thick secretions that would otherwise choke her. CF, the doctors called it, the same condition Anna had been born with. The disease in which every cold could go into pneumonia; and every bout of pneumonia could mean death. Ali's parents never told her the prognosis for people with cystic fibrosis. She found it for herself-- on the Internet. Patients with CF usually died as young adults, and though the life expectancy had risen, the outcome was certain. One day, not too far off, the disease would kill her. 36 KAREN KINGSBURY Ali adjusted her position again. The vest was tight against her ribs, tight and uncomfortable. It wasn't for protection, the way the bull riders' vests were, though hers was customized to look like theirs. Rather, it was a compression vest. Powered by electricity, the vest had a series of air chambers, which rhythmically compressed Ali's lungs. The vest did mechanically what used to be done only by Ali's parents pounding on her chest and back. One way or another, her lungs had to be cleared. She leaned forward and let the vest work its magic. Ten more minutes and she'd be done. A series of coughs came over her, productive coughs. The type that kept her healthy. When she was finished, she closed her eyes and remembered again. Her first rodeo came before her fourteenth birthday, the first time she and Ace tore around the barrels for a winning time. Three years later she hit the Pro Rodeo Tour, and she'd been hard to beat ever since. Same as Cody Gunner. The two of them were alike, both quiet, distant. Mysterious. Ali was no longer amazed at how the crowd responded to Cody, how whole sections of women in the stands would wave their arms and chant his name when Cody received another saddle or a buckle. The sight of a six-foot-two bull rider with short dark hair, unrelenting blue eyes, and a confidence bigger than the arena left them collectively breathless. Ali wasn't blind; the attraction was there for her, too. But that was as far as it went. As far as it would ever go. She'd shared the winner's circle with Cody 37 a thousand Tomorrows too many times to count, and still they'd never said more than a polite hello to each other. Other cowboys would tip their hats or smile in her direction. Several made attempts at conversation. Only Cody Gunner never tried, and that suited Ali fine. Cody was an island, a loner--just like her. He didn't flirt with the barrel racers or grin at the cowgirls who hung out near the stock pens; he didn't tend to the throng of female fans who waited for him after every rodeo. The longer she rode the tour with him, the more Ali thought she understood him. The fact that he kept his distance didn't mean he was unkind, any more than she was unkind for keeping hers. On occasion, when their eyes met, Ali thought she saw a glimpse of something familiar in Cody's soul. A respect, maybe. A sameness. Whatever drove Cody Gunner to ride bulls for a living, Ali guessed it wasn't far off from what drove her. A passion born of something intensely private. So while she didn't get weak at the knees in his presence, she quietly admired his independence, the way he didn't need people or trappings or success, but just the bull. Just the ride. He had placed second last year, just as she had. This year--for one more season at least--they'd share the tour and the limelight with a single goal: a national championship. There was talk that Cody then might leave the tour, join Tuff Hedeman's upstart Professional Bull Riders circuit where the stock was more rank, the purses potentially bigger. If Cody was going to leave, this could be the last year they'd tour together. 38 KAREN KINGSBURY Not that it mattered. That cold January day, the beginning of her third season in the PRCA, Ali Daniels had more important details to mull over than whether this was Cody's last season with the Pro Rodeo Tour. This was her year, the year she would stay healthy and strong and break record after record on her quest for the championship. Ali and Ace, making history. Her heart had room for nothing else. 39 chapter four The season was three weeks old, and Cody Gunner was riding better than ever. The tour was in San Antonio, and his draw that night was a good onena bull named Monster Mash, ridden just once in twenty-two attempts. A rider who could stay the course was guaranteed a score in the high eighties. Make it pretty and anything was possible. Cody didn't worry about the judges. Scores didn't matter nearly as much as the eight seconds. If he got bucked off, Cody's anger would swell and grow, desperate for release. But if he stayed on for eight, he could beat the demons that battled him-- if just for the night. There was the practical side, too. Winning meant enough money to keep playing the game. Cody hung his rope in his locker, shoved his gear bag inside, and headed down the tunnel. Like most of the winter events, this one was at an indoor arena--the Joe and Harry Freeman Coliseum. It was his fifth season in the PRCA, so Cody knew his way around most of the venues. He tucked his shirt in as 40 KAREN KINGSBURY he walked, making sure the buttons lined up with his belt buckle. Before he could stretch, before he could focus on the ride, he needed to know where he was in the lineup. He came into the clearing and turned right toward the information table, the place where the judges sat in a row, their paperwork spread out in front of them. That's when something caught his attention. A few feet away, leaning against the wall, was a fellow bull rider, a Brazilian who had taken first place from him three times the year before. Next to the cowboy was an older man with the same eyes, same cheekbones. The rider's father, Cody figured. He'd seen the two of them together before, in a handful of cities. Cody watched them, watched the way the older man put his hand on the bull rider's shoulder, whispering something that made the cowboy smile. Probably some bit of encouragement or advice, something only a father could bring his son in the hour before a bull ride. That was the way his own father had been with him before he walied out, wasn't it? Kind and compassionate, there with words of encouragement when Cody was up at bat in Little League or working on a school project? Cody clenched his fists and turned from the scene. A young woman at the information table smiled at him. "Cody Gunner, what can I do for you?" Images of the Brazilian cowboy and his father 41 a Thousand tomorrows burned in his mind. Cody focused on the woman. "Where am I in the order?" The woman checked a list, grabbed a scrap of paper, and scribbled something. "Here." She handed it to him. "Good luck tonight." Cody took the slip, nodded at her, and headed back down the tunnel. Halfway to the locker room he opened the paper. The woman had written that he rode second to last that night. At the bottom she'd scribbled her phone number. He ripped the paper in half and went to his locker. It was time to stretch, even if his ride wasn't until the end. But he couldn't focus yet, couldn't let go of the picture in his head, the one of the rider and his dad. What would it be like to ride bulls with his dad around, to get a dose of wisdom and confidence from his father before every ride? Cody opened his locker, pulled out his worn deerskin riding glove, and slammed the door shut. He dropped to the bench, hung his head, and closed his eyes. Of course the thought would haunt him today. There was no way around it, not after his mother's call that morning. She knew better than to call him the day of a ride, but she did it anyway. The news had made Cody sick to his stomach, unable to force down more than a piece of toast and an apple all day. Her call played in his mind again. "He found us." Her voice was nervous, mixed with fresh hope. "Who?" Cody had still been in bed, the hotel sheets a mess from the night before. He blinked back a hard night's sleep and tried to focus. He was alone, though he hadn't been a few hours earlier. What was 42 KAREN KINGSBURY his mother talking about, someone finding them? Had Carl Joseph wandered off? "Tell me later; I'm tired." "Cody, you need to hear this." His mother's voice grew stronger, happier. "Your father found us, Cody. He called a few minutes ago; he wants to see you and Carl Joseph." Cody had sat straight up in bed. His heart pounded hard, sending shock waves through his chest and throat and temples. It wasn't possible. "My father called? After thirteen years he looks us up and you sound happy about it?" Silence stood between them for a moment. "He's sorry, Cody. Life hasn't been easy for him, either." She hesitated. "We had a long talk; he wants to see you." Her words hit him like a load of buckshot, ripping at the places in his heart that still cared, still ached for his father no matter how much he told himself otherwise. A sound came from him, part laugh, part moan. Was she serious? How could she consider letting him back into their lives after what he'd done? Cody leaned over his knees, the sheets loose around his waist. "I don't have a father." "Cody, that's not how you feel, and--" "I won't see him." His tone was sharp. "I need to go." He slammed down the phone, flopped back onto the pillow, and stared at the ceiling. The nausea hit him then. How dare he walk back into their lives now? How could he complain about his own life being hard when the whole mess was his fault? Cody pressed his fists into his stomach and forced 43 a thousand tomorrows himself out of bed. What was the problem., anyway? He'd told her the truth; he didn't have a father. But the conversation marred the entire day. Normally the afternoon of a ride was marked by quiet preparation and nervous anticipation. In this case, he had both a hangover and his mother's phone call to shake off. The buildup felt flat, and all day he fought a headache. Voices sounded outside the locker room door, and Cody hunkered down on the bench, his eyes still closed. The other cowboys would guess he was lost in concentration, readying himself for the ride. They'd leave him alone. He pictured his father--however he must look with thirteen more years on him. Mike Gunner had played the field for more than a decade, shirked every ounce of family responsibility, and now-- maybe because his son was a famous bull rider--he wanted back into their lives. Worse, his mother was entertaining the possibility. Adrenaline mixed with fury and ran hot through Cody's veins. He wanted to put his fist through the locker door, but he held back. Save it for the bull, Gunner. Save it for the bull. His eyes flew open. He stood, grabbed his rope, and headed down the tunnel. The barrel racers were competing. He climbed a fence so he could stretch and watch at the same time. Over the loudspeaker the announcer was introducing the next ride. "Ali Daniels is up, riding her longtime horse, Ace. Ali's on a streak of top-three finishes this season, and looking for the win here tonight. Anything less 44 KAREN KINGSBURY than fourteen-point-five seconds should do it, ladies and gentlemen." He droned on about Ali's statistics, her intrigue and mystery. Cody spread his legs wide until he felt the stretch along the inside of his thighs. Ali Daniels didn't need an introduction. Next to him, she was the most well- known competitor on the tour. Beautiful, strange, and mysterious. She rode with a reckless abandon that Cody understood innatelg an abandon he admired. From the first time he saw her compete, Cody wanted to go to her, wanted to be with her and ride with her and know everything about her. She was quiet and reclusive, confident and masterful in her talent. For all the girls who gave him no resistance, Ali was the ultimate challenge. But he didn't allow those feelings to be anything more than fleeting. His success on the tour depended on his anger. He was twenty-one, too young to fall for a girl. Not even a girl like Ali Daniels. And so he ignored her at every rodeo--except when she competed. Cody leaned to the right, focusing the stretch on that leg. Just then, Ali tore out of the tunnel, her head close to her horse's mane. She wasn't hard- looking like some of the barrel racers. Black hat and black jeans, a starched white shirt, her light blonde ponytail flying behind her, eyes intent on making the turn. Tight around the first barrel, then she blazed across the arena and around the second. The crowd was already on its feet. Every time Ali rode, there was the possibility of 45 a thousand tomorrows her setting a new record. That night was no exception. She rounded the third barrel and leaned forward. She and her horse blazed across the barrier at 14.35 seconds. "Ladies and gentlemen, we have a new arena record! Ali Daniels shaved two-tenths of a second off the previous fastest time for barrels in this arena. She's sitting pretty safe for first place. Let's show her our appreciation." Again the crowd cheered. Cody wanted to peer into the tunnel, watch her pull up and dismount the way other cowboys watched Ali Daniels. But he wouldn't. Times like this he was glad he'd kept his distance. He didn't need any distractions. He shifted his weight to the left leg, feeling the stretch stronger than before. Forty minutes passed, while the anger he harbored rose and grew within him. Forty minutes of picturing Carl Joseph's face as their mother explained the obvious--their father was gone. Forty minutes of hating him for walking out, for not making it clear to Cody what he'd ever done wrong, how he might've been responsible for making his daddy leave. Forty minutes when Ali Daniels was just another rider on the tour, when his mother and even his brother might as well have been a million miles away, when nothing mattered in life except the battle, the damage he was about to do to a bull named Monster Mash. "You got yourself the best draw of the night, Gunner." One of the cowboys slapped his back and 46 took a step ready?" "Ready." "Let's get tators. "It's show." KAREN KINGSBURY toward the chute next to Cody's. "You 'em." The cowboy nodded at the spec- a good crowd tonight; they deserve a "Nothin' but eight." The bull riders were lined up by then, gathered near the chute of whichever cowboy was next out. One at a time the riders flew into the arena, half of them making the eight seconds, the other half bucked off. Cody cheered them on, because that's what cowboys did. They pulled for one another. Bull riding never pitted a cowboy against his fellow rider. The contest was against the bull, only the bull. But even as he cheered, his heart was back on a street corner the summer of his eighth year, watching for that yellow cab. Cody zipped up his protective vest and spread his legs. Stretching was crucial; he'd been loosening up for an hour already. He bent at the waist, nose to his right knee, two, three, four, five. A little farther, and he switched sides, nose to his left knee, two, three, four, five. A shift to the center, straight back, palms to the ground, two, three, four... The whole time he kept his eyes on the bull. An announcer was introducing the matchup. "Monster Mash is a Texas Brahma bull, genetically engineered by the best in the business. Wicked horns, and a twist--about to keep a cowboy guessing." The other announcer broke in. "Now remember, this is a bull that hasn't been rode ever. Not once. A 47 a thousand tomorrows killer beast with an average score of forty-eight-nine. Twenty-three cowboys on; twenty-three off." "And Cody Gunner wants to change all that." Cody tuned it out. He felt himself slipping into the zone, the place where his little-boy disappointment, his unchecked rage and pent-up hatred, could be released. If only for eight seconds. Finally it was his turn. He pressed his cowboy hat onto his head, low over his brow, ran a few steps in place, and climbed the gate. One leg over the top of the chute, then the other. A push and he braced himself with his hands until he was straddled above the bull. Monster Mash was an ugly beast, mottled gray with uneven coloring and evil black eyes. His horns weren't much threat, but the hump on his back had knocked out a cowboy or two. Cody knew this, but he didn't think about it, didn't think about the bull's tendencies or any of the things most riders thought about. All that mattered was this: The bull wanted to kill him. Cody saw it in the way those dead eyes watched him, anxious, waiting. The bull had an innate sense, an ability to spot the cowboy, sniff out the next sacrificial victim. The animal shouldered the gates and pawed at the ground. Those awful eyes never let up, never blinked. If there'd been a way through the bars, the bull would've found it. Van Halen's "Jump" pounded out a rhythm that grew and built and filled each of the fifteen thousand fans with a frenzied anticipation. Bull riding was the 48 KA1KEN KINGSBUP.Y last event, the biggest draw. Rodeo fans loved it. Loved the energy and intensity and possibility of horrific wrecks, the idea of mere mortals going head-to-head with an untamable beast. "That's right," Cody glared at the animal, "go ahead and try it." The bull jerked his head, shark-like eyes rolling back into his skull. Cody could picture it, knew what would happen the instant they opened the gate. The bull would become two thousand pounds of snorting, sweating muscle, writhing and twisting and flying through the hot summer night driven by one desire: Kill the cowboy. The bull rider didn't need the announcers to tell him; he knew the score. Monster Mash couldn't be ridden, wouldn't let a cowboy sit on his back four seconds, let alone eight. Five guys stood on the out side of the gate, two of them holding tight to Cody's jacket, ready to pull him out if the bull went psycho. But Cody was ready. He lowered himself a foot, not quite touching the animal, his feet still on the steel rungs. "Yeah, you want me." Cody gritted his teeth. The hatred was growing, filling him with a burning intensity, a seething red-hot rage. Everything but the bull faded from view, the bull and the profile of a face. His father's face. How could he walk out on us? The hatred bubbled within him, mingled with liquid intensity and spilled into his icy veins, pumped through his ready limbs. 49 a thousand tomorrow. "Let's go, Gunner." A cowboy on the gate grabbed his arm and slapped his back. It was time. He lowered himself onto the bull, just down from the animal's shoulder blades. The beast's muscles trembled, furious, his hide hot and sweaty and loose over his bony spine. Monster Mash was famous for his damage in the chute, and today was no exception. The animal shifted all his weight sideways and Cody bit into his mouth guard. He smacked the bull's shoulder. Fiery pain shot through his knee, the same knee he'd had pinned in the chutes six times this season. He couldn't leave the chute until he had his hand wrapped; couldn't wrap the hand until the bull let up, moved to the center, and freed his leg. Another whack and another. Fire shot up through his thigh. The deeper the pain, the more intense his hatred. He was just a little boy, eight years old, full of laughter and love and kindness and goodness, and his little brother... His little brother. The rage tripled. He shoved the bull's head. "Get outta there!" The animal moved three inches to the side and Cody jerked free. He shoved his right hand through the rope, palm up. Someone handed him the lead and he wrapped it hard, yanked it tight. Cody wasn't sure if Monster Mash would spin to the outside or buck first. Films were available on every bull, and most riders memorized that sort of detail. Not Cody. He wanted his bulls unpredictable, because fury and hatred and rage were unpredictable. 50 KAREN KINGSBURY The bull rattled the chute again, jerking his head back and snorting, spraying the legs of the two closest guys, sounding like the beast he was, hating the cowboy. Cody slid forward to his tied-down hand, checked to make sure his knees weren't trapped. He locked his eyes on the animal's neck and gave the signal--a quick nod. A click of the latch, and the gate flew open. "Go, Gunner!" another cowboy yelled. He was one second into the ride when Monster Mash threw himself into a convulsion, all four hooves off the ground, twisting and snorting, kicking up dirt and dung in all directions. Onepointfive seconds.., two.., two-point-five. The bull crashed down on his front feet, and already the animal's body was contorting in another direction, frantic to get the cowboy off his back. Cody kept his seat centered within a fraction of an inch, his legs tight around the bull. Every late night wondering where his father was, why he hadn't called. Every birthday and Christmas and summer vacation without a gift or a card or even a call. All of that hatred poured from him, releasing the rage that would otherwise strangle him. Monster Mash was off the ground again, flying in a circle, kicking his backside up into the air, but Cody wasn't going anywhere. He leaned back, staying with the ride, holding center. A buzzer sounded and suddenly it was over. With a flick of his wrist to release his riding hand, he kicked his feet over the side of the bull. But something was wrong. His hand was hung up, and with 51 a thousand Tomorrows the animal's next arch of his back, Cody flopped like a rag doll alongside the bull's belly. This had happened before; Cody didn't panic. No matter what the bull did to him now, he was the winner. He'd already won the battle. From both sides he felt the bullfighters rush in, one of them grabbing at the end of the rope, trying to free his hand. The other waving something to distract the bull. The men might be dressed like clowns but they were willing to sacrifice their own bodies to keep a cowboy from danger. Cody was still caught up, still trying to free his hand, his body still being jerked along the side of the bull. That's when he heard it. A snap in his riding hand. At the same time, Monster Mash whipped his head back at him. The hump on his back caught Cody square in the jaw and that was all he remembered. When he woke up, he was lying on a bench with the rodeo doctor staring at him. "Cody..." The man was in his mid-thirties, the first one on the scene of any wreck on the Pro Rodeo Tour. "Can you hear me? Cody?" "What?" His head hurt, but his heart and soul reveled in the release. He'd stayed the course, ridden Monster Mash for eight, and nothing could change the way that felt. He massaged his fingers into the sides of his head. "What was my score?" The doctor chuckled. "On the knockout or the ride?" Cody gave his head a slight shake. "Forget the knockout. I'm fine." 52 KAREN KINGSBURY "You got an eighty-nine." The doctor shone a small flashlight into his eyes. "How're you feeling?" "Better." Cody ran his tongue over his lower lip. "Eighty-nine?" "Yes." The doctor frowned. "Lift your hand." Cody tried to move it, and that's when he understood the doctor's frown. He winced, and supported it with his left hand. "It's just sprained." "X-rays will tell." Half an hour later, Cody had his bags packed for a two-week visit to his mother's house. A small bone in his hand was fractured, and he had a mild concussion. The doctor ordered two weeks off the bulls--minimum. Cody was given a splint for his hand and instructions to lay low. He was on his way out of the training room when he spotted Ali Daniels. Every other time they'd passed each other--for two years straight--they barely looked up. Today, though, Ali paused. "Want some advice?" She took another step toward him, a bridle flung over one shoulder. Too stunned to answer, Cody stopped and sized her up. She was five-foot-six, maybe five-seven, and up close her eyes shone like summer lake water. He leaned against the nearest wall and grinned at her. "Okay." "If you can stay on eight, stay on nine." She smiled and started walking again. "At least until your hand's free." She was gone before he could recover, before even a single comeback formed on his tongue. Was she kidding? Did she think she had information that 53 a thousand Tomorrows might help Cody Gunner ride bulls better? And why did she talk to him now, after so many events where they had never connected? Cody had no answers. Maybe it was a delusion; concussions could do that to a person. He watched her leave and let the comment pass. He didn't have time for Ali Daniels or any of the other girls who would be waiting for him outside the arena. He had something far bigger ahead of him--two weeks to talk sense into his mother. That way, the next time his father called she could do what she should've done the day before. Hang up on him. 54 chapter five Mary Gunner loved having her older son home. Out on the road, riding a slate of bulls every weekend, meant that bad news was always just around the corner. Mary knew the sport well enough to know the possibilities, and they terrified her. So when Cody showed up with his hand in a splint needing two weeks of rest, she was grateful. Quietly grateful. Cody wouldn't have it any other way. His anger at her hadn't dimmed from the days after Mike left. Never mind that his blaming her made no sense. The moment he entered the house he looked around, his expression tense. "Where is he?" Mary held his eyes for a moment, then she turned toward the stairs and cupped her mouth. "Carl Joseph! Your brother's home." The sound of pounding footsteps came in response. "Brother!" the voice bellowed from an upper room. 55 a thousand tomorrows "I'm down here, buddy!" Cody went to the foot of the stairs and looked up. "Coming, brother!" Carl Joseph was fifteen now, still attending a special-education program where they were teaching him menial tasks. Most days Mary was grateful for Carl Joseph's Down syndrome. It meant that at least one son would always love her. One son would keep her company the way Cody never did. Carl Joseph barreled down the stairs and gave Cody a long bear hug. When he pulled back, his eyes danced. "How's the bulls, brother?" "Well..." Cody held up the hand that bore the cast. "Not so good this weekend." "Ooooh!" He touched Cody's cast and shook his head. "You be careful, brother. You be careful." Cody chuckled. "I will." He put his arm around Carl Joseph's neck and led his brother into the next room. For two weeks straight the two were inseparable. They played checkers and backgammon and watched videotapes of bull riding on TV. The morning after Cody left, Carl Joseph found Mary reading a book in the living room. "Mom, I have a question." He came a few steps closer. Mary held her hand out to him. "What, honey?" "How come Cody doesn't like you?" Carl Joseph cocked his head, his mouth open. "How come, Mom The question tore at Mary's heart, but it was an honest one, proof that Cody's bad attitude wasn't only her imagination. She cleared her throat, 56 KA1KEN KIN GSBU1KY searching for a way to explain the situation. She couldn't mention Mike. Carl Joseph didn't remember his father, and if Mike wanted back into their lives the way he said he did--she didn't want to taint Carl Joseph's image of him. "Cody loves me." Mary bit her lip, fighting tears. "But sometimes his heart doesn't work the same as yours." "Brother's heart doesn't work right?'" Carl Joseph thought about that for a minute. "You know what I hope?" Mary slid to the edge of her seat, her eyes damp. The compassion in Carl Joseph was every bit as intense as the hatred in Cody. "What, honey?" "I hope that Cody's heart will get better, just like his hand." Mary hugged her younger son. "So do I, honey." He couldn't know that's what she'd hoped and prayed for years, what she prayed for even now-- that one day Cody would meet someone who would teach him more than horses and rodeos and bull riding. Someone who might teach Cody the most important lesson of all. How to love. Cody was back on the tour, riding as if he'd never hurt his hand at all. Yes, he was using a lot of tape, wrapping his hand and forearm tighter than before. But a little pain was nothing. It made the battle that much more intense. Fighting not just the bull, but pain and injuries, too. 57 a thousand tomorrows He was in second place in the standings, ten points below first despite two missed weekends. Regaining the lead was as sure as morning. His nighttime hours were different, too, fewer beers and women, cleaner, the way they always were after a few weeks with Carl Joseph. His mother called twice in the next few weeks. "Your father's been by," she told him during the first phone call. "Carl Joseph likes him. They played football in the backyard." Football? The idea made Cody's gut ache. Mike Gunner, big former NFL player, loses thirteen years of his kids' lives and then shows up and tosses a ball around? Like nothing ever happened? "He's asking about you, Cody," she told him the next time. "He wants to watch you ride." "Tell him no." Cody was in the locker room. He dropped to the bench and gripped the edge of it, his voice low so the other cowboys passing in and out wouldn't hear him. In the background Lynyrd Skynyrd was singing "Sweet Home Alabama" over the arena speakers. "I won't do that, Cody." His mother sounded impatient. Cody pinched his eyes shut. What was the feeling tearing at him? Hatred, right? More anger and fury? But it didn't feel like only that. It felt like little-boy sadness, too. A sadness that didn't make sense because he'd banned it from his heart the day the yellow cab drove away. "Cody, when can he see you?" His mother sounded tired, as if she knew his answer before he said it. 58 KAREN KIN GSBU1KY "Never." He pursed his lips. "I have nothing to say to him." Whatever his mother wanted to accomplish by calling him, the end result was a good one. That weekend and the next, he took first and second, and now he had the lead heading into the final go-round in Houston at the Reliant Center. The barrel racing was under way, and Cody took his spot on the fence, stretching the insides of his legs and the muscles that lined his groin. As always, he watched Ali's race. She was every bit as fast as usual, but this time something was wrong; her face was red and puffy. He looked around but no one along the fence looked worried, as if maybe he was the only one who saw that she was in trouble. He was off the fence, jogging toward the tunnel before she crossed the barrier. He stepped into view just in time to see her hop down from her horse and lower her head between her knees. She was coughing so hard she couldn't catch her breath. Cody stared for a minute. Was she sick? Was it asthma? Maybe she was choking. He grabbed a cup of water from a nearby cooler. With no one around, Cody wasn't sure what to do. He took ten tative steps closer until she looked up. "Ali?" He closed the distance between them and held out the cup. She hacked again. "Thanks." She took it and downed it in a single swig. A few more coughs and the redness in her face started to fade. She leaned against her horse, clearly exhausted from the struggle. "I'm okay. I... I guess I have a cold." 59 a tllolsand Tomorrows "I guess." He took a step back. "I've never heard anyone cough like that." She folded her arms in front of her and stared at him, eyes wide. Then she nodded her chin toward the arena. "Your ride's coming up." "Yeah." He tipped his hat to her. "Get better." He trotted off for the chutes, surprised by one thing. Ali Daniels wasn't superhuman after all; he'd seen a vulnerable side of her. It was all he could do to shut her image out of his mind while he rode. The first bull that night tripped and fell to his knees, giving Cody a re-ride. He lasted eight on the second. His score wasn't great, but it was enough to win, and less than half an hour after her coughing episode, Ali Daniels stood next to him in the arena while they both accepted their championship buckles. They were headed back down the tunnel when Cody fell in beside her. "Hey... wanna go out? Get something to eat?" Ali hesitated. She met his eyes but only for a few seconds before staring straight ahead. "I can't; I have plans." "Plans?" Cody allowed a smile into his voice. It wasn't that he doubted her, but she traveled with her mother, and the two of them were in her trailer before ten o'clock every night. What plans could she possibly have? "Yes, Cody Gunner." She angled her face, teasing him. Her eyes didn't look quite right, maybe the cold she was fighting. "I have a hot date, okay?" Cody wanted to laugh out loud, but he couldn't. He didn't know her well enough to assume she was 60 KAtEN KINGSBUIY kidding. Instead he shrugged and winked at her. "Suit yourself." He held the door open for her and they headed into the night--her to her mother's trailer and what ever hot date she had that night, and Cody to the nearest bar to meet up with the other cowboys. But it was another early night for him. Dinner was good, the beer was flowing, and half a dozen girls made themselves available. But he wasn't interested. No matter what they looked like or how they presented themselves, or what they had to offer, Cody couldn't help but compare them to Ali Daniels. And since they all fell short, he did the right thing. When he turned the key of his hotel room that night he was by himself, except for the place in his memory filled with the blonde, blue-eyed barrel racer. A girl whose level of mystery had doubled in a single conversation. 61 chapter six The hot date was a private plane ride to Denver General Hospital. Ali had been expecting the visit since the second week of the season, and it frustrated her. This was the year she didn't want to miss a single event, the year she planned to keep herself healthy so she wouldn't need any downtime in a hospital bed. But her body had other ideas. It was Monday night now, and her mother was in the chair beside her bed. Dr. Bryce Cleary was due any minute, the same doctor who had treated Ali since she began riding horses. The visit wasn't any surprise, really. Since early in the season, her coughing had been more intense, the spells closer together. The lives of cystic fibrosis patients are directed by test results. Bacteria analysis, lung function, nutritional deficiencies, enzyme levels. Ali have to be closely monitored. When one or more of Ali's readings fell into their respective danger zones, it was time to see Dr. Cleary. 62 KAREN KINGSBURY In the hospital she would be on constant oxygen and intravenous antibiotics. Her body would get the rest it needed, the infection she was fighting would clear up, and after a week she could get on with living. At least that's how it had always played out before. Ali rolled onto her side and studied her mother. "You look worried." "I'm not much for hospitals; you know that." She reached out and took Ali's hand. "Me either." They were quiet for a minute. Ali knew what her mother was thinking--the same thing she was thinking. Anna died in a room like this one, her body trying to find the way back to daylight. They both know cystic fibrosis patients weren't admitted to the hospital unless their situation was serious. There were no guarantees, no certainties that this would be merely another tune-up, another pit stop between rodeo appearances. Her mother leaned back in her chair. "After your win the other night"--their eyes met--"why was Cody Gunner talking to you ?" A smile lifted the corners of Ali's mouth before she could stop it. "He asked me out." "Cody Gunner?" Her eyebrows lifted, creasing her forehead. She still held Ali's hand, but now she loosened her grip. "Why didn't you tell me?" "I couldn't breathe; I guess I was distracted." Her smile softened. For a minute she could see Cody's face as he walked next to her. "It's okay, Mama. I'm not interested." Her mother hesitated. A slow breath came from 63 a thousand tomorrows her. "You know I have hopes and dreams for you. That you'll live long enough to be loved, that when the time's right you'll meet someone. Someone who'll sweep you off your feet and take you away from horse dander and dusty arenas and damp hay." She looked at the ceiling. "But heaven forbid it be someone like Cody Gunner." Ali laughed, and the effort brought on a wave of coughs. "Mama... I told you I wasn't interested." She gulped, catching her breath. "Wish for my health, but don't wish that I'll meet someone." She stroked her thumb along her mother's hand. "I am loved--by you and Daddy. I have the life I want-- me and Ace, winning on the rodeo tour, flying across arenas in every city on the schedule." She felt her expression soften. "That's all I need." Her mother looked at her, a look that went straight to her soul. "Ali, before you die, I want you to be loved the way your father loves me. Loved by a man who would give anything for you." She paused. "Horses can't compare to a love like that." Ali didn't respond. Her mother was wrong, of course. Horses were enough; they had always been enough. But there was no changing her mother's mind. They had this discussion at least once a month. Ali believed her mother was less interested in her meeting a man than she was in her leaving the rodeo tour. She bit her lip. She'd already told her mother the way she felt about falling in love. She wouldn't do it. She'd dated once, the year before she joined the PRCA. After a series of colds and a hospital stay, the 64 KAREN KINGSBURY boy told her he couldn't handle her being sick. And he didn't even know about her cystic fibrosis. The experience convinced her that dating was a waste of time. She didn't want to disappoint someone every time she got sick; and in the end, any relationship would end too soon. That was the way of life for a cystic fibrosis patient. Riding Ace was enough; it was all she wanted. Her mother could dream twenty-four hours a day, but nothing would change Ali's determination. She would stay on the Pro Rodeo Tour until her body gave her no choice but to quit. Then she would live with her parents until the end. No sad goodbyes other than the ones she would have with them and Ace. There was a knock at the door and Dr. Cleary entered the room. "Hi." He had a manila file in his hand. "How're you feeling, Ali?" "Better." She rolled onto her back and released her mother's hand. "My lungs are still full, though. I can feel them." "Yes." The doctor came to the foot of her bed and looked at her. "Your numbers could be better. You've lost some weight, so I'm increasing your enzymes." "That's what the nurse said." Ali managed a smile. The routine was the same every time. Eat more, take the enzymes, adjust the medication. She wanted him to get to the good part, the part where he told her how long until she could be released, until she could be back at her next rodeo. "Is it worse than before?" Her mother's lips were pale, narrow and pinched. Her fear was palpable. 65 a thousand tomorrows She forced a tight smile. "You know Ali. She thinks these visits are tune-ups." She paused. "Is this one different?" "Well... yes." The doctor opened the file and sorted through several sheets. He looked up and met Ali's eyes. "It's different because after two full days of treatment, her lungs aren't responding the way I'd like." Ali's heart missed a beat. She had grown up around doctors and hospitals; nothing in the medical world frightened her. But what was Dr. Cleary saying? She propped herself up. "So increase the medicine, right? Is that what's next?" The doctor closed the file and let his hands fall to his sides. "Ali, your lung tissue is losing elasticity. You've always known this was where you were headed." Her mother lifted her chin, her back stiff. "So, what does that mean? She stays in the hospital longer?" "We'll increase her medication and keep her for a week, like always." He pursed his lips. "The problem is, at this point, her lungs can't rebound as well. Every time her numbers get bad, she'll lose some of her lung capacity permanently. Some of the bacteria won't ever go away. That's where we're at." Ali swallowed against the lump in her throat. The doctor was wrong; he had to be. Her lungs weren't worse than usual; the feeling was the same as always. "Isn't there anything.., can't you give me something to bring them back all the way, like before?" "Yes." The doctor's tone was gentle but stern. "I 66 KAREN KINGSBURY can give you an order, Ali. When you leave the hospital this time, go home and stay home. Sell your horse and take up piano again. You have to stay away from all irritants if you want to slow this thing." Ali shook her head, her mind spinning. The doctor's order was out of the question. Impossible. She glanced at her mother. Was that relief in her eyes? Did she pay the doctor to come up with such a crazy suggestion? She leaned on her elbows and met the doctor's eyes straight on. "I'm in the middle of a season, Doctor. I'm not quitting." The doctor clutched the file to his middle and looked at her, silent. Something in his expression told Ali he was being straight with her. Remorse fell into the mix of feelings burying her. She couldn't blame Dr. Cleary. The news wasn't easy for him either. Finally he drew a slow breath and looked at them. "Let me make it clearer." He opened the folder again. "The dust and molds and allergens at horse arenas have done permanent damage to your lungs. If you don't stop riding, you'll need a lung trans plant in a year or less." A lung transplant? Things were that bad? Ali's heart raced and the mattress beneath her felt wobbly and off-balance. Cystic fibrosis patients didn't get lung transplants until their situations were dire. Unless... She held her breath, hopeful. Maybe things were different now, maybe a lung transplant would cure her. "Would that make me better?" Her mother hung her head and shaded her eyes. 67 a thousand tomorrows This was the worst possible news; the news all of them had dreaded since Ali started riding horses. The doctor took a step closer. "Nothing's changed." He patted Ali's hand. "A transplant buys you three years, maybe four. Less if you don't take care of yourself." "Doctor..." Her mother lifted her head. Tears pooled in her eyes. "Are you saying if Ali doesn't stop riding she could need a transplant, or she will need one?" The doctor brought his lips together and exhaled in a way that filled his cheeks. He gave a sharp sideways shake of his head. "Anything could happen, Mrs. Daniels. There's a chance she could return to riding and not see things get worse for more than a year. Two or three years even. But eventually it'll catch her. I'm completely certain of that." Ali was trembling. What were all the tubes attached to her, anyway? She wanted to rip them from her arms and run from the room, from the awful news. But something the doctor said caught her attention. "So you could be wrong? About needing it within the year?" "You can hear what you want to hear." The doctor's expression was soft, sympathetic, but he sounded defeated. "I'm advising you to stop riding--the sooner, the better." Ali stared at him. Then she let her head fall back against the pillow. "I won't stop." She closed her eyes. "Please, do everything you can to make me better. I'll finish this season, and then I'll decide." The doctor knew not to argue. He'd recommended against horses since she was eleven. "Very 68 KAREN KINGSBURY well." He took a few steps back. "I'd like to run tests on your parents; see if they'd be a match. We're doing transplants with live donors these days, but it takes two people to pull it off." "Live donors?" Her mother looked hopeful, and Ali's heart hurt for her. "It's a serious ordeal, Mrs. Daniels. One donor gives the lower right lobe, the other gives the lower left. Anyone who donates a lobe will experience a permanent loss in lung function." "That wouldn't be a problem." She nodded. "We'd like to be tested right away." With that, the doctor was gone. Ali wanted to scream and cry and bury her head in the pillow. She didn't want her parents going through something that drastic, a difficult surgery and the loss of lung function. Not when it had always been her decision to keep riding, to put her health at risk. She opened her eyes and looked at her mother. "I'm sorry, Mom." She reached out and took her hand again. The doctor could check all he wanted; she wouldn't take a lung from either of her parents. It wasn't their fault she was sick. It was her own. Her determination to keep riding. "Ali"--her mother's eyes pleaded with her-- "You're the best in rodeo. Isn't that enough?" "I haven't won a national championship, Mama. Ace and I can do it. It might still happen this season." Her lungs hurt from the emotion building within her. "I can't stop riding; you know that." Instead of yelling at her or demanding she stop, her mother dabbed at her eyes and stared at her 69 a thousand tomorrows folded hands. "I don't know how we'll tell your father." Ali felt the victory all the way to her soul. "He'll understand." She looked up and their eyes held. "I understand, too. I just want to keep you around a little longer." "I know. Thanks, Mama." She was released from the hospital a week later with a stronger arsenal of medicines and inhalers and strict orders to use her vest two to three times a day. Especially at rodeos. The next week while she recuperated at home, watching old movies with her father and helping her mother in the kitchen, Cody Gunner's name never came up. Except in Ali's mind. She'd told her mother the truth; she wasn't interested. Not in Cody or anyone else. Despite her mother's prayers to the contrary, she would not get involved with a man; not when she had so little time, when her sport demanded every spare moment. Still, her first night out of the hospital, when her parents had turned in and sleep wouldn't come, when the prospect of getting off Ace for good or being relegated to a lung transplant left her too frightened to close her eyes, she found comfort in one thing alone. The memory of Cody Gunner leaving his place on the fence to bring her a cup of water. The sound of his voice, the feel of his body a foot from hers in the tunnel, the guarded kindness in his voice as he asked her out. By morning, she shook off the crazy thoughts and promised to never entertain them again. Cody 70 KAIE N KINGSBUPY Gunner? Any thought of him was ridiculous, unwanted. She didn't care a bit for the guy. He was a player, a renegade who needed no one. It was one thing to ride horses against her doctor's orders. But to have feelings for Cody Gunner? Even she wasn't that crazy. 71 chapter seven Cody hated himself for worrying, but he couldn't help it. For two straight events, Ali Daniels hadn't shown up and that could only mean one thing. Her cold was worse than he'd thought. Maybe it wasn't a cold, but pneumonia. Maybe she was in the hospital. Thoughts of her distracted him, and he rode below what he was capable of at both events, taking a fourth place and a no-score. The third weekend, he spotted her trailer and felt himself relax. Whatever the problem, she must have recovered. He saw her that Saturday morning, several hours before the spectators were scheduled to arrive. She was riding her horse in the field behind the arena, tearing up one way, circling imaginary barrels, and then racing like the wind back toward the edge of the parking lot. Cody loved horses, but he didn't own one. Most of the time he flew to events and stayed in hotels. Ali and the other competitors who relied on their horses traveled in motor homes, pulling horse trailers. He 72 KAREN KINGSBURY wandered toward the stock area and borrowed a horse from one of the steer wrestlers. In an easy motion, he swung himself into the saddle and galloped out to the field toward Ali. She looked healthy and tanned; her cheeks clear of the puffy redness. He pulled up near her. She turned two tight circles, then stopped and faced him. He held her gaze. "You've been gone." "Yes." Without tugging on the reins, the animal leaned his head back, and she rested against his neck. She was breathless from the workout. "Did you get hung up while I was away?" A strange feeling worked its way through Cody's gut, a feeling he couldn't quite identify. He allowed the hint of a smile. "I would've." He leaned forward, his hands covering the saddle horn. "But I got the best advice." "Really?" Her expression was light, easy. "Really." He danced his horse sideways a few steps. "Someone told me if I could stay on for eight, I could stay for nine. You know, use the extra second to untie my hand so I wouldn't get hung up." "Well?" She shifted back in her saddle. "Did it work?" "Like a charm." He lifted his hands so she could see them. "No more casts." "Hmmm." She raised one eyebrow. "Imagine that." Her heels pressed against her horse's belly. And without further warning, she was off, flying down the field, clearly intent on finishing her workout. Cody watched her, and the challenge was too 73 a Thousand omorrows great to pass up. He switched the reins from one side of the horse's neck to the other. "Yah!" And suddenly he was tearing up the field after her, mesmerized by her speed and ability. He didn't catch up with her until she reached the far side. She brushed her hair off her face, her cheeks ruddy from the exertion. "Are you chasing me?" He held the reins tight against his waist. With the sun on her face, exhilarated from the ride, she wasn't only beautiful. She was irresistible. He waited until he had his breath again. "Do you want me to?" "No." A laugh came from her, one that sounded like the most delicate wind chimes. "There's no point." "Why not?" His words were slow, the conversation unhurried. They were far enough from the arena that no one could see them, no one would wonder why Cody Gunner was talking to Ali Daniels. "Because," she smiled--"I don't want to be caught." She set her horse in motion again. "See ya." There was laughter in her voice. She was kidding, of course. All girls wanted to be caught. But maybe Ali was different in this, too. He didn't ride after her. Instead he set out at a diagonal, back toward the stock pen. He returned the horse and headed to the hotel for breakfast. It took him an hour to stop replaying their conversation in his head. He chided himself, hating the way she'd distracted him that morning. If she didn't want to be caught, fine. He wouldn't chase her. He needed his focus, needed to stay angry, in 74 KAREN KINGSBURY touch with the rage. Nothing in his riding regimen had room for the strange feelings she stirred inside him. But after their encounter that morning, he couldn't get into a rhythm, couldn't find the way back to the pain that kept him centered on the back of a bull for eight violent seconds. He was bucked off an easy ride, a bull that had been ridden 70 percent of the time. He was walking down the tunnel, disgusted, when he saw Ali sitting by herself outside the locker room. She was coughing, but she stopped when she saw him. "Ready for more advice?" She stood and leaned against the wall. Normally after a buck-off, he wouldn't talk to anyone. But his frustration had no staying power in her presence. He stopped and crossed his arms. "Let me guess, don't fall off, right?" "No." She pushed the toe of her boot around in the dirt. A smile lifted her lips. "That would help, but you should anticipate more. The way you ride, it's all about reacting. You should balance that. Focus on the feel of the bull's shoulders and anticipate his next move. Anticipation first; then reaction." She lifted one shoulder and fell in alongside him. "Couldn't hurt." He stopped just before the men's locker room door. "Thank you, Ali." His tone was dry, mildly sarcastic. He was still dusty from being bucked off the easiest bull at the rodeo. She couldn't expect him to be cheerful. "How did I get along without you?" "That one"--she pushed the door of the women's locker room and grinned--"I can't help you with." 75 Cody waited outside the arena for her, but she never showed. He was on his way back to the hotel when two bull riders and a half dozen scantily dressed girls met him in the parking lot. He hung with them for a few hours, but just before midnight--when one of the girls moved onto his lap--Cody called it a night. As he fell asleep, he promised himself he wouldn't lose another go-round because of Ali Daniels. She wasn't interested, and neither was he. That was reason enough to put her out of his mind. The next day he was getting ready for his ride when his heart dropped. Not ten yards ahead of him stood his mother and his brother and a man who looked very much like his father. Cody glared at the man. Was it really him? Had he come without being invited? Cody wanted to walk up and punch him in the face, release on the man a fraction of the rage he felt when he climbed on a bull. But not in front of Carl Joseph. He was about to turn around when his mother spotted him. "Wait, Cody." She wore jeans, and a red sweater he'd never seen before. She took light running steps toward him. "Don't leave." He shook his head and took a step back, but it was too late. Carl Joseph saw him. "Brother! Hi, brother!" Cody stopped. He gritted his teeth and ordered his heart to kick into a normal beat. When his mother was inches from him, he leaned in, his voice strained. "Why'd you bring him?" "He wanted to come." She wore sunglasses, but 76 KAREN KINGSBURY he could see the fear in her face. "You're his son, Cody. You need to talk to him." Carl Joseph was loping up. "Brother! Guess what?" "Hey, buddy." Cody couldn't let his brother know he was mad. "You gonna watch me ride tonight?" "Yeah, and guess what?" He jumped a few times in place. "I met my dad. He's your dad, too!" Carl Joseph pointed at the man, still waiting ten yards back. "See, brother. That's him. That's our dad!" The excitement in Carl Joseph's voice made Cody furious. The nerve of the man, coming back into their lives and getting Carl Joseph's hopes up. When he walked out the next time it would change the kid forever, just as it had changed Cody. Carl Joseph tugged on his arm. "Come meet him, brother. He wants to talk to you." A seething hatred consumed him. He shot another angry look at his mother. It took all his effort to keep his tone even. "Listen, buddy, I need to get ready for my ride. I'll talk to him later, okay?" "Okay." Carl Joseph gave him a dramatic high five. "Have a good ride, brother!" Without saying another word to his mom, without another glance at his father, he turned and headed fast in the opposite direction. That night-- intently aware that somewhere in the stands his father was sitting next to Carl Joseph, the ride was easier than it had been in weeks. Cody rode out his rage, taking every bit of it out on the bull. In the process he kept a seat on a beast known for its violent wrecks. 77 a thousand tomorrows Cody's score for the night was ninety-three--his highest of the season, and enough to put him in the championship round. He stayed in the locker room until he was sure his family was gone. When he was ready to leave, he exited to the outdoors. There would be no partying for him that night; not when he had a decade of emotions to sort through. Before turning in, there was something he had to do. He made his way through the parking lot to Ali's trailer and gave a light knock on the door. She wore jeans and a sweatshirt, and in the moonlight she looked impossibly beautiful. "Cody... what're you--" "Ali." He tipped his hat, a grin tugging at his mouth. "Just wanted to thank you for the advice. My win tonight.., it was all you." With that he turned and headed for the hotel across the street. He was gone before she could respond. 78 chapter eigkt Cody avoided Ali as much as possible. They were midway through the season, and points were crucial if he wanted to take a lead into the summer. After seeing his father, he had no trouble focusing, no difficulty identifying the demons only bull riding could battle. He won three straight and by the first part of June there was no one close. His mother still called, but he didn't mind. Every conversation about his father was fuel for the fire, another reason to attack the bull, to go the distance no matter how violent the ride. The guy was serious about coming back. He took a job coaching at a small college a mile from their house. The story was the same with every phone call. His father was desperately sorry, anxious for a second chance. "The call of every Christian is to forgive," his mother told him one morning. "Please, Cody, give him a chance." "That's funny." Cody wanted to laugh. "I thought the call of every Christian was to love." He 79 a thousand tomorrows tightened his grasp on the cell phone. "Remind him of that, why don't you." His mother didn't miss a beat. "What would you know of love, Cody? You don't love anyone but Carl Joseph. No one else gets in." "I don't need anyone else." "You do, Cody. You'll waste your whole life fighting make-believe battles if you don't turn around and see the truth. We all love you, Cody. Carl Joseph and I, and even your father." Cody was shaking by then. "Don't mention his name again or I'll hang up." The battle raged. Cody could only guess how the situation with his parents would turn out, but he was sure of this: He wouldn't go home again. Not until his father was out of the picture. The man had changed the course of his life, sent him chasing after death every weekend of the year. He should've been playing football for some college team by then, but instead he was crippled with rage. A rage that was worse than ever, one even bull riding barely eased. Ali could tell Cody was staying away. He was winning, but he looked angry as he stormed around the arena, angry and distant. The two of them hadn't spoken to each other in weeks. That was okay; Ali was fighting her own battles. Despite an arsenal of stronger medications and inhalers, she was struggling during events. She could 80 KAREN KINGSBURY still hold her breath during the ride, but afterwards, when she grabbed that first bit of air, she would slip into a coughing spasm that sometimes lasted five minutes. Other riders had begun to notice. Whereas they typically kept their distance, reacting to her aloofness, now a few of them expressed concern. "You should see a doctor about that cough," an older rider told her the day before. "You sound like you have pneumonia." If they only knew. That day, Ali added a third session with the compression vest. The treatment helped, but a few hours later she finished her ride with one of her slowest times of the season, and afterwards she lapsed into a series of coughs that wouldn't let up. She was doubled over near her horse when she felt his hand on her shoulder. "Ali... here." This time Cody handed her a full water bottle. "Maybe you're allergic to dust." "Maybe." Ali took a long drink. She had her own water, but it was twenty yards away, near the back of the tunnel. Another swig and she could feel her lungs relax, feel the air making its way into even the stubborn areas that were no longer soft and pliable. "I'm fine." She wiped her brow and met his eyes. "Thanks." He studied her for a minute. "I have to go." "Yep." She smiled. "My advice is still paying off." Cody grinned and let his gaze fall to his boots. When he looked up, his eyes were more vulnerable than before. "Can I ask you something?" 81 thousnd tomorrows "You just did." She lowered her chin, her eyes big. It felt fun to tease him. "I'm serious, Ali." He looked over his shoulder at the arena. The last barrel racer was about to go. His ride was coming up. "Okay." She took another drink from the bottle. She could breathe now; but she needed to get out of the tunnel. The dust there was almost as bad as it was on the barrel course. She squinted at him. "Ask." "Why do you ride sick?" The words skipped across the surface of her heart like a series of smooth stones. She met his gaze, unblinking. "Why do you ride angry?" He mulled over her question and finally gave her a slow nod. "The answers are somewhere, aren't they?" "Probably." "Let's talk tonight." The teasing faded from his eyes. "Can we do that, Ali?" The truck was circling the barrel course now; a handful of cowboys tossing the bins in the back, clearing things for the bull riders. Ali knew what her mother would think. Anyone but Cody Gunner... She looked at the arena. "You need to go." "Tell me, Ali. We'll find someplace and talk for an hour. Nothing more." Ali bit her lip. She needed to wear the vest for an hour before she could do anything. "Come by my trailer around eleven. Knock once on the door; I'll be waiting." For the first time in weeks, the anger lifted entirely from Cody's face. "Me, too." 82 KAREN KINGSBURY Ali rarely stayed in the arena long enough to watch the bull riders. If she wanted her lungs to bounce back from a race, she needed to get Ace out to the stock pens so she could breathe fresh air. Then, as soon as possible, she would return to the trailer and slip on the compression vest. Her mother would already be there, waiting. But that night, she wanted to watch Cody ride. So she took care of Ace and headed back down the tunnel toward the arena. Bull riders were crazy. Ali had always thought so. It was one thing to ride a horse around a pattern of barrels. But to sit on a bucking bull, to think for a minute it was possible to master two thousand pounds of muscled beast, that was crazy. Crazy and dangerous. One of the riders that night got hung up on a bull's horns. He was almost free when the bull jerked his head back and hit the rider's face square on. It wasn't as bloody as it could've been, but the rider was knocked out, cold. The bullfighters rushed in and distracted the animal, saving the rider's life. When it was safe, a stretcher was brought out. Even the announcer-- usually optimistic in the face of injuries, sounded concerned. Two riders later a cowboy was bucked off and landed on his head. He lay motionless for nearly a minute before giving a weak movement with first his hands, then his feet. Two more riders and then it was Cody's turn. The announcer was commenting on Cody's luck, how he always seemed to draw the rankest bulls. That was a good thing because half the rider's score 83 a thousand tomorrows came from the bull's ability to buck. The best stock could twist in more than one direction and keep their front and back feet off the ground at the same time, flying through the air. Ali read the reports. Cody had a knack for drawing that type of bull at least once every rodeo. She watched him climb onto the bull, and that's when she saw it. She was right; he rode angry. From the moment he straddled the bull, his jaw was set, his eyes narrow. They showed his face on the big screen, and his expression was so colored with rage it made her take a step back. The chute opened and Cody held on, focused and intent. The seconds ticked off, and Cody didn't give the bull a single centimeter's edge. He stayed perfectly centered, his left hand in the air no matter what the bull did to buck him off. His ride brought him an eighty-six, good enough for second place heading into the final go-round the next day. Ali hurried out of the arena, her stomach in knots. What was the feeling inside her? The strange fluttering of her heart when he survived the ride and pumped his fist in the air? Was it the oneness, the sameness Ali had recognized in him before? Ali had no answers as she darted through the rows of trailers and RVs. When she reached theirs, her mother was outside waiting. "Where've you been?" "Talking." Ali walked past her, up the few stairs and into the trailer. She found her vest, eased her arms into it, and zipped it up. "Ali..." Her mother followed her back into the 84 KAREN KINGSBURY trailer. She sounded more tired than angry. "Your lungs can't take it; you know that." "Mama ..." She flipped the compression switch. The machine made a gentle whirring sound and the vest began to inflate. "I've gone two years riding this tour without so much as a friend." Her tone was soft; she had no desire to fight. "I think it's okay if I hang around one time to talk, don't you?" Her mother hesitated. Then she kissed the top of Ali's head. "I want you well, Ali. As long as possible." "I know." Their eyes met. "I'm sorry." Ali spent the next hour angry with herself. She shouldn't have asked Cody to come. She was wrong to invite him; wrong to make him think she was even a little interested. A friendship with him wouldn't lead anywhere, not when her health was so unstable. There was no reason to involve him. The knock came at eleven on the dot. Her mother was long since asleep. Ali pulled a jacket on over her sweater, opened the door and slipped outside, down the steps so that she was standing in front of him. "Hi." "Hi." Cody took a step back, giving her space. He wore his heavy PRCA jacket, jeans, and a cowboy hat. It was easy to see why the girls never left him alone. "My mom's asleep." Ali shut the trailer door. "Oh." He stuck his hands in his pockets. The night was the warmest it had been all season, and a slight breeze played in the distant trees. The parking lot floodlights were off. The only glow came 85 a thousand tomorrows from a canopy of stars and a sliver of the moon hanging on the horizon. "Follow me." She led him around the front of the trailer where two canvas chairs were set up. It was the place where she and her mother would some times sit and talk while they waited for Ali's events. She took one of the chairs and he took the other, sliding it so it would be closer to her. "I got eight." His voice was a whisper. "I know." She angled herself so she could see him better. "You left." "I came back." Ali studied him. Was he interested or only curious? Either way she had no business leading him on. "You were good." A smile danced in his eyes, one she could see even in the dark. "Just following advice, ma'am." He shrugged one shoulder. "Sure glad you said some thing." She grinned. "I do what I can to help." Her lungs wanted a full breath, but she could only take in so much air. She should've felt better after an hour with the vest. Her grin faded. It was a reminder she should keep the conversation brief. "Okay, you wanted to talk." He hesitated. "You were gonna tell me why you ride sick." He leaned closer, his voice quiet. "Maybe you should get an inhaler or something." She smiled. Four inhalers lay in a drawer inside the trailer. "I ride because I love it, Cody. Same as all of us." Her hair blew in the breeze and she caught it, smoothing it back. A tinny Hank Williams song played from a nearby trailer, and the smell of horses 86 KAREN KINGSBURY hung in the air. "I just get sick more." She hesitated. How much should she tell him? Cody stretched his legs, his boots almost touching hers. "Doesn't it make you worse, riding when you're sick?" "If you were sick, you'd ride anyway." She stared at the moon for a minute, then back at him. "Right?" He leaned back, locked his fingers together and placed them behind his head. "I guess." He narrowed his eyes, more concerned than curious. "Why are you sick so much?" She blinked, waiting. "That's the question I never answer." "I know." He angled his head, his eyes searching. "That's why I'm here." "Hmmm." She pressed into the canvas chair. For the wildest moment, she actually considered it. What if she told him? Her secret had belonged to her and her parents all these years, but somehow--in the dark night with Cody Gunner--she wanted him to know. Maybe then he would lose interest; it would be easier than telling him later. One thing was sure. Her secret would be safe with him. Cody talked to no one, same as her. If anyone could keep her situation under wraps, he could. "Tell me, Ali." He leaned closer. The smell of him was intoxicating. Leather and cologne, and something Ali couldn't make out. Confidence and charisma. The intangible that made every bull rider larger than life. The scenario played out in her mind. What would it hurt? She could have 87 a tholsand tomorrows a friend on the tour, couldn't she? Someone who would know what she was up against? Her hands trembled and her heart raced. She sat up straighter in the chair and met his eyes. "I have cystic fibrosis." There. She'd said it. She pulled her knees up and hugged them to her chest, her eyes still on his. "It's a lung disease." Cody stared at her, his eyes wide. "Cystic fibrosis?" His expression changed from shock to anger and back to shock again. "Is it bad?" Ali wasn't surprised at his question. Most people her age didn't know about CF unless they had a reason to know. "Yes." She rested her chin on her knees, but it did nothing to ward off the chill in her heart. "Cystic fibrosis is always bad." His expression was frozen, as if he were waiting for her to laugh out loud and tell him it was all a bad joke. "You're serious?" "Serious." She felt herself relax. Relief and a new sort of camaraderie flooded her soul. It felt wonderful to finally tell someone the truth. "That's why I cough so much; it's why I ride sick." She smiled. "I have no choice." He was still motionless. His mouth was open, but it took a long while for the words to come. "Will you die?" "Everyone dies." She kept her tone light. He didn't need to know everything. "I mean it, Ali. How sick are you?" This time something vulnerable flashed in his eyes, a depth of emotion that couldn't have been easy for someone as private as Cody Gunner. "I'm sorry." She sat straighter and gripped her 88 KAReN KINGSBURY knees, not sure what to say. Was she really having this conversation with him? Sitting beside him in the dark parking lot outside the arena, sharing secrets she'd kept all her life? She bit the inside of her cheek. "CF doesn't have a pattern. It'll shorten my life, yes. But no one knows exactly how much." He stared at her for a few more heartbeats. Then he stood and walked a few feet away, his back to her. His outline was impressive in the shadows, the cowboy hat and jacket only adding to his image. He wasn't going to stay, she could tell. Her honesty had frightened him. They probably wouldn't talk again after this. "Cody?" He turned, hung his head for a moment, then straightened and returned to his chair. A long sigh left his lips as he looked at her again. "I'm sorry." "Don't be." She lowered her voice. If they weren't careful her mother would wake up. "I'm doing what I love. How many people can say that?" "Riding horses." He lifted his hat and pushed his fingers up his forehead and into his short hair. His voice was tinged with pain and frustration. "That can't be good for you." The breeze was picking up, the temperature dropping. "Anything that makes me feel that alive is good for me." Ali eased her feet back to the ground. "I get sick once in a while, but the doctors know what to do for me." "That's why you were gone a few weeks ago?" The reality of her situation was settling in. The 89 a Thousand ornorrows shock was gone, and now his eyes held a helplessness, a futility. "Yes. I spent a week in the hospital. Sort of a tune-up." Ali turned toward him in her chair so she could see him better. "I wear a compression vest three times a day. Otherwise my lungs will get worse." "So that's..." He swallowed, his eyes wide. "That's why you go straight to your trailer." "Mm-hmm." She felt utterly at peace. How wonderful to finally tell another competitor the truth, more wonderful than she could've imagined. Hiding her sickness had allowed her to compete like anyone else; but the journey hadn't been easy. Everyone wondered about her; they guessed about what made her different from the others. Now Cody knew. She explained how she held her breath when she rode, how she took only a few inhalations in the tunnel to keep from breathing in too much dust, and how she'd kept the entire ordeal a secret. "I never wanted anyone to leak it to the press. I wanted people to know me for the way I run barrels, not my sickness." "Why me, Ali?" His eyes softened. "Why'd you trust me?" "You asked." She looked at the silhouette of the nearby mountains against the sky. Then she found his eyes again. "You're a lot like me, Cody. All you need is the ride." "Yes." Cody thought about that. "Can I do anything to help? Anything that would make it easier for you?" 90 KAREN KINGSBURY She grinned. "Sure. Don't talk to me in the tunnel." She pointed toward a clearing a few yards away. "And could you ride your bulls out here so I could watch?" His smile broke the tension of the moment. "If they'd let me, I'd do that every night. I hate the crowds. They're not why I ride." Silence sat between them for a time. "That brings us to you, Cody Gunner." She lived with CF every day of her life. She was finished talking about it for now. "What makes you so mad? I watched you tonight, all that anger. It has to come from somewhere." She waited. "What are you fighting out there?" Cody studied her for a minute. "You should get in; you have goose bumps." "I'm okay." She paused, wanting his answer. "No. It's late." He reached out his hand to help her up. "I don't want you getting a cold." The minute his fingers touched hers, she felt it. A current of something new and wild and exciting. Something that touched her heart and soul and body all at the same time. As soon as she was on her feet, she let go and the moment was over. Her cheeks were hot, and she was glad for the darkness. "Okay." She swallowed. Was he really worried about the cold air, or had her honesty scared him? Either way, he was right. She needed to get inside. "Maybe some other time." "What about tomorrow?" "Tomorrow?" Her heart soared. "If it's okay. I'll meet you here, same time?" "Okay." 91 a thousand Tomorrows They stood, facing each other. For a long moment she searched beyond his eyes. She'd been wrong earlier. He wasn't afraid of her disease. They had found a friendship, and she was completely comfortable with that. He wouldn't tell anyone her secret. Besides, it didn't matter as much now. Dr. Cleary was right; her time on the tour was short. Eventually everyone would know the truth about Ali Daniels. "Thanks for talking." He slid his hands into his pockets again. "Go in and get warm." He hesitated, and she wondered if he was going to hug her. But then he took two steps back and tipped his hat. "Good night, Ali." "Good night." She was inside before she acknowledged the subtle ache in her chest. She was breathless, flushed, the way she felt when she needed her inhaler. Only this time the feeling was different, and Ali knew why. She wasn't breathless because of the night air or the long day or the battles she fought with cystic fibrosis. She was breathless because of Cody Gunner. Ali drove him in ways he didn't dare tell her. That first night was the beginning of many. Through summer and into fall, for the rest of the season, Cody was driven by a different set of feelings. He enjoyed the bulls more, embracing the adrenaline rush and smiling more often when he lasted eight seconds. After a good ride, he would 92 raise his fists to the crowd and grin at their applause, or toss his hat at a bull that had given him a winning ride. For the first time, Cody identified with the other cowboys on the tour. It was a rush, riding bulls, a rush Cody had missed too often in the years when every ride was consumed with thoughts of his father. Now, when the familiar anger kicked in while he was lowering himself onto a bull, when it churned in his gut and made him grit his teeth during his final seconds in the chute, it was less about his father than something else, something new. A lung disease called cystic fibrosis. He and Ali talked about everything, and their talks became a lifeline, the difference Ali made in his life too big to measure. Because of her, he didn't go through the day angry, he didn't waste the nights putting out the embers of hatred with a six- pack. Rather he spent his days waiting for the one night each weekend when he and Ali could be together. Always he'd known that if he fell for a girl, his riding days would be numbered. Because love was a light that wouldn't allow darkness to reign in his soul. And without the darkness, what reason did he have to battle it? To get in the arena with a snorting beast and fight for his life? Without the rage? There would be no point. But with Ali it was different. What he felt for her was more pure and honest, more intense. And it made everything about riding bulls more intense, too. It wasn't love, not in the conventional sense. His feelings for Ali were deeper, 93 stronger, the same sort of emotions he felt for Carl Joseph. He would've protected Ali Daniels if it meant jumping in front of a train or taking a bullet in the chest. Feelings that strong. As the season played out, the two of them stayed near the top of the leaderboards. Since talk on the tour flowed like cheap wine, Cody kept his distance during the day. Neither of them wanted their names linked for any reason other than the obvious--they were both among the best in the business. But at night, after the championship buckles had been handed out and the crowds had gone home, Ali and Cody would sneak out and take their places in the familiar chairs in front of her trailer. There they opened themselves to a world neither of them had ever known before. The world of friendship. He told her the story of his childhood, how his father had left, and how there would always be the struggle to forgive the man. Some of the more private details he kept to himself, sparing her the part about Carl Joseph's handicap and running after his father's cab and how he felt no connection with his mother. Still, what he did share was more than he'd ever told anyone. No matter how late they stayed up, whispering in the moonlight, they never ran out of things to talk about. Once in a while a comfortable silence would fall between them and Ali would smile at him, her eyes dancing. "You aren't chasing me, right?" 94 KAREN KINGSBURY He would raise his eyebrows in mock surprise. "Chase you?" His chin would lift a few inches. "Come on, Ali. I don't chase girls. You know that." "Good." She'd pull her feet up, her voice full of teasing. "I don't want to be caught, remember?" "Yes, Ali, I remember." He'd hold his hands up in surrender. "You're safe with me; I don't want to be caught either." Ali Daniels was the most serious girl he'd ever known. But after a few weeks, he found ways to make her laugh. Before turning in for the night they'd sometimes be in tears from trying to stifle their bouts of laughter, keeping quiet so they wouldn't wake her mother. By the end of the season they both qualified for the National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas. Usually after a long year, Cody was anxious to get to the NFR, ready to take a shot at the title and head home. But this year he had no home to go back to. His father had moved in, and from what his mother said he was sleeping in Cody's bedroom. There was even talk that the two of them might get remarried. Apparently, Carl Joseph was thrilled. Cody wanted nothing to do with any of them. So instead of looking forward to the season finale, he was dreading it. Ali was coughing harder, looking tired more often. She wanted a national championship in the worst way, but her times had been a whole second or two slower in the past weeks. They would compete like crazy and when the final buzzer sounded he had no idea what he was going to do. But that wasn't why he was dreading the final. He 95 dreaded it because after the finals he wouldn't see Ali again until late January in Denver. The truth was something he recognized. He could barely last a week without her. How was he going to survive two months? 96 chapter nine For Ali Daniels, there was no worse place to corn pete than Las Vegas. A constant wind blew across the desert floor, stir ring up dirt and pushing the smog from one side of the valley to the other. The National Finals Rodeo was held at the Thomas and Mack Center, a huge indoor arena that sat more than fifteen thousand fans. Not only would the dirt be softer, more likely to fill the air, but NFR organizers used indoor fire works before each day's events. And the NFR didn't happen in a weekend like other rodeos throughout the year. It ran ten days straight. Ten days of racing barrels through dust and fireworks smoke and the stuffy confines of one of the biggest indoor arenas of the year. Even the locker rooms were worse, because officials at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas covered the tunnel and locker room floors with plastic. That meant the dirt wasn't packed down the way it was in most arenas. No wonder she hadn't done well at her first two NFR showings. 97 This year, though, she had a plan. She would wear the compression vest ninety minutes, three times a day. The longer she spent in the vest, the more relief she felt, and the longer that relief lasted. It was the first day. She and her mother had found a nice spot at Sam's Town for their trailer, an oversized space with trees along one side. Ali liked that; it would give her and Cody privacy for their late-night talks. Cody had a room at the hotel next door, so after the rodeo each night, they wouldn't have trouble meeting up. Ali slipped on her vest and zipped it up. She and her mother had spent the past two weeks at home, the first three days in the hospital. The doctor's warnings were just as strong as before, but he stopped short of badgering her. When the season was over, when she had her national championship in hand, then she could think about quitting. Not until then. She flipped on the compression switch and felt the vest fill up. At the same time, the door opened and her mother walked in, a bag of groceries in her arms. "Again?" She set the bag down and began unloading it. "Didn't you get an hour earlier?" "Ninety minutes. I'm going longer for the next ten days." Her mother was quiet, unusually so. She finished putting away the food and took the chair opposite Ali. "Honey, we need to talk." Ali felt her heart skip a beat. Her mother was easy. Whatever hardships being on the Pro Rodeo Tour caused, however difficult it was being away from home, her mother never let on. She wanted Ali 98 KAREN KINGSBURY to be happy. It was the reason she'd agreed to travel with her in the first place. But the concern written into her expression now was something Ali almost never saw. "What's wrong, Mama?" A tired breath made its way from her. "I was in line at the store, and two bull riders were in front of me." Two bull riders? Ali wasn't sure what to say. She waited for her mother to continue. "They were talking about Cody Gunner. One of them laughed about how tame he was these days, none of the partying and loose women he used to associate with." Ali had a feeling about what was coming. But how could anyone have known? They hadn't so much as shared a conversation in front of the other riders. She swallowed. "Okay... I guess that's good, right?" "There's more." Her shoulders dropped a notch. "The other cowboy said, 'You know what happened to Cody, right?' And the first guy nodded and said, 'Ali Daniels, that's what happened to him.'" She blinked, searching her mind's list of possible replies. "I'm with you all the time in the arena, Ali. Ever since that first night when you and Cody talked, I've watched you and seen nothing. Absolutely nothing between you." She turned her hands palms up. "Have I missed something? Are you dating that boy behind my back?" Her secret meetings with Cody were never supposed to be anything but temporary, small chances 99 a thousand tomorrows for a friendship that had made the entire last half of the season her best days of all. From the first she'd looked for a way to tell her mother about her time with Cody. Now she was getting her chance. She cleared her throat. "We're not dating, obviously. You'd know if I was." "Then what? Why would they say that?" "Because..." The vest made it harder to talk in whole sentences. She didn't want Cody to come between them. She closed her eyes tight and then opened them, her tone flat. "Because sometimes Cody comes by our trailer at night." It took a minute for Ali's words to sink in. "What?" Her mother's voice was tight, disbelieving. "After I'm asleep?" "Yes." Ali winced. Sometimes she had to remind herself. The vest wasn't squeezing the life out of her; it was pressing life back into her. "Yes, after you're asleep he comes by and we... we sit outside in the folding chairs." Her mother's expression was a study in control. Shock and surprise added to the fine lines around her eyes. She wasn't angry. Hurt, maybe, but not angry. For a while the only sound between them was the steady rhythmic whirring of the vest as it worked on her lungs. What was she thinking? Was she disappointed, frustrated? Was she ready to take the two of them. home for good? Finally Ali couldn't handle another minute. "Mama? Say something." Her mother leaned her elbows on the arms of the chair and looked at Ali. "Do you love him?" 100 KAREN KINGSBURY The question made Ali hesitate, and that hesitation terrified her more than anything her mother could've said or done. Did she love him? Of course not, right? The idea was absurd, falling in love with a reckless bull rider like Cody Gunner. But then why did she hesitate? Ali ran her tongue over her lower lip. "No, Mama, it's not like that. He's my friend; nothing more." Her mother's words were calm, deliberate. "Then why hide your visits? Did you think I wouldn't approve?" "Do you?" Ali's answer was sharper than she intended. Her heart melted and she felt her expression soften. "I kept thinking about what you said. Heaven forbid it be someone like Cody Gunner. I didn't think you'd want me talking to him." Her mother drew a slow breath, her eyes searching Ali's. "How much have you told him?" If she was going to be honest, she couldn't stop now. "Everything. He knows about my CE" "Well ..." her mother slid back in her chair. She turned it so she was facing the opposite window. "It'll be all over the tour by January, if it's not already out there. If that's what you want, then I guess it's okay "Mama!" Ali was supposed to relax when the vest was on, work with the compressions so they were more effective. But she was too upset to relax. She flipped the switch and the machine fell silent. "Turn around and look at me. Please!" Her mother spun around. "Don't use that tone with me, young lady. Cody Gunner's reputation 101 a thousand tomorrows precedes him. In the arena and out. He's not your type, not our type." "Be quiet, Mama." Ali's voice rang with passion. "You don't know him. He won't tell a soul about my CE" She pressed her hand against her chest. "He'd do anything for me. Anything at all." Her mother's mouth hung open. "Dear me." The words were the slightest whisper. "You're in love with him and you don't even know it." "I'm not in love with him. He's my friend. The first friend I've had since I started riding professionally." Ali's throat was tight, her lungs heavier than usual. "Can't I have that, Mama? One single friend?" For years, her mother had been forced to hold back her opinions, forced to let Ali make her own decisions about the way she spent her time. Even when those decisions might take years off her life. Now, Ali could see the same struggle playing out. Her mother didn't want Cody Gunner around any more than she wanted Ali on a horse. She crossed the small space between them and knelt at Ali's feet. With gentle movements, while her eyes filled with tears, she put her hand on top of Ali's knee. "I'm sorry, honey. I never meant to upset you." Ali put her arms around her mother's neck. "I don't love him, Mama. I promise." Tears filled her own eyes, because it wasn't fair. She was twenty years old and she wouldn't see thirty. Tears because her mother had given so much, and now she was afraid Ali would somehow share what was left of her time with Cody Gunner. 102 KAREN KINGSBURY "It's your life, Ali." She whispered the words against Ali's cheek. "I promised you a long time ago--I won't tell you how to live it." There it was. The bottom line, the thing her mother always said whenever they had these discussions. After Anna's death, when the idea of horseback riding seemed suicidal, time and again when Dr. Cleary insisted that barrel racing would cut years off her life, and now--when Ali wanted the green light for a friendship with Cody Gunner. Ali closed her eyes and a stream of hot tears spilled onto her cheeks. Her mother's words ran through her mind again. It's your life, Ali... I won't tell you how to live it. Exactly what she needed to hear. "It's okay, honey." Her mother took her hand and squeezed it three times. Their silent way of saying the three most important words of all, I love you. "It's okay." She sniffed and blinked her eyes open. "Can I have him come earlier tonight? Before you go to bed." "Yes." Her mother reached out and dried her cheeks. "I'd like that." Ali took second that night, putting her in position to make a run for the championship. She had only a minute to pull Cody aside and tell him about the conversation with her mother. "She must hate me for keeping you out late." "No." Ali shook her head. "Give her a chance. She's on our side, Cody. Really. Come by early tonight; you'll see." At 10:30 he knocked on their trailer door, and Ali let her mother answer it. 103 a thousand tomorrows "Cody." Her mother hesitated, but her voice was warm. "Come in." From the back of the table where she sat, Ali felt herself relax. Everything was going to be fine, once her mother got to know him. "Yes, ma'am." Cody's voice rang with cowboy respect. "Thank you." Ali's mother stepped back and gestured toward the small table where Ali was sitting. "How'd you ride tonight, Cody?" "I took third, ma'am. The bull could've been better." "We'll be pulling for a better draw tomorrow." She gave him a smile that eased the tension. "Iced tea?" "Yes, ma'am, that'd be nice." Cody shot a nervous glance at Ali. "I appreciate you having me." Ali's mother was at the small refrigerator, pouring three glasses of tea. "Well..." She looked at him over her shoulder. "It's about time you saw the inside of our trailer." The silence was interrupted by Ali's giggles, and not long after, her mother and Cody joined in. After that, the ice was broken. Their evening visits continued to be early every night that week, and always, sometime around eleven, Ali's mother would turn in. Ali would get into her sweatshirt, and she and Cody would find their familiar places in the chairs outside. Over the next few days, most of their talk was about the competition. Cody held a strong second place, but Ali was frustrated with her times. She wasn't riding as fast as before, and she didn't know why. Her times had her sitting at fourth overall, but she would need a few first-place finishes in the 104 KAIEN KINGSBURY remainder of the races if she were to have a chance at the championship. "You're still holding your breath?" Cody was sitting beside her, closer than when they first started meeting together. "Definitely." She frowned and stared straight ahead. "I do the ride in my mind a hundred times a day; I can't figure out how to catch that extra step." "Hmmm." Cody stretched his legs out and folded his hands behind his head, the way she was familiar with now. A grin started in his eyes and made its way down to his mouth. "Someone once told me the secret was anticipation." He bumped her arm with his elbow. "Sound familiar?" She chuckled, careful to be quiet. "Must've been someone smart." "Yes." He tapped her head, letting his fingers run along her hair for a few seconds. "And did I mention focus. She thinks focus helps, too." "Ah, yes. Focus." Ali did an exaggerated frown. Focus had been easier before, back when her mind didn't share time between racing and thinking about her conversations with Cody Gunner. At most rodeos they talked for a few hours a weekend. At this one, they were together that long every night. By the sixth day, she met him outside the arena. "You're right." She anchored her hands on her hips and squinted at him. The sky was bright blue, the December day as sunny as any in July. "Right about what?" He smiled at her, studying her. "About my focus; it isn't there." She shifted her 105 a thousand tomorrows weight, hoping he wouldn't take this wrong. He needed to understand. "Let's take a few nights off, turn in early. We can talk when it's over. Maybe that'll help me concentrate." "I'm a distraction, huh?" He gave a light laugh, but disappointment colored his eyes. He kept his tone upbeat. "Sure, Ali. Whatever helps." "You understand, right?" She felt funny trying to explain herself. Neither of them owed the other anything. "This championship means.., well, it means everything to me. I've waited all my life for it." The next four rides were the best either of them had all season. Still, the competition was tough. Ali was in third heading into the final round, Cody a few points shy of first. He was the defending champion, but for him it would come down to the draw. Minutes before her race, Ali climbed onto Ace and ran her fingers over his coarse blond mane. She spoke to him, low and gentle near his ears, the way she always did before a ride. "Atta boy, Ace. It's all yours tonight. All yours." A million thoughts fought for her attention. Anna sitting by the window looking out at the neighbor's farm. I wanna race through the forever bay fields and play hide-and-seek out by the tallest pine trees, and jump on that palomino horse next door. And her mother agreeing finally to let her have the baby foal. It's your life, Ali. I won't stop you.., won't stop you. And Cody Gunner with those crazy blue eyes wanting to talk to her. Just once, Ali. Tell me why you do it; why do you ride so sick? She cleared her mind. People in her position talked often about sacrifice, 106 KAt.EN KINGSBUIY all they'd given up to get where they were. For Ali, of course, the sacrifice was something more than a missed childhood or the cost of spending hours a day on the back of a horse. The sacrifice would come later--in the years of life she would lose for her decision to ride. From the first time she watched a rider race around barrels she'd believed she was better, faster. That one day the championship would belong to her. And now here she was, minutes away from taking it, owning it. This would be the fastest ride of her life; she could feel it in her bones, in the center of her being. It was her turn to take her mark. Like always, Ace was spirited, desperate for the go-ahead, the chance to tear out of the tunnel around the course he loved. He nodded and pranced sideways. "This is it, Ace," she whispered. "Fasten Faster and stronger." She sucked in a full breath and held it just as they tore down the tunnel and into the arena. The two of them flew around the first barrel, cleaner, faster than ever, and Ali knew it was happening. The thing she'd dreamed of since she was eleven years old was happening here and now, and no one could stop them. Ace pushed himself, his hooves barely making contact with the soft dirt as he rounded the second barrel. One more, just one more. Ali pressed into him, willing him to move. They were almost around the third barrel when it happened. Ace's foot caught the barrel's edge. "No!" Ali screamed, and as she did she sucked in a mouthful of dusty air. She lunged toward the 107 barrel, desperate to keep it upright. But it was too late. In the corner of her eye she watched the barrel crash onto its side, taking with it her only chance at the title. A spilled barrel was something Ali rarely dealt with; certainly never in a National Finals Rodeo. The mistake meant a five-second penalty, and a score that wouldn't be in the top six for the round. She couldn't feel Ace beneath her as she raced into the tunnel. It was all a nightmare, right? She was dreaming, and any minute she'd wake up and it would be time to go to the arena. Her eyes closed before she came to a stop. No... no, that didn't happen. It can't end this way. That's when she realized something else was wrong. She couldn't breathe, couldn't draw a breath. Never mind the race or the lost championship, suddenly she couldn't think about anything but drawing in oxygen, meeting her body's desperate need for air. She must have taken in too much dust when she took a breath out on the course, and now she couldn't stop coughing. She dismounted and grabbed her water bottle. Her knees were weak, and it took all her energy to stay on her feet. Dark spots danced in her eyes and she held on to Ace, coughing with no relief, certain she was about to faint and not sure if it was because her heart was breaking or because she couldn't quench the burning in her lungs. She sucked in a long swig of water and forced herself not to draw a breath. Calm, Ali. Be calm. The coughing wouldn't let up, and she sprayed the mouthful of water across the floor. This had 108 KAREN KINGSBURY happened one other time, and the doctor had told her above all not to panic. But even Ace was nervous, whinnying and giving her anxious glances. She was too far down the tunnel to get anyone's attention, but clearly she needed help. The coughing had kicked into an asthma attack. She needed her inhaler, the one she kept in her equipment bag for emergencies. Only this was the first time she'd ever needed it after a race, and she wasn't even sure where her bag was. Nausea welled up in her and she grabbed at a shallow breath. More coughing, and now she was doubled over. She was about to drop to her knees when she heard his voice. "Ali." Her face was burning up, red hot from the exertion. She met his eyes, and saw the inhaler in his hand. She couldn't speak, couldn't do anything but grab it and shove it up against her lips. The first two puffs, she could hold the medication (or no more than a second. But then, slowly, she felt her airways relax. The third puff lasted longer and by the time she took her fourth, the coughing subsided. Everything ached, even her bones. She was dizzy from the lack of oxygen, and just as she swayed Cody caught her arm and led her to a bench a few feet away. He took the spot next to her, stroking her back, brushing his cool knuckles against her hot cheeks. "Ali, you scared me." She was too tired to keep her head up, so she let it fall on his shoulder. For all their late-night talks, 109 a thousand tornorrows this was the closest their bodies had ever been. Ali couldn't get a rope around her thoughts. She'd lost the biggest race of her life, but somehow her heart soared with possibility. "I... I lost." "I know; it's all right. You can get it next year, Ali." He gulped and she caught a strange look in his eyes, something she hadn't seen there before. "Are you okay?" Ali took in a slow breath. "I couldn't.., couldn't stop coughing." "I saw the whole thing." He smoothed a section of hair off her forehead. "The barrel went over and you breathed, didn't you?" A sense of awe joined the emotions already having their way with her. She sat up straight and looked at him. "You saw that?" "Yes." He exhaled, and she caught a look at his legs. He was trembling. "I knew you were in trouble; I ran for your bag, and your mom was already on it. She handed me your inhaler because I could get it to you faster." He ran his hand along her back again. "You sure you're okay?" "I'm fine." Her heart rate was fast, but her breathing was as good as it would get inside the stadium. "Thanks." He shot a look toward the arena. The floor was cleared already, the bull riders getting ready. When he spoke, his teeth were clenched. "I hate that you suffer like this, Ali. It isn't right." Tears stung at her eyes, but she refused them. Rodeo riders didn't hold on to the hurt very long. It was part of their way, their lifestyle. She gave him a 110 KAREN KINGSBUIY gentle push. "Go ride. At least one of us can be champion." Cody hesitated, looking into her eyes. "Later?" "Yes." She didn't have to ask what he meant. They'd avoided each other the past four days, and in the end it hadn't done her any good. She didn't have a national championship, but she had a friend. He gave her one last look, a grimace that shouted fierce determination. Then he stood, pressed his hat onto his head, and took off down the tunnel. Her mother came through the locker room door at the same time, her face tight with worry. "I knew you were coughing. I gave Cody your inhaler; he could reach you first." "Yes." She stood and faced her mother. The way her throat closed up, it was much worse than coughing, but there was no reason to say anything now. "Thanks." They were talking around the obvious, but the pretense could only last so long. Her mother knew more than anyone how much the championship meant. Her health wasn't holding up the way she wanted it to, and unless she found a way to get stronger, she might not be well enough to compete next year. Her mother's eyes grew watery and she held out her hands. "Come here, Ali." Ali was tough so much of the time, determined to push ahead, bent on being the best barrel racer in the world. But right now, she didn't feel tough or determined or even close to the best in the world. She took a few steps and leaned into her mother's embrace, but even then she kept the sobs at bay. 111 a thousand tomorrows She wanted to head back down the tunnel, find a spot with a good view and watch Cody ride. He'd drawn a tough bull, one that would give him the win if he lasted eight seconds. But at that moment, still buried beneath the weight of her defeat, in all the world she really needed just one thing. To be held by her mama until everything felt right again. 112 chapter ten Sling Shot was the best draw Cody had gotten all week. The animal was the biggest, meanest bull at the NFR, a bull with thick, curved horns and shoulders that could toss a cowboy across the arena in a single violent motion. It was the exact draw Cody had been hoping for. The rage he felt when he thought about Ali was almost frightening. She was an angel, a delicate flower with a grace and strength on horseback that would take the breath from anyone with eyes. No one knew she was sick, because she didn't look sick. Her skin was tanned from the summer season, her pale blonde hair long and healthy. How would any of the others have known that the cough she battled wasn't a cold or an allergy, but a dreaded disease? Ali Daniels shouldn't have had cystic fibrosis. She should've been dreaming of another five years on the tour, and then a life that was nothing but blue skies and flaming red sunsets. It wasn't fair, the disease. The ride beneath him was no longer tied in any way 113 a thousand Tomorrows to his hatred for his father, but to cystic fibrosis, with all the merciless damage it was doing to Ali. Because it was that--combined with a reckless abandon for the rush of the ride--that had Cody riding better than ever in his life. Cody positioned himself over the bull and stared at the animal's center. If only he could battle her disease the way he was about to battle the bull. "Ready, Gunner?" "Ready." Cody worked the muscles in his jaw and slid his mouthpiece in place. His blood boiled hot through his face and neck, down his arms. He lowered himself onto the animal's back, wrapped his hand tough and fast, and slid forward. Sling Shot reared his head back and lifted off his front feet. Cody smacked the bull's neck, and the animal dropped, startled. "That's right." Cody seethed the words. No disease would ever hurt Ali Daniels, not if he had anything to say about it. This time he didn't wait. He shoved his crotch against his riding hand, leaned forward, and nodded hard. The latch opened and the bull took to the air, spinning halfway around before ever touching ground. He was already twisting in the other direction as he pushed off his back feet. Cody kept his seat, his body so balanced he didn't feel like he was riding the bull, but floating above him. A jerk of his neck and the bull was airborne again. Adrenaline surged through Cody's body and in that moment he believed he was actually stronger than the bull. Stronger and smarter. Fight me, bull; try it. Ali would get on a horse again next season. Nothing would stop her, not even 114 KAREN K1NGSBURY cystic fibrosis. Twice more the bull spun and bucked, arching through the air, and suddenly Cody knew. He had this one, the ride was his. He heard the buzzer. He'd made it; he'd ridden a bull that was responsible for some of the worst wrecks in the PRCA, and it had felt easy. He leaned forward, readying himself. Next time the bull bucked he'd make the jump. The animal rocked back and then slammed down on his front hooves, his back legs snapping behind him. Cody pushed off, but as he did, the bull snapped his head back and caught Cody in the forehead with his horn. A splash of dark spots filled his vision, but only for a few seconds. He felt one of the bullfighters at his side, helping him out of the arena. The other one must've been distracting the bull. Cody blinked and the stars faded. Blood was dripping down his face before he could get back to the gate. The doctor was at his side in three seconds with a cloth and a stitch kit. He handed Cody the rag and helped him press it against his head. "Nice gash." He led Cody down the tunnel to the training room. "You okay?" "Yeah." Cody wasn't sure what he felt. His head hurt, but it was nothing compared to the way his heart felt. Yes, he was the national champion bull rider, an award he'd won before, one he'd earned. But what about Ali? She'd wanted the title more than any other rider. How was that fair? She was the best barrel racer on the tour, no matter what the final standings showed. He took a seat at the trainer's table. Like so much about her life, she deserved more than a seventh-place finish. 115 a thousand tomorrows The doctor took the bloody cloth from Cody and studied his head. "It's deep, but not too long. Most of it's in your hairline." He chuckled. "We won't need to make a mess of that pretty face of yours. Not this time." "I guess." The doctor went to work, and Cody didn't flinch as the stitching got under way. "You cowboy up better than anyone out there, Gunner." He wiped a clean cloth along Cody's brow, and dropped it on the floor. It was blood red. "Blow like that should're knocked you out." "I'm fine." He played the doctor's words in his mind again. Cowboy up. It was the slogan of the Pro Rodeo Tour, the slogan of bull riders and rodeo competitors at every level of the game. No matter how hard the hit, whatever the level of injury, a cowboy didn't stay down. He got up and shook off the pain. Cody had ridden with broken ribs and a separated shoulder. He'd seen cowboys get knocked out, stitched up, and taped together and an hour later be rubbing resin into their rope, ready for the next go- round. Guys would laugh off the injuries, slap one another on the back, and say it again: "Cowboy up." The words had come to define the cowboy mentality, the rodeo way of life. Riders had two choices: cowboy up or go home. If cowboys didn't look past their injuries, the rodeo would no longer exist. Everyone rode hurt; it was the nature of the sport. But the doctor was wrong. Cody wasn't the toughest cowboy on the tour, not by far. Not him or 116 KAP,.E N KINGSBUt