high. Peety takes a moment to rub Lupeâs forehead, then trots after Andy.
I breathe out a sigh of relief, though a moment later a new worry starts up where the old one left off. How would Andy know how to ride a horse? I never considered the matter before now.
Cay pinches a slice of bacon from the frying pan and devours it whole. âHeâs a good coosie even if his caboose donât stay on his cayuse.â
My nose wrinkles. âWhat does that mean?â
With his mouth full, Cay answers, âA coosie is who cooks for you, a cayuse is the animal that carries you, and a caboose is what you should never wave over a stinging nettle.â He peers into the frying pan and glances up at West. âWrestle for the last piece?â
âSammy didnât get one.â
West keeps his gaze trained on a spot around my nose. My first reaction is to demur. Iâve been taught to never take the last piece for myself, which Chinese people consider very impolite. But to these cowboys, such a gesture would probably go unappreciated. They would simply assume I wasnât hungry, which isnât the case at all.
Why stand on principle when itâll just give people the wrong idea?
I take the bacon, stuffing the whole strip into my mouth just like a boy might do. It is wondrously good.
As Andy and Peety draw near, I hear Andy say, âHe understands Spanish, so donât think you can fool Him with that cussing.â
Peety stomps around our fire. â
Chico
pretend he know how to ride horse,â Peety tells us, waving his hands at Andy.
âWell, it was a long time ago,â Andy shoots back, brushing off her sleeves.
â
Estas loco.
How are you going to ride Princesa?â
âAinât I gonna ride her double with Sammy?â
Peety glares at her. âPrincesa only takes one rider, and you are bigger than Chinito. Sammy, you ride with West and Francesca today.â
By Francesca, I guess he means Westâs sorrel. Itâs a tough call as to whoâs the most disappointedâAndy, me, or West. The deal was for us to ride Princesa together, but if we protest, the boys might get suspicious. Andy picks her face up the quickest. âFine,â she says gruffly.
âYou ever rode a horse?â West asks me.
I stop picking at the hem of my shirt and raise my chin.
âI know how to ride,â I say coolly. I donât mention that my only steed was our compliant mule, Tsing Tsing, back in New York who only had two speeds: slow, and slower.
West tucks his lower lip under his top, like he drew the shortest straw. He busies himself tacking his sorrel alongside Cay and Peety. I kneel beside Andy, who is rearranging the items in her saddlebag. âYou okay?â
âHeâs a stubborn man, that Peety,â she grumbles. âI ainât got no business riding that frisky she-devil by myself.â
I cluck my tongue in sympathy, remembering well how fiercely I gripped Fatherâs hand the first time I sat upon our gentle Tsing Tsing. âYou want me to ask if I can ride Princesa and you go with West?â I ask a bit too eagerly.
ââS okay,â she says darkly. âThey might change their minds about taking us if we fuss too much. You got more waist than me, tie a shirt âround your middle to even things out.â
I do it while Andy knits her fingers together, casting glances at the sky. Yellow clouds, backlit by the coming sun, trek over the horizon like cat prints.
âYouâre sixteen, which means you were born in 1832, right?â I ask.
She stops praying. âI guess, though donât ask me the day, âcause I donât know. Why?â
âThatâs the Year of the Dragon, the most powerful of the twelve animals on the Chinese calendar.â
âMost powerful?â She slits her eyes at me.
I nod.
âWhat animal are you?â
âSnake.â
A wry smile touches her lips. âYou donât
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