Klaus would probably hire a regiment of lawyers. Still,

  the evidence was pretty solid against him.

  “Not everything.” Ned frowned. “I can't get that

  other horse out of my mind.”

  “What other horse?” Bess asked.

  “The one that was stolen,” Ned told her. “The one

  that ended up going to the slaughterhouse.”

  Texel slapped him on the back. “Don't look so

  gloomy, son. Even that has a happy ending.”

  “It does?” Ned perked up, and Gilly looked

  interested, too.

  “Seems Brackett couldn't bear to sell the horse to

  the killers so he gave it to a friend of his who lives in

  the boondocks where no one would ever find it,” Texel

  explained. “He made up some story about its being an

  old broken-down show horse that the owner wanted to

  get rid of.”

  Gilly smiled. “Even though I only took care of him

  for a couple of days, I knew he was a nice horse. Does

  he have a good home now?”

  “The best,” Texel said. “I personally checked the

  place out this morning. After all, that horse is evidence.

  Lucky is doing well in a pasture full of grass with two

  little girls to love him.”

  “Lucky?” Ned laughed. “That's a perfect name. He

  was lucky to escape the auction.”

  “A perfect name is right,” Texel agreed. “In fact, I'd

  say we were all lucky.”

  “Why is that?” Bess asked.

  Texel grinned at Nancy. “We were lucky you

  happened to be at this show, Nancy Drew!”

 


 

  Carolyn Keene, The Missing Horse Mystery

 


 

 
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