Dell Jennings, Horse Thief

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                                                                   Part II:  Dell Jennings, Horse Thief



Horse thievery became Dell's main staple. She had a natural talent for horses, the Broncos were calmer and trusting in the presence of the young girl. Because of this ability, Dell becomes an expert in luring even the most headstrong horses from the hitching posts of local saloons without alerting the riders or patrons of the crime. Then afterward she sold the fillies to Mr. Larson, the dubious owner of the neighboring town's stables, who never batted an eye when Dell always rode in on the horse she planned to sell him.

She knew stealing horses was the equivalent to murder, especially out in the West, where equines was a person's livelihood. Guilt would probably eat at her if her intended targets weren't well-to-do businessmen whose pockets could afford another pony.The money Dell stole from her "guide" was dwindling fast, she spent a large amount when visiting the Creedstad general store, prior to the theft of Jolie, for supplies after an appointment with the sneering tailor to fit the clothes stolen from the unguarded suitcase of a male train passenger. She was in dire need for a big score and soon, her tinned ration supply receding at an alerting rate.

"Ya wanna make serious bank?" Mr. Larson asks one foggy morning, leaning against the wooden gate of the stall as Dell brushed the slightly tangled mane of a Dutch Warmblood. Sometimes Dell worked at the stables when she needed to lay low until the law of a neighboring town stop sniffing around for a horse thief to string up.

"What do you mean, sir?" She knew to be wary about any job suggestion the stable owner gave her. Mr. Larson, a hefty Midwestern man with a thinning scalp of caramel hair, steely-eyed, with a bear-like rumble of a voice, is a notorious swindler who uses down-on-their-luck schmucks to do his dirty work and then, is not afraid to finger them for the blame.

"Ya know, a gig, one that could fill up ya pockets handsomely," Though facing away from the man, she could tell the stable owner was becoming slightly annoyed by Dell's oblivious attitude, the man had a rigid no-bullshit policy.

"Oh! What is it then?" Dell always enjoys playing the role of a fool, everyone underestimates her cleverness because of her age and impoverished appearance. And never fail to be flabbergasted when realizing they have been hoodwinked, cursing the young thief's name in the wind as she rides into the next town with a heavier satchel and a sly grin plastered on her face."I'm glad you asked, Mr. Jennings," Mr. Larson said in a sing-song voice that made Dell suppress a cringe at the Mr. It became apparent early for Dell, many people believed she was a boy. A belief only made truer by her lanky shapeless figure that swam in dark billowing shirts, often hung off her narrow shoulders, despite it buttoned up to her sternum. The cuffs of her oil-ruined pants rested high above her ankle, the ill-fit hem was cinched tightly to her amorphous hips by a well-worn belt. And her hair, pixie-cut mop of auburn locks, often hidden underneath a tan Stetson hat, Dell stole from a drunken man asleep at the bar of the saloon she was scoping out. 


To everyone else, Dell looked to be a young orphaned boy, too tall and lithe for his clothes and filthy from the backroads the forgotten must survive on. A few months earlier, she definitely had been offended by Mr. Larson's assumption of gender, but now Dell knew it was a blessing, the young thief learn quickly it was better to be a wayward boy in the West, then a wayward girl.

"Ever heard a Hoagy Macintosh?"Snapped out of her thoughts, Dell shook her head "No. Who's that?"Mr. Larson let out a heavy sigh behind her, grumbling underneath his smoky breath about clueless brats. Ignoring the miffed owner, Dell finished brushing the horse's mare, she admires dark silky hair as the strands seemed to glow in the dim lighting of the stable. The glow of the horse's mane reminded her of a simpler time in her past, she often forced herself to not think upon it, for it was just too painful to recall. As she returns once again to the present, Dell noticed Mr. Larson began explains further "Hoagy Macintosh is a wealthy doctor from New England, comes a long line of well-respected physicians-""What does this have to do with the job?" She turned to the man, irritated. He was beating around the bush, she could tell. Usually, Mr. Larson was very straightforward with his demands and bargaining, so this was unknown for Dell, it terrified her."If ya didn't interrupt, brat, I would have gotten to the goddam' point!" Mr. Larson growled, annoyance flashing on his aged face before returning to the man's regular scowl "Long story short, he's in town and owns me some money from a poker game a few years back."Now, was that so hard to say? "Okay. How does this involve me?" Dell responds, watching as another stablehand, whose name Dell could never place, slip past her to grab the reigns of Dutch Warmblood. The stable hand guided the snorting bronco around the two and outside to the fenced-in field for grazing.

Ballad of Dell Jennings    ~RED DEAD REDEMPTION~Where stories live. Discover now