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The Trust of One (standard:non fiction, 1757 words) | |||
Author: E. Creely | Added: Jul 21 2001 | Views/Reads: 3380/2245 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
This is a recollection/narrative about a particular little girl who I hope I gave a lasting gift to. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story grass in his mouth. Before I let out another sound, he turns and comes walking toward us. At this point I climb under the fence and stand there, half expecting him to stop, or turn, but he keeps his ambling. A happy, friendly horse! I invite her to come next to me as this dull-honey colored horse with a slightly dopey look to him comes and stands in front of us. I reach out and let him sniff my hand, and then hers. I start to stroke him, first on his head and then I move to his belly by the route of his neck. She does the same and he simply stands and sniffs and enjoys us. Oh, he is a sweetie. We are on a slope, so I tell her to grab the bucket and follow me to a flatter area. "Will he come too?" she asks me. I nod yes and as I walk, he quickly turns around and bounds after me, in a lazy trot. So I jog a bit, and he picks up speed and before we know it, we're playing tag with him, darting in front and running with him following and playfully snorting. She is enthralled and so I stand still and she runs a bit and isn't showing any signs of anything but bliss as he follows her around, at times making me nervous because he's trotting on her heels. This was our first introduction to the horse who, like her, somehow got his name bumped from my memory. We spend about an hour with him, brushing the dust and old hair from his body and I believe if horses could purr, he would've been humming with a loud one. For the last 3 months of my stay in the area, the girl and I would make it out to see the horse every week or so. It should have been more frequent, as my finely honed hindsight suggests. As time passed, the horse grew more accustomed to us and would prick his ears and give a little whinny when he saw us, running over for a game of tag and then some brushing. She began to want to ride this horse, said she dreamed of it. Towards the end, she grew more and more open with me, talking about school or the horse and she was very factual and if indeed she had a façade, it never cracked. I think I was her only friend as I never saw her have friends over or her leave for the night for a sleepover. Many times she would walk up the stairs with the bucket and say sheepishly 'do you want to go over?' Many times I had to say no, because I was either off to work, or working on school things, or had friends over."Ok, maybe later," she'd say trying not to sound dissapointed. The last few times we went over, I felt like she deserved a ride on this beast who became her good friend. There was an old halter hanging from the wall of the house, and I felt that her wishes trumped any propietary issues held by the owners, who we only saw that first day. They simply didn't care and I was only worried about injury to her. I put the halter on him in a corner of the pasture where the trees grew thick and gave us cover. He didn't mind at all. With slight heart-beating I hoisted her up to his back, thinking of what to do if he spooked, reared, ran, etc...But no, he stood his ground. I told her how to sit on him and to find her seat on him. I took the long lead rope and began walking around. She sat him well and he seemed pleased to be serving a purpose. I thought she was holding her breath and had to remind her to talk to him, let him know who she was and that they were not just rider and horse, but partners in navigating the yard. We walked around for about 30 minutes and I let him toward the end give a little trot. Like other random, striking memories, her face lights up in my thoughts and it's a feeling I can't put words to. She rode him a few more times before I had to pack up and leave the area , because I was done with school. She knew I was leaving and before I left, I encouraged her to continue to visit him and keep him as a friend. I left her my batch of horse combs and brushes so she could. What I don't know after all these years is if she grew the gumption to visit him alone, and whether she learned anything because of it. I choose to think that at some point, the owners let her take more responsibility and she was able to ride him on the trails, all the while someone encouraging and teaching her how. I like the rose-colored lens I choose to remember and hope for her through. I like to believe that her fate had been changed by that horse and that no name-calling occurred and that she never rebelled against her vulnerable, sweet and developing strength of her 9-year-old self. No goth years, no dreadful makeup, no trading in affection for sex, no booze. No. No.No. Just a girl who became a woman because of a horse. So simple, so good, so there... So the picture of her brushing him, freezes for me a moment of trust that I was able to witness, and remains one treasure to find unexpectedly from the chaos of my pictures. Tweet
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