Thirteen horses in my yard. |
They must have moseyed in from the front, which means clomping down Saddlebrook Avenue past Queens’ Street, only to take up residence in the back. And so there they are, thirteen horses, a pack of different colors too. I recognize two stallions, three Arabians (by their size), and at least one old paint, maybe more. The rest of them are sorrel brown--I feel like I’m out west! Thirteen horses in the back; my new neighbors. I could speculate till dawn, but such labors only drain, and what would be the point of it? Thirteen is odd and ominous, yet they saw fit to come as one, a rider-less posse for reasons beyond my ken. I can toss some more around and tax my bunkhouse brain, but neigh. I would rather dally where the equine stay! Come along with me as horses shake their mane. I am not remiss--I take some sugar cane in cubes, of course, and let them take it from my hand. Lips roll like waves, eyes indicate they understand the camaraderie I feel. This is O.K Corral! Yet it is not Tombstone of yesterday. Thirteen horses make the yard very small. As they mill about and eat green grass, I call them, not individually, but as a group: “Disciples,” I say, and as I stand upon the stoop and watch, thirteen horses in the yard form a semi-circle, as if to them the norm is wagon wheel conformity. Bonanza, each and every day--I see what heights nature can reach. “Ah, Disciples,” I say with tongue in cheek, as I stand with equine brawn feeling meek, ever so humble, acknowledging their place of stewardship through time for the human race. 34 Lines Writer’s Cramp September 5, 2013 |