The Ex-Stallion, continued ...
          The day after the lovers simmered down, I saddled up Sandia
          and rode him. He had a funny "ba-dump" feel to his
          trot. I had felt that ba-dump while riding him a few weeks before.
          Now the ba-dump seemed worse. I remembered telling Al about it.
          
          "He's always had it," Al had said. "It's his
          left hind leg. It always goes in funny when he trots."
          Later that day, Debbie came over. She noticed that "ba-dump,"
          too. "He's lame," she said. She tested his back by
          running her fingers down either side of the spine, pressing hard.
          When she got to the loin, he squatted in pain. 
          She prescribed rest and back massages, which I gave several times
          a day.
          After a week of rest, Sandia appeared better. He didn't squat
          down any more when I tested his back. So when Diana Stender proposed
          that she would ride Coquetta while Virginia rode Sandia, I said
          OK - if they only walked Sandia.
          Since I had a deadline, I went inside to write while they
          saddled up. Ohmigosh, did I hear screaming? I rushed to the door.
          Valerie and Diana were running toward the house. "Call
          911!!! Call 911!!!" 
          I saw Virginia lying in the driveway. Blood was running down
          her forehead.
          As we waited for the Edgewood Fire and Rescue ambulance, Virginia
          told me that just as she was swinging up on his back, Sandia
          had taken off at a full gallop. She'd hung on long enough to
          get up some real speed before he threw her off.
          The ambulance got there in about ten minutes. One of the EMTs
          (emergency medical technicians) said "It's a wreck."
          A horse wreck.
          I accompanied Virginia to the emergency room, riding in the
          front seat of the ambulance. The driver told me he'd lived in
          the Estancia Valley all his life. Said he'd worked as a farrier.
          It was the broken bones he kept getting that made him quit. Soon
          he and I were muttering about how old stallions never change,
          not even if they are gelded. Wrecks waiting to happen. Yep, we
          agreed. No darned pig-trucking good for anything but making foals.
          Fortunately Virginia just needed some stitches and cleaning of
          road burn
          We had a vet evaluate Sandia. He discovered a back problem
          that is common among studs. A place on his backbone would sometimes
          pinch a nerve, especially when being ridden. His escapade with
          Coquetta had worsened it. Sandia's solution to that nerve pain
          was simple. Buck the rider off.
          The Wulfekuhles asked Philip Johnson to check out Sandia.
          He made a special shoe for his left hind foot - the one that
          had been making him go ba-dump when he trotted. This helped enough
          that Melody, at least, felt safe riding him.
          The next time Al turned up in church, I asked why he had gelded
          Sandia.
          "He was doing crazy things to hurt himself. Like he leaped
          off a cliff once -- good thing I jumped off in time!"
          A perfect kid horse, huh?
          Next chapter:  Three Fillies
          --->>
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          Killer Buyer