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Killer Buyer:
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Visit to Canyon
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Horses in Love, continued ...

I kept on walking circles in the center, mumbling "Hey, hey-ey, it's o-kay-ay-ay, this i-i-is verrry bo-or-ing." Eventually the mustangs -- Charlie calls them brumbies -- slowed. They hesitated from time to time, then came to a halt with their rumps turned toward me. If I drew too close, their body language told me they might throw double-barreled kicks at me.


If she were fat, she would go for $65 per hundredweight. Thin as she was -- maybe $40?

I let out a ragged breath. I felt they were no longer likely to stampede over me and make the catwalk viewing worth the drive into town.

I sensed that a yearling was growing interested in me. From time to time she turned her head toward me. "Hey, hey-ey-ey, it's okay-ay-ay," I murmured deep in my throat over and over again, tying to talk to her like a dam comforting her foal. I cautiously drew my gaze across her body. She didn't flinch.

Just how comfortable had she become with me? I sidled across the herd's invisible line. They bolted, like a school of fish that turns as one. The yearling filly seemed half-hearted about joining the panic. I watched her gait as she loped, then slowed to trot, then walk. No limping. She was sound.

She lagged behind the others, moved out closer to the center. Soon she let me get so close I could almost touch her.

That was when I realized she had weepy eyes. I told myself that perhaps it wasn't a serious health problem. What counted was she had the most promising personality of the group. Cleaned up, gentled, with brown striped on gold, and cream Appaloosa spots on her rump, she might bring good money.

I still hadn't made a decision to bid on her. I climbed out of their pen and headed south to see a tall, big-boned gray mare. Horse feathers booted her feet. I figured she was a Shire draft horse. Her distended belly told me she was in foal. Her protruding ribs and hip bones suggested the killer buyers wouldn't bid her price too high. Folks in France and Belgium prefer their imported horse steaks extra large. She would have to spend a few weeks on the feed lot before she would qualify for their dinner plates.

If she were fat, she would go for $65 per hundredweight. Thin as she was -- maybe $40? My practiced eye told me than despite her condition, she would come in at over 1500 pounds. She was easily the largest horse there.

I pictured her sleek and powerful, wearing Medieval finery. I was an organizer of Middle Ages style equestrian competitions. She would be awesome in a game of Saracen Heads.

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