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Horses in Love, continued ...

I walked south to her corral and sat on the top pipe rail. The gray mare plodded up and offered to make friends.


"Sold Bill's Straightaway," cried the auctioneer. The sorrel was headed for the cattle semis. And Ft. Worth. And French or Belgian dinner plates.

As best as I could tell, she was sound. However, she was penned with a yearling and a two year-old-colt, also Shire types. They both hobbled about on swollen knees and crooked legs. Were they hers? Did she carry a genetic defect? Had malnutrition harmed them? Perhaps the foal that lay big in her belly also was a cripple.

The auctioneer begin his babbling. His voice, amplified by a PA system, carried into the holding pens. As usual, he would begin with the sheep, auctioning up to a dozen at a time. Behind the sheep waited goats, queued in a series of pens just off the arena entrance chute. In about 20 minutes it would be the horses' turn.

Wranglers began saddling the horses they would ride, at $5 a head, into the ring. Horses sold under saddle often went to dealers who would resell them as riding horses. The rest were usually destined for pens at the southwest corner. That afternoon stockyard workers would cowboy these horses up a chute for a semi trailer ride to a stock yard for fattening, or directly to Ft. Worth.

Now goats frolicked into the chute for the auction ring. The iron gate clanged shut behind them. I heard laughter -- probably the usual goat antics. Riders lined up their horses behind the last of the goats.

No one had brought a halter to the striped mustangs. No one had haltered any of the draft horses, either. Darn, I had always wanted to buy a draft horse. Darn, my two favorite prospects looked as if they would take extra time and care -- the gray mare to get her through delivery of her foal, maybe another crippled offspring. The mustang had eye problems. I couldn't afford to work with both.

A wiry Hispanic with mustache and crumpled felt cowboy hat rode the first of the horses into the gloom of the iron box that was the last stop in the progression into the sale ring. The gate clanged shut behind them. To the south, another wrangler opened the gate to the pen with the draft horses, waved his hands and clucked his tongue. They trotted down the central pathway directly under the catwalk to take their place in line for sale. I hurried inside the cavernous metal shed which houses the auction.

My eyes adjusted to the gloom. Cutting through the gabbling of the auctioneer I heard the chatter of a sparrow. It flitted about the iron beams of the ceiling high above. I took a seat as close as possible to the sale ring. It was a sawdust-floored, half-oval enclosure only some 25 feet long. On the long flat side across the back of the oval, in a booth with a counter about six feet above the ring, sat the auctioneer. To his left sat Charlie Meyer, and farther left a cowgirl with big hair. With each sale, she fed a document into a pneumatic tube that whooshed it to the front desk.

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