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One of the illustrations from Mr. Summerhaye's Horse |
The third in a series of extracts from my soon to be published novella. This passage follows the second extract. Please note that this is from an unproofed version and that there might be typos.
One day, they wander further away from the mountainside, looking for water, looking for food. And for the first time he hears neighs which are not those of his mother: it is not her voice, calling his name, a sound imprinted deep into his soul. His mother listens, then answers. It is not the soft, tender voice she uses with him.
There are others like us, then? he asks her. She looks for a long time towards the place whence the neighs have come. We must walk on, she tells him.
He follows her, but he is curious. From time to time, he thinks he hears the neighs again, and pricks his ears, and turns his head towards the sound. Walk on, walk on, his mother insists, and she even breaks into a trot.
At last they stop, in the shade offered by a twisted cedar tree. His mother sighs and closes her eyes. He nibbles a needle-covered branch, spits it out. A lizard runs under a rock. He gazes at it with interest, until a small bird catches his attention. Hello again, hello again, the bird chirps. Do you remember me? I came down from the snowy mountains, on a frosty, frosty morning. You are much bigger now, you are much healthier too. The vultures were disappointed then.
What did the vultures want with me? he wonders. You wouldn’t know, the small bird chirps. He sighs, ruffling the feathers of his white, spotted throat.
Neighs again, not so far away. His mother opens her eyes and lifts her head, listening. Then goes back to sleep. He wanders off, the small bird fluttering behind him.
Where are you going? Where are you going? You should not leave your mother’s side. But he is puzzled by the neighs. He is puzzled and does not want to rest. He will not be gone for very long, he only wants to have a look. Still the bird follows him, chirping in alarm.
He smells the horses, like his mother, but not his mother. Smells them, yet there is another scent mingled with theirs, one he has not encountered before. One that makes him suspicious, and he advances cautiously, noiselessly, hooves making only a dull thump on the dusty ground.
He sees them by the water and the trees, a group of horses. What are they wearing on their heads and on their backs? And what are those beings, standing next to them?
These are men, these are men, the small bird chirps. And the horses belong to them, not to the mountain like you. That is why they have golden bridles and silver saddles. You should not stay there.
The men are draped in flowing clothes, white as the snow on the summit of the mountains. Their voices stir something in him, an old, old memory, a memory that is not quite his. He stares at them, fascinated. Go back, go back, the small bird chirps. And his mother is beside him, ears pinned flat against her neck, teeth bared. What do you think you were doing?
The bird flies away to settle on a branch above the horses and the men. The silver and the gold glisten in the sunlight. It was wrong of you to leave my side, his mother tells him, and pushes him back toward the mountainside.
Why was it wrong? he asks. We greet the antelopes and the birds, the lizards and the snakes. Why do we not gallop with the horses who are like us? His mother pushes him on, ears back still, and her teeth bruise his neck. These horses belong to men, and men would capture you if they saw you. Men cannot be trusted. You must remain by my side if you want to be safe. And for the first time, the first time since that first night, he sees a strange new light in his mother’s eyes. He sees fear.
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