The One-Eyed Rescue Horse Who Knew What the Storm Was Hiding-lbsuong

The bottle was already open when the plastic cap hit the frozen floor.

It made a small, hollow snap that seemed too ordinary for the moment.

Outside, the Colorado wind pushed snow against the cabin windows until the glass rattled in its frame.

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Inside, the last orange light in the fireplace was shrinking into ash.

I sat on the floor wrapped in a thin blanket, twenty-eight years old, unemployed, alone, and convinced the world would keep turning more easily without me in it.

The room smelled like cold wood smoke, old pine boards, and the sour sweat of two days without sleep.

I remember how quiet the cabin felt after the cap stopped rolling.

Not peaceful.

Empty.

Then the front wall exploded inward.

Glass burst across the living room.

The window frame cracked with a sound like a tree splitting in half.

A sheet of freezing wind and snow slammed into the room, lifting the curtains sideways and throwing ash out of the fireplace.

I raised my arm over my face.

When I looked up, a massive horse stood in the broken window frame.

Buster.

He was a two-thousand-pound Clydesdale with one good eye, a scarred face, and a body so huge he barely fit through the ruined opening.

His breath rolled out in white clouds.

His one good eye fixed on me in a way that made my lungs forget how to work.

He lunged before I could move.

His wet muzzle hit the center of my chest so hard it knocked me backward.

The pill bottle flew out of my hand.

White pills scattered across the floorboards, clicking against wood, glass, and the edge of the hearth.

Some vanished under the couch.

Some slid into the snow now blowing across my living room.

Buster stepped farther into the cabin.

His hooves crushed broken glass under him.

He pressed his body against me and pinned me into the corner.

I pushed at his neck.

I hit him with both hands.

I screamed at him to get away from me.

He did not move.

He lowered his enormous head and rested his chin on my shoulder.

His breath smelled like hay, cold air, and the barn down the road I used to complain about every time the wind shifted.

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