The Boy With One Leg Who Calmed The County’s Wildest Horse-lbsuong

A disabled nine-year-old asked me to be his dad for one afternoon so he could ride the most dangerous horse on our rescue ranch.

I wish I could say I answered like a good man.

I did not.

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I shouted first.

“Get away from that iron gate right now, kid!”

My pitchfork hit the gravel with a metal clang, and I ran across the yard so fast my bad knee almost gave out.

The morning was cold enough to make my fingers stiff, and the whole ranch smelled like damp hay, dust, and old leather.

A loose strip of tin on the back of the feed shed kept tapping in the wind.

The boy did not even flinch.

He stood at Buster’s isolation pen with one small hand pushed through the thick metal bars.

His right leg was a below-knee prosthetic, metal and plastic dusted with gravel, planted like a fence post in the yard.

On the other side of the bars stood Buster.

He was a thousand-pound mustang with a scarred coat, a huge head, and eyes that had learned not to trust anything that walked on two legs.

He had come to the rescue ranch after a string of owners who treated fear like stubbornness and pain like disobedience.

By the time he arrived, he kicked at the gate, struck at the air, and charged anyone who came too close.

The ranch owner had put him in the isolation pen because no one could safely handle him.

A note on the tack-room clipboard said auction review pending.

Everybody knew what that meant.

But that morning, Buster was not charging.

He had lowered his massive head and let the boy stroke the pale scars across his nose.

“He’s just scared of you guys,” the boy whispered.

He said it like he was telling me the weather.

I reached him and grabbed his shoulder gently, pulling him back from the gate.

“I don’t care what he is,” I said. “That horse is unpredictable. You could get yourself killed.”

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