Sunny summer morning
driving home with groceries
along the winding backroads
past forests, clearings,
smatterings of houses
at the crossroads
where the tobacco field
gives way to pastures and pond
two horses, trotting
side-by-side
not uncommon, horses
being ridden
along these
country byways
except that these
are unsaddled
unbridled
riderless
in the left lane
headed toward us
moving in sync
at a lively pace
tossing their manes
faces covered
with fly masks
Look! cries my husband
who’s driving
immediately
slowing down
to a near stop
— no one’s with those horses!
And their eyes are covered
—they can’t see!
They can see,
I tell him
even though I know
next to nothing
about fly masks
and equine husbandry
I just know
by the certainty
of their movements
and their canter
that they can see
they are not blindfolded
to be led out of
a burning barn
but they’re here
on the road,
unattended
and drivers
who might be coming
from either direction
are unaware
and people drive
too fast
on these
winding backroads
—how, how,
I wonder,
did they get loose
these magnificent beasts
that someone
surely values
and loves
—should we call 911?
—what can they do?
—remember, we did that once
when we saw the mule
strolling up the street
in our neighborhood
—yeah but the farmer
figured it out and got to it
before it got to the highway
—should we get out and…
—and what? Try to hold ’em?
They don’t know us.
We don’t know them.
We don’t know
how to handle horses…
by now, the carefree pair
on its merry jaunt
has passed us
and I can only hope
the owners have realized
and are on the way
or that someone who lives
in the nearby houses
knows to whom they belong
or that these creatures
will use their intuitive
horse sense
to go home
I cannot think
the thousand terrible things
crowding my brain
images of beautiful beings
taking newfound liberty
headlong, headstrong
toward what they cannot know
and others
who do not see

Photo: IMG_2703. thatsavagegirl. CC BY-NC-ND 2.0.
We didn’t hear any news of something terrible happening to the horses; living in a small community, we would have. I am pretty sure that, a few days later, I saw these same two horses, still fly-masked, safe in the fenced pasture beside that same tobacco field where we saw them on the loose. The initial feeling of awe mixed with horror is hard to shake, however. The image of these two riderless, fly-masked horses is now an indelible one in my mind for potential harm, needless loss and destruction, and feeling utterly helpless in the face of it.
I hope they made their way home.
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I believe they did, Kim. The horses were beautiful. They had no bridles or saddles, but were well-tended… my horror at seeing them on the loose could only be topped by their owners’ realization, surely.
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