Before the mustangs started disappearing, I tried telling myself it was enough to catch occasional glimpses of them running free and wild. I loved horses, made my living giving riding lessons, training stout Quarter horses, leggy warmbloods, cute ponies. Margo Richards, Everything Equine was not only imprinted on my business cards but on my soul. But mustangs were unlike any animal I worked with, often tougher, smarter, surprisingly adaptable. They deserved lush meadows under a warm sun. But reality spawned drilling rigs instead of grasses, threw fences around water holes. Reality came down to dollars, left out the sense.
The last straw was when the Bureau of Land Management on Coloradoโs Western Slope issued a bulletin declaring that despite decreasing numbers of horses at Soda Creek Cliffs, half of the remaining animals would be removed before the Fourth of July, a mere two months away. Drought, grazing rights, and energy exploration were cited as reasons, but the gist was clear. Mustangs made the sky too blue, the moon too bright. They sinned by having no financial reason to exist.
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The wild horse refuge Iโd long dreamt about finally seemed like a possibility as well as a legacy to several special human beings. After last year’s death of my beloved foster, Elizabeth “Bow” Bowan, was killed, her entire thousand acre property was hopefully going to become a mustang refuge. A generous donation from Sam Connolly, an old-time rancher, offered seed money. The plan to provide a forever home for mustangs progressed from maybe never to maybe now. But stubborn obstacles remained.
Which was why my truck was parked outside the BLM office in Pinedale Springs on a blue-sky spring day, and I was inside confronting obstacle number one. Joe Gannon was a big guy, not so much tall as paunchy. A middle-aged, middle management sort with an over-sized plaque in the precise center of his desk proclaiming his importance: Joseph Herbert Gannon, Field Supervisor, Bureau of Land Management. Ever since his arrival a few months ago, heโd taken advantage of every opportunity to whine that this little western Colorado town was nothing but an outpost on the edge of civilization. It didnโt matter to him that area ranchers like me considered this edge a fine place to live.
Gannon leaned forward in his impressive leather chair, placed elbows on his impressive desk, and scowled. โLike I said last time, Miz Richards, thereโs nothing more I can do.โ
Everyone calls me Margo. Miz sounded weird, like Iโd suddenly aged from thirty-five to seventy-five. Whatever. โCโmon, Joe,โ I said, attempting a smile without much success. โNothing more you can do or nothing more you will do! The BLM has a mandate to protect mustangs, including those at Soda Creek Cliffs.โ
“Wild Ride”
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His scowl deepened. โBLM land has many uses, and oversight of wild horses is just one aspect, a minor one at that.โ
I clinched my fists. โSo this enormous next roundup will proceed despite the already low numbers of mustangs, despite the danger to foals made to run in summer heat. And what about the disappearances?โ
โAs you know, the next gathering is already scheduled. And you keep insisting horses are disappearing. But animals do die. Youโve ranched here all your life. Surely you must realize that horses donโt live forever. Death is just nature taking its course.โ
My turn to scowl.
I may be female, I may be on the short side, and I may be so lacking in style that I hadnโt bothered to change out of my usual breeches and paddock boots for this meeting. But surprise, surprise, Iโve got a brain. Iโve got a temper, too, but managed to take a deep breath and aim a tight smile that didnโt reach my eyes in his direction before responding.
โSurely, you realize that nature leaves carcasses, bones. Disappearances leave nothing but questions.โ
He sighed, putting some effort into it.
โDo you even know how many are missing?โ
โYes, of course.โ
โWell, then, give me a number.โ
โItโs your job to know that,โ I said. There were at least six disappearances that I knew about.
โNow see here, Miz Richards, getting all huffy is not necessary.โ
I was tempted to provide a demo of huffy, but he wasnโt worth the effort. I just shook my head. โYou hate the mustangs, so why wonโt you authorize moving some of them to my private refuge?โ
โBecause those animals are on BLM land and under my jurisdiction.โ
I was on the verge of letting loose with a mouthful of unladylike, but managed to hold back. Mostly. “The BLM wastes hellacious amounts of money on round-ups and then maintaining mustangs in those damn holding pens. Iโm offering to save the Feds money. Taking some horses off government hands is a favor to taxpayers.โ
โI hear not everyone around here agrees with your plans to turn the Bowan property into a refuge.โ
He was right about that. โThat doesnโt bother me,โ I said even though it did. A lot. Not only did I have to convince the BLM, I had to overcome the downright hostility some locals aimed my way. When it came to mustangs, tempers flared. Always had, always would. To some, wild horses symbolized the West, freedom. But others called them feral nags, considered them nothing but nuisances taking up space, depleting grasses needed for cattle, land suited for drilling.
Gannon stroked one of his double chins. โBest listen to those who oppose you. At any rate, you are wasting your time and mine. It is not going to happen, Miz Richards.โ
โShit,โ I muttered, pushing back my chair and storming out. Patience never made it onto my skillset, except when it came to horses. Neither did sweet talking bureaucrats. Not everyone in the BLM hated mustangs. In fact, the last district manager promoted darting mares with birth control, but Gannon was the local head honcho now. I needed another plan. I needed allies, both inside and outside of the BLM. And soon. I had to establish the refuge before more mustangs disappeared and before Gannon got his way. Some BLM doodle-brains conjured up the sugarcoated term โgatheringsโ instead of round-ups, downplayed the use of low-flying helicopters, but there was no way to sugarcoat the inevitable injuries and deaths.
I had no firm ideas why mustangs were disappearing without a trace. Besides that, two foals died in the last round-up, trampled to death in the chaos as a helicopter stampeded thundering hooves toward catch pens. A mare and a yearling colt fell, too, shattering legs. The BLM shot all of the injured on sight, leading to arguably more merciful ends than those destined to wallow in overcrowded holding pens the rest of their lives or end up in the Mexico slaughter pipeline.
Outside the BLM office, I took a deep breath to attempt lowering my blood pressure and hoisted myself inside the truck. Zap and Fetch delivered the usual tail-wagging greeting. My one-ton dually broadcast my sour mood as we rumbled loudly down Main Street. I considered stopping for a double-dip butter brickle at the corner of Main and 3rd, but not today.
Too riled.
Always the happy dog, Fetch stuck his head out the passenger-side window, mouth open, tongue lolling while Zap cuddled beside me, dark eyes registering concern. Both border collies were perceptive, but Zap soothed while Fetch entertained. Despite the dogโs efforts, I fumed all through town, on past Mortonโs Auto Dealership and Smithโs Hay & Grain to ten miles of dirt road and home.
The ranch where I grew up served as my hub for the collision of lifeโs highs and lows. Even though itโd been a year now since Bowโs death, the sight of her barn and land next to mine remained an open wound pulling me back to times past, to others gone, tears shed. Establishing a refuge on her land would be an homage to her, a reminder of who she was and all she taught me about horses, about life.
Anyone whoโs ever loved horses relates to that mystical feeling of being transported into their realm. As always, I slowed down while driving past the dozen or so horses in my front pasture. Most ignored me, but Phantom and Babe knew the sound of my truck, lifted their heads from lush May grasses and trotted toward the fence, inviting me to come stroke their velvet muzzles. Offering a snack was welcomed too, which was why I kept a bag of crunchy horse treats in the back. I pulled over, ducked inside the fence and spent a few minutes with Phantom, the sleek black mustang mare, talented and reliable beyond expectations. And always Babe, the fabulous Half-Arab chestnut who tolerated me as a kid and even now, with greying muzzle, she still tutored me about the link between horses and humans.
A few minutes with these two mares rendered me mellow enough to face the rest of the day. Who needs Prozac with horses around? It wouldโve been better if Roy was home, but he was in Salt Lake City on business, due back in a day or so. We were now husband and wife, and the delight of our six-month union hadn’t yet worn out, hopefully never would. I still caught myself staring at the gold band on my ring finger with shock and amazement.
I was a married woman!
Keeping my last name seemed simpler for business reasons, and speaking of business, as much as I wanted to concentrate on establishing the refuge, that wouldn’t pay the bills. There were horses to train, lessons to give, stalls to clean. I grabbed an apple and a handful of walnuts for lunch, put on a baseball hat and headed to the barn.
I barely got inside before my cell rang.
“Stop messing with those mustangs or you’ll be real sorry,” a man’s voice began. He didnโt bother identifying himself, just threatened to ruin my business unless I dropped my plans to save the mustangs. The voice sounded different from another anonymous foul-mouth whoโd called two days ago and unleashed a string of expletives ending with something unpleasant about the horse I rode in on. I didnโt say a word to either one, although I considered telling them to have a jolly good day and drop in soon for a cookie and a cup of simmering strychnine.
I plopped my cell on a shelf and proceeded to groom a skittish young mustang Iโd be mounting for the first time. This gelding, appropriately named Hotshot, was brought to me by one of the locals who favored these animals for stock work, once the wild was gentled out of them. The rancher was too smart and too rich to risk his own skin when he could wave a wad of cash under my nose and let me be the first human to get cozy with half a ton of unpredictable horseflesh. It paid to be cautious. I have trained enough horses to know that working with any youngster isn’t for those intimidated by mangled bones or broken pride.
The phone made more noise.
I was more intent on gathering my equipment and my courage than on continued interruptions, and one threat per day seemed sufficient. Still, who knew, this might be a buyer for one of my horses or a client scheduling riding lessons.
โMargo Richards here,โ I said while continuing to groom Hotshot.
โHi Margo,โ Jessica Parker said as if weโd spoken yesterday.
My fingers opened, and a brush full of horse hair plunked onto the concrete floor. Zap and Fetch sprang up from curled slumber and rushed to my side, ears up, eyes alert.
The last thing on my mind was yesterdays or former friends.
โItโs been a long time, Jessica,โ I finally said, reaching down to pet the dogs.
โYes, far too long. Iโve missed you so much. But weโre always on the move. And things are… complicated.โ
Things always were, with Jessica. I lifted my baseball cap, swiped the back of one hand across my forehead, stuffed long blonde hair behind my ears. And waited, silent.
โI need to โฆ โ she cleared her throat. โThis is โฆ awkward.โ
Hearing her voice again twisted the present into the past, a swirl of moments remembered. I shook my head against a breathless inability to stop memories from sliding back to the bond between us that seemed unbreakable until it shattered from neglect.
โWell then,โ she said into the silence, โI canโt blame you for being mad.โ
โItโs โฆ Iโm not mad.โ
โYou have every right. Life just, like โฆ happens. Too busy, you know?โ
I opened my mouth, wanted to say something profound. Busy, I understood, but still. From grade school on through college, we’d been like besties. After college, she headed to Nashville and a recording contract while I returned to Pinedale and the ranch. We stayed in touch, for a while, first through calls, then Facebook, Instagram. Then even those connections fell away amidst changing contact info, impermanent addresses. Iโd tried telling myself it wasn’t a big deal, but it felt like one more loss in a life too full of them.
Hotshot raised his head, snorted. Nothing like a spray of horse boogers to convey impatience. โI have an antsy gelding here,โ I said, rechecking his crossties and murmuring โEasy now, easy.โ
Roy says I whisper those words in my sleep.
โI wonโt keep you,โ Jessica said. โI just โฆโ She made a sound between a laugh and a groan.
I was tempted to groan myself. Time had suspended the ease between us, maybe erased it altogether. But something in her tone jolted me. โIs something wrong? Are you sick?โ
โNo, no. Nothing physical.โ
I exhaled, banishing half-formed visions of bandages, nurses with needles. Zap licked my hand and Fetch sat, fluffy tail working. I patted first one hairy head, then the other. Assured that no crisis existed, the dogs yawned and laid back down. โItโs good to hear your voice. I justโฆ Iโm just surprised. Hold on for a minute, let me put this gelding in a stall.โ
โIโm sorry. Why donโt I call back later.โ
โItโs okay, just give me a minute.โ Hotshot wasnโt yet used to standing tied very long, so I led him to a nearby stall. He was the type prone to sudden panic and the risk of having him pull back and get all excited would mean no mounting session today.
โIโm here again. So whatโs up?โ
โWell, for starters, Iโm coming to Pinedale Springs for a concert.โ
โOh, thatโs a surprise. But itโs great. When?โ
โLike soon, I hope. The sooner the better. I, wellโฆ.โ
โWhat? Tell me.โ
She sighed, loudly. โItโs, like, complicated. To begin with, my career has, like, taken a nosedive. And then, well, thereโs some guy… a crazy fan. He calls, sends letters, like, weird stuff. Didn’t bother me at first.โ
โThis guy is stalking you?โ
โKind of, yeah, but it’s, like, under control, at least I think so. I’ll tell you all about it when we get there.โ
I imagined seeing her again, wasn’t sure how that might unfold. โWhere are you now?โ
โHeading for San Antonio, our next gig. We’ve been on the road for weeks.โ
โSounds exciting.โ
โUsed to be, back when it seemed like Iโd make it big. The bloom is off, though. Now itโs just a whole lot of work. Iโm looking forward to seeing you, spending a few days in Colorado. I wrote a song about mustangs called โRunning Wild, Running Free.โ It needs to debut there. And… I need your help.โ
โMustangs can use positive publicity, especially around here, but you know that.โ
โWe need wild ones on stage. Yours, of course.โ
โOn stage? Mustangs? You canโt be serious.โ
โThis is important, Margo. Might be the last song I ever write. I need one final triumph.โ
โWhat do you mean? Your songs are still on the radio, youโre still on tour.โ
โYeah, but like I said, itโs complicated. But my career isnโt, well, it needs a boost.โ She paused. โBesides, Iโm homesick, thought we could pick up where we left off.โ
I wasn’t sure where we left off, what fragments of friendship remained.
โSo provide a few horses,โ she continued, โdo this for me. Youโre still dreaming about a wild horse refuge, right?โ
โYes. Itโs more than a dream now. But Iโm trying to save mustangs, not jeopardize them.โ
โNow c’mon Margo. Yours are, like, trained and all, right?โ
โSome. Others havenโt been handled yet, some may never be. Besides, I have mostly Quarter horses. But even the mellowest horses of any breed wouldnโt tolerate being on a stage in front of berserk crowds.โ
She sniffed. โI thought youโd help.โ
โWhat youโre asking isnโt reasonable. Why not show videos instead?โ
“We’re planning the big screen thing. We need real mustangs, too, not some nags who wouldn’t prick their ears if the stage burst into flames.โ
โI hate the word nags.โ She knew that.
โOkay, sorry. But the audience, especially there, will know if the horses aren’t genuine. And so will the press.โ
โThe press?โ
โDefinitely. Publicity is crucial.โ
I imagined cameras, chaos. โYou know enough about horses to realize what youโre asking is, just, crazy.โ
She produced a dramatic sigh. โAre we friends or what?โ
โI โฆ nowโs not the time for this. Iโm sorry, Jessica.โ
“They’ll only be on stage five minutes, thatโs all, and in a secure corral. They will be fine. My new song is soft, mellow.โ
โSome people around here hate the mustangs now, want them gone.โ
โHate them? But why?โ
โMoney. Drilling, cattle grazing and big game hunting are profitable, mustangs aren’t.”
โAll the more reason to show your horses off, make people aware,โ she insisted. โHaving them on stage will remind everyone how beautiful they are, how majestic.โ
โBeing on stage in front of a crowd would scare the hell out of most horses.โ
โBut donโt you still train horses for movie producers?โ
โOccasionally,โ I said, โbut most of my horses have never been around bright lights, sudden noises.โ
โIf anyone could train a few for this, itโs you, Margo.โ
My turn to sigh. โMaybe,โ I muttered. As soon as Iโd said that one word, I regretted it. Iโd just turned absolutely not into something Jessica would run with.
โMake it three, no wait, five. And I’ll donate a chunk of the proceeds from my concert toward this refuge of yours. Everyone wins.โ
โItโs not that easy,โ I said. โThe herds out there are in real trouble. Some of them are disappearing.โ
โWhat do you mean?โ
โAs in gone without a trace. No carcasses, no bones, nothing except hoof prints.โ
โThatโs terrible. Whoโs behind it?โ
โCertain ranchers, possibly. Certain BLM people, maybe. Or, could be the drillers. Anyone driven by greed. And time is running out. I need to get out there again, check the herds.โ
โTake me with you. Iโd love to come.โ
โItโs a long ride, might be dangerous.โ
โDonโt give me that. One of the reasons Iโm coming home is to ride again. Besides, I’ve ridden at Soda Creek Cliffs with you before.โ
โThat was years ago. Things are different now.โ
โThe right publicity would help them, raise some of the money you need. I want to go, see the wild ones, Margo.โ
She asked me about Bow, and although it was still painful to talk about how my foster mother had died, Jessica had loved Elizabeth โBowโ Bowan. โI wish Iโd known,โ Jessica said when I finished an abbreviated version of last yearโs awful events. โIโm truly sorry I didn’t keep in touch.โ
โI tried to contact you, but nothing worked, not Facebook, nada.โ
โI had to change my social media contacts, like, several times. It’s been crazy.โ
I told her to call back in a few days, let me think about the mustang proposal. She had a point about the need for publicity. She also had the same old way of manipulating me. Even so, her ideas had some merits. The world was full of horse lovers, and the more of them who knew about the mustangsโ plight, the better. Then again, what the hell was I thinking? No way should I jeopardize mustangs no matter how much publicity resulted. But Iโd let myself fall right into Jessicaโs trap. Her singing career might be wavering, but her talent for dramatic flair and for playing old friends remained unchanged. I couldnโt help but look forward to seeing her again, but I hoped her visit would be low-drama, for once.
Fat chance.
I saddled Hotshot, led the gelding to the round pen, put one foot and a bit of weight into a stirrup. He allowed it. I stroked his neck, murmuring low, and eased myself onto his back. Born wild, some mustangs adjusted surprisingly well to domestication. But Hotshot was the type who smoldered with resentment at the loss of freedom, this association with puny two-legged creatures. My job was to change his mind. A few circles around the perimeter would complete the chestnutโs first mounted lesson.
Someone had other plans.
Half-way around, a yellow ball landed in the middle of the pen, scattering dust, bouncing high. Any horse would’ve been startled, but the gelding got downright pissed. He snorted, sidestepped, then thrust his neck down. First two bucks weren’t bad, but then the little turd got serious.
I landed face down, the ball inches from my dirt-encrusted eyes. The thing was the size of a basketball, but smooth and shiny. Someone had gone to the effort of writing a message on it to clarify that this wasn’t some random bouncing. Good to know.
The scrawl suggested I should โeat shit and DIE.โ That final word was enlarged and done in red. The penmanship was atrocious.
Lenore Mitchell, a Colorado native, is a lifelong horse lover and has competed in over a thousand total miles of competitive trail rides, each 60 miles long. She has also enjoyed occasional pair-pace two-mile jumping competitions โ as well as relaxing rides through shady forests. She also enjoys amateur botany, leading hikes with the Colorado Native Plant Society and teaching field-based Native Plant Master courses through CSU the past 20 years.

