Excerpt
From Where The Rivers
Run North
By Sam Morton
Rusty
Wells topped a high ridge over looking the Powder River and drew
rein on the black gelding. The horse pawed at the dry ground beneath
his hoofs, causing small waves of grasshoppers to rise off the drought
stricken land. The year was 1932 and the great depression that swept
the land had little effect on either horse or rider. The fifteen-year-old
had never felt more alive than he did at this moment. In sitting
on this magnificent animal all his dreams of the past five years
had come true. He was on the open Montana range, working for the
biggest horse outfit in the world, riding a pure thoroughbred that
was as attractive as he was athletic. He wasn’t playing cowboy,
he was living it. The young cowboy paused and admired the majesty
of the scene below, giving silent thanks to God for putting him
there. Reaching forward, he stroked the gelding on the neck, letting
his hand run through the coarse black mane basking in the smell
of horse and leather. He felt at the scab over his left eye, a reminder
of the beating he had taken back at camp a week before at the hands
of a crew cowboy. Neither the cut nor the thought of the cruelty
mattered at all now.
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