When I was a kid, I always smelled like hay. I spent my mornings feeding hens, my afternoons brushing ponies, and my summer evenings chasing barn cats over the fields. Animals weren’t merely pets to me; they were friends, instructors, and a source of peace that I could never properly express.
So when I became a mom, I secretly hoped that my daughter would feel the same way for animals, big and tiny. But I never could have anticipated how close she would get to one in particular or how that friendship would save her life. In our calm town, the houses were far apart, so there was plenty of area for gardens, pets, and, in our neighbor’s case, a horse named Jasper.
He was a huge, white horse with a silky coat and dark, attentive eyes. His stature would startle those who weren’t used to horses, yet he was fairly gentle. He had never been afraid, bitten, or kicked.
He had a continuous serenity about him that made people want to trust him. Lila was only two years old when she first saw Jasper. One morning, we were outside and she observed him eating grass in the field behind our fence.
She paused in the middle of her walk, pointed her small finger, and murmured, “Horsey.” She constantly observed animals; she enjoyed birds, dogs, and even the squirrels in our yard. But the way her gaze latched upon Jasper was different. That morning, Mr.
Caldwell, our neighbor, happened to be in the field cleaning Jasper’s mane. He waved us over. “Do you want to meet him?” he requested pleasantly.
I was unsure. Lila was incredibly small, and Jasper was really huge compared to her. But there was something about the quiet patience in his eyes that made me feel better.
We walked closer with my hand firmly gripping hers. Jasper bent his enormous head, as if he realized how small and weak she was. Lila reached out with her plump fingers and touched his nose.
She then stroked her cheek on his nose and laughed. That was it, the start of something I couldn’t quite put my finger on. Lila wanted to see Jasper every chance she got after that day.
She’d stroll to the back door with her small shoes in her hands and say, “Horsey?” “Horsey?” until I gave in. At first, I only let visitors visit for a little time. I stood right next to her while she brushed his mane for fifteen minutes.
But Jasper was incredibly patient. While Lila talked to him, rubbed his flank, or buried her face in his mane, he would stand still like a statue. She would hum small songs to him while her cheek rested against his neck.
And he never left. He seemed to lean in closer, if anything. Our little visits morphed into lengthier ones before we realized it.
Lila would sit in the hayloft some days and chat to him in her toddler language, as if he understood every word. Some days, she would curl up next to him in the straw, put her thumb in her mouth, and close her eyes as if she totally trusted him to watch over her. It was sweet, almost like magic.
A horse was my daughter’s dearest friend. Their bond developed stronger over the course of months. That’s why the knock on my door one night worried me so much.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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