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“Can You Tame Horses?” the Lonely Widow Asked the Apache — But Something Wilder Needed Him First

At the sign. At the crowd around her. Then she walked forward. She stopped in front of him. The Apache looked at her. His eyes were dark and direct and gave nothing away. The eyes of someone who has decided that his dignity is the one thing in this situation that remains entirely his. Eleanor looked back at him with the same quality of attention she gave everything.

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Careful, without performance, taking stock of what was real. Then she said, simply and without preamble, in a voice quiet enough that only he could hear, “Can you tame horses?” A silence. The Apache looked at her. Something moved in his expression, not amusement exactly, but something adjacent to it. The recognition of a question that was not what he had expected.

“I was riding before I could walk,” he said. His English was precise and unaccented in a way that suggested it had been learned carefully and a long time ago. “I have broken horses that no one else could touch.” Eleanor nodded. “My name is Eleanor Voss,” she said. “I own a ranch 12 miles north of here.

I need a horse handler. The work is hard and the pay is fair and you would not be anyone’s property.” She said the last part looking at him directly, so there was no confusion about what she meant. The Apache held her gaze for a long moment. “My name is Cale,” he said. It was not his full name, but it was the name he chose to give her, which was its own kind of information.

“Then we have a deal, Cale,” Eleanor said. She turned and walked toward the auctioneer. What Eleanor Voss did at the auction of April 14th was, depending on who you asked in Marlow Creek, either the most sensible or the most incomprehensible thing she had done in two years of doing sensible and incomprehensible things.

She paid the bounty hunters their asking price, $40, which she counted from her purse with the deliberate efficiency of someone making a point, and told them that she was purchasing the contract of indenture, which was the legal mechanism available to her, and that the man was coming with her, and that any further contact from them would be addressed through the county solicitor.

They took the money and left, which was what men who work for money generally do when they’ve gotten it. She had the chains removed by the blacksmith, whose shop was 20 ft away, and who did it without comment, which Eleanor thought well of him for. Caleb stood in the street and rubbed his wrists where the chains had been.

Then he looked at Eleanor. “You didn’t have to do that,” he said. “I needed a horse handler,” she said. “That’s not why you did it.” She looked at him. “No,” she said, “it isn’t, but the work is real, and the offer is real, and I’d appreciate it if we could proceed on that basis.” He was quiet for a moment.

Then he nodded. They walked to where Eleanor’s horse was tied at the rail outside the general store. She had a second horse, a bay mare she had brought specifically for hiring purposes, which turned out to be a practical coincidence, and she handed him the reins without ceremony. He took them, ran his hand along the mare’s neck once, the way a person greets rather than inspects.

The mare settled immediately in the way that horses settle for certain people and not others. Eleanor noticed this. She didn’t say anything. The ride back to the Voss ranch took 2 hours, and they covered most of it in silence, which suited both of them. The ranch appeared over a rise in the way that a well-situated property does.

First the windmill, then the roofline of the main barn, then the sprawl of the corrals, then the house itself, set back from the working buildings by a respectful distance. It was a substantial operation. Anyone could see that immediately, maintained with the careful attention of someone who understood that a ranch’s appearance was not vanity, but information about how it was run.

Cale looked at it as they rode in. “It’s a good property,” he said. It was the first thing he had said in 2 hours, and it had the quality of an honest observation, rather than a compliment. “It was good when Thomas built it,” Eleanor said. “I’ve tried to keep it that way.” “Thomas was your husband?” “He was.

He died 2 years ago, fever.” A pause. “I’m sorry,” Cale said. “Thank you,” she said. They rode into the yard. Three ranch hands were visible, working at the fence line, loading feed, moving through the afternoon with the efficient pace of people who knew their work. They looked up when Eleanor and Cale rode in, and their faces did the thing that faces do when they are adjusting to something unexpected and trying not to show it.

Eleanor dismounted. “This is Cale,” she said to the yard in general. He’s the new horse handler. He knows what he’s doing.” She paused in the way of someone adding the important part. “Anyone who makes his time here difficult answers to me.” She went into the house. Cale stood in the yard with the reins of the bay mare in his hand, and three ranch hands looking at him.

He looked back at them with the same patience he gave everything. Then he led the mare to the water trough, because the mare was thirsty, and that was the next thing that needed doing. The horse’s name, informally, was Devil. Nobody had named him this as a joke or an exaggeration. He was a black stallion, 4 years old, that Eleanor had acquired 6 months ago from a rancher in New Mexico who had been unable to do anything with him and who had sold him at a significant discount with the slightly guilty expression of a man passing along the

problem. Three of Eleanor’s hands had tried to work with Devil. The first had been thrown in the first 30 seconds. The second had not even managed to get a hand on him before the horse made his position clear. The third, a man named Porter, who had 15 years of horse work behind him and who was not without skill, had spent a week trying and had finally come to Eleanor and said, with the professional honesty of a man who knows his limits, that the horse was not breakable by any method he knew. Devil was in the far

corral, separated from the other horses. He moved along the fence with the nervous, coiled energy of a creature that has decided the world is against him and is prepared to act accordingly. On Cale’s second morning at the ranch, he walked to the far corral and stood at the fence and looked at the horse. He  stood there for 2 hours.

He didn’t approach the fence. He stood 10 ft back and watched. Devil watched him back. First with the aggressive attention of an animal expecting a threat, then with something more complicated as the threat failed to materialize. Eleanor, who had been watching from the house window, came out at noon. “That horse has put three of my men in the dirt,” she said.

“I know,” Cale said. “I talked to Porter this morning.” “What are you going to do?” “Today, nothing,” he said. “Today, I’m letting him understand that I’m not going to do anything.” Eleanor looked at the horse, then at Cale. “It’s the first part of a method,” he said. She went back to the house. On the third day, Cale moved to 8 ft from the fence.

On the fourth, to 5 ft. On the fifth, he stood at the fence rail itself. Devil approached him, not in friendship, but in the aggressive way of a horse testing the edges of a situation. And Cale stood completely still and let the horse make whatever assessment it needed to make. On the sixth day, he put his hand on the fence rail with his palm up.

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