
That first day he came to her she was nearly trembling with excitement. That first moment a horse came was magical. He moved slow and purposeful, accepting the treat from her hand with a flick of his ear. He stood there only a moment longer, and then turned and trotted across the pen, tossing his mane and looking back over his shoulder as if to say, so?
But it was still progress, and she was thrilled at it. Piper came to her more regularly, though some days he merely stood and watched. She ceased rewarding him unless he came to her. It was with nervous excitement that she slowly raised her hand and stroked his nose, a feather-light touch down the course hair to the velvety muzzle. He blew out, once, brown eyes meeting her blue, and she returned the gesture.
After that she got a halter in his size. It was time, and she was sure Piper was ready. So, each time she came, she brought the halter, let him sniff it over, stroking his face, neck, and ears more confidently. She came over the fence on week three. He was calm, much calmer than he had been, and did not start. He bobbed his head once, looking particularly satisfied, and she could not stop the silly grin.
Farm work was divided with Piper Work. Piper Work was stroking the mottled body, showing the simple black leather halter with silver buckles, sitting in the pen watching him watching her, and bracing up for the introduction of the halter. But the anxiety was fading quickly, as Piper settled. The initial fear and frenzied attempts at escape did not show themselves at all.
He tolerated being touched, accepted treats easily. So one warm afternoon she slipped the halter over his head in one deft movement, buckling it and stepping back. Piper, for his part, looked merely confused, shaking his head twice, rubbing it against his foreleg, shaking it again, and then nosed her hand that had been feeding him.
She could have laughed out loud. But she didn’t, because she still had to teach him to accept a lead.
Introducing him to the halter was easy, and she hoped it bode well for the rest of his training. Each day she worked with him, she replaced his halter, associating it with treats, pettings, and affection before it was removed again. He greeted her now at the fence when she came, his low nicker clearly audible, head lifted high as he waited for her to come.
Piper was smart, the way wild horses were. It was a way she didn’t understand but assumed came from living without relying on humans. Once she had a Mustang who trained manners into her small heard that she had failed at for years. She respected Piper, the intelligence and emotion in his eyes, and she hoped frequently he felt the same.
Sometimes, when practicing putting on his halter, he would lower his head to hers, and their eyes would lock for several long moments. Then the world would spin on and he would bunch his hindquarters and sidestep away, tail flagged high and the brown highlights gleaming.
It was exciting, until her six-year-old German Shepherd mix got loose. Then it was terrifying.
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