My Pegasus
Angels on Earth|Sept/Oct 2020
I’ve found a better name for the golden palomino mare we loved in childhood
LOU DEAN
My Pegasus

PHIL AND DAVID and I crept along the yard fence on our bellies and elbows, like sol­ diers on a battlefield. In the lead, my older brother, Phil, gave a hand signal for us to lay low while he proceeded.

Within minutes, David and I were scrambling up on the golden palo­ mino mare as Phil untied her from the fence. Our older sister, Pat, came blasting out the screen door into the front yard.

“You little brats!” she screamed. “She’s my horse.”

“Just ’cause you’re the oldest doesn’t mean she’s yours,” Phil yelled as he jumped on Maybelle and kicked to get us going.

Maybelle trotted toward the back pasture of our farm with the three of us bouncing bareback and clinging to one another. Sis pursued us on foot. As we passed the barn, I turned and could barely see her, a speck near the creek. After a few minutes I heard the screen door slam. Phil pulled the mare to a walk, and we rode off toward the blackjack thicket that surrounded our Oklahoma farm.

“She’s a good old babysitter,” Phil said, patting the mare’s neck.

“I’m no baby,” David said, with a pout. “Don’t need no babysitter.”

“Phil just means that Maybelle is calm and can be trusted,” I said. “That’s what Dad says. He calls May­ belle a natural babysitter.”

“Mama will be comin’ back soon,” my younger brother proclaimed. My four­year­old brother had remained adamant that our mother would re­ turn to the farm.

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