Livestock Crossing, continued ...
          As time went on, I got into the spirit of west Texas -- perhaps
          too much. A game of "Red Rover come over" made football
          look tame. Football itself was so important that the public high
          school mixed Anglos and Hispanics to get enough boys to field
          a team. I shut up taunts of "tenderfoot" with a knuckle
          sandwich.
          Livestock crossings were the essence of the spirit of Big
          Bend country. Fences were few. Driving was a pinball game with
          cattle and horses. An occasional sign reading "livestock
          crossing" didn't help. They might cross anywhere. One day
          a collision between a pickup and a cow injured a classmate. Our
          teacher had us make get well cards. Some kids drew livestock
          crossing signs. The teacher said, "That's cruel." The
          boys snickered.
          The summer I turned nine, the Krebs hosted a barbecue. While
          the grownups chatted in the shade of live oaks, the Krebs boys
          and I saddled up. We figured nobody would spot us running livestock.
          We worked the herd toward the barbecue area. We got to where
          only one stand of scrub oaks screened us from the party. What
          the heck. I urged Pepper to a lope, cut out the herd bull and
          sent him at a dead run toward the sound of chattering adults.
          As the bull crashed into the scrub I faded back and rejoined
          the boys.
          We made a wide circuit and rode up to the party from the opposite
          side. My dad shouted, "You kids missed a lot of excitement."
          "What happened?" Us little girls can look so innocent.
          "A bull came charging out of the forest. Ran right though
          the crowd!"
          The Krebs boys never told on me. It was the best livestock
          crossing ever, I thought.
          About then I vowed that if I ever had a horse of my own, I
          would let other kids ride it. I went on to fulfill the vow with
          dozens of children. I supervise them closely. Especially nine-year-old
          girls.
          Next chapter: The Nag, the Cripple,
          and the Deaf Dog --->>
          Back to the Table of Contents for
          Killer Buyer: True Adventures of a New Mexico Horse Dealer