the way I burst out of school at the 3:30 bell.
For Momâs sake, the first thing Iâll teach him is to pull a cart so she can deliver her homemade jams and jellies. And by the time heâs three, heâll be our do-it-all horse. Wheeee! Tomorrow Iâll be
Molly Moore
Horse owner.
P.S. Tomorrow night Iâll have LOTS to tell.
CHAPTER 3
HORSE SALEâLOWER BARN
I t was the perfect autumn day in middle Tennesseeâtrees showing their colors, squirrels scampering off, their cheeks bulging with hickory nuts and persimmons. And along the dry roadsides ragweed flowers tossing their pollen to the wind.
Mollyâs father whipped out his handkerchief to cover a steam-whistle sneeze. In spite of his hay fever, he was in high spirits. A tall-built man, his red thatch of hair touched the roof of the pickup. He and Molly were barreling along the highway to Williamsport, leaving home and Sawdust Valley far behind.
âFor six years Iâve wanted this day to happen,âhe said. âBut all good things take time.â
Molly wanted to squeeze her fatherâs hand, but one was holding the wheel and the other clutched a wet handkerchief.
âWill you care,â he asked, âwhether the animal we can afford is a gelding or a mare?â
âNot even if heâs a stallion, Pops,â Molly said.
Her fatherâs laughter boomed through the truck. âYouâre safe there, Punkin, we could never afford a stallion.â
For the rest of the ride, they were lost in their own dreams. Molly saw herself riding her dashing young horse as they led a grand parade, while Pops pictured himself handing over the lead rope of a beautiful yearling to Molly on her tenth birthday.
By the time they found a parking space and Molly had stumbled over tree roots and squawking chickens, the visiting auctioneer had taken his place opposite a tier of homemade bleachers. They were filled to the loft with city folk from Nashville and who knows where else. Sitting alongside were farmers, merchants, and folks from roundabout.
The auctioneer lifted his bowler hat with a flourish and said, âTop oâ the morninâ, ladies and gentlemen.â
Molly looked around. There was only one lady in the audience. She and Molly exchanged smiles.
The auctioneer cupped one hand about his mouth.
âBring in that strapping big colt,â he said in a whisper everyone could hear. From around the side of the barn, a tall boy stepped into the ring leading a frisky colt with a #1 slapped on his rump.As the boy turned the dancing colt to face the audience, Molly noticed that his whiskers were beaded white as if heâd just been nursing. She caught her breath at the golden-red newness of him.
âNow this fellerâs already been haltered, as you horse folk can tell; meet Numero Uno.â
Molly leaned forward eagerly. It was all she could do to remain in her seat.
âIf âtwerenât due to problems of will-probating, the ownersâd never sell a strapping fellow like thisâun.â
Molly nudged Pops. âThe colt looked right at me. At me! â
âThis big little feller is outen a saddlebred mare and a Morgan sire. Whoâll start the bidding? At fifty dollars! Make it fifty!â
Molly nudged her father again. âCan we afford him?â
âOnly one way to find out. Ten dollars!â he offered.
The auctioneerâs voice sneered. âTen dollars?â he repeated, curling his lips. Suddenly his mood changed. His pace quickened, words slurred. âWhoâll make it fifty? Fifty . . . fifty?â
âTwenty-five dollars,â piped a little old sunburned man.
âPops, bid!â
âTwenty-five, Iâm bid. Twenty-five, Iâm bid. Whoâll make it fifty?â
âForty!â The womanâs voice.
Pops let out one of his ragweed sneezes. The auctioneer smiled his approval, accepting the sneeze as a fifty-dollar