Bridle
Darkness
comes through the decaying wooden slats of the pen you forced me into last
night. It’s time to wake up. Long before I hear your boots plodding along
the soft autumn soil, I smell you, fresh coffee and stale tobacco assaulting my
delicate nose. Involuntarily I let out a
soft whimper, knowing what today is going to bring. This is training season; you’re going to push
me hard, harder, the hardest of the days though yet to come. Today we’re practicing for the Big Day, the fastest two minutes of my
life. You want me to finish in one
hundred and forty seconds, my feet pounding the track gracefully, but still
with power and force. I can’t move that
fast, but you’re going to try to make me.
Later today, when the sun begins its long slow descent, you’ll pat me on
the ass and shove me back in here.
Throwing
open the wide door, you call my name, adding baby after it for good measure.
I stand back, the corner of this stall too small for both of us.
“Come
on now,” your gritty voice calls out, “You know what’s coming. Don’t play games.”
I
don’t ever get to play any game but yours.
Don’t you see that?
I
may weigh more than you, but you’re stronger.
You harness me, saddling my back with your expectations, bridle my mouth
so I can’t speak. You like it better
that way. Whispering dreams of your
success into my attentive ears, you detail the work I must do for you to take
the glory. Three seasons ago, I resigned
myself to knowing my nails will never be painted with bright spring suggestion,
my long hair plaited with colorful ribbons.
You’ve designed me to work, not to show, but still you want that wreath
of victory. I bow my head as thoroughbreds
saunter past, their strong faces haughty and sure. A trumpet blares in echoy morning silence. It’s time.
Trying
to warm me, you pull my strings like a puppet master, leading me in
circles. I buck my head. A man joins you, and the two of you dissect
my body, the long lines of muscles I’ve broken down and recreated barely
visible after so many seasons. It’s as
if I don’t exist.
“You
think she’s ready,” you ask the little Mexican standing next to you.
“Only
one way to find out, esse. Let’s get her
out there.”
I
exhale with force and stamp my leg. I am right here, I want to call
out. But this fucking metal in my mouth
keeps me silent. My head turns from you
toward the tender curve of the distance, steam rising up in the early October
morning. We’ve stood here too long. I know it’s time, but I still pretend that I
won’t feel you on my back soon enough.
You
mount me. Over the years, I’ve carried
too many of you – all men, all with dreams of some distant grandeur that I must
create. This is my last season, I heard
you tell someone that last week. You’ll
turn me out to pasture after the Big Day,
and find one younger, sleeker, with muscles taut and fresh, someone who might
give you a trophy. Your muscled thighs
flex around my body. You push me into
submission.
Like
an errant lover, you pull my reigns, forcing me to a speed you think is acceptable. I don’t respond quickly enough, so you whip
me. We loop the track, and I glance at
the clock. I’m over by twelve
seconds.
“Damn
it, girl. What the hell is wrong with
you?” You smack me on the bridge of my
nose and I cower. It shouldn’t be only
my fault that I can’t move fast enough.
Maybe you’re too heavy. I’m
spent, and you’re feeling decidedly defeated.
You let me stand without your weight as you feed bits of sugar that
taste like freedom. Not bothering to
wipe off the sweat I’ve poured for you, you throw a coarse blanket over my
steamy body, snickering as you walk off.
“Ain’t
gonna happen, Juan. Just no way. You said you know a guy?” You leave me to sleep cold and alone, shivering
in my defeat. This stall cannot contain your
demands. I’ve lost. Green is everywhere around me, but there are
no fields.
Heartbreaking and gorgeous. Gonna go kiss my guys now and thank them for all the glory we shared--because I always tried to be sure it was shared, not just mine. Lovely.
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