The Amish Blacksmith (9 page)

Read The Amish Blacksmith Online

Authors: Mindy Starns Clark

BOOK: The Amish Blacksmith
10.62Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I was about to approach her when I heard the sound of my name from the other direction. I turned, surprised to see my friend Eric, a fellow student from my Missouri farrier school, weaving his way toward me through the crowd. Despite the fact that Eric was
Englisch
and I was Amish, he and I had become friends on the first day of class because we'd been the only two there from Eastern Pennsylvania.

Unlike me, he'd gone to the school not so he could become a farrier himself, but so that he could get a better understanding of what good horseshoeing involved. His family worked with show horses, so for him to learn the shoeing trade was, as he'd explained it, “kind of like a car dealer learning auto mechanics—it never hurts to understand how things happen under the hood.”

We greeted each other now with a handshake and a quick one-armed hug, and then he asked me what I was doing. I told him I'd come to help my boss pick out a new horse for his niece.

“How about you?” I asked, trying to remember exactly where he lived. I knew it wasn't too far away, somewhere in Chester County, where the farms of the Amish gave way to the large estates of the
Englisch
. His family's business involved the transporting of show horses—not just on the ground but in the air as well.

“Same sort of thing. One of our clients needs a riding horse for her little girl, so I offered to come here with her to Stone Road. She's never been to a horse auction before.”

“Yeah, neither has the niece.” I glanced over to where Priscilla had been standing and was relieved to see that Amos had joined her. He seemed to be looking around for something, probably me, so I caught his eye with a wave and gestured toward the stands, indicating that they could go on in without me and I'd be along shortly. He gave me a wave and a nod.

“Find anything promising?” I asked, turning back to my friend.

“A couple possibilities. It helps that this woman's pockets are deep. She doesn't care what it costs. She just wants something with a good temperament.” He went on to describe the horses they were interested in, but I couldn't weigh in because I hadn't paid attention to any of those. Amos and I had been looking solely at workhorses.

Eric went with me to the coffee stand, where we each bought a cup, and then we continued our conversation over by the baskets of sugar and creamer.

“So how goes the dream?” he asked, confusing me for a moment before it struck me what he meant.

Back in school, I had told him all about my hopes of one day combining a horseshoeing business with a horse-gentling business. I had no official training as a gentler. I just knew what I knew. And though I liked shoeing, I enjoyed even more the time I spent working with problem animals.

“It's going well,” I said, adding that I was about halfway through my two-year blacksmith apprenticeship.

“And then what?” he prodded, so I went on to tell him about the plan, how in one more year Owen would be leaving the family business to take over his father-in-law's dairy farm, freeing me in turn to step into Owen's position at Kinsinger Blacksmith and Welding.

“What about working for yourself, man? You wanted your own business. That was the dream.”

I shrugged, wondering how to explain the complexities of the situation to a guy like Eric. I still harbored hope that someday I might have my own blacksmith shop that offered both farrier work and horse gentling, but in the past year of working at Kinsingers, I had begun to realize that it wasn't going to come easily. There were a few big problems in the way. First was the simple matter of supply and demand—and noncompetition. A good blacksmith would always find work in Lancaster County, but Amos had hired me with the understanding that even if I didn't stay with him in the long run, I would never work in direct competition with him either. In the end, I'd had to agree to no blacksmithing within a ten-mile radius of the shop.

As for the horse-gentling side of things, I'd always assumed I'd have some
Englisch
patrons but that my primary customer base would be Amish. Lately, however, I'd begun to realize that it would probably have to be the opposite of that. The Amish were never fully going to embrace my techniques. There was too much resistance, with lots of scoffing or changing the subject whenever I tried to explain. It wasn't until they ended up with a problem horse themselves that they had any interest, but so far that hadn't happened enough for me to make much money at it.

I would always be there for my fellow Amish and their horse issues, of course, but for the gentling side of things, the
Englisch
were going to have to be my focus. They seemed far more amenable to “natural horsemanship,” as it was sometimes called, and I felt that I could make a success of things with them eventually. But such an endeavor would take years of hard work—and contacts I didn't have. So for now, the dream was still just that—a dream. Not even close to being a reality.

Eric seemed to get what I was saying, but before he could reply, we both realized the crowd noises were dying down, signaling that the bidding was about to start.

“Let's get together sometime, Jake. Maybe I can come up with a few ideas for you.”

“Sure. Thanks.”

We tossed our empty coffee cups in the trash and then began weaving through the crowd, past the booths for pies, hot dogs, and root beer and toward the metal bleachers that looked out over the oval auction ring. We parted there with a shake, and he walked off to join his party as I scanned the crowd for mine. By the time I spotted Amos and Priscilla, the auction was already underway, but it didn't really matter. The horses we'd chosen wouldn't be up for a while yet.

Moving carefully, I worked my way to where Amos and Priscilla were sitting, but by the time I got there, I could tell something was wrong. Amos was going down the listing he held in his hand, describing the horses he and I had checked out and deemed acceptable, but Priscilla seemed to be ignoring his every word.

Granted, there was nothing amazing about those particular horses we'd picked, but they were fine equine specimens—certainly good enough for a young woman to have to drive a cart—so I didn't get her attitude. It was as if she couldn't care less. She kept looking down at each horse as it was paraded
around the ring during the bidding, and then her eyes would dart to the people holding up their bid cards, or the children scampering around with bags of popcorn, or the distracted parents who were more focused on the auction than they were on their own kids. Several rows below us was that same cluster of
Englisch
men with clipboards Priscilla had been standing near earlier, and they were laughing and joking among themselves between bids. Even their mindless conversation seemed to be of more interest to Priscilla than whatever her uncle or I had to say.

I looked at Amos, and he shrugged helplessly. I could tell he needed me to jump in here. He'd thought having her own horse would cheer Priscilla, and he told me he'd even allotted a budget of up to six hundred dollars, plenty enough to get a decent animal. He was ready to plunk down that kind of money, and yet his reticent niece was more interested in her surroundings than in any of the horses he was offering to buy her.

I looked again at Priscilla, miffed at her lack of gratitude. When Amos turned away, I tried to get her attention so that I could somehow communicate with my eyes that she was being unkind to her uncle, especially considering his generosity. But she wouldn't look at me any more than she would look at him.

“Everything okay?” I asked her. Amos didn't deserve this.

She was slow to turn and face me. When she finally met my eyes, I saw that hers were filled with… what? Anger? No,
rage
. Not just rage, but something else too, something like dread.

Dread? Why?

None of us spoke for a few seconds.

“What is this place?” she finally said, the first words I heard her utter since she'd broken off from us earlier.

Amos shot me a worried glance before turning his attention back to his niece. “It's… it's a horse auction. Priscilla, are you all right? Are you sick?”

She didn't answer, and for a moment I thought maybe she was having a breakdown of some kind right here at the Stone Road Auction. She turned her gaze again to take in the whole of the ring and the bidders and the men with their clipboards. It took me a moment, but then I realized why she was so upset. She'd figured out how part of it worked. She'd seen the other buyers. Heard the conversations between those men.

Stone Road was not just a place to buy a nice horse. It was also a place where old horses were sold when they had outlived their usefulness, where
troublesome horses were sold when they couldn't be tamed, and where unwanted horses were sold when their upkeep was more expensive than their overall value. Horses like these were bought for their meat. Stone Road was known as a “kill auction,” a place where among the regular bidders were a number of “kill buyers,” or those who purchased horses specifically for slaughter.

I supposed that could come as a bit of a shock to the uninitiated, and I tried to think of a way to explain it to Priscilla. We didn't eat horse meat in America, but people did in many other countries throughout Europe and Asia. From what I understood, in some places horse meat was as common as chicken and pork chops were here. It was just the way it was. Sadly, I didn't think too much about it anymore because that's how it had always been, but this was all new to Priscilla, a young woman who loved horses more than people and who had never been to any horse auctions when she was a child living in Lancaster County.

Getting her a horse at Stone Road had been a good idea. Bringing her here to pick it out was a bad one.

“We should go,” I murmured to Amos.

“What?” he said, his brows furrowing into one long rut.

“Go?” Priscilla swiveled her head to face me, wide eyed. “You're telling me you want to just go?”

I blinked at her. “Uh. Yeah. Don't you want to?”

“You want to leave and not even save one of them? Not even one of these animals that those men down there are buying? Not one?”

She had obviously figured out who the kill buyers were, the ones who were here to fill their quotas for the international demand for horse meat by buying low-priced horses that still had muscle and life in them and then shipping them off to Canada for processing. I didn't like it either, but I didn't make the rules.

Below us, one of the men raised his card to bid on a dark bay Thoroughbred gelding that had attracted the attention of no one. The animal had no discernable flaws that I could see other than he was a Thoroughbred, not a workhorse, and thus was apt to have a bit of an attitude. The buyer was about to win him for a mere three hundred dollars when Priscilla grabbed Amos's card and shoved her hand into the air. The caller acknowledged her bid of three twenty-five with a tip of his head, and the kill buyer turned to see who had taken a sudden interest. He slowly lifted his card to raise the bid to three fifty.

“What are you doing, Priscilla?” Amos said, his voice incredulous.

“Bidding on that horse.” She again thrust her hand in the air and raised the bid to three seventy-five.

“That isn't one of the horses we looked at!” Amos exclaimed.

“She's aware of that,” I muttered.

“Priscilla, we don't know anything about that horse,” Amos continued as the kill buyer raised his card.

“I know enough.” She upped her bid to four twenty-five.

The kill buyer contemplated his bid for a moment and then shook his head, letting the auctioneer know he was going to let the fiery young Amish woman have the horse. There was no reason not to at that price. Sadly, there were plenty of other horses just like that one he would likely have to fight no one for.

The auctioneer declared Priscilla the winning bidder.

“You bought that horse!” Amos's eyes were wide.

“Actually, I think you did, Amos,” I said.

“Priscilla, what is the meaning of this?” he demanded, ignoring me.

She turned to him. “He's the one I want, Uncle. You brought me here to get me a horse. He's the one I want.”

“But he's not one of the ones we were looking at!”

Priscilla put her hand on her uncle's arm. “But he's the one I want. I will pay you back for him, I promise. It may take some time, but as soon as I get a job, we can figure out a payment schedule and—”

“What on earth are we going to do with him?” Amos interrupted. “He's not a workhorse.”

She stood.
“We
won't have to do anything with him. He'll be mine. I'll handle everything.”

She stepped past me to climb down the bleachers. She turned to Amos and me when we did not immediately follow. “Are we buying another? That's fine with me if we are.” She nodded to the kill buyer, who was preparing to bid on a palomino mare.

“I guess we're done,” Amos said.

He and I followed her down the steps.

It did not take long to pay for the gelding and arrange for his transport to the house later that afternoon. Then we headed over to the pen area to get a closer look at him. He was a handsome animal, a bit on the skittish side—a race horse who hadn't won enough competitions to earn his keep. He also had a name. Voyager.

Other books

Little House On The Prairie by Wilder, Laura Ingalls
Rebel Without a Cause by Robert M. Lindner
Tempest in Eden by Sandra Brown
The Shadow Of What Was Lost by James Islington
Independence Day Plague by Carla Lee Suson
Silent Hunt by John Lescroart
Warped by Alicia Taylor
A Deceit to Die For by Luke Montgomery