At its core, this imagined volume leverages three interlocking tensions: freedom versus control, past versus invention, and the visible versus the deliberately obscured. The horse—at once partner and mirror—becomes a metaphor for memory under duress. Each file reads like an eyewitness account filtered through the smoke of obfuscation: a rancher’s ledger misfiled with diplomatic cables, a veterinarian’s notes that read like code, a child’s crayon map that points to an abandoned rail yard. The world the book sketches is populated by people who speak in half-phrases and horses that keep secrets with the patient indifference of beasts who have seen empires pass.