Authors: Bonnie Bryant
She fastened her seat belt, turned the key, and shifted into reverse. She checked the mirror and began backing down the driveway carefully. There was a flower bed on the left side and the parked car on her right.
“What is it about impatiens?” Stevie asked her rearview mirror. “Why does everybody in this town have a border of impatiens next to their driveway? Is this a test?”
She checked over her left shoulder and then looked back into the mirror. The flower bed was safe this time. Cautiously she proceeded.
There was an unfamiliar feeling that Stevie didn’t like at all, and she met some resistance when she put her foot on the gas pedal ever so lightly. She looked over her right shoulder. The car that was parked sideways in the turnaround area was right there. Stevie gulped, shifted into drive, and pulled ahead about a foot. She hurried out of the car, dreading what she might find.
She was right to worry. She’d broken her taillight and dented the area all around it. It was bad, really bad. She could barely bring herself to look at the other car, but she forced herself.
The other car was a Jeep. That meant it was expensive, but it also meant it was tough. Where Stevie’s car had really visible damage, it wasn’t so clear that the Foresters’ car did. There was a scratch. And there was a slight dent—or maybe that’s how the car was made. Stevie scooted over to the other
side to see if it went that way, too. But it was dark outside, and the lights from the house cast dark shadows on that side of the car. She couldn’t see. She really didn’t know.
It wasn’t like the impatiens at the Applethwaites’ house. Stevie knew she’d done that and didn’t really care because they’d been so stingy and because so many other people had obviously done exactly the same thing she had to the flowers.
There was a scratch on the Foresters’ car, but Stevie couldn’t believe she had done that. She’d been driving so slowly, how could she possibly have done any kind of damage? And
if
there was damage, there wasn’t much of it. A little scratch like that could have happened anytime. Yesterday, last week, a year ago. How would anybody ever know?
Stevie heard the beeper go off again. She had to hurry or Mr. Andrews would be totally annoyed with her.
She was pretty sure she hadn’t damaged the Foresters’ car. The damage to her car had almost certainly been caused by the big protective bumper on the van. Definitely, Stevie decided.
She got back into her car and backed down the driveway very carefully. She decided that from then on, she would park at the curb and carry the pizzas up to the houses.
“C
OME ON
, boy,” Carole said to Fez the next morning. “You’re about to get your first taste of riding Pine Hollow style.” She gripped the horse’s reins firmly and led him out of his stall toward the schooling ring, where she was going to begin fulfilling her inexplicable promise to the congressman’s daughter.
Carole had ridden many horses over the years—easy ones, tough ones, old plugs, champion hunter jumpers, and priceless racehorses. Every one of them was a new experience for her, and every new experience was a good one in its own way. She wondered how this horse was going to fit into that.
Fez followed Carole dutifully out of his stall and down the stable aisle. He was getting his first real look at his new home, and Carole didn’t rush him. He had every right to be curious. He eyed all the other horses as he passed them. He showed little interest, but Carole was sure he was taking it in.
She mounted and then walked him over to the good-luck
horseshoe, one of Pine Hollow’s oldest traditions. Three generations before, the founder of Pine Hollow, Max Regnery, Sr., had nailed this horseshoe over the entry to the main outdoor ring. He instituted a rule for all his students that they had to touch the horseshoe before riding—every time, without fail. He told them the horseshoe had special good luck, and if they followed the rule, they wouldn’t get hurt. It seemed to work. In fact, no one at Pine Hollow had ever gotten seriously injured while riding.
The little kids who rode at the stable believed deeply in the magic of the horseshoe. Carole suspected something else was at work. Touching the horseshoe was a way of reminding oneself that riding could be a dangerous sport. People could, and did, get hurt when riding, but a lot of riding accidents were the result of carelessness. Riders who remembered the dangers tended to be sensible and cautious. The horseshoe was strong preventive medicine.
Fez flinched and nearly bolted before Carole had a chance to make contact with the horseshoe.
“No way!” she said. “I know you’re a handful, and there’s no way I’m taking a chance. I’m going to touch that horseshoe before we take one more step.”
Fez pulled at the reins and pranced nervously, but he did what he was told, and Carole managed a successful swipe at the horseshoe before she and Fez entered the schooling ring.
It was early in the morning, and she had the place to herself. The only way she could get in a brief stretch of exercise for Fez that day was to do it before work. She’d been hoping to have a chance to ride Starlight, but that would have to wait until the trail ride the next day.
Carole’s plan was to give Fez an easy workout for his first full day at Pine Hollow. She wanted it to be easy for both of them, since she had a full morning ahead of her, including a whole class of young riders who needed pony assignments and a meeting with the grain salesman to go over a mysterious and complicated bill. They began at a walk, and after a few times around the ring, she gave Fez a signal to trot. He was slow to respond. A well-trained champion horse like Fez should be eager to move to a more rapid gait, but he didn’t seem eager to do anything she asked of him. It took three kicks and a flick of her crop to get his attention.
It was a frustrating business. Carole wondered if her annoyance with herself was affecting the way she was riding Fez and the way he was reacting to her, but she dismissed the idea. She knew how to ride. She also knew better than to take out her frustrations on a horse.
As the ride went on, she found that she had enough frustration to take out on a hundred horses. Champion though he might be, Fez was no joy to ride. She felt as if he were giving her a fight about everything. No wonder he was an endurance champion—any rider would have to have a lot of endurance to put up with this!
Carole took a deep breath and held her temper. How could she be mad at Fez? He must be terribly confused. He’d just had a long trip, which he clearly hadn’t liked. He was in a new stable, surrounded by totally new horses, handled by totally new people, probably eating a new mixture of grains, exercising in an unfamiliar schooling ring. Everything had to be frightening to him. There was no reason why his rider should be frightening, too.
Carole leaned forward and gave him an affectionate pat on his neck. “Good boy,” she said. “I know you’re trying, and I’ll try, too. We’ll do just fine together. You don’t have to worry, because I’d never do anything to hurt you. I’ll be gentle as can be and take good care of you.”
In thanks, Fez bucked.
Fifteen frustrating minutes later, Carole began thinking about how much fun it was going to be to assign ponies for the beginner class. That was when Stevie arrived. As far as Carole was concerned, Stevie was the proverbial knight on the white horse—only in this case, it was a good thing she arrived without a horse, because Carole was more than willing to provide one.
“Can you give me a hand here?” Carole asked.
“Sure,” Stevie said. Carole wondered briefly if she should leave Stevie in blissful ignorance and abandon her to Fez. Somehow that didn’t seem fair.
She rode over to where Stevie stood by the fence and dismounted. Fez relaxed instantly, and Carole was amused to see that he was clearly as relieved to have her out of his saddle as she was to be out.
“I’ve done something dumb and I really need some help,” Carole confessed. “This is Fez. He’s new at the stable and he’s like a VIP. The owner was here yesterday. She was difficult, fussy, and moody, and she kept telling me how wonderful her last stable was. Well, you know how I am. I can’t stand the idea that anybody thinks any other stable is better than Pine Hollow, and she gave the strong impression that her horse was exercised by the staff as part of his board there, so naturally—”
“Carole, you didn’t!”
“Well, I guess I did,” Carole said. “I told her I’d exercise him four days a week.”
“Right, like Max is going to pay you for that?”
“Not a chance,” Carole said. “I know. It’s on me. I’m going to have to deal with it, and soon. But until I do, I made a promise. Now, I’ve got a whole bunch of stuff to do in the office before the beginners arrive. Can you give this guy the rest of his workout?”
“I’m always happy to ride,” Stevie said.
“This may be an exception,” said Carole. “He’s a real handful—as bad as his owner. The workout is simple, though. He’s just got to get some kinks out. Loosen him up until he’s relaxed, maybe another half hour.”
“Oh, sure,” Stevie said. “You let me take care of this boy. All he needs is a little of Stevie’s special tender loving care. He’ll be putty in my hands in no time.”
“Thanks,” Carole said, handing her the reins. “But don’t forget to touch the horseshoe.”
Before Stevie could ask for any more information, Carole had headed for the office.
It only took a few minutes for Stevie to see what Carole was talking about. This horse was a handful. There were some horses it would be wonderful to exercise, but this guy—what was his name?—was going to take more than a little getting used to.
Walk, trot, canter. He did them all, but he balked and fussed. She didn’t like to use her crop on an unfamiliar horse, but when she did, he didn’t pay any more attention to her. She decided to use a gentle hand while she and the horse got
used to one another. It meant generally letting him have his way, but it also meant they weren’t fighting all the time, and at the very least it meant that he got the exercise he needed, even if he didn’t get the discipline routine training required. Tomorrow would be another day.
When she’d finished putting him through his paces—or, more accurately, letting him put himself through whatever paces he wanted to go through—she dismounted and walked him around the ring to cool him down. They’d need to be out of the ring before the beginner class started.
The second time around the ring, she noticed that she was being watched. It was Callie, the girl she’d met last night. Stevie walked over to her.
“Welcome to Pine Hollow!” she said.
“Well, thank you,” said Callie. “You’re riding early this morning.”
“I’m doing someone a favor,” Stevie said as she dismounted. “This horse belongs to some difficult VIP who has just started here, and my friend was trying to soothe some ruffled feathers, so she offered to exercise him for the owner—”
Something was wrong, and Stevie knew it before she could stop the words from tumbling out of her mouth.
“I guess that would make me the difficult VIP with the ruffled feathers,” Callie said.
“Oh, no, I’m sure there’s a mistake here,” Stevie said, but she knew the mistake was hers. “I probably totally misunderstood. Anyway, I’ve been riding this horse and he’s a handful, so I guess what my friend meant was that the horse is difficult.
I just wasn’t listening too carefully because the horse is so, um, well, he’s a beauty, but he is hard to handle. Didn’t you say he was a new horse for you?” There had to be some way to deflect the conversation into a safer zone.
“We’re renting him with an option to buy. Fez has been winning endurance ribbons all over the place. I’m sure he’s feisty. I know he gave that girl—Carole?—trouble yesterday when he got off the van. But I rode him before we signed his papers and he’s good—that is, if you know how to handle him.”
“I guess I have some learning to do,” Stevie said, still trying to recover from one of the most embarrassing situations she’d ever created. “But I’m about done with his exercise. I think he’s loosened up, and he won’t be so difficult tomorrow.”
“I’m sure you’re right,” Callie said. “I have to go now—unless you need me to do something with Fez?”
“No, no, I’ll take care of him,” Stevie said. “I’d like the chance to get to know this champ a little better. Grooming is a good way to make friends. Um, how was the pizza?”
“The—? Oh, right, the pizza. Last night. It was fine. Thanks. Well, see you sometime.”
“Tomorrow,” Stevie said. “Remember the trail ride?”
“You sure? This isn’t just something nice to do for a hard-to-handle VIP?”
“No, I’m sure. And it’ll be good for Fez here,” Stevie said. “He’ll love to spend some time in the woods. It’ll feel like home to him.”
“Right,” said Callie. “Tomorrow. Bye.”
“Bye,” said Stevie. She leaned against the fence and
watched Callie walk back to the car that was waiting for her. Stevie thought she had never in her life been so glad to have a conversation end. She’d liked Callie from the moment she’d met her the night before, and she thought Callie liked her. This was someone she could be friends with, and any friend of Stevie’s was bound to be a friend of Carole’s and Lisa’s. Well, that was a great way to begin a friendship! She’d insulted Callie and betrayed Carole’s confidence.