The Coachwood Crossing police station was a small timber building on stilts next to the railway station. It had a front desk, one small office behind a glass window and a tearoom off to the side.
Shara felt messy-minded and unclear as she tried to make sense of the afternoon's events. Outside, people were gathering and she could hear heated and excitable voices, Mrs Arnold's among them. Again, she was amazed at how quickly news spread through Coachwood Crossing, this time about the sick and dead brumbies.
Thank God Dad isn't home from out west yet. This
would have really sent him over the edge.
The thought had barely formed in her head when the murmur of the crowd rose and the door of the police station burst open. Her father, red-eyed and bleary, walked straight to her. âWhat happened?' he demanded.
Shara hadn't seen him since he had put Rocko and Goldie on the float and she could barely look him in the eyes. She turned away without replying.
âDid you do anything to further provoke those Connemans? Because if you did . . .'
âHold on a minute, Barry,' said Sergeant Bigwood. âThe kid's done nothing wrong. We found some neglected animals on a remote property. We think they belong to the Conneman brothers.'
âDon, what are they doing back in town?' Barry's voice rose. âI don't like them lurking around and stalking my daughter like this. What is going on?'
âWell, they wanted that colt back. But since then we've found this mob of wild brumbies, which complicates things.' Don went on to explain the afternoon's events. âWe're waiting for Hendra tests to see if the death of one of the horses was preventable or not.'
âPreventable or not?' Shara mumbled from her chair in the corner. âYou only have to look at the state the other horses were in to know it wasn't being cared for properly.' She muttered âHendra virus,' under her breath, adding a raspberry.
âThose brumbies were caught in the wild,' said Don Bigwood. âThe Connemans say they rescued them and were actually trying to get them back into good health for an upcoming rodeo.'
âOh, puh-leease!'
Shara snorted with disbelief. âYou don't honestly believe that, do you?'
âIt doesn't matter what I believe,' said the sergeant sternly. âWhat matters is the truth. Facts.'
âThat brumby is dead. Doesn't get any more factual than that.'
âYes, and we need to determine the cause of death before we go jumping to conclusions. There are a whole lot of people who are not happy about what's happened, I know. But everyone needs to just calm down and go about things rationally and
legally
.'
Barry gave Shara a tight-lipped glare.
â
What?
' demanded Shara. âHow is a dairy full of sick and dead horses my fault? Those disgusting people should be run out of town. They should be hunted down and held accountable . . .'
âThat's precisely what
shouldn't
be done, Shara,' said her father, his voice rising. âThat's exactly the type of thing I spoke to you about. That's a lynch-mob mentality, and completely against the law.'
âWell, some of the laws should be changed!'
âYou can get change without breaking the law!'
âWell,
how
?' yelled Shara. âThe law hasn't been too good so far, has it? Everyone seems to know the Connemans are crooks, they treat their animals terribly, but they're still doing it, aren't they? Those horrible people are probably going to get Goldie back and the law is actually
protecting
them! Don'tâ'
âHey, hey,
heyyy
!' yelled Sergeant Bigwood over the top of her, trying to calm them both down. âI think you're both making a bit of sense,' he said. âAnd if you'd put your heads together, you might find a solution to this whole problem. Blood samples have been taken and the cause of death will determine any cruelty charges.' He looked pointedly at Shara. â
If
there are any cruelty charges to be made.'
Shara shut her mouth and looked out the window.
âIn the meantime,' Sergeant Bigwood continued in a quieter voice, âit seems that stunt you pulled at the Coachâwood Show has had some effect. A lot of people in this town support you and are angry about the Connemans' treatment of wild horses. Why don't you hold some sort of protest ride or something? It might put pressure on show societies to lift their game and stop using these guys as contractors.' He shrugged. âThe Kympania rodeo is on next weekend.'
Barry stood there, an intense look on his face. He breathed in. He breathed out. He looked to the ceiling. He looked to the door. He looked at Shara. âDoesn't sound like a bad idea, actually.'
âYeah, except I don't have a horse to ride,' said Shara.
Barry gave Shara a long, scrutinising look. For the briefest of seconds, she saw his face soften, before it hardened again. âBorrow one.'
Sergeant Bigwood continued. âYou would need a written application to get a permit, but I can help you organise all that. Oh, and you'd need to contact the council as well.'
Shara sat, mouth tight.
âAnd you can organise it from somewhere else,' said Sergeant Bigwood. âI've got a station to run here.'
As they walked out the door, Shara looked at her father. His hair stuck up in a tufty crown around his bald patch and he looked exhausted, too tired to fight. So she plucked up the courage to ask about Rocko. âHave they let him onto the station yet?'
âHe's still in the house paddock,' said Barry. âI want to see you put things right before we talk about him again.'
Shara knew by the look on his face and from past experience that he meant it. But his words offered her a faint glimmer of hope that she might see Rocko again. She forced herself to shut up, but she couldn't stop a fresh wave of tears running down her cheeks at the thought of him. She missed him dreadfully. She turned away and desperately tried to pull herself together. She would make things right. She had to.
That night Shara booted up her laptop and found about ten emails from Jess. Each one had a different version of
CONTACT ME!!!
in the subject bar. No sooner had she logged in than an instant message came up.
Sharsy, what happened? I haven't been allowed to ring you. My email's going nuts with all the rumours â is it true???
What have you heard?
Shara flopped onto her bed and curled up with her computer. Her body was exhausted but her mind was spinning like a flywheel. She gave Jess a run-down of her day: told her about Goldie, the Connemans trying to claim him back, about the dairy and the dead horse, the brumbies, the trip to the police station. Jess fired questions at her like a machine gun.
Did your dad spew? Do you reckon it's really Hendra? OMG that's so scary!
Jess I need your help. I want to run a protest ride about
cruelty to brumbies. The rodeo is on at Kympania this
weekend and there's a wild horse race on. I want the
protest ride to go past there.
Jess quickly latched onto the idea. Rosie and Grace came online and joined them in the chat, and before long they were all tossing ideas around. Rosie suggested possible meeting points:
We could start at the pony-club grounds and assemble people there.
Jess thought of all the different clubs and horse organisations they could invite:
We could look up different animal welfare people too â there are lots of brumby groups!
And then Grace had an epiphany.
Hey, Kympania is near the mountains. We could do a mountain ride â a brumby ride â how excellent would that be!!! We could run a sausage sizzle afterwards!
A brumby ride â perfect. Grace was a genius. They would ride past the Kympania rodeo, up through the mountains for a picnic lunch and then finish by riding back through the main street of Kympania. They decided to meet the following evening at the pony club with as many people as they could muster to discuss the finer details.
BARRY JANGLED HIS KEYS
and opened the door of the little timber clubhouse, flicking on the lights as he stepped into the doorway. Shara stepped in behind him. A waft of cool air and old cooking smells mixed with seasoned timber greeted them.
Barry walked straight to the hot water urn and lifted the lid. âHow do I get this thing to work?'
âLet the expert have a look,' Shara said. She flicked the switch at the power point and turned the knob at the front of the urn. âThere you go: it'll take about fifteen minutes.'
Vehicles began to fill the pony club grounds one by one. It had taken only a few text messages and tweets for the word to spread like lightning. Cars, utes, old trucks and four-wheel drives lined up in rows. Doors slammed and voices called hello.
Barry did blokey farm talk with John Duggin and Lawson Blake. They were soon joined by Ian Hoskins. Tom and Rosie arrived in Tom's sleek black ute, and Grace and Elliot turned up squeezed onto Elliot's tiny motorbike with their knees around their ears. Anita from the animal shelter came with a group of colleagues and before long they were joined by Lurlene Spencer, who wore violent red lipstick like war paint. Shara wasn't surprised to see her chatting with Judy Arnold as if they were old friends.
Pony club members turned up by the dozens, keen to help out any horses in trouble. Other locals leaned against fence posts and tucked their hands in their pockets as they talked. They had all seen or at least heard about the protest against the wild horse race at this year's show, and were beginning to admit they had loved it. They knew about the dead brumby at the dairy, and the colt at the vet surgery, although Anna Paget grumbled that Goldie should stay there permanently.
âOkay, let's get this meeting going,' Barry called out over the crowd. âCan everyone come and sit down?' The crowd shuffled around, finding seats and standing room. Barry sat at the front bench and was flanked by Shara, Jess, Rosie, Grace and Sergeant Bigwood.
As the noise level settled to a low mumble, the sergeant stood and addressed the crowd.
âAs you may have heard, some very sick horses were found by the RSPCA yesterday. Now, rather than forming a lynch mob, Barry and these girls have come up with a plan to hold a protest ride this weekend. The Conneman brothers will be supplying brumbies for the wild horse race at Kympania and that will be our starting point. This is a legal way to go about raising concerns for brumby safety, especially in wild horse races.'
Barry stood up next to Sergeant Bigwood. âWe appreciate everyone being here, but if anyone feels they can't work with us without causing trouble, they may as well leave now. This is going to be a peaceful ride.'
There were murmurs. Several people turned and stared at Judy Arnold, who stood tight-lipped and frowning, her hands clenched in her pockets. âWhat?' she growled.
Barry continued. âRight, now let's organise this ride.' He turned to Shara. âAre you taking notes?'
âYep,' said Shara, pen in hand.
Sergeant Bigwood gave the crowd a run-down of what they needed to do about the applications and permits in order to ride through town. Then Barry began to delegate jobs. Shara wrote furiously, making lists of people to contact and recruit. They would ring every pony club secretary in the district and ask them to contact their members. The RSPCA, the local campdrafting club and adult riding club members would all be notified. There would be an advertisement in Friday's paper as well.
Elliot offered to set up a Facebook page, and Rosie was placed in charge of arranging parking at the Kympania Pony Club and fresh water for the horses. Jess was made publicity officer, responsible for contacting the media. Grace would organise the sausage sizzle and Tom volunteered to help draw up a petition to present to the mayor.
A clipboard was passed around for people to record their names and phone numbers so they could be contacted to help. The details were endless, but Shara remained sharp and alert, writing furiously, not missing anything. Her mind raced and her excitement grew.
âI can't believe how much support we're getting,' she said to her father on the way home.
âYeah, you can tell not much ever happens in this town. It's like a re-run of the fete,' said Barry.
âYou don't think it's because they believe in us?'
âThat too â a bit of both, I reckon. Most decent people don't like to see animals suffer, but they don't often get up and do much about it.' Barry went quiet for a moment and then he glanced at his daughter. âThat prank of yours was wrong, but not as wrong as what the Connemans did to Corey, or to those brumbies.'
Shara was silent for a while, soaking up the relief she felt that her dad was coming around.
âThanks for helping me with the brumby ride.'
âWell, I've always said parenting is not about punishing but about teaching your kid to do the right thing. You've still got a big job ahead of you to put things right.'