Название: Sundancer
Автор: Shelley Peterson
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Природа и животные
Серия: The Saddle Creek Series
isbn: 9781459739505
isbn:
“Can we do some jumps?” called Melanie.
“I want to practise the drop,” chimed Jo.
“And I want to get Zachary over the barrels,” added Peter.
“Not today,” answered Hannah. The kids all groaned. “The horses were at a show yesterday, and we’ve done enough jumping today already. Let’s head back now.”
“Hannah?” Kimberly had to yell to be heard. “My mom could wait, right? She said she would.”
Bird could hear the anxiety in Kimberly’s tone, and wondered if Lavinia had left. Moms did that sometimes; that much Bird knew for sure. Fortunately, she needn’t have been concerned. Lavinia’s Suburban was parked at the barn in full sight when they came around the corner.
The kids dismounted and amused each other with horse horror stories. The time a loose horse had jumped into a field of cows and led the herd back to his barn, surprising the horse owner no end. Another time a horse spooked on the road and landed on the front bumper of a car. The stories kept coming as they untacked their horses and sponged them off amid gales of laughter.
Bird thought of the stories she could tell about Sundancer. How he thought he was better than all the other horses, and smarter than all the humans. How sometimes he got so scared he couldn’t think. How … She stopped herself. They’d think she was crazy if she said those things out loud. Maybe she was.
Dr. Paul Daniels arrived and walked up to Hannah as she untacked Charlie. Finished with her own grooming, Bird quietly walked over and sat on a bale of hay near where her aunt and Dr. Daniels stood. She chewed silently on a piece of hay and listened.
“Have a good ride?” asked the vet. “Wonderful. It’s a beautiful day.”
“Less humid, for sure. I came to check up on the new gelding.” Hannah turned to face her vet, saddle over one arm, bridle in the other. She looked him in the eye. “He’s an outlaw. I tried to gentle him this morning. He didn’t respond normally. At all.”
Paul took the saddle from her and they walked to the tack room. Bird thought about following but decided against it. She was in the perfect position. She could hear them talking but they couldn’t see her. She’d wait until she had all the information she needed, and then she’d slip away. She had some business with Sundancer.
“I need to know who owns Sundancer, Paul. Liability, and all that.”
“I hear you. It’s not clear. Owens’ stable manager called to have me put him down, but when I saw how good he looked, I asked if I could take him. They were happy to get rid of him, no questions asked.”
“And you never asked for proof of ownership? You didn’t buy him for a dollar?”
“That would’ve been too clever. No. I didn’t think of it. We can’t all be perfect, Hannah.”
“If you’re trying to make me mad, it’s working,” said Hannah. “I need to know who’s paying his bills, who he belongs to, what I can and cannot do with him. If he’s yours, you have the right to instruct me on how you want him fed and maintained, and you’ll pay me the first of each month. Same as any owner.” Hannah took a breath and continued. “If he’s mine, then I’ll buy him for a dollar, and I’ll need a receipt, signed by his former owner.”
“He’s dead. Samuel Owens passed away.”
“Who inherited his horses?”
“That’s not clear. It’s probably a company.”
“So who had the right to give him to you?”
Paul paused. “I assumed the manager, but I didn’t ask any questions. It seemed like a good idea at the time.”
Hannah sighed. “You know how the saying goes? When you assume you make an ass of u and me.”
Paul was thinking about how to respond when both of them saw the same thing. In the paddock, visible through the tack room window, Bird was sitting on Sundancer’s back; no halter, no bridle, no saddle, no nothing. Just a girl and a horse.
They stopped talking and watched.
Bird stroked his neck gently, from his ears to his withers. Again and yet again. It seemed as if the horse was hypnotized. He stood quietly with his ears drooped and his lower lip hanging. His eyes were half-closed.
That feels good. Keep doing that.
Talk to me, Sundancer. Tell me why you went crazy in the barn this morning. What scared you so much that I couldn’t get through to you?
Don’t stop patting me. I feel better now.
Bird felt light and relaxed on his back. Her legs hung loosely, her back slightly hunched. Her eyes were closed.
I will never hurt you, you know. And I will never let anyone else hurt you. Tell me what happened at the barn.
I don’t want to think about it.
Okay. Maybe one day you’ll let me understand why you’re the way you are.
Suddenly the gelding shuddered violently. Bird, eyes still closed, saw what was in his mind. Was it his imagination or a memory of a real event? She saw a man coming at him with a pitchfork, yelling harshly and waving his arms. A dark stall. No way out. Sundancer reared, striking the man with a front hoof. The man fell and Sundancer ran out of the stall. Out of the barn. Down the road. He ran and ran. He couldn’t stop.
From the tack room window, this is what Hannah and Paul saw: Sundancer, for no discernable reason, suddenly reared up, struck out, then raced off.
In an instant, everyone was in motion. Hector started barking in panic, and Hannah ran through the barn. “Paul, get help!” she yelled over her shoulder. “I’ll try to stop him!” Once outside, she climbed the fence and ran for the middle of the field where she’d be closest to Bird if she fell.
On the horse ran, head down, legs stretched to the limit. Bird’s fingers clutched handfuls of mane and her legs clenched tight.
It was the yelling that set him off in the barn, she thought. It was a memory; a flashback. When Peter ran in waving his arms and yelling about the coyote, Sundancer just stopped thinking. He’s living in a dream and no one can reach him. She clung to him like a burr.
Sundancer raced faster. We’re flying, Bird thought. We’re not even touching the earth. I’ve never felt power like this before.
Hannah caught sight of Bird’s face. She looked calm and determined. But the horse was another story. A chill went down Hannah’s spine as she looked at his face. The gelding’s eyes were closed.
“Please, Lord above, save this child,” prayed Hannah. She could not begin to imagine how many things could go wrong.
Drawn by the confusion, Hannah’s students plus Lavinia, John, and Cliff all came running. Hannah put up the palm of her hand, signalling them to stop and stay where they were. They stood at the fence, СКАЧАТЬ