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Chapter One...
Dear Winnie the Horse Gentler,
I know you’re terrific with horses. But how R U with parents??
I LOVE my Paint, but my parents
are driving me crazy! Whenever I go 2 a horse show, they HAVE 2 come along.
Then
they worm their way to the arena and clap and cheer every time I go around.
And
if I win, they scream so loud! It’s totally embarrassing! Can you help?
—Horse Show–bound
I stared at the computer screen, trying to come up with an answer.
After school
I’d biked straight to Pat’s Pets, where I have a part-time job on the Pet
Help Line. My friend Catman Coolidge, who’s in eighth grade, answers the cat
questions. Another friend, Eddy Barker, who’s in seventh grade with me but is
way more responsible, does the dog questions. He also works part-time, helping
Pat in the pet shop.
I get any e-mails to do with horses. Pat trusts me on the help line because I gentle
horses in real life, training them for their owners by figuring them out instead
of bullying them.
I’d already handled eight horse e-mails that afternoon, but this one had me stumped.
March had come in like a lion. It was only midmonth, but she was going out like a lamb.
Through
Pat’s window I could count 18 shades of green. It even sounded like spring
inside the pet shop. Parrots squawked. Lovebirds sang. New puppies yapped from
their pen.
Catman slid over a crate to sit next to me.
He stared at my empty screen. He doesn’t say much,
but he doesn’t need to. We get each other. In honor of spring Catman was
wearing a lime green leisure suit, which I guess guys wore in the 70s. And a
flowered shirt. Maybe it was more like a flower-child shirt, like hippies used
to wear in the 60s. That’s when Catman should have lived. He would have fit
right in.
Catman squinted at me through his wire-rimmed glasses, making his bright blue eyes piercing
question marks.
“I know,” I answered. “I just can’t think of anything to tell somebody whose biggest
problem is that her parents care too much about her life.”
The truth was, I envied the kid. I only had one parent, and he’d been so tied up working on his
current invention that lately we’d barely talked.
Note to self: Life is so unfair.
“Hang tight, Winnie,” Catman advised, his eyes not letting me look away.
He knew. Somehow the Catman knew what I was thinking.
My mom had died almost three years ago, a week before my 10th birthday.
We were living in
Wyoming then so March was still winter. Even though there was a blizzard, I’d
talked Mom into driving me to see the horse she was getting me for my birthday.
That’s when she had the accident. Birthdays weren’t something I’ve looked
forward to since then.
Dad was doing his best to raise my sister, Lizzy, and me.
He’d quit his job with the
insurance company in Laramie and moved us across the United States. We’d
stopped for a few months in each of the I
states—Illinois, Indiana, and Iowa—for my fifth and sixth grades before
ending up in Ashland, Ohio.
We were making it too. Dad had turned into Odd-Job Willis, local handyman and inventor.
And
I’d become Winnie the Horse Gentler.
Only Dad’s current invention had been taking over.
It was almost like he wasn’t even
there. I guess Catman had noticed. He doesn’t miss much.
Pat, the owner of the pet store, hollered up, “Catman!
Can you help me with these itty-bitty
kittens? If they’re not the cat’s meow! No offense.” Pat always excuses
herself to animals for using them in expressions.
Catman left and I typed my answer:
Dear Horse Show–bound,
All I can say is that you should be really grateful that you have two parents who love you enough
to embarrass you.
—Winnie the Horse Gentler
The bell over the pet shop door rang, and Kaylee Hsu walked in.
She glanced around, then waved
when she spotted me.
Kaylee is as short as I am. But on her it looks good.
She has shiny dark hair and a smile
that makes you feel like you know her. If she were a horse, she’d be an
easygoing Morgan. I guess she and her parents are Chinese-American, but they
must have been in America longer than my relatives, because her English is 100
times better than mine.
I liked Kaylee. But we’d never really done much together.
Her parents come to everything at
school, and her mom is always the first to volunteer. I was pretty sure they
have a lot of money, but Kaylee never acts stuck-up or anything—unlike Summer
Spidell, another girl in our seventh-grade class. Summer’s dad owns half of
Ashland, and Summer acts like she owns the other half.
Kaylee stopped to talk to Pat. All week at school Kaylee had been going on and on about her
horse, a buckskin she called Bandit. She didn’t really own the gelding.
But
every spring, as soon as the old trail-riding stable just outside of town
opened, she got her parents to go for an hour horseback ride with her. And for
the past three years she’d always ridden the same horse.
Happy Trails was opening for their first ride of the season Saturday—tomorrow—and Kaylee
wanted me to go meet her horse today.
“Be right there!” I called, logging off.
I said a quick good-bye to Pat and Catman, and
left with Kaylee.
We biked the two miles to Happy Trails. Kaylee’s bike is regular.
Mine is a back bike, one of
Dad’s earliest inventions. I have to pedal backwards to go forward.
I hate my
bike because of the way people stare at me.
“I can’t wait to see Bandit!” Kaylee said for the 100th time.
“I go to that old
livery for only one reason. Bandit. Wait until you see him, Winnie.
They call
him Buck, because he’s a buckskin. But I’ve always called him Bandit.
The
first time I rode him, he stole a Snickers out of my back pocket and ate it,
paper and all.” She grinned sheepishly at me. “And now he has stolen my
heart. I know it’s silly. But for almost three years, I’ve pretended Bandit
is mine.”
I knew how Kaylee felt. I’d felt the same way about my horse, the most beautiful Arabian
in the world. I’d dreamed of owning Nickers when people were still calling her
Wild Thing. “It’s not silly at all, Kaylee.”
“I knew you would understand, Winnie.”
When Happy Trails came into view, it surprised me how run-down the place was.
Weeds hid
half the hand-painted letters on the Happy Trails sign. Beer and pop cans
littered the hill.
“I’ve never seen it this dilapidated,” Kaylee said.
We left the bikes and walked up the lane, dodging puddles.
About 10 horses’ lengths from
the stable was an old house. Both buildings had plywood nailed to the roof where
shingles should have been. I had a feeling the stable had been nice once,
log-cabin style, with hitching posts, like a Pony Express outpost. But now it
was a rotten place for a horse to live. I thought about Stable-Mart, the ritzy
stable owned by Summer Spidell’s dad. What a difference!
Note to self: Life is so unfair for horses too.
It didn’t look like anybody was around as I followed Kaylee into the stable.
Inside it was dark
and dank, and my first impulse was to set the prisoners free. The stalls were so
small I wondered if the horses could even lie down or turn around in them.
Kaylee was already peeking into stalls. “Bandit?” she called.
When my eyes got used to the dark, I walked up to the first horse, an old Palomino.
She was
swatting flies with her tail. I hadn’t seen a single fly at my barn.
I’d
thought it was too early for them. The mare didn’t look up, even when I
clicked for her. Her trough was empty, and I didn’t see a water bucket.
The
manure had piled on the floor so long that it smelled like acid and vinegar.
“This is the mare Mom rode last year,” Kaylee said, stopping two stalls down from me.
“It’s great your mom rides with you,” I said, trying not to think about the way my mom and
I used to ride together.
“It’s so dark in here!” Kaylee complained. “Bandit?”
I counted eight horses in the barn. At the next stall a roan Quarter Horse hung his head, as
listless as the Palomino.
“Here you are, Bandit!” Kaylee cried. “It’s me, Kaylee!”
I’d started down to Kaylee, when all of a sudden she screamed.
There was a crash, as if the horse had kicked down the stall.
“Kaylee!” I cried, running to her. “Are you okay?”
The back stall was even darker than the others.
But I could make out a cream-colored horse that
might have been a buckskin. He had his ears back and teeth bared.
“Bandit,” Kaylee pleaded, approaching the stall again, “don’t you remember me?”
“Be careful,” I warned. The gelding’s eyes were white with fear and anger.
He
looked too sweaty for the cool of the barn. His ribs and bony back stuck out,
and I could smell his fear.
“I have to get closer,” I said, feeling for the stall latch, as rage burned inside me.
I
could make out tiny scars on his rump and sides. It didn’t take much
imagination to picture the whip and spurs that had made those marks.
“Kaylee,” I said, gripping the stall door so hard I felt splinters under my fingernails,
“this horse has been abused.”
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