Moonlight: Star of the Show

Read Moonlight: Star of the Show Online

Authors: Belinda Rapley

For Mump and Pud

T
HE
four girls rode in single file down a narrow, rocky path in the woods. Charlie and her dark bay native pony, Pirate, were in front, leading the others. Pirate, whose bushy black forelock almost covered his white star and mischievous eyes, bounced sideways excitedly as Charlie sat lightly in the saddle.

“Can you believe it? The day we’ve been dreaming about for ages is finally here!” She smiled, closing her eyes for a second. She kept her reins loose, knowing that if she shortened them Pirate would use that as a signal to charge off. Charlie twisted in the saddle to look back at the other three riding behind her. “We’ve got six whole weeks of summer holidays ahead of us.
I reckon we should make some plans – any ideas?”

“My plan is to do nothing apart from lots of hacking,” Rosie piped up from the back of the ride. Suddenly she was pulled out of the saddle as her strawberry roan cob, Dancer, dived for some grass at the edge of the path. They were riding downhill and Rosie squeaked as she started to slide down her pony’s neck before scrambling back into the saddle. “I thought that’s what holidays were for.”

“I really need to practise my showjumping,” Alice said, going cold. Part of her was over the moon that it was the start of the school holidays. The other part felt like she’d swallowed a lead weight. “The Fratton Show’s only one week away. I’ve entered Scout into the Cup but I’ve hardly schooled him since Easter.”

The Fratton Show was the first big event of the summer holidays. It had lots of different classes all day, from gymkhana games to ‘pony with the biggest ears’, but the highlight was
definitely the Fratton Cup. It was a huge
showjumping
class which was held last on the day, and it always drew the biggest crowds. Scout, the sturdy dappled grey gelding Alice had on loan, loved jumping. So did Alice. But the crowds and the atmosphere at competitions never failed to reduce her to a bag of nerves.

“Well, I know what
I’m
doing,” Mia announced as she held her palomino part-bred Arab, Wish Me Luck, with a light contact on her reins. Wish picked her way down the slope carefully. “Getting Wish prepared to win, again, in the Ridden Show Pony class next week.”

Showing was Mia’s speciality. Unlike the Fratton Cup, no jumps were involved in a showing class. Instead of having to clear a twisting course of brightly coloured fences, Mia had to impress the judge with her and Wish’s smartness, style and correctness as they were inspected both standing still and during an individual ridden display. The pair of them ruled the local show ring, and it
seemed as if Wish, with her silky palomino coat and delicately dished face, just had to place one expensive, well-oiled hoof inside it to be handed the red winner’s rosette.

The four girls and their ponies reached the bottom of the rocky path and splashed across a shallow stream that gushed under the arch of a little stone bridge. Pirate charged through the water. He let out a squeal of excitement as soon as his boxy black hooves touched the soft, wooded path on the other side, and he shot off in a scurry of short legs. Alice kept her reins tight until Mia and Rosie had reached the bank too, with Scout bouncing beneath her, straining to race after Pirate. As soon as Rosie shouted that she was clear of the stream Alice softened her hold on the reins. Scout sat back on his haunches, motionless for a second, then flew forward.

Alice watched Scout’s dappled neck stretch out in front of her. She listened to his fast, rhythmical hoof beats on the mossy earth as they galloped
through patches of warm sunlight. His ears were pricked forward and Alice knew her pony was enjoying himself as much as she was.

Charlie, Alice then Mia breathlessly brought their ponies to a walk one after the other at the top of the hill, beaming as they trotted out of the shaded woods into the sun. Pirate backed up excitedly, hardly able to stand still for a second as Wish and Scout shook their heads, nodding them up and down and jinking their bits as they waited for Rosie. Dancer’s chestnut head with its white blaze emerged slowly at the top of the sloping track. Dancer had a chestnut mane, tail and legs, but her barrel-like body was a mixture of white and chestnut hairs, making her look pink. Her saucer-like hooves thudded the ground, and she looked highly offended at being expected to canter uphill. She was determined to snatch mouthfuls of tree or shrub as she trundled her way towards them, grinding to a halt despite Rosie flapping her legs to encourage her on.

“I don’t know about the rest of the holidays, but the first thing I’m going to do when I get back to the stables”, Rosie said, her cheeks glowing, “is eat lunch. I’m
starving.

Mia rolled her big, dark eyes. “Honestly, Rosie, you’re as bad as Dancer. Always thinking about food.”

Rosie muttered that she’d rather be eating it than thinking about it as the four girls set off to ride home at a relaxed, tail-swinging walk. They let their reins slip through their fingers so their ponies could stretch their necks, and dangled their feet out of their stirrups. By the time the ponies had wandered up the long, dusty farm track and reached the gates of Blackberry Farm, they’d cooled down.

Rosie’s parents had inherited Blackberry Farm from an ancient aunt over a year ago. The farm consisted of a yellow-painted cottage, a small, rundown yard, a few big barns and acres of paddocks. As soon as they’d moved in, Rosie’s
parents agreed to Mia and Charlie stabling their ponies in the yard. The farm was nearer to where they both lived than their last yard, so it was perfect. They’d finally agreed to Rosie having her own pony, too, and soon afterwards Dancer had arrived, goggle-eyed and whinnying. Just a week later Alice had taken Scout on loan and she’d led him straight to the farm. Suddenly, the yard was transformed into life. Rosie’s mum, an artist, had only made one condition: that the girls all took full responsibility for their ponies and the yard. The girls had agreed excitedly at once.

The yard had eight wooden stables, four of which were being used by the ponies. One of the others had been converted into a feed room, one a tack room and one had all the mucking-out tools in it. The last stable was spare. Only the four of them kept their ponies there, and they all agreed that it was pony heaven.

Charlie opened the squeaky wooden gate with its crooked hand-painted sign and clattered onto
the small sunny square yard with its flowering weeds sprouting up from the cracks in the concrete. The girls were greeted by the squawking of chickens and the welcoming yaps of Beanie, Rosie’s Jack Russell, who trotted importantly beside them.

They led their ponies across the yard to their stables. Scout dozed quietly outside his stable in the warm sunshine, resting one back leg as Alice undid his girth and lifted his saddle off. She put it over the stable door then reached up and slid his bridle over his ears, making sure the metal bit didn’t clonk against his teeth. She slung the bridle over the saddle then slipped Scout’s headcollar on and tied the lead rope to a bit of baler twine outside the stable. She dug out some mints from her pocket. Scout picked them off her hand softly, his whiskers tickling her. He shook his head up and down, crunching the mints, while Alice got a bucket and sponged his warm neck and back with some cool water.

Next she ran her hands down each of Scout’s legs. Scout picked up each hoof in turn and Alice used her hoof pick to scrape them out. She turned the hoof pick over and used the brush on the other side to swish away the last of the mud.

“Come on, slow coach,” Charlie called over. Alice looked up. The other three were all waiting for her, their ponies untied and ready to be turned out.

“I’m coming, hang on,” Alice puffed, throwing her hoof pick into her grooming kit and hastily pulling the rope loose. She was always the last of the four to be ready although she could never work out why. She jogged over to the others waiting at the gate. Scout walked fast behind her, sticking his neck out, and they led the ponies together along the grassy path to the paddock at the back of the yard.

Pirate galloped off as soon as his headcollar was unbuckled and slipped off his nose. He bucked and wheeled, squealing and tucking his chunky
neck into his chest. Wish stood looking out to the horizon, her long lashes framing her huge dark eyes as if she were posing for a photograph, ignoring Pirate’s antics. Scout circled a patch of grass, his legs buckling. He chose a spot then dropped to the ground and rolled vigorously, grunting. He stood back up and shook himself before settling down to graze. Dancer twisted her head through the bottom rung of the fencing, tugging at the longer, lusher grass just outside the paddock.

As soon as the gate was clicked shut the four girls wandered over to the hay barn, where the sunlight shot through the wooden slatted walls in shafts, picking up all the dust hanging in the still air. The sweet-smelling hay made it the best place on the yard to hang out. They’d turned it into their den, with faded posters pulled from
Pony
Mad
, their favourite magazine, stuck all over the walls. It was snug in the winter and cool in the summer and provided the perfect place for them
to relax and keep an eye on their ponies at the same time, because the huge barn doors looked directly onto the paddock. They’d pulled bales into a circle near the barn doors among all the spilt hay and straw that made the floor spongy to walk on.

Beanie suddenly appeared in the barn, snuffling among the hay, pretending to chase rats.

“Okay, so apart from getting ready for the show next week,” Charlie said, “does anyone have any other ideas for the holidays?” Neither she nor Pirate were keen on schooling. Her lightning-quick, intelligent bay pony only had two speeds, jog and flat out, and going round in circles didn’t seem to improve the situation much, so the thought of schooling all week wasn’t exactly filling her with joy. Charlie flopped down onto one of the straw bales, tucking her long, gangly legs up beside her. She scruffily pushed her elfin-cut dark brown hair out of her tanned face and green eyes.

Mia frowned. Any kind of untidiness in the
others bugged her. She was tall and striking, with slim legs that were always wrapped in a selection of pink or purple jodhpurs. Even after the two-hour ride that morning, Mia didn’t have a single long straight black hair out of place, her olive skin was dirt free, and the tiny bit of make-up on her dark, almond-shaped eyes was still intact. Even her jodhpurs were as clean as when she’d arrived that morning. She always looked immaculate. While the others couldn’t figure out her secret for staying so clean, she could never work out how they attracted so much dirt and messiness without even trying. She looked around the others as they got comfy in the barn, and sighed.

Alice was suffering from a bad case of hat hair. Her shoulder-length mousy brown hair was stuck to her head and Scout had rubbed against her pale blue T-shirt, covering it with white hair and dirty smudges. Alice was the smallest of the four girls, and her jods were always too baggy and worn because she preferred to spend any spare money
she managed to save on Scout, rather than on herself. Rosie, on the other hand, was plump and somehow always managed to wear clothes that were a size too small for her. Rosie’s thick, long straw-blonde hair was flyaway; she never tied it back and it floated all over the place. She was a total English rose, with pale skin, pink cheeks and blue eyes. Mia used to threaten her with a makeover, seeing how pretty she was beneath all the scatty hair and odd-shaped clothes. But Rosie was more interested in grooming Dancer than in grooming herself, and Mia had declared her a lost cause.

Looking from Charlie’s spiked-up fringe, to Rosie biting her sandwich and taking a mouthful of hair with it, to Alice trying to piece together a hole in the knee of her ancient jodhpurs, Mia said that it was no wonder she was the only one of the four who went in for showing.

“None of you would ever be smart enough,” she sighed.

“Or care enough about being smart,” Rosie pointed out as she slumped on one of the bales. Beanie circled a couple of times before settling at her feet, rolling over to have his tummy tickled. Rosie took another big bite of her sandwich, flicking through her brand-new copy of
Pony
Mad
magazine.

“Well, if anyone else fancies doing some jump schooling, we could always build a course in the paddock,” Alice said half-heartedly. In the corner of the schooling paddock there was a pile of old flaking poles, some barrels and jump wings. But just the thought of putting up the jumps reminded her again of the show. Her stomach churned and she put down her apple, unable to take another bite.

“Count me out,” Rosie replied, not taking her eyes off the magazine. “Sounds too much like hard work. Anyway, there’s no point. I know me and Dancer will be totally useless in the Cup, however much jumping practice we have.
Last year we had two refusals and got eliminated at the first fence.”

She looked up for a second, starting to giggle with Alice and Charlie as they remembered Dancer deciding to stop and eat the decorative shrubs beside the first fence, rather than jump it. After Rosie’s third failed attempt to get her over, Dancer had left the ring with one of the shrubs hanging from her clenched teeth.

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