After they'd said goodbye and thanked everyone for coming, Brandon took Tully to a lush, green park not far from the restaurant and they walked hand in hand beneath statuesque English elms, Tully relishing his presence and this refreshing dose of nature in the shadows of a Melbourne evening.
Brandon agreed it was freezing in her flat but tonight Tully had never felt warmer, snuggling into his chest for real and kissing him deep into the night.
Tully took Brandon to see Dahlia the next day and they had lunch at the Headquarters Tavern, but Sunday afternoon came much too soon, and she cried into his shoulder as Fia drove them to the airport.
It's too soon to have to say goodbye again . . .
Brandon's kiss lingered and he promised to be back as soon as he could get away.
Tully and Dahlia kicked off their second cup season with a big win at Caulfield, on track for their maiden Melbourne Cup campaign. When Tully slowed down enough to think about it, which wasn't very often, it did seem crazy to her that she'd be racing the iconic, gruelling,
long
race in just their second season in Melbourne. But Dahlia was truly on fire, and Fia was determined to carry the momentum from their debut to strike while the duo were hot, and were both still sound. âIt's the only way in this game, doll,' Fia said with a grin, slapping Tully on the back.
That night Brandon broke the news that Pearce was again keeping him home for the Cup season, but Tully decided it was finally time. She caught a red-eye flight home that Saturday night, after claiming a third on Calypso.
She cried when she spotted Tam and Judy waiting outside the gate as she disembarked the plane. The trio laughed and sobbed their way back to Avalon, where Tully crashed out in her own bed but was still up early the next morning to drink in the land and see her horses. Her father had left a note to say he'd gone pig hunting for a few days and she wasn't sure where Bucko was. Tully did her best not to be disappointed, telling herself to be grateful for avoiding any awkward hellos.
Brandon picked her up to spend the day riding at Weston Park as Pearce was away in Sydney looking at horses. Again, it was wonderful to see him, but Tully couldn't shake a sinking, depressing realisation that things had changed since before she'd left for Melbourne. Brandon was tense and distant and just when he seemed to lighten up and act himself, it was again and time to head to the airport.
All the tension Tully been feeling between Brandon and Zack and the pain of the distance between them seemed to settle on Brandon's shoulders as they paused at the gate, Tully ready to head down the tunnel to board her plane.
âPlease, don't go,' Brandon said, grabbing for her at the last moment, pulling her up into a crushing hug.
âI'm sorry it's so hard, Brandon,' Tully said, tears sliding cold and fast down her cheeks. âI'm so sorry! This isn't forever, you know that. Please, Brandon, just let me get through the Cup, okay,
please?
I love you too much to see you in pain.'
He wouldn't meet her eyes, but Tully could see his were red and strained. His jaw hardened and he hung his head, taking her strong, slender fingers in his warm rough hands.
âIt's killing me,' he said, blinking back tears and glancing up at the ceiling. âThis whole thing, but I don't know what to do about it . . . Can't you just make friends with some of the girls?!'
Why does he have to keep carrying on about Zack?!
âEven if Zack has intentions, Brandon,' Tully said, her voice rising. âThey're not going to lead to anything.
I'm not interested in him;
you should know that! It's always been you.' She lifted onto her tiptoes to kiss him on the cheek. âTrust me. Please?'
Brandon nodded, but Tully knew how empty he felt when they were apart, could feel his anger and frustration at this distance splitting them in two â she felt the exact same. Tully prayed they would survive, but doubt had begun corroding her spirit.
Why can't he just understand?!
She took a cab to the unit after arriving back in Melbourne, but decided she couldn't stay another second within the cement block walls.
Tully imagined her remarkable mare on the ride over to the barn, the horse who had given her so much hope and life and strength. The horse who had battled through more than most could ever withstand, held her head high and never tolerated less than what she deserved. The mare who had stayed true to herself and exceeded everyone's expectations. The mare who was tipped as second favourite to a foreign champion for the Cup, the
Melbourne
Cup. And Tully would be riding her.
Tully paid the cabbie, pulled her jacket tightly around herself as she flashed her ID at the security guard at the gate and rushed across the yard to Barn Fifteen.
The yellow nighttime lights buzzed, the horses deep in peaceful slumber. She took a moment to breathe it all in, before moving down the aisle to the second last stall on her right. Calypso stood up from his shavings, shook and whickered at her in delight. Tully stopped to pat him and feed him a treat before moving next-door to Dahlia.
Her phone started ringing in her pocket as her eyes met the vacant space of a stall just recently vacated. She let it ring, her heart beating into her throat.
Dahlia was gone.
35
Shock Waves
Tully glanced around the empty stall, panic rising hot and tingly in her chest.
Where's my horse?!
she thought desperately, flinching at the shrill rev of her phone. She'd only just taken it off airplane mode in the cab, hadn't even checked for missed calls. She caught the call just before it could go to Messagebank â it was Fia, âI've been trying you for
hours
, Tully!'
âWhere's Dahlia, Aunt Fia? Have you had to take her somewhere?'
Fia paused, then sniffed, before blurting: âPearce came this afternoon, TullsâI'm so, so sorry!'
âWhat do you mean,
Pearce
came?'
âHe had the transfer papers, and everything,' Fia rambled, âThey were signed by your father! He handed me a cheque for the acceptance fees we've already paid for the Cup, then he said, âI'll take it from here'. The bloody,
arrogant
. . . He had three big blokes with him, sweetheartâthere was nothing we could do. She's gone, our mare's gone to the Westons!'
â
Whaa
â' Tully cried, sinking down against the wall of Dahlia's stall. She gazed across at the imprint of Dahlia's body in the shavings, where she would have slept the night before. Her cheeks went cold from the tears and she cried out, her whole body suddenly frozen like a glacier, shaking so violently she dropped her phone into the bedding. A sharp pain stabbed at her chest, she was gasping for breath. She pulled her knees up, heaving with the utter heartbreak and betrayal and rage that ripped through her like a bulldozer.
She's gone
, the realisation pinged around her throbbing brain. He's
taken her . . . And
my own father
let himâlet Pearce Weston shatter our dreams!
âTully,' Fia's voice rang out from the phone, âTullsâwhere are you, sweetie? Are you at the stable? I'm coming to you.'
Tully closed her eyes, her wails shattering the serenity of the barn, waking all the horses. Calypso brought his nose around, pawing to get to her. She shut her eyes, enveloped in the darkness.
Tully felt arms around her and for a moment, she imagined they were her mother's. Stroking her hair, whispering that everything would be all right, just as she had when Tully was a little girl and she'd had a bad dream.
âIt wasn't real, My Little Race Girl,'
her mother would say.
âI'm right here, we're ready for the Cup, and Pearce Weston has never tried to ruin our lives . . .'
But Tully knew
all
of this nightmare was real.
Her mother was dead, Dahlia was gone. Her father and the Westons had stuck a knife in her heart. She had to face it, and somebody needed to pay.
Tully looked up at Fia, blinking through gritty, sore, wet eyes. She wiped her nose, shook her head to try and distract herself from the sickness and the shock roiling in her stomach. She opened her mouth to speak but had no idea what to say. What
could
she say?
Fia wrapped her arms around Tully, sobbing loudly into her shoulder. âI'm so sorry, Tulls,' she said. âI never imagined she'd be taken from us,
never
. Not again.'
âIt's okay, Aunt Fia,' Tully heard herself say. âIt's my fault, really. I was the
idiot
who registered Dahlia in Avalon's name. It seemed ridiculous to have a racehorse registered in the name of a sixteen-year-old girl! But I see now how
ridiculous
that attitude was . . .'
She is
my
horse, and I'm gonna fight for her . . .
Tully shook her head, the ball of pain, dread and regret dropping down to the pit of her stomach. â
Friggin'
hell! How frigging stupid was I not to see this coming!'
Tully snatched for her phone, wiped away the shavings, blinking through the tears to stab her home number. It rang four times before her father finally answered.
âI was at home
what
, like six hours ago, Dad?!' Tully said, sitting up in Fia's arms. Fia sniffed and straightened to her, watching her intently. âYou didn't think to tell me that you'd
sold
my horse, to Pearce Bloody Weston!'
âIt was the only way, Tully. Would you have wanted us to lose Avalon?'
âYou couldn't have warned me?' Tully cried. âYou couldn't have waited just
two weeks, until after the Cup? Did you not believe that maybe I could've
won
the money that we needed?!'
You could have believed in me, in Dahlia!
Her father was silent, papers shuffled. Tully kept her jaw clenched to keep from screaming down the line.
âIt's the business, Tully. I had to save the farm. I thought you'd understand.'
âShe wasn't your horse to sell! I'd asked you about money, I've asked you heaps of times and you said we were right. You lied to me, Dad, you betrayed me and worse yet, you betrayed Mum's memory! What did Bucko have to say about all this?!'
Her father cleared his throat. âKyle's gone.'
âOf course he left, you drove him away!' Tully hung up, a fresh wave of hysteria shaking her frame.
Three missed calls from Brandon popped up onto the screen of her phone, but she couldn't even think his name without tasting bile and nearly spewing.
Does Brandon know about this?!
She furiously typed a message:
Brandon - make sure your father takes good care of my horse!
Hit Send, before shoving her phone back into the shavings. Tully clung to her aunt and they cried their broken hearts out together. Fia insisted Tully stay with her and that tomorrow they'd make a plan to get Dahlia back. But Tully knew it was too late. Pearce would never sell her now â Dahlia was gone, forever.
Everything in Tully's life: her dream of finally seeing the Athens name in the Melbourne Cup, her dream of riding Dahlia in the race that would see her name etched in the history books where it belonged, her dream of having a life with the boy she loved, of returning home to Avalon Downs â everything was shattered.
The darkness dragged her down and there was no way out.
36
Blood Ties