Dark Witch

Dark Witch by Nora Roberts

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Authors: Nora Roberts
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around your paddock.”
    “What are you? Seven stones soaking wet?”
    He was giving her a job, she reminded herself. And compared to him—even compared to Meara—she probably did come off as small and weak. “I don’t know how much seven stones is, but I’m strong, and I’m experienced.”
    “He’d rip your arms out, and that’s before he tossed you off his back like a bad mood.”
    “I don’t think so. But then, if he did, you’d be right.” She glanced back at the horse. “Think about that,” she told Alastar.
    Boyle considered it. The pretty little faerie queen had something to prove, so he’d let her try. And she could nurse her sore arse—or head, depending on which hit the ground first.
    “Once around the ring. Inside,” Boyle said, pointing. “If you manage to stay on him that long. Get her a helmet, will you, Meara. It might help her from breaking her head when she lands on it.”
    “He’s not the only one who’s pissed off.” Confident now, Iona offered Boyle a smile. “I need to shorten the stirrups.”
    “Inside,” he repeated, and led the horse in. “I hope you know how to fall.”
    “I do. But I won’t.”
    She shortened the stirrups quickly, competently. She knew Boyle watched her, and that was fine, that was good. She
would
settle, and gratefully, for a job doing no more than mucking out stalls and cleaning tack.
    But God, she wanted to ride again. And she wanted, keenly, to ride this horse. To feel him under her, to share that power.
    “Thanks.” She strapped on the helmet Meara brought her, and since Meara had carried one over, Iona used the mounting block.
    Alastar quivered under her. She tightened her knees, held out a hand for the reins.
    Now he reconsidered—she could see it in those tawny eyes.
    “Branna won’t be pleased with me if you end up in the hospital.”
    “You’re not afraid of Branna.”
    She took the reins. Maybe she’d never been sure where she belonged, but she’d always, from the first moment, felt at home in the saddle.
    Leaning forward, Iona whispered in Alastar’s ear. “Don’t make a fool out of me, okay? Let’s show off, and show him up.”
    He walked cooperatively for four steps. Then kicked up his hind legs, dropped down, reared up.
    Stop it. We can play that game another time.
    She circled him, changed leads, circled back, changed again before nudging him into a trot.
    When the horse danced to the side, tried another kick, she laughed.
    “I may not weigh as much as the big guy, but I’m sticking.”
    She took him up to a pretty canter—God, he had beautiful lines—back to a trot.
    And felt alive.
    “She’s more than words on paper,” Meara murmured.
    “Maybe so. Good seat, good hands—and for some reason that devil seems to like her.”
    He thought she looked as if she’d been born on a horse, as if she could ride through wind and wood and all but fly over the hills.
    Then he shifted his feet, annoyed with his own fanciful thoughts.
    “You can take her out with you—
not
on that devil—see how she does on a guide.”
    “He’ll breed well, you know. Fin’s got the right of that.”
    “Fin’s rarely wrong. But when he is, it’s massive. Still, she’ll do. Until she doesn’t. Have her put Alastar in the paddock. We’ll see if he stays there.”
    “And you?”
    “I’ll see to her paperwork.”
    “When do you want her to start?”
    Boyle watched her slide into a fluid lope. “I’m thinking she already has.”
    * * *
    SHE DIDN’T GET TO THE VILLAGE. HER PLANS CHANGED IN the best possible way as she spent the rest of her morning mucking out, grooming, signing papers, learning the basics of the rules and rhythms from Meara.
    And best of all, she tagged along on a guided ride. The pace might have been easy to the point of lazy, but it was still a ride on the cheerful Spud. She tried to remember landmarks as they rode placidly along the hard path, through the deep green woods, along the dark hum of the river.
    An old

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