phone call and now he was in the living room.
She heard the television click on.
âBecause today we got a black-edged notice in the mail,â Ann continued, âand it said Mr. Mel Border, equine specialist for the insurance company, will âdrop byâ for an inspection on July fifth.â
Who even knew that insurance companies had equine specialists, Darby thought. But that was exciting. If Mr. Mel Border knew horses, he couldnât help being impressed that Sugarfoot could chase humansand other horses in a controlled manner.
âYou havenât been talking,â Ann said. âDo you, uh, have company?â
âYep, I do,â Darby answered.
âOkay, well, call me the minute you know anything. Promise?â Ann said.
âPromise.â
Chapter Nine
âS o then my mom said, âEd, heâs a good-hearted horse and once we work through his problem, heâll be an asset to the ranch. I just know it.ââ
Ann and Darby were sitting in the âIolani Ranch office waiting for Dr. Lukeâs ride-and-tie class to start, and Ann was explaining how sheâd persuaded her parents to let her enter the event.
âAnd then my dad said, âIf youâre set on keeping him, we can give it a try.ââ
âThatâs cute,â Darby whispered.
âThey didnât even mention my leg,â Ann whispered in amazement. âI just had to promise that if this transformed Sugarfoot, Iâd continue working with him. Mom found out there are ride-and-tie races throughoutthe islands, and if competing in them is what works, thatâs what weâll do. But if I let him relapse into his bad habits, heâs gone.â
âBut you wouldnât do that,â Darby said.
âOf course not,â Ann said, and she followed the direction of Darbyâs glance over her shoulder.
Darby pointed out two-thirds of a ride-and-tie team from Oahu. Jack and Jackie Olson were already camping on âIolani land with a gray Arab named Joy Ride. They were quiet, serious, and certain theyâd win the race.
Next, Darby saw Lukeâs energetic sisters, Sheila and Sissy Cray. She waved and the pair sat behind them.
âIs this your friend Ann?â Sheila asked, and the girls all introduced themselves.
âYouâll have so much fun,â Sissy said, and then she and Ann began talking about Samba Splash and the ugly fact that one-third of all racehorses went to slaughter after they no longer had jobs entertaining humans.
Megan slipped into the seat beside Darby.
âIâm just listening,â she said. âI think this is kind of cool.â
âSo Sambaâs really pretty lucky,â Sheila was saying to Ann as Darby turned back to their conversation.
âPretty lucky you found him,â Ann corrected her.
âIt wasnât us. It was Luke,â Sissy said. âHe was supposed to put Samba down. The trainer thought he wasdoing Samba a big favor, paying Luke sixty dollars for a shot to put him to sleep, and when he refusedâ¦â Sissy grimaced.
âNever mind about that part,â Sheila said. âWhen the trainer said that he wanted Samba gone in the morning one way or anotherâvoilà ! Luke gave him to us.â
âThat is so cool,â Darby said, and as the young vet sidled through the crowd of people whoâd shown up for the class, Darby thought the smiles that his sisters sent him looked a lot like hero worship.
Â
Darby and Ann were furiously taking notes when a rustling at the doorway drew their attention. Pauli, Cade, and Tyson slipped into their row.
Cade blushed. Pauli smiled. Tysonâs face stayed blank.
Darby figured it was an improvement over his usual sneer, but Ann leaned close and hissed, âItâs eighty degrees outside and heâs still wearing that stupid sweatshirt!â
Of all the things Darby disliked about Tyson, his sweatshirt was last on her list.
Darby
Kresley Cole
Dirk Patton
Bernard Knight
Teresa Southwick
Michael Gruber
Hugh Howey
Deborah Rumsey
Delphine Dryden
Don Pendleton
Damien Boyd