A small, smiling moon cast dappled light through the old coachwood tree. He could see Rusty standing next to Chocky with a low head and a resting leg, looking sleepy. The fillies raised their heads and pricked their ears.
Luke walked to the next yard and poked his head over. A rush of white, gleaming in the moonlight, charged at him with a full set of teeth. Chelpie swung around and double-barrelled the fence, connecting with a bang so hard it almost rattled the pins from the rails. She trotted back to Tinkerbell, nuzzling and nickering protectively. Then she stood between Luke and the filly with a leg raised in warning, ears flat back.
Luke smiled. âDon't worry, girl, I won't let them take this one away from you. Not for a while, anyway.'
Luke had talked the Pettilows into leaving Chelpie in his care until she calmed down a bit. All it had taken to convince them was six months of free feed and agistment, and an agreement not to ride her. Unbeknown to the Pettilows, and with only a small dose of sedative, Luke had managed to settle Chelpie enough to introduce her to her new baby.
Tinkerbell nickered and Chelpie nuzzled the filly to her belly, offering her milk. The little foal tottered around and butted at her udder.
âBunch of little foster kids,' said Luke quietly as he looked at all the horses in the yards. âYou've come to the right place.'
He walked to the feedroom, gathered up the horse rugs and took them out to the stable aisle. There he made a cosy nest, flinging straps and buckles out of the way, and flopped himself down in the middle, jockeying for position with Filth and Fang.
He lay back and thought of Marnie's little red filly with the three diamonds cascading down its shoulder like falling stars. Then of Tinkerbell the orphaned brumby foal, nuzzled up with Chelpie, the show pony with impeccable breeding and faultless conformation.
And as he lay there thinking, listening to the familiar, soothing sounds of home, there was a soft, flapping noise above him and a dark shape glided across the top of the building to land on a crossbeam. A big owl looked around the building. Luke smiled up at its tawny-brown dinnerplate face.
âWe're all just the same, aren't we?' he said to the bird. âSame way my mob. Same way your mob.' He shrugged. âSame way that horse mob.'
The owl sat silently with a shrewd look on its face for a while longer. Then it shook its feathers, lifted its wings and glided off through the western window into the darkness.
To Tyson Kaawoppa Yunkaporta, for your advice,
encouragement and wonderful ideas, thank you from
the bottom of my heart.
Thanks also to my wonderful and adventurous
friend Suzanne Sandral, for showing me the Gulf.
And to my perfect husband, Anthony, thanks for
your never-ending love and support.
KAREN WOOD
has been involved with horses for more than twenty years. After owning many horses, she has finally found her once-in-a-lifetime-horse in a little chestnut stockhorse called Reo. Karen has an Arts degree majoring in communications and a diploma in horticulture. She has syndicated a gardening column in several newspapers throughout Australia, has published feature articles in various magazines and has published photographs in bushwalking guides. She is married with two children and lives on the Central Coast, New South Wales.
A SNEAK PREVIEW
OF THE THIRD BOOK IN THE DIAMOND SPIRIT SERIES
âWOOHOO!'
JESS SLID DOWN
the front stair rail, her arms out wide, and landed expertly on the driveway. âToday's the day!'
For the first time in weeks, the sky was a clear blue, and the air was still, not a breath of wind. The sun was warm on Jess's face and everything about the day seemed perfect. She skipped to the feed shed, hauled out some hay and threw it over the fence. âCome on, Dodger, it's time to go and get Opal!'
Dodger nickered to her and began snuffling at the hay. Jess stepped through the fence and gave the old stockâhorse a big hug. âEighteen months we've been waiting,' she said, running her hands through his shaggy brown coat. âI can't
believe
I can finally bring her home!'
She took a brush to him, rubbing in hard circular motions as she talked. âOpal's a very special filly. She's connected to Diamond. You remember Diamond, don't you?'
As Jess rubbed Dodger's back, the old horse curled his lip with pleasure. She combed out his tail, painted his hooves with grease, and pulled her phone from her pocket to thumb a message.
U guys saddled yet?
Before she could send it, Jess heard a shrill â
Coo-ee!
' A clatter of hooves sounded along the road, gradually getting louder. From behind the hedge, she could hear her friends, chatting and laughing.
âI thought you'd have that old stockhorse saddled up by now,' Shara called as she rode through the gate on Rocko.
âSharsy!' Jess squealed. âYou're home!' The day was becoming more perfect by the minute.
âDad brought me home for the weekend,' her best friend grinned.
âHow's vet school?'
âI'm their star student!'
Rosie followed on her quarter horse. âYou're back on the legend, Jessy!' she said, as she pulled Buster to a halt and jumped off.
Jess gave Dodger a pat on the neck. âI will be in a minute.' She picked up her new stock saddle and slung it over his back, pulled the girth through the rig and slapped the fenders down into place.
âAre you excited?' asked Grace, appearing on a leggy chestnut.
âI couldn't sleep last night,' answered Jess, as she reached for her bridle.
âHave you got a little halter for her?' asked Shara.
âWe don't need one. We're just going to lead the mare and let Opal follow.'
âWhat? All the way back to here without a halter?' Shara sounded mildly alarmed.
âProbably the best way. She's never been touched by a human, let alone had a rope on her,' said Jess. She pulled a face. â
Lawson's rules
.'
As part of the purchase agreement with Lawson, Jess had agreed not to handle Opal during her first six months. Lawson didn't like foals being mollycoddled by girls. He said it made them ârude and disrespectful'.
Shara snorted. âHe's such a killjoy.'
âNot for much longer,' said Jess. âAs soon as she's weaned, she'll be
mine
! I'll have three whole weeks to handle her before she goes out west to Longwood.'
âWish
we
could go on that trip,' said Grace.
Lawson had inherited a share in his father's grazing property, Blakely Downs, and was taking several horses, including a mob of brumbies, out there for a droving trip. Opal, together with the other young horses, would be turned out onto the station to fatten up on the Mitchell grass. The older horses would be put to work on the stock route, droving fifteen hundred cattle to the saleyards.
âMe too,' Jess sighed. âDroving would be so much fun.' She rammed a foot into a stirrup and sprang into the saddle.
âAre you leaving Opal's mum with her for a couple of days?' asked Shara.
âYeah, just overnight to get her settled, then Lawson wants to get Marnie back into work for the droving trip.'
âYou'd better look after her,' said Rosie. âDo you have any idea how much he paid for that mare?'
âMum reckons it was enough to buy a brand-new car,' said Grace.
âShe'll be all right,' said Jess. âLawson's been over and checked the fences to make sure she can't hurt herself.'
At that moment a low rumbling noise rolled through the valley, making the ground tremble.
âWhat was that?' asked Jess, looking up at the cloudless blue sky.
âStorm,' said Grace. âIt's supposed to come through later this afternoon.'
âLook, the sky's turning green over there,' said Shara, pointing beyond the mountains to the south. âIt's gonna be a doozy!'
Jess gathered her reins and kicked Dodger on. âLet's get going. We don't want to get stuck in it.'
The girls headed towards the river flats. As they followed a well-worn track to the crossing, they could hear thunder rumbling through the valley again.
âThat sky's getting darker,' warned Rosie.
âIt's coming up over the hills,' said Shara. âLook!' Behind Mossy Mountain, the sky was turning an eerie mix of green and purple. It suddenly flashed white with the afterglow of distant lightening. âWe're going to get drenched.'
âI don't care â I love riding in the rain,' said Grace.
âSo do I, but I hope it doesn't unsettle Opal while we're trying to move her,' said Jess.
Grace scoffed. âHorses aren't scared of rain.'
âBut what if the river rises?' Jess squeezed Dodger into a trot. âWe might not be able to get her through. I couldn't handle having to wait until next weekend to bring her home.'
Dodger swished his tail and gave a skip with a hind leg. He broke into a canter. Jess led the girls down the riverbank and they splashed through the knee-deep water.
Shara cantered up on her shoulder. âCan't that old gerry go any faster?' she yelled, as she thundered past.
Dodger seized the bit and took off after Rocko, with Buster and Milly following closely behind. Jess gave him the reins and let him stretch his legs. It felt fantastic to be flying along on him again, his hooves making a loud melodic rumble over the grassy flats. She laughed into the wind and kicked him on.
Beyond the grassy flats at the Slaughtering Creek junction, the group reached Katrina Pettilow's place. Her horse Chelpie stood listlessly on a timbered hillside. When the little white mare saw the girls, she pulled a horrible face and charged at the fence.
âHave they weaned Tinkerbell already?' asked Shara, pulling Rocko back to a walk.
âAbout a month ago,' said Jess. âKatrina wanted Chelpie back.'
âDid she ever find out about Tinks?'
âNope. She didn't visit Chelpie once in six months.' Jess shook her head. Her friend Luke had used Chelpie to foster his orphan brumby filly when Chelpie had lost her own foal. The little mare had been a good mother, ferociously protective. âShe's done nothing but pace up and down that fence since Tinks was taken away from her. She looks terrible.'
âLook how skinny she is,' Shara said in disgust.
âKatrina should sell her if she's not interested in her anymore,' said Rosie. âPoor horse.'
âChelpie's so sour. Who'd buy her?' said Jess. âI just wish Katrina would feed her a bit more.'
She looked up at the bank of thick cloud that was swelling behind the mountains â it was moving unbelievably fast â and pushed Dodger into a trot. Chelpie called a screeching whinny as they departed.
The weather caught up with them just as they rode around the bend alongside the old sawmill. Heavy drops speared into their oilskin jackets and rolled down their helmets. Up ahead, Lawson's blue timber house stood as neat as a pin. Perfectly straight fences radiated from brick stables and, in the paddocks, the mango trees were heavy with ripening fruit.
The girls walked the horses through Lawson's fat red cattle dotted about the flats, then rode up the laneway and into the stable block. The rain was deafening on the tin roof, but it was warm and dry inside.
Lawson pulled himself from beneath the horse he was shoeing and stretched. âI've got another couple of horses to trim before we can move that filly,' he shouted over the din. âAnd I've gotta get the cattle in. That river's gonna rise this afternoon.'
Jess's heart sank. Opal was too little to be swimming across rivers, especially fast-flowing ones. âDo you want
us
to bring them in?' she yelled. âWe can do it while you finish shoeing those horses.'
âYeah, righto, just don't stir 'em up.'