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Authors: Lauraine Snelling

Secondhand Horses (4 page)

BOOK: Secondhand Horses
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When had it become
her
fault? “What? I didn’t do anything. I was trying to
help
, for pizza sake. I had the red bandanna and was going to—”
Was going to
didn’t mean
finished
.

Ughness
.

Vee was shaking her head. “Sometimes, Sunny, your big ideas are—”

“Dumb.” Esther wasn’t letting this go.

Warmth rushed to Sunny’s cheeks. If there was going to be a fight, it was usually between Vee and Esther. Sunny didn’t much like being the one in trouble. Especially since The Spaghetti Event.

Trouble again.

She sighed and pushed her hands through her hair then looked at the dusty hands. Now she probably had dirt streaks running through her curls. Could she do anything right?

“Okay, I’m sorry. It seemed like a Great Idea. Kinda fun, like a matador …” Her voice trailed off then surged back in full Sunny power. “Forget the bandanna—you won’t believe what I heard from that creepy carnival zoo guy.”

“Tell us.” Aneta’s smile made Sunny feel not quite so dumb.

“He’s selling the zoo to be eaten!”

“He’s
what
?” Esther clutched the goose so tightly it clacked its beak up at her. “You’re kidding.”

“He can’t do that!” Vee’s head tipped toward Sunny, her eyes slanted in what Aneta had named the Vee Stare. “You ate too much cotton candy.”

“We cannot let him do that,” Aneta said. Her usually gentle face looked like she was ready for a fight.

Motioning the others to join her, Sunny spun on her heel and headed back toward the petting zoo. Aneta fell in step next to her.

“She’s nuts. It can’t be true,” Sunny heard Esther mutter to Vee behind her.

“Yeah, Sunny gets excited, but she’s never lied.” Vee’s voice was closer now, at Sunny’s side. No Esther yet. Glancing behind, she noted the shorter girl, still carrying the goose, standing next to a popcorn stand. Sunny frowned. The Squaders weren’t easy to convince, but they were usually willing to give it a try if it meant saving animals. It wasn’t like Esther to give up on the Squad and just stop and eat.

She worked the inside of her bottom lip and stepped up the pace. How long would it take the creepy carnival guy to find a buyer for the zoo?

In the next moment, Esther had zoomed past them, goose jouncing up and down. She flung these words at them: “C’mon! The popcorn guy—told candy apple girl—Glad it’s last night. He can’t wait to leave—boring Oakton. We’ve got to save the zoo now!”

Vee broke into a jog. Sunny mustered up her muscles and merged into a full gallop. Now the Squad was together. That thought made her smile while she tried to remember to breathe and run. The jingling change in her pocket bounced with each step: Save. The. Zoo.
Save. The. Zoo
.

While the corral was in sight, they still had some ground to cover to reach the animals. She saw the three remaining animals, but where was the creepy guy? Would the creepy carnival guy have a cell phone? What if he already called someone to come and tow off the zoo? What would happen to the big-eyed miniature horse?

The guy must have a cell phone.

Didn’t everyone have a cell phone?

I can’t wait to turn thirteen and get a cell phone
.

Jingle, jingle
. How much money did she have in there?

No matter, once she got a cell phone—

“Sunneeee!” Vee’s voice cut into her jumbled thinking.

Ooops. Is this what her mother and father were talking about? Easily distracted. Life and death for the zoo and she was running along thinking of when she could get a cell phone. “What?”

“What are we going to do when we get there? What are we going to tell the bad guy?” Aneta was running sideways.

Jingle, jingle
went Sunny’s pockets again.
Save. The. Zoo
.

“Don’t stop running!” Esther yelled. “We’ve got to stop this guy!”

“Sunneeee!” Aneta’s voice dripped panic.

Jingle, jingle
.

A Great Idea burst into Sunny’s head.
A big, brilliant, BOUFFY idea
. She wanted to spin it was so brilliant.

“We’re going to buy a zoo!” Sunny shrieked as she reached the corral, catapulted over the top railing, and landed smack in front of the creepy carnival guy.

Chapter 8
Trouble in a Truck

I
can’t believe we bought a zoo.” Early the next morning, Sunny sat hugging her knees on the bed.

“That’s the fastest rescue we’ve ever done.” Esther sat next to Aneta on the inflatable mattress in Sunny’s ranch bedroom. “And cheapest.”

“Fifty-four dollars and forty cents.” Aneta pulled out a plastic bag of hair accessories and began to comb her long blond hair.

“I only had my allowance,” Esther said, flushing, then brightened. “But together our money convinced the creepy guy!”

“Something’s not right about all this.” Vee stretched. She and Sunny had shared the queen bed. “It was too easy.”

“Maybe we are getting good at rescues.” Aneta braided the right side of her hair into tiny braids while Esther worked on the left side. The plastic bag sat between them.

“Yeah, Vee,” Esther agreed.

“I thought it was cool. The guy even said he’d deliver them.” Sunny stood on the bed and turned in a wobbly circle, arms held over her head. “I sort of felt bad calling him the creepy carnival guy after a bit.”

Aneta nodded. “He wanted to know what kind of building the zoo would be living in. It was kind of cute that he wanted to make sure the miniature horse kept his raggedy wagon near him at all times.” “Yeah, cute. So why would he sell the zoo?” Vee asked. “After all that?”

The other three shook their heads. The softness of the mattress finally dumped Sunny on Vee, who shoved her off and stood up. “It’s just weird.” She held up her index finger. “Weirdness number one: four eleven-year-olds bought a
zoo
. Who does that?”

“We did.” Esther grinned. “Last night.”

Vee swung her head back and forth, holding up her thumb. “Weirdness number two: they’re going to live here and, weirdness number three”—she added a finger—“your uncle doesn’t
know
it yet, and”—another finger straightened to join the others—“the final weirdness: the guy drops them off
today
.”

With barely concealed impatience, the man had written down Sunny’s rather long directions to get to Uncle Dave’s house and said he’d be there in the morning. When they ran to find Uncle Dave, however, he’d been deep in conversation on his cell phone and never got off!

Sunny caught phrases like “mare delivery” and other horse words, which was pretty exciting. Uncle Dave was getting more secondhand horses. She’d been right that he’d be okay with a secondhand zoo. Pretty soon there would be enough horses for all the girls to ride one. She couldn’t wait. “I thought we could make a rocko-socko breakfast and tell him before the guy comes. Uncle Dave loves breakfast.”

The girls agreed. After scrambling into clothes and brushing their teeth, they were in the hall outside Sunny’s uncle’s bedroom ready to thread their way through the boxes when a truck horn sounded outside.

Too early!

“Uh-oh,” Aneta said, speeding up.

“Wait, back to the bedroom!” Sunny put her finger to her lips, pivoted, and ran on her toes back the way they’d come.

“Why?” Esther wanted to know, but followed.

When all three of them had joined Sunny, she closed the door.

“What’s going on?” Vee asked.

Sunny reminded them about the groaning front door and the squeaky screen. “We’ll have to go out the window.” She crossed to the window and tugged it up. No screen. It was one of the things on Uncle Dave’s “I’ll have to take a look at it” list. If, of course, he ever wrote that sort of list down. He wasn’t the most organized of people. Vee was a lot better at it.

Each girl sat on the sill and swung her legs over. “Good thing the ground’s higher back here,” Esther said, the last to swing her shorter legs up and out the window. She pushed off with her hands and landed on the ground.

Sunny reminded them they would be passing her uncle’s bedroom window. They dashed toward the front as quietly as shoes on crushed stone could. A beat-up red truck with splotchy rust on the fenders parked in the driveway.

Bang!
A single kick vibrated the side of the dilapidated trailer.

“I bet that’s the mini,” Esther said.

The creepy carnival guy stood at the back of the trailer. Without a word, he undid the latches on both sides and let the ramp fall.
Bang!
Four animal voices responded.

“You scared them,” Aneta said, stepping forward.

The animals didn’t want help, only out. A second after the ramp landed, the goose flew out low with some serious honking attitude. The pygmy goat followed, bouncing, then a scamper of tiny hooves drummed on the wooden ramp. Both were soon by the right corner of the house where the drive led to the back corral and the—now Sunny realized—
nearly endless forest and meadow
.

“Wait!” Four voices yelled, and four girls glared at the carnival guy.

The miniature horse was next, bucking and kicking. It headed the same route as the other escapees. The pig was a little slower, both in coming out and following its zoo mates.

The carnival guy shrugged. “Your problem now. I told you they was trouble.” Disappearing into the trailer, he reappeared with the roughly made wagon. “Now, where you gonna keep
this
?” If he was trying a friendly smile, he would have to practice. No matter what questions he had asked about the zoo being safe, he was still creepy. “You gotta keep the two of ’em together. That horse just loves this wagon. Understand?”

Sunny jerked a thumb toward the barn. “Yeah, I
get
it. They’ll be in that barn over there.”

“C’mon girls,” Vee said, taking off. “We’ve got to catch that zoo!”

Esther and Aneta joined Vee in darting after the stampede. Amazing how fast a pig could run when motivated by its buddies disappearing out of sight.

Great. Now the next worst thing would be Uncle Dave seeing the zoo before Sunny had a chance to explain. And get them washed. The quick parade of animals had shown they were even dirtier than last night.

The dust from the beat-up red truck’s departure settled back onto the driveway while Sunny bounced up and down on her toes, thinking. Good thing Mom always said that her brother could sleep through a tornado. One had just swept through as a runaway zoo. It would be so fun to play with them, she thought, this new idea causing a little spin just thinking about it. If they were going to get them adopted, they would have to make them not grumpy by showing them kindness.

“The S.A.V.E. Squad shall un-grump them!” She cracked herself up sometimes. Over her hilarity, she heard a pig snort to the left of the house. The problem again descended: Uncle Dave did not yet know he had a secondhand zoo.

What to do?

She first heard the groan, then the squeak, then Uncle Dave appeared, squinting on the front porch. Mom said Uncle Dave was the absolute last man to own animals, since getting up at dawn was his least favorite thing to do.

Sunny no longer wanted to spin. Okay, now what? Another pig grunt then a small bleat that sounded like “Baaahhhhhb.” Goats didn’t talk. Did they?

“Did I hear a truck horn?” He rubbed both fists back and forth on his head. Despite the crisis, Sunny had to giggle. He wore his blond hair longer than Dad, and one side had a big poof of hair. The other flopped right back to flat after each knuckle rub.

“A—a truck?” She widened her eyes and turned in a big, slow circle, shading her eyes as though searching. “Mom says you walked in your sleep when you were a kid, Uncle Dave.”

Hooonnkkk!

Sunny stood motionless, her back to her uncle. She had to do something. If the girls
hadn’t
gathered up the zoo, those goofy animals would scatter again, every which way, right in front of Uncle Dave. If the girls
had
the zoo under control—sort of—they’d herd that zoo right in front of Uncle Dave. Either way, if Sunny did not warn them, Uncle Dave was going to wake up faster than if she’d poured ice water on him. Now, while Sunny did not have a Great Idea, she
did
know the zoo parading in front of Uncle Dave right after he woke up was
not
any sort of a good idea.

Finishing the turn to face her uncle, she froze. On the left, pushing through the evergreen bushes, was a dirty snout and Vee tapping the pig’s back with a stick. To Vee’s left marched Esther, the goose under one arm on one hip, her fist perched on the other hip. Uh-oh. To Esther’s left, Aneta held the rope leads of the goat and the mini. Even from many feet away in the driveway, Sunny saw Aneta was dirty and the closest thing to a glare she’d ever seen on the usually tranquil blue-eyed girl’s face. And Aneta was limping.

Turning back to her uncle, she asked, “Are you awake?” She stepped to his left and took his arm with her right arm. With her left arm, she smacked desperately at the air, hoping the girls would read that as “go away, not now!” More than that, she hoped Esther wouldn’t decipher her arm and decide anyway to introduce the zoo to Uncle Dave because Esther thought it was the right thing to do.
Trust me, Esther.…
Sunny shot her a silent message and a quick
AHHHHH!
face as Uncle Dave yawned.
It is not a good idea
.

BOOK: Secondhand Horses
13.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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