car,â she said. âWeâre leaving.â
Mrs Brown ranted non-stop the whole drive home. âYou could have been killed!â she fumed. âThat pony was dangerous-I should never have let you get on him. Learnerâs pony? More like a bucking bronco!â
âIt wasnât Apacheâs fault!â Issie tried to stick up for the grey pony. âHe was just scared.â
âIâm sure he was!â said Mrs Brown. âThat big oaf is obviously very brutal to the poor animal. Your aunt was right,â she continued. âItâs a dishonest business buying and selling horses. That man was a total liar. I doubt that horse was even broken in. And did you see the state it was in? Iâve got a good mind to report him to the police.â
âCan we do that? Tell the police on him?â Issie asked. âMaybe theyâd help Apacheâ¦â
Mrs Brown shook her head. âHonestly, Issie, I would call the police in a heartbeat, but I really donât think they want to know about dodgy horse dealers. Heâs not actually committing a crime, is he?â
âBut he was really cruel and awful!â Issie insisted. She felt herself getting tearful again, but they were tears of anger this time. âWe canât leave poor Apache with him.â
âNo,â Mrs Brown agreed, âwe canât. And I donâtintend to either.â She pulled the car up in the driveway of their house and strode inside. She went straight to the phone in the hallway and began to leaf quickly through the phone book.
âWho are you calling?â Issie asked.
âI donât know. There must be a listing for a horse protection society or something in here. There must be someone who deals with people like that. They need to see how malnourished and mistreated that poor pony is.â She flicked through the book and found what she was looking for.
âAh-here it is-The International League for the Protection of Horses. Thereâs a number here for the local ILPH branch.â Mrs Brown dialled the number and held the phone to her ear. âItâs ringing,â she said to Issie. âQuick! Run into the kitchen and get me a pen and paper.â Issie raced off and by the time she was back her mum was finishing up the conversation.
âTerrific,â she said. âThank you so much. No, thatâs great. We can come to you straightaway. If you give me your address, weâll be there in five minutesâ¦â She gestured to Issie to hand her the pen and then frantically scribbled something down.
Mrs Brown hung up the phone. âWell, that was theman from the horse protection league. He was very helpful. Turns out he doesnât live far from here; he moved to Chevalier Point just a few months ago. I got his details-we can go round there now, fill in the paperwork and file a complaint.â She passed Issie the piece of paper she had just scrawled on. âHang on to this for me. Itâs the address. Iâll just grab my coat.â
Issie looked at the bit of paper in her hand, deciphering the familiar messy, looped letters of her motherâs handwriting. She had written the street address first: 127 Esplanade Drive . And there, beneath the address, were the words that would change Issieâs life forever: Tom Avery at Winterflood Farm.
4
Winterflood Farm
On the way to Winterflood Farm, Mrs Brown started to have second thoughts.
âSweetie,â she said, âI think we have to face reality. I canât buy you a pony. I have absolutely no idea what Iâm doing. I donât even know what half the words in the ads mean. Look at what just happened! That pony sounded perfect to me and he was a total nightmare!â
Issie felt a chill run through her as she saw her chances of ever getting a pony slipping away. âYou mean Iâm not getting a pony after all?â
âI didnât say that,â her mum corrected her,