her back, she turned fully toward him, obviously willing to continue the conversation. 'I brought them a bag of apples,' she added, nodding toward a large brown sack just inside the
door.
Since she apparently preferred to feed them, not ride them, Cole leapt to the obvious conclusion. 'Do you know how to ride?'
She surprised him again by nodding. 'Yes.'
'Let me see if I have this straight,' he joked. 'When you come here, you don't ride, even when all your friends are riding, right?'
'Right.'
'And you do know how to ride, and you do like horses very much. Right?'
'Right.'
'In fact, you like horses so much that you bring apples for them, right?'
'Right again.'
He hooked his thumbs in his belt loops and studied her curiously. 'I don't understand,' he admitted.
'I like them much
There was embarrassed laughter in her voice, and it was so contagious that Cole grinned. 'Don't tell me— let me guess. You were thrown and got hurt, is that it?'
'You got it,' she admitted. 'I rushed a fence and got a broken wrist.'
'The only way to get over your fear is to get right back on,' Cole lectured.
'I did that,' she assured him gravely, but with a twinkle in her green eyes.
'And?'
'And I got a concussion.'
Cole's stomach growled, and his thoughts shifted to apples. He lived on a tight budget, and he seemed to have an appetite that was never satisfied. 'I'd better put that bag of apples away before it gets stepped on or someone trips over it,' he said. Harrison picked up the bag and started toward the rear of the stable, fully intending to share in the horses' bounty. As he passed one of the stalls near the end of the long aisle, an ancient named Buckshot put his head out over the door, his eyes hopeful and inquisitive, his soft nose aimed at the bag in Cole's arm.
'You can't walk and you can't see, but there's nothing wrong with your sense of smell,' Cole told the horse as he dug an apple out of the bag and gave it to him. 'Just don't go telling your stablemates about these apples. Some of them are mine.'
Chapter 3
Cole was putting fresh hay into the empty stalls when several of the girls who'd been riding marched into the stable. 'Diana, we need to talk to you about Corey,' Haley Vincennes announced. Cole looked up from his chore, took one look at the group, and knew that the all-girl jury was about to deliver their verdict. And it wasn't going to be a good one.
Diana obviously sensed it, too, and tried to head them off, her voice sweet and persuasive. 'I know you'll all like Corey when you get to know her, and then we'll all be good friends.'
'That just can't happen,' Haley decreed with haughty finality. 'None of us have anything in common with somebody from a hick town we've never even heard of. I mean, did you
'I liked it,' Diana said stubbornly. 'Corey's grandmother is an artist!'
'Artists paint on canvases not sweatshirts, and you know it. And I will bet you a month's allowance those jeans she's wearing today came from Sears!'
A chorus of murmured laughter from the other girls was proof they agreed; then Barb Hayward finally added her vote to the majority opinion, but she looked a little timid as she decreed poor Corey's fate: 'I don't see how she can be our friend, or yours either, Diana.'
Cole winced with empathy for Corey and with sympathy for poor little Diana, who he was certain would buckle under the intense peer pressure, but poor little Diana didn't give an inch, even though her voice never lost its softness. 'I'm really sorry you all feel that way,' she said sincerely, directing her words to Haley, who Cole already knew was the leader in this and the nastiest of the dissenters. 'I guess I never realized you'd be afraid of the competition if you gave her a chance.'
'What competition?' Barb Hayward asked, looking baffled but concerned.
'Competition with boys. I mean, Corey is very pretty, and she's lots of fun, so naturally the boys are going to be hanging around her wherever she goes.'
In the stall across from the girls, Cole paused, pitchfork in hand, a smile of admiration on his mouth, as he realized Diana's strategy. As he'd learned while working there, boys were the most desirable, most valued of commodities to teenage girls, and the possibility that Corey might attract more boys into their collective lair was almost irresistible. He was wondering if that possibility wouldn't be outweighed in their minds by the threat that Corey might steal their existing boyfriends, when Diana interjected smoothly, 'Of course, Corey already has a boyfriend back home, and she isn't interested in having another one here.'
'I think we should give her a chance and take some time to get to know her before we make up our minds we don't want her in the group,' Barb said in the earnest, hesitant tone of a girl who knows the difference between right and wrong, but who lacks the courage to be a leader.
'I'm so glad!' Diana said happily. 'I knew you wouldn't let me down. If you had, I'd have missed all of you— I'd have missed sharing some of my best clothes with you, and missed having you go with us to New York next summer.'
'Missed us? What do you mean?'
'I mean that Corey is going to be my best friend. And best friends have to stick together.'
When the others left to return to the party, Cole strolled out of the stall, startling Diana. 'Tell me something,' he said with a conspiratorial grin. 'Does Corey
Diana nodded slowly. 'Yes.'
'Really?' Cole asked dubiously, noticing the guilty laughter in her sparkling eyes. 'What's this boyfriend's name?'
She bit her lip. 'It's sort of an odd name.'
'How odd?'
'Promise you won't tell anyone?'
Enchanted with her face, her voice, her loyalty, and her cleverness, Cole drew an X over his heart with his index finger.
'His name is Sylvester.'
'And he's a—?' Cole prompted.
Her gaze mischievously slid away from his, her curly russet lashes casting shadows on her cheekbones as they lowered over the jade of her eyes. 'A pig,' she confessed.
Her voice had been so low, and Cole had been so certain that Sylvester was a dog or cat, that he thought he had misunderstood. 'A pig?' he repeated. 'As in
She nodded. 'As in 'hog,' actually,' she admitted as she lifted glowing green eyes to his. 'Corey told me he's huge, and he tags after her at home like a cocker spaniel. At her old home, I mean.'
At that moment, Cole decided that Corey was a very lucky girl to have a diminutive but potent champion like Diana Foster to help her bridge the social gulf. Unaware of his silent compliments, Diana glanced at him. 'Is there anything to drink inhere? I'm really thirsty.'
Cole smiled. 'Deceit is hard work, isn't it? And there's nothing like going to battle against a half-dozen stuck-up girls to work up a thirst, is there?'
Unabashed, she rolled her eyes at him and smiled. She was spunky as hell, Cole decided, but with a unique