The Winter Companion (Parish Orphans of Devon #4) - Mimi Matthews Page 0,71
attention.
It was one of the sweetest things Clara had ever beheld. “Is it safe for me to come in yet?”
Neville clipped the bucket to the hook on the wall. Betty thrust her head into it without hesitation. “Now it is.”
Clara crept inside. Betty didn’t pay her any attention, but Firefly was ready and waiting. He nudged her with his nose, and pushed her hard with his shoulder. “He’s getting strong!”
“He wants his milk.” Neville held Firefly’s neck, keeping him still. “Remember…you have to p-pour it.”
“I remember.” She offered Firefly the padded spout of the teakettle, tilting it so the milk slowly streamed into his waiting mouth. He drank deeply. A smile spread over her face. “He’s getting better at this.”
“So are you,” Neville said.
She didn’t know about that. It was impossible to keep the milk from spilling. At least now, however, after three days’ practice, she was confident that more was ending up in Firefly’s stomach than on the straw-covered floor.
“Good boy,” she murmured. “How clever you are.”
When the teakettle was empty, she stepped outside the loose box again. She was careful not to press her luck with Betty. It was Neville who must win the ponies’ trust, not her.
He remained inside with both of them. His hands moved over Betty while she ate, stroking along her neck, shoulders, and flanks. It was as if he was speaking to her. Gentling her and reassuring her. Persuading her to trust him.
Firefly wandered along with him, mouthing at Neville’s sleeves with tiny, experimental nips.
Neville glanced at Clara. “Fetch your bonnet and cloak.”
She quickly did as he bid her, retrieving her things from the front of the stables and slipping them on as she returned to the back. By then, he’d managed to put a rope halter over Betty’s head and was leading her from the box.
Clara stood back, well out of kicking range. “What about Firefly? Doesn’t he need to be haltered?”
“He’ll follow her.”
Sure enough, Firefly ambled along at Betty’s side as Neville led her through the arched doorway at the back of the stable. It opened to a series of long paddocks with white wooden fences. The smallest was closest to the stables. A pen, merely, with an even footing of mud and grass.
Neville walked Betty into it. Her nostrils flared, and her sides heaved like a bellows. “Will you shut the gate?”
Clara closed and latched it behind him. Her heart was halfway in her throat, her stomach clenched in both fear and anticipation. She didn’t know what to expect. At only twelve hands, Betty couldn’t do much damage, could she? She was just a pony.
But when Neville slipped the rope halter from her head, Betty managed to make herself look as big and dangerous as a full-sized horse. She reared up on her hind legs, shaking her neck and striking out with her hooves.
Clara’s hand flew to her mouth. “Oh, do be careful!”
Neville didn’t seem at all alarmed. He backed away from Betty slowly. When he reached the fence, he climbed over it with ease.
Betty cantered wildly around the pen, Firefly leaping and kicking at her side. She whinnied, high and shrill, tossing her head and quivering all over.
“She’ll hurt herself,” Clara said.
Neville came to stand next to her. “She won’t.”
Clara wished she could feel as confident. Instead she felt cold and wet and quite certain she was about to witness either Betty or Firefly break one of their legs. “Is there nothing you can do to calm her?”
He shook his head. “She’ll c-calm on her own.”
Clara supposed she’d simply have to trust him. He knew horses far better than she did. And he was the last person on earth who would let an animal come to harm. “I hate to see her so frightened.”
“She’s not afraid.”
Eventually, Betty slowed to pace the perimeter of the pen, examining the fence and what lay beyond it. She stopped to snatch a bite of grass, and again to paw at a mud puddle. And then, all