Helping Hands

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Helping Hands Page 2

by Laurie Halse Anderson


  I don’t know what to say to that. I’m in way over my head. I mean, I love animals, but I’ve only ever been around little ones, like bunnies and cats. Ponies or horses—whatever—they’re way bigger than bunnies and cats. They seem to be a lot more trouble, too.

  David strokes the brown and white pony through the window. “Let’s see if we can get you out here in the fresh air. Come on, buddy.” He turns to me. “Can you get some carrots or maybe an apple? We can use them to lure him out.”

  Now there’s something I can help with. I run past Babe, go inside the store, and snag some of Cuddles and Lolli’s carrots. But it’s no use. Buster still won’t move, not even for a yummy treat.

  “Horses and ponies are creatures of habit,” David says. “And some don’t like walking backward. I helped Mr. Quinn’s horse, Trickster, get used to his trailer. He didn’t like going in or out, either. Maybe Babe can help us out. Josh, bring her over here.”

  “Me?” I ask.

  “I don’t think Gus is going to help, do you?”

  I swallow hard and hope David doesn’t realize how nervous I am. Babe watches me carefully as I untie her lead. “Just don’t bite me, okay?” I whisper. Once she’s untied, I walk her to the trailer, and her hooves clip-clop on the asphalt behind me. She smells horsey: dusty and sweaty, with a hint of hay and Mom’s basil. Suddenly, she head-butts me right in the middle of my back and almost sends me crashing to the ground.

  “What the heck are you kids up to?” Gus shouts from across the parking lot. “I already got that one out.”

  “Buster shakes every time that dude yells,” David says, annoyed. “It’s okay, buddy, look, here comes Babe.”

  I hand him her lead and rub my back. “Careful. She thinks she’s a goat.”

  “Yeah, I saw that,” David says. “I think she likes you.”

  David leads Babe back into the trailer. The two ponies nuzzle each other’s necks, and Buster lets out a big sigh.

  “Okay then,” David says. “Let’s try this again.” He clicks his tongue. “That’s it, Buster. Just do like Babe is doing. Easy does it.”

  And sure enough, David manages to coax Buster to follow in Babe’s footsteps and back out of the trailer. “Good boy, Buster! That wasn’t so bad now, was it?”

  Buster snorts and looks around the parking lot, taking everything in: the corral, the back of the store, the Dumpster, and the line of excited kids sitting with Jules, their parents standing behind them. He keeps looking back to Babe, as if he wants her to tell him that everything is going to be okay.

  I understand the feeling totally.

  Buster has a small white star of fur on his forehead and a white patch on his muzzle, like Babe’s. His coat is a pretty combination of reddish-brown and white patches, but it’s matted down and dirty. His white legs are splattered with dried mud and manure. I was hoping that Buster would be younger and perkier than Babe, but he’s even more of a mess.

  David notices, too.

  “Hey buddy,” he says, touching the pony’s tangled mane. “When was the last time you were groomed?” He pats Buster on the head and the pony shies a bit. “It’s okay, we’ll take care of you.”

  David tells me to lead Babe into the pipe corral, and he follows right behind with Buster. The waiting kids clap, and Sophie starts singing her pony song again.

  “Thank you. Thank you.” David bows to the crowd and hams it up. “I’m a certified horse genius, if I do say so myself.”

  “Ha,” I say. “I wouldn’t go that far, but you don’t completely stink at pony handling.” I punch his shoulder, not too hard, just friendly. This could have been a nightmare without his help.

  “Ow, ow, ow!” David rubs his shoulder and fakes that he’s in pain. “You’re just jealous of my amazing horse-taming skills.”

  I try to smile because he’s just teasing, but the truth is I am jealous. It’s like David was born to deal with these ponies. Jules is a natural with rabbits—that’s why we call her the Bunny Whisperer. At Dr. Mac’s clinic, Maggie’s in charge of dogs, Sunita is the cat expert, and Brenna, well, she’s the nature girl who connects with all the wild critters. I like animals, too, but I don’t have special skills the way they do. In fact, I’m not sure I should be a Vet Volunteer at all.

  Gus slams the back door of the trailer closed. Buster startles and pulls at his lead rope.

  “Whoa there, buddy,” David says. “Everything’s fine.” Buster relaxes as David pets his neck. “You should have seen me with Trickster,” David says. “He was terrified of the trailer because he’d been in an accident in one. He’s a lot bigger and more powerful than these old ponies. He’s more than sixteen hands high.”

  “Hands?” I ask, confused.

  “Horses are measured in hands, didn’t you know that? Each hand is four inches. Buster and Babe are maybe ten hands high. You weren’t here at Thanksgiving, were you? I got to ride Trickster in the Ambler Thanksgiving parade. We looked pretty good, if I do say so myself. But you should really see my dad’s horse, King’s Shadow—”

  “Let’s get the pony rides started,” I interrupt. “You can tell me that other stuff later.”

  Mom pops her head out the back door and calls to me. “How’s it going out here?”

  “Great,” I smile and wave. “We’re just about ready.”

  Babe lifts one foot in the air like she is waving, too. Mom smiles and goes back in. Good thing she didn’t notice what Babe ate for breakfast.

  Chapter Four

  Where’s the grooming gear?” David asks Gus.

  Gus grunts and jerks his thumb toward the trailer.

  “Wait, what are you doing?” I ask, following David.

  “We have to groom Buster.”

  “No, we don’t. Look at all those kids. We need to get the saddles on.”

  David takes a faded plastic crate out of the back of the trailer and carries it to the corral. “Nobody rides until the ponies are ready.”

  I had no idea it was going to be this complicated. Gus should have showed up two hours early instead of half an hour late.

  David pulls a weird-looking thing the size of a hockey puck out of the crate.

  “This is a currycomb,” he says, working it through Buster’s coat. “You need to groom them, especially here, where the saddle goes. If you don’t pick out the burs and stickers, they’ll really hurt once the rider is on.”

  He trades the currycomb for a brush. “Most horses like to be groomed. Look how Buster is leaning into this. He’s already happier, which will make the pony rides safer for the kids. No one wants to ride a cranky pony.”

  Some of the kids in line are whining. I hear some parents grumbling, too, until Jules drowns them out by starting a sing-along to “Old MacDonald Had a Hardware Store.”

  Buster looks a whole lot better after he’s been brushed. I comb his mane clean while David starts on Babe. By the time I’m done, Buster stands a little taller, as if he knows he looks better and he’s proud of it.

  “Anytime now!” an impatient dad calls from the long line of waiting kids.

  David carries the saddles and bridles from the truck as I’m finishing Babe’s mane. I watch as he sets the saddles over the saddle pads and cinches up the girths. “Tacking up,” he calls it. The ponies take the bits in their mouths, and the bridles are buckled up around their jaws.

  “There’s a mounting block in the back of the truck,” Gus calls.

  David and I lift it down together and set it up inside the corral so kids can climb on and off the ponies.

  “Not that I mind,” David says, “but isn’t that guy supposed to be doing all this?”

  “He is,” I say. “But the whole point of the pony rides is to bring families to the store and to keep their kids happy. I think Gus would scare them all away.” I pause. “Look, you’ve already helped a lot and I really apprecia
te it, but you don’t have to stay if you don’t want to.”

  “You’re kidding me, right?” David stands. “Helping is what the Vet Volunteers are all about. We have to, or we face the wrath of Dr. Mac.” He grins so I know he’s joking. “My dad can’t pick me up until later this afternoon, and you could use a hand, so . . . can I stay?”

  It’s my turn to grin.

  “The Wrenches and Roses First Annual Pony Ride is officially open,” I shout. “Who’s first?”

  Sophie sprints across the parking lot before I can say another word, and David helps her onto Babe’s saddle. Sophie is singing as loudly as she can. I hope David’s grooming made Babe happy enough that she won’t mind the off-key tune.

  I hang back, unsure what to do.

  “Go ahead,” David urges. “That little guy at the front of the line, I think his name is Malik. He was in my sister’s class last year. Pick him up and put him on Buster.”

  “Right,” I say, trying to look more confident than I feel.

  I wave Malik over, and he runs to the corral and jumps up onto the mounting block. Buster stands perfectly still while I help Malik into the saddle. He shuffles his feet a bit as the little boy pats his neck.

  David has already walked Sophie and Babe halfway around the corral. “Go ahead,” he calls. “Take his lead.”

  I lead Buster and Malik slowly around the corral. Both boy and pony seem to be having fun. So far, so good.

  David and I lead the pony rides for the next hour, while Gus sleeps in a folding chair with his hat over his face. Jules helps by entertaining the kids in line. The kids are all happy, and their parents are smiling. I cross my fingers and hope that means they’ll turn into Wrenches & Roses customers.

  “So when was the last time you rode a horse?” David asks, once we’ve both settled into the routine.

  “Um . . . never,” I admit.

  “Never?” he asks. “Never, as in, not once in your entire life?”

  “Yeah, that’s usually what ‘never’ means.”

  “Man”—he pats Buster’s neck—“I don’t know if I could handle that.”

  “If you’d never been on a horse, you probably wouldn’t think it was such a big deal,” I point out.

  “I can’t remember a time when I wasn’t on a horse,” he says. “My dad was supposed to go to the Olympics, but it got canceled that year. We have pictures of me riding with him when I was two years old.”

  “My dad taught me how to play soccer,” I say, even though it isn’t exactly the truth.

  “That’s cool,” David says. “Dad and I are going riding tomorrow. He’ll be on King’s Shadow. When my dad is riding him, it looks like the two of them are flying.”

  “I help my dad with the store a lot,” I say. “You know, the family business.”

  I’m secretly wishing that my dad could afford a horse, or that he had the time to take me to the stables, or a soccer field, or anywhere.

  “You have to work here a lot, don’t you?” David asks.

  I’m saved from the need to answer him by Maggie and Zoe, who walk up to the corral, grinning and checking out our work with the ponies. They’re both granddaughters of Dr. Mac, our town veterinarian and the leader of the Vet Volunteers. Maggie’s lived with Dr. Mac since she was a baby, and now Zoe lives with them, too, since her mom is an actress working in Hollywood.

  “Looks like you have this under control,” Maggie says.

  “Thanks to David,” Jules says. She’s left the line of kids under the watchful eye of a mom with a baby in her arms.

  Zoe rolls her eyes. “Don’t say that too loud—you’ll make his head swell even bigger.”

  That makes David laugh. Babe swishes her tail like she’s joining him.

  “Did you guys hear about Ranger?” Maggie asks.

  “Mr. Fedor’s dog?” I ask. I haven’t met him yet, but the other volunteers say he’s a nice old man whose dog, Ranger, is always getting into trouble.

  “What happened this time?” David asks.

  “He tried to make friends with a porcupine,” Maggie says.

  I wince. “Ouch!”

  “Totally,” Zoe agrees.

  “Poor Ranger,” Jules says. “Is he going to be okay?”

  “Nothing keeps Ranger down,” Maggie says. “Gran said the hardest part was removing the quills stuck in his nose. He won’t go near a porcupine again, that’s for sure.”

  Just then, Buster lifts his tail and leaves a huge pile of poop on the parking lot.

  “Ewww!” says the little girl riding him. I’m thinking the same thing, but I try not to show it. Pony poop smells even grosser than it sounds.

  “I’ll get the shovel,” says Jules.

  “This is the perfect time for us to leave,” Maggie says, laughing. “Remember, guys, the clinic closed at noon today. Gran is taking us camping on the Lehigh River.”

  “Sounds like fun,” I say.

  “Not really. We have to sleep in a tent,” says Zoe, wrinkling her nose. “On the ground.”

  Zoe is more of a hotel kind of girl. A five-star hotel, if you please. With room service and a view.

  “What about the animals?” I ask.

  “Ranger went home with Mr. Fedor last night. Gran’s been planning this camping horror for months, so we don’t have any boarders,” Zoe says. “Sherlock Holmes is staying with a guy from Gran’s book club and Socrates will be very happy to have twenty-four hours of peace and quiet.”

  The first time I met Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Mac’s old basset hound, he drooled so much on my sneakers that I had to change my socks when I got home. Socrates, the clinic’s cat, still won’t let me get close enough to pet him. Maybe he senses that I’m not sure if I really belong with the group.

  “Is Dr. Gabe on call?” David asks.

  Dr. Gabe is the other vet who works with Dr. Mac.

  Maggie nods. “He’s at a conference in Philly right now,” she says. “But he’ll be back tonight.”

  “Gotta go, cousin,” Zoe says. “I’m not done packing. Gran says all we need are old T-shirts and shorts, but I think my clothes should match even if we’re in the middle of nowhere.”

  Maggie rolls her eyes. Zoe loves fashion. Maggie, not so much. Zoe likes to cook bizarre, healthy foods that smell gross and taste worse, while Maggie is a pizza, burgers, and wings girl. As far as I could tell, the only thing they have in common, besides their grandmother, is that they care about animals more than anything else.

  “Just remember, you have to carry what you pack,” Maggie says. “See you guys. Have fun!”

  “This would be a great weekend to go camping,” David says. “My dad’s taking me to the Chester County Horse Show tomorrow. You want to come with us?”

  “I can’t,” I say. “The ponies are going to be here tomorrow, too. It looks like Jules and I are going to be stuck working.”

  The words come out meaner than I’d planned, but the truth is, I’m getting a little fed up with David’s bragging about his horse experience and his father.

  Out on Main Street a car revs its engine and beeps its horn loudly. Buster startles, almost jerking the lead out of my hands.

  “Hold tight,” David calls. “If you’re calm, he’ll be calm.”

  I won’t miss David’s bragging tomorrow, but I sure will miss his help. I hope Jules and I can handle it.

  Chapter Five

  Soon another Vet Volunteer, Brenna Lake, shows up with her younger brother, Jayvee. You’d think Jayvee wouldn’t be very excited about boring ponies. He gets to hang out with all kinds of wild critters because his family runs a nature preserve and wild animal rehab center. But Jayvee is as horse-crazy as all the other kids, leaning forward to hug Buster and wave at Brenna, who is watching outside the corral with Edgar Allan Poe Crow on her shoulder.

  Yup, a crow. A real, live cro
w. I didn’t believe it the first time I saw it.

  Brenna gives Jules a hug. “This is so cool you have ponies here in the middle of town! I haven’t seen Jayvee this excited since winter vacation.”

  Jules grins and hugs her back. I’m glad my sister is finally making friends. We moved here in the middle of the school year, and things were bumpy for her, especially with Maggie. Life got a lot better once we joined the Vet Volunteers, although Jules has had an easier time fitting in with the group than me.

  “How often do these ponies get a break?” Brenna asks as I help Jayvee off Buster. “And when was the last time they had any food or water?”

  Brenna has strong opinions about how animals should be treated, and she isn’t shy about sharing them.

  “They’ve only been here a couple hours,” I explain. “Do they really need a break? We still have kids waiting for a ride.”

  “Brenna’s right,” David says, “though I hate to admit it. I should have been paying more attention. They need a water break now.”

  “Did they eat before you started working them?” Brenna asks, staring at me as intensely as her crow does.

  David glances at Gus, snoring in the shade. “Wouldn’t surprise me if they’re hungry, too,” he admits.

  Jayvee tugs on Brenna’s arm. “I’m hungry,” he says.

  “My mom has sandwiches and juice inside for anyone under ten,” I say.

  “Perfect,” Brenna says. She turns to the parents and kids waiting in the line. “The ponies need a short break, folks.”

  “We have snacks in the store for you. And lots of stuff on sale, too,” I add lamely. “Be sure to check out the hammer display.”

  • • • • •

  While David shows me how to loosen the saddle cinch under the ponies’ bellies, I ask him what they normally eat.

  “Fresh hay two or three times a day,” he says, “plus plenty of water, as long as they’re not hot from running around.” He ties Buster’s lead to the corral with a fancy knot. “Depending on the horse, it might get grain or special food. You need a salt lick, too, for the minerals.”

 

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