got noeuwa tack,â said Lady Sara.
And Susan rose to it.
âI donât need any,â she said.
âOeuwa, bareback riding,â said Lady Sara. âAnd you steer by the ears, ya?â
Cassandra Fox said: âProbably canât afford them, out in the sticks . And stop that dwarf looking at my pony. Sheâs looking at my pony!â
âIâm only looking,â said Gloria.
âYou were . . . salivating,â said Cassandra.
There was a pattering across the cobbles and Susan swung herself up and on to the horseâs back.
She looked down at the astonished girls, and then at the paddock beyond the stables. There were a few jumps there, just poles balanced on barrels.
Without her moving a muscle, the horse turned and trotted into the paddock and turned towards the highest jump. There was a sensation of bunched energy, a moment of acceleration, and the jump passed underneath . . .
Binky turned and halted, prancing from one hoof to the other.
The girls were watching. All four of them had an expression of total amazement.
âShould it do that?â said Jade.
âWhatâs the matter?â said Susan. âHave none of you seen a horse jump before?â
âYes. The interesting point is . . .â Gloria began, in that slow, deliberate tone of voice people use when they donât want the universe to shatter, â. . . is that, usually, they come down again.â
Susan looked.
The horse was standing on the air.
What sort of command was necessary to make a horse resume contact with the ground? It was an instruction that the equestrian sorority had not hitherto required.
As if understanding her thoughts, the horse trotted forward and down. For a moment the hoofs dipped below the field, as if the surface were no more substantial than mist. Then Binky appeared to determine where the ground level should be, and decided to stand on it.
Lady Sara was the first one to find her voice.
âWeâll tell Miss Butts of youewa ,â she managed.
Susan was almost bewildered with unfamiliar fright, but the petty-mindedness in the tones slapped her back to something approaching sanity.
âOh yes?â she said. âAnd what will you tell her?â
âYou made the horse jump up and . . .â The girl stopped, aware of what she was about to say.
âQuite so,â said Susan. âI expect that seeing horses float in the air is silly, donât you?â
She slipped off the horseâs back, and gave the watchers a bright smile.
âItâs against school rules, anyway,â muttered Lady Sara.
Susan led the white horse back into the stables, rubbed him down, and put him in a spare loose-box.
There was a rustling in the hay-rack for a moment. Susan thought she caught a glimpse of ivory-white bone.
âThose wretched rats,â said Cassandra, struggling back to reality. âI heard Miss Butts tell the gardener to put poison down.â
âShame,â said Gloria.
Lady Sara seemed to have something boiling in her mind.
âLook, that horse didnât really stand in mid-air, did it?â she demanded. âHorses canât do that!â
âThen it couldnât have done it,â said Susan.
âHang time,â said Gloria. âThatâs all it was. Hang time. Like in basketball. 6 Bound to be something like that.â
âYes.â
âThatâs all it was.â
âYes.â
The human mind has a remarkable ability to heal. So have the trollish and dwarfish minds. Susan looked at them in frank amazement. Theyâd all seen a horse stand on the air. And now they had carefully pushed it somewhere in their memories and broken off the key in the lock.
âJust out of interest,â she said, still eyeing the hay-rack, âI donât suppose any of you know where thereâs a wizard in this town, do you?â
âIâve found us somewhere
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