Sunshine Stables: Sophie and the Spooky Pony - Olivia Tuffin - E-Book

Sunshine Stables: Sophie and the Spooky Pony E-Book

Olivia Tuffin

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Beschreibung

At Sunshine Stables, dreams become adventures! Young pony fans will love this fantastic pony club series from Olivia Tuffin. Sophie loves playing tricks and telling jokes at pony camp. When the ponies start acting strangely, Sophie suspects a very spooky explanation, but no one will believe her! She and her beautiful Exmoor pony, Gorse, will need all their courage to solve this mystery themselves... Packed with adventure and full of heart, Olivia's huge knowledge and passion for ponies shines on every page. Beautifully illustrated throughout by Jo Goodberry, this is a perfect pony story for readers aged 7+. Don't miss the other Sunshine Stables stories! Poppy and the Perfect Pony Gracie and the Grumpy Pony

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Gorse stopped dead and snorted, and the hairs on the back of Sophie’s neck stood up. It was as though every other pony in the yard was looking in the same direction. Holding on to Gorse’s thick mane, Sophie peered into the darkness…

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FOR OUR OWN SUPER SOPHIE

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CHAPTER 1

Sophie wiggled her nose a bit, feeling the tickle and prickle of the soft hay. At least it smelt good, she thought, breathing in – like summer and fresh air and ponies. Crouching lower still, she grinned, trying to stop herself from giggling out loud and giving the game away. She could hear Gracie now, chatting away to Willow and Poppy. They were coming into the barn, the door was opening with a creak, the voices getting louder. Now they were walking up to where the sweet meadow hay was neatly stacked, so they could fill their hay nets. It was perfect and she was ready. 2

Three, two, one. “BOO!”

Leaping up from behind the bales, hay stuck in her dark curls, Sophie laughed as her friends jumped, dropping their nets.

“Got you!” she said with a chuckle, ignoring their glares. “Again!”

3 Gracie rolled her eyes and tutted. “Every time!” She said. But she was sort of laughing now and threw a handful of hay at Sophie in response. Not that it would make any difference – it was already all over Sophie’s camp T-shirt and jodhs, as well as tangled in her hair.

“Ha!” Sophie said as she joined her friends. “You should know by now.”

Willow was busy filling her hay net, her glossy brown hair tied back in a ponytail. She was wearing jodhs and a running top that had her name in red letters across the back. Willow ran cross-country races with the town running club and was often in the local paper for her achievements.

“Sophie,” she said once the giggles had died down, “have you not finished your stable? We’ve got to be in the arena in ten minutes! It’ll take you that long to get all that hay off you!” 4

“Of course I’ve finished!” Sophie said airily. She’d quickly swept up the shavings, and got Jack, who lived on-site at Vale Farm, to help her with the rest.

“You know Lainey might get cross if you haven’t finished the stable, though,” Willow replied slightly doubtfully. “You remember what she said at the start of camp? How things had to be done properly?”

“I know, I know!” Sophie said cheerfully. “And it is done. Gorse is back in, all happy. Don’t worry, I remember the camp rules!”

Sophie had been looking forward to pony camp at Vale Farm, the local riding stables, for ever. Lainey was Jack’s mum and owned the stables. She had run the camps for a couple of years and they were very popular, especially with children like Sophie who didn’t own their own pony but 5 longed to. There were lessons, and a beach ride, and even a camp cookout in one of the fields to look forward to. It was pony heaven! Sophie smiled, remembering the moment her mum had agreed to book her a place at the camp, and she’d leapt about crazily.

“Oh, Sophie.” Her dad had smiled once she’d finally calmed down. “Your grandmother would be so happy. It’s a shame she’s so far away.”

Sophie sighed every time her dad reminded her of this. Her grandmother still lived in Nigeria, where her dad had been born and raised. He’d met her mum when he came over to England to study. Her grandmother loved horses and had even kept some in her younger days. She and Sophie spoke regularly – it was always so good to wave to each other on screen. Sophie thought back to their last conversation, when she’d told her grandmother all about the upcoming camp. 6

“I’ll take loads of photos,” she had said. “Then you can see how much I’ve improved.”

“Oh, I know you will have,” her grandmother replied. “Ponies were always in your blood, Sophie. Your brothers still showing no interest?”

And Sophie had sighed dramatically.

“No,” she said. “Still into football, and boring old cricket like Dad. I mean, why stand in a field catching a ball when you could be galloping around it?”

Her grandmother laughed heartily at that. “Maybe they’ll come round.”

“I doubt it,” Sophie replied. “No one cares about horses, apart from you.”

When her mum had dropped her off at camp, her older brothers, Samuel and Joseph, had been in the car as well, dressed in their team tracksuits ready for a cricket match, their kit bags jostling for space with Sophie’s pony things. 7

“Is this it?” Samuel had asked, looking up at the stables with a wrinkle of his nose. “Just looks like a farm.”

“It’s a riding school,” Sophie had explained. “The owner competed at Badminton Horse Trials. That’s really famous – you have to be super skilled to do that. It’s dressage, showjumping and cross-country – a three-day event. Why don’t you come and look?”

“Nah, we’re good here,” Joseph said, flicking through his phone as he read the latest football results. He and Samuel were obsessed with knowing which team was winning at what. “I don’t want to be late for cricket. And, anyway, riding’s not actually a real sport, is it?”

“Of course it is!” Sophie cried. “If it wasn’t, it wouldn’t be at the Olympics, would it?”

“But how much skill do you need to just sit there?” Samuel grinned. 8

Sophie had rolled her eyes, letting herself out of the car. There was no point trying to explain. No one really listened, or got her love of horses, like her grandmother.

But it was her mum who’d found Vale Farm, and Lainey, about a year before. Her grandmother had insisted on paying for the lessons. Sophie had thrown herself into learning, and had been on the waiting list for camp for what had felt like for ever. She’d asked her mum to sign her up as soon as she’d heard about it, after a lesson one day. And, now she was here, she was going to enjoy every minute!

Even better, after learning to ride on Henry, a sweet but steady cob, she had been paired with Gorse, who she’d loved from the first moment she set foot in the yard. Gorse was a beautiful Exmoor pony. He was bay with rich dapples running over his strong shoulders and a lustrous 9 black mane and tail. His eyes were ringed with a lighter brown, which Lainey had explained was known as “toad eye”.

Sophie had laughed, wrinkling her nose. She’d come to see Gorse after her lesson a few weeks earlier. “It doesn’t sound very nice for such a beautiful pony.”

“No,” Lainey had agreed with a chuckle. “But he’s a fantastic example of an Exmoor.” She had given Gorse a friendly pat. “Did you know, he was champion at the Exmoor Breed Show? It was a wild, windy day on top of the moor and by the end of it he had so many sashes on you could barely see him. He loved to strut his stuff in the ring.”

“Do you think he misses those days?” Sophie had asked, and Lainey had smiled. 10