Sally wouldn’t have thought it was possible to surprise her anymore, not after the morning she’d had. But as the horse’s head bent and shook, crackling the twigs that made it up as it did, she couldn’t take her eyes off it. It looked as if it had changed the material it was made out of into something softer and more flexible, just by Rube talking to it. And when it finally focused its glass eyes on them and opened its mouth, it spoke in Uncle Colwyn’s voice.
“Ruby? Girls? Is that you?”
“Yes,” said Rube, and her voice sounded like a kettle whistling, it was so high-pitched and breathy. She almost seemed to breathe the word in instead of out.
“Are you alright? I’m so sorry I wasn’t here when you arrived. If I could have been…”
“How are you talking through a horse’s head?” This was Jeanette, who was still frozen to the spot next to Sally.
The horse turned its head so it could look at her properly. “It’s my security system. When I’m away from the house, I can keep an eye on…”
“Where are you?” asked Rube.
“I’m… It’s a little hard to explain. Have you seen the paths around the gardens? The ones with the white walls?”
“We’ve seen them,” said Rube, “We’ve just been to Wallfruit Cove.”
“Ah,” said Uncle Colwyn, as if Rube had cut him off mid-thought, “I suppose I should have guessed. You wouldn’t have known to speak to Falada if you hadn’t seen some of it. Well… have you heard of the Iridescence family?”
“Yes!” Sally was pretty sure all three of them had shouted out at once. To her, it was as if Colwyn had made them jump and say it against their will.
The horse flinched a little at the force of their answer. “I see. Well, they won’t let me leave. I went to their estate to bargain for the release of a hostage, but he managed to escape while I was there, and now they think I only came here as a distraction.”
Rube nodded. “This hostage- his name wasn’t Kai, was it?”
“Yes- Kai Domino. Have you met him? Did he get out safely? I heard he’d been injured…”
“He’s fine. Sally actually…” Rube turned to look at her. Sally felt a bit of pride welling up in her chest. Rube and Jeanette had probably thought she was wasting her time trying to make that moth better, and now look where they were. “He’s in Wallfruit Cove. They said he could stay.”
“Oh, that’s wonderful.” Sally didn’t know how you could tell if a horse was smiling, but she thought she could hear it in his voice.
“Now what about you?” asked Rube, “How do we get you out of where they’re keeping you?”
“You don’t,” said the horse, “I’ll be fine. They’re not stupid people. Sooner or later, they’ll realise it’s not worth the trouble they’ll have with the Opal Hill council, and they’ll let me go.”
“But what if they don’t? What if they try the same thing on you as they did on Kai?”
“Ruby, they won’t. Not on a member of our family. Trust me. I’ll be back in a day or two. Until then, you three just sit tight and stay in the house. You’re safe here.”
“When we were in Wallfruit Cove, they said that the Opal Hill council doesn’t do enough to rein in the Iridescence family. It doesn’t sound as if you can rely on them doing their jobs.”
“They may not do enough, but you mustn’t think that they do nothing. The Iridescence family know that they mustn’t push things too far. In a couple of days…”
A strange, chiming noise rang out from the back of the room. It took a moment or two for Sally to realise that it was the phone ringing.
*
It didn’t occur to Rube until later that she really should have sent Jeanette or Sally to answer the phone. She was the one talking to the horse’s head. She had her hands full. Once a big sister, always a big sister, she guessed.
The phone was a red plastic thing on a little side-table near the French windows at the back. It had one of those circular dials on the front that Rube had never learned how to use. She wouldn’t have been surprised if she’d found out that Colwyn had had the same one since the Seventies. She picked up the receiver and tried to sound calm. “Hello?”
“Ruby, it’s your dad. Are your sisters there, too?”
Rube’s heart sank. The voice had a jolly tone to it, but she knew how quickly that would evaporate when he didn’t get his way. “Yes. How are you?”
“Could you put your mother on? I want a word with her.”
Here it was. “Um, she’s not here, I’m afraid.”
“Put her on.” The voice was still calm, but he’d let a little bit of coldness seep into it. “Do it.”
“No, she’s really not here. She didn’t come with us.” A second later, she could have kicked herself. She’d basically told him that their mother was home alone.
“Oh, I see.” The coldness had gone, for now. Rube even thought she heard him chuckle. “New bloke, is it?”
“What?”
“Is that why she wanted you off her hands for the summer?”
“Um… I don’t think so…” Rube couldn’t even remember the last time Mum had been out on a date.
“Well, tell your uncle that I’m coming to pick you up.” Rube heard him jangle his keys, like an actor using a prop. “If she can’t be bothered to take care of you, then I’m going to have to step in, aren’t I?”
Rube wondered what her father would have thought if he’d seen what Rube had been doing before he rang. He’d probably have got angry. That was how he usually reacted to things that surprised him. “No, we’re OK here…”
“I’m coming to pick you up. No arguments.” And then he hung up on her.
Rube looked back at her sisters, still standing by the horse’s head. They’d only heard her half of the conversation, but that had probably been enough. They’d got the gist.
“So, that’s that decided,” she told Colwyn, “We’re not staying in the house.”
(To be continued)