As the two girls rode past each other in opposite directions through the narrow entrance to the arena, Georgie gave Sybil a smile but it wasnât returned. When she recalled this later, Georgie thought she saw Sybil out of the corner of her eye, surreptitiously raising her whip. She didnât see what happened next, but suddenly Tyro had shot forward underneath her, bolting into the arena. Did Sybil hit Tyro with her whip? All Georgie knew was that Tyro was calm one moment and then heâd gone like a rocket.
âHoi! Tyro!â Georgie was so totally focused on hanging on to her pony she had completely stopped paying attention to the loudspeaker. When she finally had Tyro settled into a steady canter, she noticed that the warbling banter which normally poured out through the tannoy between rounds had stopped. There was only deafening silence as the crowd waited for her round to begin. Georgie began to panic. Had they rung the bell to start and she hadnât noticed? Had she missed her cue? She wasnât very experienced at showjumping but she knew that if they had rung the bell, then she only had a minute to cross the start line or she would be eliminated! She looked around at the audience, trying to find Lucinda. There was no sign of her trainer and still no sound from the loudspeaker. They must have rung the bell already!
In a mad panic, Georgie turned Tyro and headed back up the arena towards the start line. She did a quick loop at a brisk canter and then rode the black pony forward. She was half a stride over the line when she heard the bell ring out. She hadnât missed it after all! Well, that was fine nowâshe was off!
At the first jump, Tyroâs stride was too long and he leapt from too far back. Georgie was certain that he would drop his hind legs over the back rails and drop a pole, but he only contacted the rail gently with his fetlocks and the pole stayed in its cup.
At fence two she was back in control and rode the pony perfectly into the jump, taking it neatly. Tyro gave a little buck, flinging his legs up in high spirits as if to say, âpiece of cake!â
By the time they reached the bogey fence, the treble, Georgie had hit her stride. The final spread was really huge and she felt her tummy tie up in nervous knots, but she did what any good rider does when they are scaredâshe kicked on. âCome on!â she shouted at Tyro. He lifted up into the air and took the jump. They were still clear!
Then before she could even think about it, she was over the green plank upright and the last jump, a wide oxer made of pale blue rails, and then Georgie was through the flags and the crowd was clapping. It was the third clear round of the day!
âOh well done! Well done!â Lucinda raced up to her as she emerged from the arena.
âHe was genius, wasnât he?â Georgie enthused. âDid you see the way he took the treble?â
âYou were both brilliant!â Lucinda told her with a huge grin on her face. âYouâre through to the next round.â
âI donât think so!â a voice boomed out. Georgie looked up and saw the orange face of Mrs Hawley bearing down on them. If Mrs Hawley had looked thunderous earlier in the practice ring, now she looked positively volcanic.
âYouâre a cheat!â
These words were said with such venom that Georgie and Lucinda were dumbstruck. Unfortunately, Mrs Hawley wasnât and she continued with her vicious rant. âIâve reported you to the selector!â Mrs Hawley raved. âIâm going to see to it that you are eliminated!â
âWhat are you talking about?â Lucinda Milwood was baffled.
âYour daughter broke across the start line before the bell,â Mrs Hawley snarled. âEveryone saw it.â
âSheâs not my daughter,â Lucinda corrected her, âand this round wasnât being judged on time. Who cares if she crossed the line early?â
âItâs against the rules!â Mrs Hawleyâs face was puce with rage beneath the orange tan. âThe girl should be eliminated from the competition. Youâll see! Iâve already taken this to the highest level. The selector is on her way over here now!â
Through the crowds came a slender woman wearing dove grey jodhpurs and a navy blouse, her walnut-brown hair held back by a pair of stylish black sunglasses.
Mrs Hawley looked smug as the selector approached. The smugness rapidly vanished when the woman in grey jodhpurs took one look at Lucinda Milwood, shrieked with delight and gave her an enormous hug.
âLucy!â she exclaimed. âMy God! Lucy Milwood! Itâs been such a long time, but you havenât changed one bit!â
Georgieâs trainer laughed. âYou neither! Itâs so good to see you!â
Mrs Hawley was gasping like a goldfish. This was not the result she had been hoping for.
The selector ignored Mrs Hawley and turned her attention to Georgie. âSo this must be Ginnyâs daughter?â She had a strange expression on her face as she stared hard at Georgie. âYou are the spitting image of your mother. Letâs hope you can ride like her as well.â
âGeorgie,â Lucinda smiled, âIâd like you to meet the only rider who ever beat your mother around the cross-country course at Blainford Academy.
âSay hello to Tara Kelly.â
Chapter Four (#ulink_02ae0f95-a233-5ca0-8a2e-f18361a72a09)
The fact that Tara and Lucinda were clearly old friends only made matters worse as far as Mrs Hawley was concerned.
âBlatant favouritism!â she fumed.
Tara Kelly had been chief selector at Blainford for long enough to know how to handle pushy parents. âMrs Hawley,â she said firmly, âas Blainfordâs chief of admissions and head selector, I can assure you that I am completely impartial at all times.â
Mrs Hawley had a malicious glint in her eye. âSo does that mean youâll disqualify her?â
âThe rules clearly state that if a rider in any way gains an advantage by crossing the line before the bell then they will be disqualified,â Tara said.
Georgie felt her heart pounding in her ears. This couldnât be happening. It was bad enough to lose her chance of going to Blainford with that freak accident at the water jump. Now, to be eliminated again because of some crazy rule! Georgie looked at Sybil who was smiling wickedly from behind Taraâs back and waggling her whip at her.
âBut I didnât hear the bell,â Georgie protested, âit wasnât my fault.â
Tara ignored her. âAs I was saying,â she continued, âriders are disqualified if they have gained an advantage by crossing the line early. But since this round wasnât a jump-off against the clock the time didnât matter. Georgie gained nothing by crossing the line early.â
âSo.?â Mrs Hawley bristled.
âThere will be no elimination. Sheâs going through to the next round.â
Mrs Hawley stomped off angrily as Tara looked at her watch. âIâd better get back to the selectorsâ tent,â she said. âThere are still sixty riders to get through the first phase before lunch break.â
âWhy donât you come and meet us at my lorry for lunch?â Lucinda offered.
Tara shook her head. âI donât think that would be wise. We donât want to give the Mrs Hawleys of this world a chance to cry favouritism again, do we?â The chief selector turned to Georgie. âIâm surprised to see you here today, Georgina. I didnât think Ginnyâs daughter would be a showjumper.â
âIâm an eventer, really,â Georgie said, âat least, I want to be one.â
âGood!â Tara said brightly. âSo if you make it through the auditions I can look forward to having you in my cross-country classes.â
Georgie felt quite pleased until Tara added, âItâs the toughest course at Blainford. If a rider isnât good enough theyâre gone. Only half the students who start the year with me will make it through to the end. Itâs dangerous tooâthe cross-country department holds the record for more broken bones than the rest of the school put together. Perhaps you might like to reconsider and take up showjumpingâitâs a much safer option.â
And with that, Tara waved a brisk goodbye and headed back to the selectorsâ tent. Georgie was wide-eyed as she watched her go. âBroken bones? Is she running a cross-country class or Accident and Emergency?â
Lucinda sighed. âDonât be put off. Tara loves to come across as icy and strict when in fact sheâs.â Lucinda paused. âWell, actually, thatâs pretty much what sheâs like. Sheâs a perfectionistâand at her peak she was ranked one of the best riders in the world. Sheâs a brilliant teacher. If youâre lucky enough to get into her class at Blainford you should jump at the chance.â
Although Tara turned down Lucindaâs offer of lunch, they had company as Olivia and her mum came over to join them. For dessert Mrs Prescott brought jam tarts and Lucinda produced her irresistible ginger crunch.
Olivia had two slices and then pronounced that the butterflies in her tummy now felt even worse than before.
âIâve eaten too much! I wonât make it through in the jump-offs,â she groaned as she lay back on the ramp of the lorry holding her tummy.
âYes,â Georgie agreed, âit was my cunning plan to invite you over to scoff all the ginger crunch.â
Olivia and Molly had put in a very professional round that morning, jumping the course so smoothly and cleanly they made it look easy, which it wasnât. From the total pool of 116 riders, only a meagre fourteen had made it through to the next round. The rest were packing their horses into their lorries and trailers for the drive home.
âI canât believe Sybil Hawley got through,â Georgie groaned. âDid you hear her mum shrieking on the sidelines?â