Pony Passion

Pony Passion Read Free

Book: Pony Passion Read Free
Author: Harriet Castor
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entire life.
    Does that ever happen to you too? Does time seem to whizz by when you’re having a laugh and really drag when you’re miserable? To me, two weeks of holiday can go five billion times quicker than two weeks of school. What a bummer.
    Well, this maths lesson was exactly like that. I thought the clock had broken, its hands were moving so slowly.
    I was back at my old desk, next to Rosie and slap bang in front of Frankie and Kenny. Of course I was ignoring them. But ignoring people is such hard work! You have to concentrate on them all the time, to make sure you don’t do something normal by mistake, like look at them or ask to borrow a pen.
    Mrs Weaver had written up a load of sums on the board. We were supposed to be working quietly on our own, but I could hear rustling and whispering around me, so I knew the rest of the Sleepover Club were doing something. Saying mean things about me probably, I thought.
    But then Rosie slipped a folded piece of paper on to my desk. I opened it, and this is what I saw:

    I was so relieved, it felt like the sun had just come out inside my head. “Oh, guys!” I said, turning round to them with the biggest grin on my face. “I’m sorry too!”
    We tried to have a group hug, but it was tricky because Fliss was sitting on the other side of the aisle. And then Mrs Weaver spotted us – “I said no conferring, you girls!” – so we had to turn back to our desks. But I mouthed, “See you at lunch!” and the others all nodded.
    It was the best making-up ever. We had a proper hug as soon as the bell went, and then I did high fives with everyone.
    “It’s a nightmare falling out,” said Kenny. “Let’s not do it again, all right?”
    I nodded, grinning and feeling teary at the same time. “New club resolution.”
    “Seconded!” said Rosie.
    “Thirded!” yelled Frankie.
    “You can’t say thirded,” said Fliss. “But I know what you mean.”
    While we were waiting in the lunch queue the M&Ms swanned past with their trays already full. They’re such greedy guts, they always push to the front.
    “Untwisted your knickers yet?” asked the Goblin (that’s our name for Emily Berryman) in her weird gruff voice.
    “What a shame you’ve got the worst project,” smarmed Emma Hughes. “But then, your presentation’s bound to be pathetic, so it doesn’t really matter, does it?”
    “Actually, Transport is the coolest subject,” said Kenny, “and anyone with even half a brain can see that.”
    “That’s not what you were saying to Lyndsey at break,” said the Goblin.
    “You sneaky little eavesdropper!” gasped Fliss. “You’ve no right listening in to private conversations!”
    The Goblin snorted. “Well, what’s the pointwhen they’re as boring as yours?”
    And before any of us could reply they sailed off with their noses in the air, like the silly stuck-up idiots that they are.
    “Grrr! What would I give to squash those two toad-faces into a big pile of mushy peas!” growled Kenny.
    “We’ve got to make sure our project is a squillion times better than theirs,” said Frankie. “At least!”
    “We will,” said Rosie firmly, linking arms with me.
    Sitting at a different table from the M&Ms, we soon forgot all about them. Kenny kept making farty noises with the ketchup bottle, which made everyone fall about, and Frankie did her impression of Mrs Weaver in a bad mood, which is freakily good. I’d cheered up loads, but there was just one more thing I wanted to say.
    “Transport is definitely the coolest subject, of course,” I began sheepishly, not meaning it at all, “but, guys – you’re right that I’ve missedsome Sleepover Club things because of the stables. It won’t happen again, I promise.”
    “It doesn’t matter,” said Frankie, waggling a chip in the lake of ketchup she’d made on her plate. “We all do other things, like Fliss goes to ballet and Kenny goes to those tedious footie matches. Oof!” Kenny’d grabbed her lunch tray

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