high-pitched laugh. âYou canât be a princess because a real princess would never get her hooves dirty. Youâre just an ordinary farm pony like Mucker.â
âOf course Iâm a real princess,â Stardust said angrily.
âNo, youâre not,â Cinders replied. âThatâs what my mom says anyway.â
With that, Cinders swept past Stardust, taking great care not to step in the mud.
Stardustâs brown eyes glittered with tears. âWhat did she mean?â she asked.
âIgnore her,â Pippa said, stroking Stardustâs mud-splattered nose. âShe was just being nasty to upset you.â
âAre you sure?â
âYes,â Pippa said, even though she wasnât convinced. Cinders had sounded threatening and as if she knew something, but Pippa didnât want to frighten Stardust. She continued to stroke her nose, until she stopped shaking and calmed down.
âCinders is right, though,â Stardust said at last. âIf I have to help with the harvest, then I should be given a cleaner job.â
Mucker let out a snort of surprise. âGetting dirty has never bothered you before. Weâve always had a lot of fun together on the farm.â
âNot anymore,â Stardust said firmly. âItâs time I started acting like a real princess.â
To Muckerâs dismay, Stardust flatly refused to help further. Instead she tore up some grass and used it to wipe the mud from her face, legs, and hooves.
âIâm going to ask Crystal for something else to do,â she announced. âSomething cleaner and more worthy of a princess pony.â And she trotted off.
âIâll never get to see Stardust if she stops visiting the farm,â Mucker said sadly. âIâd love to visit her at the castle but thatâs not going to happenânot when I come from a farming family. Besides, Iâm too busy with farmwork to attend the Royal Court.â
Pippa started to go after Stardust but quickly changed her mind. Poor Mucker was so upsetâshe couldnât leave him now. Keeping one eye on Stardust, she continued to help with the harvest while also keeping a lookout for shiny objects in the mud.
It was a long, hard morning. Pippaâs back ached and her hands grew sore from gripping her tools and from all the cutting work. In the distance she could see that Stardust wasnât making much progress with her new job of collecting the cut grass. A cloud of horseflies was buzzing around her head, and each time Stardust swatted them away with her tail they just flew at her again.
âGo away, you awful things,â Stardust shouted, angrily stomping a hoof.
The horseflies were becoming even more agitated. Buzzing loudly, they flew in circles around Stardustâs head. Pippa ran over to see if she could help. But after swatting repeatedly at the horseflies with her hands, she realized that it wasnât making any difference. She stood still and listened. The horseflies were making the same funny buzzing noise, like whispery voices, that sheâd heard earlier. She decided to try something.
âAnyone would think that the horseflies were trying to talk to you,â Pippa said.
Stardust stopped being cross and whinnied with laughter. âTalking horseflies? Thatâs crazy!â she exclaimed. âThatâs the funniest thing Iâve heard all morning. Oh, lookâthereâs Muckerâs older brother, Trojan. He helps run the farm with Muckerâs dad. He must have come to check on us. Letâs say hello.â
âWait,â Pippa said, still trying to figure out if she was imagining things or if the horseflies really were trying to tell them something.
But Stardust was already on her way over to the two brothers. Pippa followed.
âHi, Trojan. Have you come to help or are you here to boss us around like Crystal?â she asked.
Trojan blushed at the mention of
Connie Brockway
Cynthia Cooke
Clarissa Pincola Estes
Diana Kirk
Gavin Chait
Lesley Pearse
Tianna Xander
Avyn Pearl
Anne Saunders
Pamela Clayfield