Crying, she felt her front horse's back legs touch the great Pacific. She was stuck. A human head, attached to three absolutely monstrous shire horse bodies, each facing a different direction. She was a total freak. She fainted from shock.
Several hours later, she woke back up, hoping that this was all just some crazy nightmare and she'd be back home, human as ever. When she opened her eyes, however, her worst fears were realized: she was staring down over the flowing mane, back and ass of a huge, tan shire horse, and she could tell that there were two other bodies, nearly the same as this one, to her back left and right, although she could not turn her head to see them, only catching a small amount if she turned her eyes all the way to one side or the other. She was a freak, a sideshow, a, well, monster.
"How am I supposed to live like... like... THIS??" she asked, dismayed at the sight of her chestnut tail swooshing in front of her vision. She got quiet upon saying this; she didn't sound human. What came out of her mouth WAS English, but it did not sound like the cute, elfin voice she had before all of this. She sounded like a talking horse, her voice much deeper than she was expecting. "I have to get out of here!" she thought. She turned backwards feeling her three bodies swivel instinctively. "Well, at least I don't have to relearn how to walk with all these legs," she sighed, as her almost 5 ton body thundered rhythmically back up the beach.
She realized, as she got back onto the sidewalk, just how hard life would be with these three gigantic bodies. She continued to run into things with either her left back or right back butt, considering she had almost no way to tell where they were by anything other than feel. She had to walk very slowly as well, as she could not see where she was walking as most of the bottom half of her field of vision was taken up by her prized tan ass. She could not look behind her, since her necks did not have nearly the amount of flexibility necessary: she could only turn her eyes.
Stopping as she walked into the mountains, with the sun just having gone down, she cried herself to sleep. "This was going to be a long life," she thought.