One Sunday, late in the afternoon,
found Daylight across the bay in the Piedmont hills
back of Oakland. As usual, he was in a big motor-car,
though not his own, the guest of Swiftwater Bill, Luck’s
own darling, who had come down to spend the clean-up
of the seventh fortune wrung from the frozen Arctic
gravel. A notorious spender, his latest pile
was already on the fair road to follow the previous
six. He it was, in the first year of Dawson,
who had cracked an ocean of champagne at fifty dollars
a quart; who, with the bottom of his gold-sack in sight,
had cornered the egg-market, at twenty-four dollars
per dozen, to the tune of one hundred and ten dozen,
in order to pique the lady-love who had jilted him;
and he it was, paying like a prince for speed, who
had chartered special trains and broken all records
between San Francisco and New York. And here
he was once more, the “luck-pup of hell,”
as Daylight called him, throwing his latest fortune
away with the same old-time facility.
It was a merry party, and they had
made a merry day of it, circling the bay from San
Francisco around by San Jose and up to Oakland, having
been thrice arrested for speeding, the third time,
however, on the Haywards stretch, running away with
their captor. Fearing that a telephone message
to arrest them had been flashed ahead, they had turned
into the back-road through the hills, and now, rushing
in upon Oakland by a new route, were boisterously
discussing what disposition they should make of the
constable.
“We’ll come out at Blair
Park in ten minutes,” one of the men announced.
“Look here, Swiftwater, there’s a crossroads
right ahead, with lots of gates, but it’ll take
us backcountry clear into Berkeley. Then we can
come back into Oakland from the other side, sneak across
on the ferry, and send the machine back around to-night
with the chauffeur.”
But Swiftwater Bill failed to see
why he should not go into Oakland by way of Blair
Park, and so decided.
The next moment, flying around a bend,
the back-road they were not going to take appeared.
Inside the gate leaning out from her saddle and just
closing it, was a young woman on a chestnut sorrel.
With his first glimpse, Daylight felt there was something
strangely familiar about her. The next moment,
straightening up in the saddle with a movement he
could not fail to identify, she put the horse into
a gallop, riding away with her back toward them.
It was Dede Mason he remembered what Morrison
had told him about her keeping a riding horse, and
he was glad she had not seen him in this riotous company.
Swiftwater Bill stood up, clinging with one hand to
the back of the front seat and waving the other to
attract her attention. His lips were pursed for
the piercing whistle for which he was famous and which
Daylight knew of old, when Daylight, with a hook of
his leg and a yank on the shoulder, slammed the startled
Bill down into his seat.
“You m-m-must know the lady,” Swiftwater
Bill spluttered.
“I sure do,” Daylight answered, “so
shut up.”
“Well, I congratulate your good
taste, Daylight. She’s a peach, and she
rides like one, too.”
Intervening trees at that moment shut
her from view, and Swiftwater Bill plunged into the
problem of disposing of their constable, while Daylight,
leaning back with closed eyes, was still seeing Dede
Mason gallop off down the country road. Swiftwater
Bill was right. She certainly could ride.
And, sitting astride, her seat was perfect.
Good for Dede! That was an added point, her having
the courage to ride in the only natural and logical
manner. Her head as screwed on right, that was
one thing sure.
On Monday morning, coming in for dictation,
he looked at her with new interest, though he gave
no sign of it; and the stereotyped business passed
off in the stereotyped way. But the following
Sunday found him on a horse himself, across the bay
and riding through the Piedmont hills. He made
a long day of it, but no glimpse did he catch of Dede
Mason, though he even took the back-road of many gates
and rode on into Berkeley. Here, along the lines
of multitudinous houses, up one street and down another,
he wondered which of them might be occupied by her.
Morrison had said long ago that she lived in Berkeley,
and she had been headed that way in the late afternoon
of the previous Sunday evidently returning
home.
It had been a fruitless day, so far
as she was concerned; and yet not entirely fruitless,
for he had enjoyed the open air and the horse under
him to such purpose that, on Monday, his instructions
were out to the dealers to look for the best chestnut
sorrel that money could buy. At odd times during
the week he examined numbers of chestnut sorrels,
tried several, and was unsatisfied. It was not
till Saturday that he came upon Bob. Daylight
knew him for what he wanted the moment he laid eyes
on him. A large horse for a riding animal, he
was none too large for a big man like Daylight.
In splendid condition, Bob’s coat in the sunlight
was a flame of fire, his arched neck a jeweled conflagration.
“He’s a sure winner,”
was Daylight’s comment; but the dealer was not
so sanguine. He was selling the horse on commission,
and its owner had insisted on Bob’s true character
being given. The dealer gave it.
“Not what you’d call a
real vicious horse, but a dangerous one. Full
of vinegar and all-round cussedness, but without malice.
Just as soon kill you as not, but in a playful sort
of way, you understand, without meaning to at all.
Personally, I wouldn’t think of riding him.
But he’s a stayer. Look at them lungs.
And look at them legs. Not a blemish.
He’s never been hurt or worked. Nobody
ever succeeded in taking it out of him. Mountain
horse, too, trail-broke and all that, being raised
in rough country. Sure-footed as a goat, so long
as he don’t get it into his head to cut up.
Don’t shy. Ain’t really afraid,
but makes believe. Don’t buck, but rears.
Got to ride him with a martingale. Has a bad
trick of whirling around without cause It’s his
idea of a joke on his rider. It’s all just
how he feels One day he’ll ride along peaceable
and pleasant for twenty miles. Next day, before
you get started, he’s well-nigh unmanageable.
Knows automobiles so he can lay down alongside of
one and sleep or eat hay out of it. He’ll
let nineteen go by without batting an eye, and mebbe
the twentieth, just because he’s feeling frisky,
he’ll cut up over like a range cayuse.
Generally speaking, too lively for a gentleman, and
too unexpected. Present owner nicknamed him Judas
Iscariot, and refuses to sell without the buyer knowing
all about him first. There, that’s about
all I know, except look at that mane and tail.
Ever see anything like it? Hair as fine as
a baby’s.”
The dealer was right. Daylight
examined the mane and found it finer than any horse’s
hair he had ever seen. Also, its color was unusual
in that it was almost auburn. While he ran his
fingers through it, Bob turned his head and playfully
nuzzled Daylight’s shoulder.
“Saddle him up, and I’ll
try him,” he told the dealer. “I
wonder if he’s used to spurs. No English
saddle, mind. Give me a good Mexican and a curb
bit not too severe, seeing as he likes to
rear.”
Daylight superintended the preparations,
adjusting the curb strap and the stirrup length, and
doing the cinching. He shook his head at the
martingale, but yielded to the dealer’s advice
and allowed it to go on. And Bob, beyond spirited
restlessness and a few playful attempts, gave no trouble.
Nor in the hour’s ride that followed, save for
some permissible curveting and prancing, did he misbehave.
Daylight was delighted; the purchase was immediately
made; and Bob, with riding gear and personal equipment,
was despatched across the bay forthwith to take up
his quarters in the stables of the Oakland Riding Academy.
The next day being Sunday, Daylight
was away early, crossing on the ferry and taking with
him Wolf, the leader of his sled team, the one dog
which he had selected to bring with him when he left
Alaska. Quest as he would through the Piedmont
hills and along the many-gated back-road to Berkeley,
Daylight saw nothing of Dede Mason and her chestnut
sorrel. But he had little time for disappointment,
for his own chestnut sorrel kept him busy. Bob
proved a handful of impishness and contrariety, and
he tried out his rider as much as his rider tried
him out. All of Daylight’s horse knowledge
and horse sense was called into play, while Bob, in
turn, worked every trick in his lexicon. Discovering
that his martingale had more slack in it than usual,
he proceeded to give an exhibition of rearing and
hind-leg walking. After ten hopeless minutes
of it, Daylight slipped off and tightened the martingale,
whereupon Bob gave an exhibition of angelic goodness.
He fooled Daylight completely.
At the end of half an hour of goodness, Daylight,
lured into confidence, was riding along at a walk and
rolling a cigarette, with slack knees and relaxed
seat, the reins lying on the animal’s neck.
Bob whirled abruptly and with lightning swiftness,
pivoting on his hind legs, his fore legs just lifted
clear of the ground. Daylight found himself
with his right foot out of the stirrup and his arms
around the animal’s neck; and Bob took advantage
of the situation to bolt down the road. With
a hope that he should not encounter Dede Mason at
that moment, Daylight regained his seat and checked
in the horse.
Arrived back at the same spot, Bob
whirled again. This time Daylight kept his seat,
but, beyond a futile rein across the neck, did nothing
to prevent the evolution. He noted that Bob whirled
to the right, and resolved to keep him straightened
out by a spur on the left. But so abrupt and
swift was the whirl that warning and accomplishment
were practically simultaneous.
“Well, Bob,” he addressed
the animal, at the same time wiping the sweat from
his own eyes, “I’m free to confess that
you’re sure the blamedest all-fired quickest
creature I ever saw. I guess the way to fix you
is to keep the spur just a-touching ah!
you brute!”
For, the moment the spur touched him,
his left hind leg had reached forward in a kick that
struck the stirrup a smart blow. Several times,
out of curiosity, Daylight attempted the spur, and
each time Bob’s hoof landed the stirrup.
Then Daylight, following the horse’s example
of the unexpected, suddenly drove both spurs into
him and reached him underneath with the quirt.
“You ain’t never had a
real licking before,” he muttered as Bob, thus
rudely jerked out of the circle of his own impish mental
processes, shot ahead.
Half a dozen times spurs and quirt
bit into him, and then Daylight settled down to enjoy
the mad magnificent gallop. No longer punished,
at the end of a half mile Bob eased down into a fast
canter. Wolf, toiling in the rear, was catching
up, and everything was going nicely.
“I’ll give you a few pointers
on this whirling game, my boy,” Daylight was
saying to him, when Bob whirled.
He did it on a gallop, breaking the
gallop off short by fore legs stiffly planted.
Daylight fetched up against his steed’s neck
with clasped arms, and at the same instant, with fore
feet clear of the ground, Bob whirled around.
Only an excellent rider could have escaped being
unhorsed, and as it was, Daylight was nastily near
to it. By the time he recovered his seat, Bob
was in full career, bolting the way he had come, and
making Wolf side-jump to the bushes.
“All right, darn you!”
Daylight grunted, driving in spurs and quirt again
and again. “Back-track you want to go,
and back-track you sure will go till you’re
dead sick of it.”
When, after a time, Bob attempted
to ease down the mad pace, spurs and quirt went into
him again with undiminished vim and put him to renewed
effort. And when, at last, Daylight decided that
the horse had had enough, he turned him around abruptly
and put him into a gentle canter on the forward track.
After a time he reined him in to a stop to see if
he were breathing painfully.
Standing for a minute, Bob turned
his head and nuzzled his rider’s stirrup in
a roguish, impatient way, as much as to intimate that
it was time they were going on.
“Well, I’ll be plumb gosh
darned!” was Daylight’s comment.
“No ill-will, no grudge, no nothing-and after
that lambasting! You’re sure a hummer,
Bob.”
Once again Daylight was lulled into
fancied security. For an hour Bob was all that
could be desired of a spirited mount, when, and as
usual without warning, he took to whirling and bolting.
Daylight put a stop to this with spurs and quirt,
running him several punishing miles in the direction
of his bolt. But when he turned him around and
started forward, Bob proceeded to feign fright at
trees, cows, bushes, Wolf, his own shadow in
short, at every ridiculously conceivable object.
At such times, Wolf lay down in the shade and looked
on, while Daylight wrestled it out.
So the day passed. Among other
things, Bob developed a trick of making believe to
whirl and not whirling. This was as exasperating
as the real thing, for each time Daylight was fooled
into tightening his leg grip and into a general muscular
tensing of all his body. And then, after a few
make-believe attempts, Bob actually did whirl and caught
Daylight napping again and landed him in the old position
with clasped arms around the neck.
And to the end of the day, Bob continued
to be up to one trick or another; after passing a
dozen automobiles on the way into Oakland, suddenly
electing to go mad with fright at a most ordinary little
runabout. And just before he arrived back at
the stable he capped the day with a combined whirling
and rearing that broke the martingale and enabled
him to gain a perpendicular position on his hind legs.
At this juncture a rotten stirrup leather parted,
and Daylight was all but unhorsed.
But he had taken a liking to the animal,
and repented not of his bargain. He realized
that Bob was not vicious nor mean, the trouble being
that he was bursting with high spirits and was endowed
with more than the average horse’s intelligence.
It was the spirits and the intelligence, combined
with inordinate roguishness, that made him what he
was. What was required to control him was a strong
hand, with tempered sternness and yet with the requisite
touch of brutal dominance.
“It’s you or me, Bob,”
Daylight told him more than once that day.
And to the stableman, that night:
“My, but ain’t he a looker!
Ever see anything like him? Best piece of horseflesh
I ever straddled, and I’ve seen a few in my time.”
And to Bob, who had turned his head
and was up to his playful nuzzling:
“Good-by, you little bit of
all right. See you again next Sunday A.M., and
just you bring along your whole basket of tricks, you
old son-of-a-gun.”