A boy scout “Broncho buster”
The next morning before breakfast
Rob recounted to his chums the conversation he had
overheard the night before. The story of the ghost
of the ancient cliff dwellings was, it appeared, no
new thing on the Harkness ranch, which accounted for
its owner’s apathy in regard to it. Successive
batches of cow-punchers doing duty in the far pasture
at night professed to have seen the grisly object
on its nightly rounds, but nobody had ever had the
courage to investigate it.
After the morning meal had been dispatched,
Mr. Harkness announced that he expected to be busied
about the ranch for the morning.
“But, Harry, you take the boys
down to the corral,” he said, “and have
one of the men catch up some horses for them.
You boys know best the kind of stock you want, so
I’ll let you choose them.”
The boys thanked him, and a few moments
afterward he left the room. A short time later
he galloped off to make a round of the different sections
of the range and to prosecute inquiries about the renegade
Moquis.
The corral was, as was usually the
case, full of ponies of all colors and grades of disposition,
from mild beasts to fiery, half-broken bronchos.
As the boys neared the enclosure, a stout little cowboy
in a huge hairy pair of “chaps” approached
them, airily swinging a lariat. His eyes opened
and shut as rapidly as a loose shutter slat in a breeze.
Cowboys have nick-names for everybody. His was
of course “Blinky.”
“Good mornin’, Master
Harry. Want some cattle this a. m.?” he
inquired.
“Yes, Blinky. Have you got some good ones
caught up?”
“Why, yes, you can have White
Eye, and what kind of stock does your friends fancy?”
There was a twinkle in Blinky’s
fidgety optics as he asked this, for the boys, although
they had donned regular ranch clothes, still bore
about them that mysterious air which marks a “tenderfoot,”
as if they bore a brand.
“How about you, Rob?”
asked Harry, also smiling slightly. “Want
a bronc, or something more on the rocking-horse style?”
Now, although Rob could ride fairly
well, and both Tubby and Merritt had had some practice
on horseback, none of the boys were what might be
called rough riders. But something in Blinky’s
tone and Harry’s covert smile aroused all Rob’s
fighting blood.
“Oh, I want something with some
life in it,” he said boldly.
“Um-hum! The same will
do for me, but not too much life, if you please,”
chimed in Tubby, somewhat dubiously.
“Anything I don’t need
to use spurs on,” ordered Merritt, following
up the general spirit.
“All right, young fellers,”
said the cow-puncher, opening the corral gate.
“Come on in while I catch ’em up for you.”
The instant the rawhide began whirling
about Blinky’s head the ponies evidently realized
that something was up, for they began a wild race
round and round the corral, heads up and heels lashing
out right and left. The three tenderfeet regarded
this exhibition with some apprehension, but they were
too game to say anything.
“I’ll rope my own,”
said Harry, picking up a lariat which hung coiled
over a snubbing post near the gate. The ranch
boy stood by the post, leisurely whirling his rawhide
and just keeping the loop open till a small bay pony,
with a big patch of white round each eye, came plunging
by with the rest of the stampede. The lariat suddenly
became imbued with life. Faster it whirled and
faster, the loop finally sailing through the air gracefully
and landing in a rawhide necklace round White Eye’s
neck.
At almost the same instant that White
Eye became a captive, Blinky let his loop go, and
roped a small, active buckskin pony which, as soon
as it felt the loop on its neck, laid back its ears
and began squealing and bucking viciously.
“I guess that’s your pony,
Rob,” said Tubby generously, as the cow-puncher
drew the struggling little animal up to the snubbing
post, and tying him there, went into the barn for
a saddle.
“If you are in any hurry, you
can have him,” volunteered Rob.
“No, I guess I can wait. How about you,
Merritt?”
“Same here, I’m in no hurry.”
“Well,” thought Rob, “I’m
in for it now, and if that bronc doesn’t buck
me into the middle of next week, I’m lucky.”
After more struggles, the bridle and
saddle were forced on the buckskin, and Blinky cast
him loose, still maintaining a grip on the bridle,
however.
“All aboard!” he said, with a grin in
Rob’s direction.
Feeling anything but as confident
as he looked, Rob boldly put his foot in the heavy
wooden stirrup with its big leather tapadero covering,
and swung into the saddle. Hardly had he touched
it when a strange thing happened. The boy felt
as if an explosion must have occurred directly beneath
him, and he was being shot skyward by it. The
next instant the sensation changed, and as the broncho
struck the hard ground of the corral, all four legs
as stiff as drum sticks, Rob felt as if every bone
in his body was in process of dislocation.
“Stick to her, boy! Yow-ee-ee!”
Blinky, roaring with laughter, shouted
the advice. At this moment, too, just when Rob
would much rather not have had any spectators about,
several cow-punchers appeared as if by magic, and perching
themselves on the corral rails, settled down to enjoy
the spectacle.
“Whoop!” they yelled.
“That’s a regular steamboat bucker.”
“Go on, boy! Grip her!”
“Don’t go to leather!”
These and a hundred other excited
exclamations were borne dimly to Rob’s ears
as the buckskin threshed about, trying in vain to rid
itself of the troublesome boy. How he did it
Rob never knew, but he stuck like a cockle-burr, and
that without “going to leather,” or, in
other words, gripping any part of the saddle.
He must have been a born rider to stand the antics
of the maddened cayuse as he did. One second the
little brute, tiring of bucking, would rear backward
as if it must overbalance, and the next it would be
fairly standing on its head. Once it lay down
and tried to roll over, but the high horn of the saddle
prevented this. As it collapsed to the ground,
Rob skillfully slipped off, and when it struggled
upon its feet again, the boy was standing over it and
was as firmly in his seat as ever by the time the
animal was ready for a new performance.
All at once the buckskin made a mad
rush for the corral fence. It was five feet in
height, and Rob turned sick as he faced what seemed
inevitable disaster.
The yells of the cowboys, however,
made him determined to stick it out.
“I’ve stood it all this
time. I’ll stay with it if it kills me,”
thought the boy.
The next instant the little broncho
rose at the fence. The bars rose in front
like an impassable wall.
“He’ll never make it,”
was the thought that flashed through Rob’s head.
But even as the fear of a direful
crash flashed through his mind, the active little
animal he bestrode had cleared the barrier, its hind
hoofs just splintering the upper edge of the top rail.
The buckskin alighted on the other side, trembling
and sweating, with expanded nostrils and heaving flanks,
but its ears were no longer back, nor did its eyes
show white. The broncho seemed to have realized
that it had played its trump card and lost.
“Get up!” cried Rob, kicking
the shivering pony in the sides.
Meekly the little buckskin obeyed
the rein, and Rob rode it back toward the corral gate a
conquered animal. From that time on the buckskin
owned Rob as its master, and a better animal never
bore saddle. As the cow-punchers burst into a
loud chorus of admiring yells, wrung from them by
the plucky exhibition, Rob took off his hat and waved
it three times round his head. For the life of
him, he could not have abstained from this little
bit of braggadocio.
“Yip-ee!” he yelled.
“Good for you!” shouted
Harry. “It was a mean trick of Blinky, and
I was going to get him in a lot of trouble for it,
but all’s well that ends well.”
“Say, you were fooling all of
us. You must have been out with a Wild West show,”
exclaimed Blinky admiringly, as Rob patted the wet
shoulder of the conquered buckskin.
“I’m glad I could stick on,” declared
Rob modestly.
“Stick on!” echoed another
cow-puncher. “Why, you’re a broncho
buster, boy!”
“Well, I’ve had enough
of it to last me for a long time,” laughed Rob.
Two other ponies were soon caught
and saddled, and much to the delight of Tubby and
Merritt, they found that the cow-puncher’s love
of fun had been worked off when Rob was given the
buckskin, and that they were each provided with mounts
that tried no such tricks as standing on their heads.
“Now, then, come on,”
said Harry, when all were mounted. “We’ve
got a big round to make. The first ranch we’ll
head for will be Tom Simmons’s. He and
his two brothers will join, I’m sure. After
that we’ll finish up the others and issue a
call for a meeting.”
The remainder of the day was spent
in the saddle, with a brief stop for a noonday dinner
at the Simmons ranch. By the end of the day the
Boy Scouts’ list contained ten names, which
were as follows: Tom, Jack and Bill Simmons,
Eph and Sam Ingalls, Henry Randolph, Charley and Frank
Price, Silas Lamb and Jeb Cotton.
All the would-be scouts had been ordered
to report, three days from the day of their signing
on, at the Harkness ranch. In the meantime the
boys wrote to Eastern headquarters for organization
papers, which, as Rob and his companions were already
so well known, they anticipated no difficulty in receiving
without delay, which, indeed, proved to be the case.
Rob had, meanwhile, received a letter from Hampton
which reported the successful formation of another
patrol in that village where the famous Eagles first
saw the light.
The interval between the call for
the meeting and the meeting itself the boys put in
in practicing riding and shooting. As they all
three were familiar with the rifle and revolver, even
that brief practice made them fairly expert with firearms
and their riding improved every day.
Mr. Harkness and Mr. Simmons had consented
to act as Scout Masters, and were present at the first
meeting of the organization. Rob, on account
of his experience as leader of the Eagle Patrol, was
voted in as leader, with Merritt and Harry as corporals.
Tubby was appointed a sort of drill master and instructor
to the new scouts. This done, they all dispersed,
subject to immediate call.
As the ranches of Mr. Harkness and
his neighbors, though separated widely by actual distance,
were each joined by telephone, it was decided that
it would be an easy matter to assemble the scouts at
a given rendezvous. The opportunity to test this
came sooner than any of the boys expected. One
afternoon, about a week after the formation meeting,
during which interval Tubby had held two drill nights,
a cow-puncher on a sweat-covered horse galloped into
the corral. Slipping off his exhausted animal,
he dashed at top speed toward the house.
“The cattle in the far pasture
have stampeded,” he panted, bursting into the
rancher’s office, “and are headed for the
Graveyard Cliffs!”
“Boys, boys!” shouted
Mr. Harkness, hastily springing up from his account
books and jamming a sombrero on his head. “Here’s
a chance to show your boy scouts some action.
Here, you, Blinky, saddle my horse and the boys’
animals! Sharp work now! There’s not
a moment to lose! We must head them off!”