When Bull left the dining room that
night after supper, Mrs. Bridewell looked across the
table at her husband with horror in her eyes.
“Did you see?” she gasped.
“He ate the whole pot of beans!”
“Sure I seen him,” and he grinned.
“But — he’ll eat us out of house
and home! Why, he’s like a wolf!”
Bridewell chuckled with superior knowledge.
“He’s ate enough for three,” he
admitted, “but he’s worked enough for six — besides,
most of his wages come in food. But work?
I never seen anything like it! He handled more
timbers than a dozen. When it come to spiking
them in place he seen me swinging that twelve-pound
sledge and near breaking my back. ‘I think
it’s easier this way,’ he says. ’Besides
you can hit a lot faster if you use just one hand.’
And he takes the hammer, and sends that big spike
in all the way to the head with one lick. And
he wondered why I didn’t work the same way!
Ain’t got any idea how strong he is.”
Mrs. Bridewell listened with wide
eyes. “The idea,” she murmured.
“The idea! Where’s he now?”
Her husband went to the back door.
“He’s sitting over by the pump talking
to Tod. Sitting talking like they was one age.
I reckon he’s sort of half-witted.”
“How come?” sharply asked
Mrs. Bridewell. “Ain’t Tod got more
brains than most growed-up men?”
“I reckon he has,” admitted the proud
father.
And if they had put the same question
to Bull Hunter, the giant would have agreed with them
emphatically. He approached the child tamer of
Diablo with a diffidence that was almost reverence.
The freckle-faced boy looked up from his whittling
when the shadow of Bull fell athwart him, with an
equal admiration; also with suspicion, for the cowpunchers,
on the whole, were apt to make game of the youngster
and his grave, grown-up ways. He was, therefore,
shrewdly suspicious of jests at his expense.
Furthermore, he had seen the big stranger
heaving the great timbers about and whirling the sledge
with one hand; he half suspected that the jokes might
be pointed with the weight of that heavy hand.
His amazement was accordingly great when he found
the big man actually sitting down beside him, cross-legged,
and he was absolutely stupefied when Bull Hunter said,
“I’ve been aiming at this chance to talk
to you, Tod, all day.”
“H’m,” grunted Tod
noncommittally, and examined the other with a cautious
side glance.
But the face of Bull Hunter was unutterably
free from guile. Tod instantly began to adjust
himself. The men he most worshiped were the lean,
swift, profanely formidable cowpunchers. But there
was something in him that responded with a thrill
to this accepted equality with such a man as Bull
Hunter. Even his father he had seen stricken to
an awed silence at the sight of Bull’s prowess.
“You see,” explained Bull
frankly, “I been wondering how you managed to
handle Diablo the way you do.”
Tod chuckled. “It’s
just a trick. You watch me a while with him,
you’ll soon catch on.”
But Bull shook his head as he answered,
“Maybe a mighty bright man might figure it out,
but I’m not good at figuring things out, Tod.”
The boy blinked. He was accustomed
to the studied understatement of the cowpunchers and
he was accustomed, also, to their real vanity which
underlay the surface shyness. But it was patent
that Bull Hunter, in spite of his size, was truly
humble. This conception was new to Tod and slowly
grew in his brain. His active eyes ran over the
bulk beside him; he almost pitied the giant.
“Besides,” pondered Bull
heavily, “I guess there’s a whole lot of
bright men that have seen you handle Diablo, but they
couldn’t make out what you did. They tried
to ride Diablo and got their necks nearly broken.
They were good riders, but I’m not. You
see, Diablo’s the first horse I’ve ever
seen that could really carry me.” He added
apologetically, “I’m so heavy.”
No vanity, certainly. He gestured
toward himself as though he were ashamed of his brawn,
and the heart of Tod warmed and expanded. He
himself would never be large, and his heart had ached
because of his smallness many a time.
“Yep,” he said judiciously,
“you’re pretty heavy. About the heaviest
I ever seen, I guess. Maybe Hal Dunbar is as
big, but I never seen Hal.”
“I’ve heard a good deal about Hal, but — ”
He stopped short and stiffened.
Tod saw that the eyes of the big man had fixed on
the corral in which stood Diablo. A puff of wind
had come, and the great black had thrown up his head
into it, an imposing picture with mane and tail blown
sidewise. Not until the stallion turned away
from the unseen thing which he had scented in the wind,
did Bull turn to his small companion with a sigh.
Tod nodded, his eyes glinting.
“I know,” he said. “I used to
feel that way — before I learned how to handle
Diablo.” He interpreted, “You feel
like it’d be pretty fine to get onto Diablo’s
back and have him gallop under you.”
“About the finest thing in the
world,” sighed Bull Hunter. He cast out
his great hands before him as he tried to explain the
mysterious emotions which the horse had excited in
him. “You see, Tod, I’m pretty big
and I’m pretty slow. Most folks have horses,
and they get about pretty lively on ’em, but
I’ve always had to walk.”
The enormity of this lack made Tod
stare, for travel and horses were inseparably connected
in his mind. He shuddered a little at the thought
of the big man stalking across the burning and interminable
sands of the desert or toiling through the mountains.
It seemed to him that he could see the signs of that
pain stamped in the face of Bull Hunter, and his heart
leaped again in sympathy.
“So when I saw Diablo — ”
Bull paused. But Tod had understood. Suddenly
the boy became excited.
“Suppose you was to learn to
ride Diablo before Hal Dunbar come to try him out?
Suppose that?”
“Could you teach me?”
the giant asked in an almost awed whisper.
The child looked over his companion
with a vague wonder. It would be a tremendous
responsibility, this teaching of the giant, but what
could be more spectacular than to have such a man
as his pupil? But to share his unique empire
over Diablo — that would be a great price
to pay!
“No,” he decided, “it
wouldn’t do. Besides, suppose even I could
teach you how to ride Diablo — with a saddle,
which I don’t think I could — what
would happen when Hal Dunbar come up to these parts
and found that the hoss he wanted was somebody else’s?
He’d make an awful fuss — and he’s
a fighting man, Bull.”
He said this impressively, leaning
a little toward the giant, and he was rewarded infinitely
by seeing the right hand of the giant stir a little
toward the holster at his thigh.
“I guess I’d have to take
my chance with him,” was all Bull answered in
his mildest tone.
Tod was beginning to guess that there
was a certain amount of mental strength under this
quiet exterior. He had often noted that his father,
who made by far the most noise, was more easily placated
than his mother, in spite of her gentle silences.
The strength of Bull Hunter had a strain of the same
thing about it.
“You’d take a chance with
Hal Dunbar?” he repeated wonderingly. He
trembled a little, with a sort of nervous ecstasy at
the thought of that coming encounter. “That’s
more’n anybody else in these parts would do.
Why, everybody’s heard about Hal Dunbar.
Everybody’s scared of him. He can ride
anything that’s big enough to carry him; he can
fight like a wildcat with his hands; and he can shoot
like” — his eye wandered toward a superlative — “like
Pete Reeve, almost,” he concluded with a tone
of awe.
A spark of tenderness shone in the
eye of Bull. “D’you know Pete Reeve?”
“No, and I don’t want
to. Ma had a brother once, and he met up with
Pete Reeve.”
A tragedy was inferred in that oblique
reference. Bull decided that this was a conversational
topic on which he must remain silent, and yet he yearned
to speak of the little withered catlike fellow with
the wise brain who had done so much for him.
“When I’m big enough,”
mused the boy with a quiet savagery, “maybe
I’ll meet up with Pete Reeve.”
Bull switched the talk to a more comfortable
topic. “But how’d you make a start
with that man-eating Diablo?”
Tod studied, the question. “I
got a way with hosses, you see,” he began modestly.
He played two brown fingers in his
mouth and sent out a shrilling whistle that was answered
immediately by a whinny, and a little chestnut gelding,
sun-faded to a sand color nearly, cantered into view
around the corner of a shed and approached them.
He came to a pause nearby, and having studied Bull
Hunter with large, unafraid, curious eyes for a moment,
began to nibble impertinently at the ragged hat brim
of the child.
“Git away!” exclaimed
Tod, and when the chestnut made no move to go, the
brown fist flashed up at the reaching head. But
the head was jerked away with a motion of catlike
deftness.
“He’s a terrible bother,
Crackajack is,” said the boy angrily, and from
the corner of his eye he stole a glance of unspeakable
pride at the big man.
“He’s a beauty,”
exclaimed Bull Hunter. “A regular beauty!”
For Crackajack combined the toughness
of a mustang and the lean, strong running lines of
a thoroughbred in miniature. His legs were as
delicately made as the legs of a deer; his head was
a little model of impish intelligence and beauty.
“You and Crackajack are pals,”
said Bull. “I guess that’s what you
are!”
“We get on tolerable well,”
admitted the boy, whose heart was full with this praise
of his pet.
Bull continued on the agreeable topic.
“And I’ll bet he’s fast, too.
He looks like speed to me!”
“Maybe you don’t know
hosses, but you sure got hoss sense.” Tod
chuckled. “Most folks take Crackajack for
a toy pony. He ain’t. I’ve seen
him carry a full-grown man all day and keep up with
the best of ’em. He don’t mind the
weight of me no more’n if I was a feather.
He’s fast, he’s tough, and he knows more’n
a hoss should know, you might say!”
He changed his voice, and a brief
command made Crackajack give up his teasing and retreat.
Bull watched the exquisite little creature go, with
a smile of pleasure. He did not know it, but that
smile unlocked the last door to Tod’s heart.
“He was pretty near as wild
as Diablo when I first got him,” said the boy.
“And mean — say, he’d been kicked
around all his life. But I fatted him up in the
barn, and he got so’s he’d follow me around.
And now he runs loose like a dog and comes when I
whistle. He knows more things than you could
shake a stick at, Crackajack does.” “I’ll
bet he does,” said Bull with shining eyes.
“Say,” said the boy suddenly,
“I’m going to tell you about the way I
worked with Diablo.”
“I’ll take that mighty
kind,” said Bull gratefully. “D’you
think I’d have a chance with him even if you
showed me how?”
“You got to have a way with
hosses,” admitted the boy, and he examined Bull
again. “But I think you’ll get on
with hossflesh pretty well. When Diablo first
come, he used to go plumb crazy when anybody come
near his corral. He still does if a growed man
comes there. Well, they used to go out and stand
and watch him and laugh at him prancing around and
kicking up a fuss at the sight of ’em.
“And it made me mad. Made
me plumb mad to see them bother Diablo when he wasn’t
doing no harm, when they wasn’t gaining anything
by it, either.”
“I used to go out when nobody
was around and stand by the bars with a bit of hay
and grain heads in my hand. First off he’d
prance around even at me, but pretty soon he seen
that I wasn’t big enough to do him no harm,
and then he’d just stand still and snort and
look at me. Along about the third time he took
notice of the grain heads and come and smelled them,
and the next day he ate ’em.
“Well, I kept at it that way.
Pretty soon I went inside the corral. Diablo
just come up sort of excited and trembling and didn’t
know whether to bash my head in with his forehoofs
or let me go. Then he seen the grain heads and
ate them while he was making up his mind what to do
about me. And he winded up by just having a little
talk with me. He was terribly dirty and dusty,
and he was shedding. Nobody dared to brush him,
and so I took a soft-haired brush and started to work
on his neck. He liked it, and so I dressed him
down and left him pretty near shining. And every
day after that I went and had a talk with him and
brushed him. Then I rode Crackajack up to the
bars and let Diablo see me on him, with no bridle
or saddle. Pretty soon I found out that it was
the saddle and the bridle and the spurs that scared
Diablo to death. He didn’t mind anything
else so very much. So one day I climbed up the
fence and slid onto Diablo’s back, and he just
turned his head and snorted at me. Just then
Pa seen me and let out a terrible yell, and Diablo
pitched me right off over his head and over the fence.
But I got right up and came back to him. He seen
that he could get me off whenever he wanted to and
he seen that I didn’t do him no harm when I
got on.
“After that everything was easy.
I never bothered him none with a saddle or a bridle.
And there you are. D’you think you can do
the same?”
“But the saddle and the bridle?”
said Bull. “What about them?”
“That’s up to you to figure
out a way of getting him used to ’em. I’ll
go introduce you now, if I can.”
Bull rose, and the boy led the way.
“If he takes to you pretty kind,”
said the boy, “you may have a chance. But
if he begins acting up, it won’t be no use.”