Wildfire ran on down the valley far
beyond the yelling crowd lined along the slope.
Bostil was deaf to the throng; he watched the stallion
till Lucy forced him to stop and turn.
Then Bostil whirled to see where Van
was with the King. Most of the crowd surged down
to surround the racers, and the yells gave way to the
buzz of many voices. Some of the ranchers and
riders remained near Bostil, all apparently talking
at once. Bostil gathered that Holley’s
Whitefoot had ran second, and the Navajo’s mustang
third. It was Holley himself who verified what
Bostil had heard. The old rider’s hawk eyes
were warm with delight.
“Boss, he run second!” Holley kept repeating.
Bostil had the heart to shake hands
with Holley and say he was glad, when it was on his
lips to blurt out there had been no race. Then
Bostil’s nerves tingled at sight of Van trotting
the King up the course toward the slope. Bostil
watched with searching eyes. Sage King did not
appear to be injured. Van rode straight up the
slope and leaped off. He was white and shaking.
The King’s glossy hide was dirty
with dust and bits of cactus and brush. He was
not even hot. There did not appear to be a bruise
or mark on him. He whinnied and rubbed his face
against Bostil, and then, flinching, he swept up his
head, ears high. Both fear and fire shone in
his eyes.
“Wal, Van, get it out of your
system,” said Bostil, kindly. He was a
harder loser before a race was run than after he had
lost it.
“Thet red hoss run in on the
King before the start an’ scared the race out
of him,” replied Van, swiftly. “We
had a hunch, you know, but at thet Lucy’s hoss
was a surprise. I’ll say, sir, thet Lucy
rode her wild hoss an’ handled him. Twice
she pulled him off the King. He meant to kill
the King! ... Ask any of the boys.... We
got started. I took the lead, sir. The King
was in the lead. I never looked back till I heard
Lucy scream. She couldn’t pull Wildfire.
He was rushin’ the King meant to
kill him. An’ Sage King wanted to fight.
If I could only have kept him runnin’!
Thet would have been a race! ... But Wildfire
got in closer an’ closer. He crowded us.
He bit at the King’s flank an’ shoulder
an’ neck. Lucy pulled till I yelled she’d
throw the hoss an’ kill us both. Then Wildfire
jumped for us. Runnin’ an’ strikin’
with both feet at once! Bostil, thet hoss’s
hell! Then he hit us an’ down we went.
I had a bad spill. But the King’s not hurt
an’ thet’s a blessed wonder.”
“No race, Van! It was hard
luck. Take him home,” said Bostil.
Van’s story of the accident
vindicated Bostil’s doubts. A new horse
had appeared on the scene, wild and swift and grand,
but Sage King was still unbeaten in a fair race.
There would come a reckoning, Bostil grimly muttered.
Who owned this Wildfire?
Holley might as well have read his
mind. “Reckon this feller ridin’ up
will take down the prize money,” remarked Holley,
and he pointed to a man who rode a huge, shaggy, black
horse and was leading Lucy’s pony.
“A-huh!” exclaimed Bostil. “A
strange rider.”
“An’ here comes Lucy coaxin’ the
stallion back,” added Holley.
“A wild stallion never clear broke!” ejaculated
Cordts.
All the men looked and all had some
remark of praise for Lucy and her mount.
Bostil gazed with a strange, irresistible
attraction. Never had he expected to live to
see a wild stallion like this one, to say nothing
of his daughter mounted on him, with the record of
having put Sage King out of the race!
A thousand pairs of eyes watched Wildfire.
He pranced out there beyond the crowd of men and horses.
He did not want to come closer. Yet he did not
seem to fight his rider. Lucy hung low over his
neck, apparently exhausted, and she was patting him
and caressing him. There were horses and Indians
on each side of the race track, and between these lines
Lucy appeared reluctant to come.
Bostil strode down and, waving and
yelling for everybody to move back to the slope, he
cleared the way and then stood out in front alone.
“Ride up, now,” he called to Lucy.
It was then Bostil discovered that
Lucy did not wear a spur and she had neither quirt
nor whip. She turned Wildfire and he came prancing
on, head and mane and tail erect. His action
was beautiful, springy, and every few steps, as Lucy
touched him, he jumped with marvelous ease and swiftness.
Bostil became all eyes. He did
not see his daughter as she paraded the winner before
the applauding throng. And Bostil recorded in
his mind that which he would never forget a
wild stallion, with unbroken spirit; a giant of a
horse, glistening red, with mane like dark-striped,
wind-blown flame, all muscle, all grace, all power;
a neck long and slender and arching to the small,
savagely beautiful head; the jaws open, and the thin-skinned,
pink-colored nostrils that proved the Arabian blood;
the slanting shoulders and the deep, broad chest,
the powerful legs and knees not too high nor too low,
the symmetrical dark hoofs that rang on the little
stones all these marks so significant of
speed and endurance. A stallion with a wonderful
physical perfection that matched the savage, ruthless
spirit of the desert killer of horses!
Lucy waved her hand, and the strange
rider to whom Holley had called attention strode out
of the crowd toward Wildfire.
Bostil’s gaze took in the splendid
build of this lithe rider, the clean-cut face, the
dark eye. This fellow had a shiny, coiled lasso
in hand. He advanced toward Wildfire. The
stallion snorted and plunged. If ever Bostil
saw hate expressed by a horse he saw it then.
But he seemed to be tractable to the control of the
girl. Bostil swiftly grasped the strange situation.
Lucy had won the love of the savage stallion.
That always had been the secret of her power.
And she had hated Sage King because he alone had somehow
taken a dislike to her. Horses were as queer
as people, thought Bostil.
The rider walked straight up to the
trembling Wildfire. When Wildfire plunged and
reared up and up the rider leaped for the bridle and
with an iron arm pulled the horse down. Wildfire
tried again, almost lifting the rider, but a stinging
cut from the lasso made him come to a stand.
Plainly the rider held the mastery.
“Dad!” called Lucy, faintly.
Bostil went forward, close, while
the rider held Wildfire. Lucy was as wan-faced
as a flower by moonlight. Her eyes were dark with
emotions, fear predominating. Then for Bostil
the half of his heart that was human reasserted itself.
Lucy was only a girl now, and weakening. Her
fear, her pitiful little smile, as if she dared not
hope for her father’s approval yet could not
help it, touched Bostil to the quick, and he opened
his arms. Lucy slid down into them.
“Lucy, girl, you’ve won
the King’s race an’ double-crossed your
poor old dad!”
“Oh, Dad, I never knew I
never dreamed Wildfire would jump the King,”
Lucy faltered. “I couldn’t hold him.
He was terrible.... It made me sick....
Daddy, tell me Van wasn’t hurt or
the King!”
“The hoss’s all right
an’ so’s Van,” replied Bostil.
“Don’t cry, Lucy. It was a fool trick
you pulled off, but you did it great. By Gad!
you sure was ridin’ thet red devil....
An’ say, it’s all right with me!”
Lucy did not faint then, but she came
near it. Bostil put her down and led her through
the lines of admiring Indians and applauding riders,
and left her with the women.
When he turned again he was in time
to see the strange rider mount Wildfire. It was
a swift and hazardous mount, the stallion being in
the air. When he came down he tore the turf and
sent it flying, and when he shot up again he was doubled
in a red knot, bristling with fiery hair, a furious
wild beast, mad to throw the rider. Bostil never
heard as wild a scream uttered by a horse. Likewise
he had never seen so incomparable a horseman as this
stranger. Indians and riders alike thrilled at
a sight which was after their own hearts. The
rider had hooked his long spurs under the horse and
now appeared a part of him. He could not be dislodged.
This was not a bucking mustang, but a fierce, powerful,
fighting stallion. No doubt, thought Bostil, this
fight took place every time the rider mounted his horse.
It was the sort of thing riders loved. Most of
them would not own a horse that would not pitch.
Bostil presently decided, however, that in the case
of this red stallion no rider in his right senses
would care for such a fight, simply because of the
extraordinary strengths, activity, and ferocity of
the stallion.
The riders were all betting the horse
would throw the stranger. And Bostil, seeing
the gathering might of Wildfire’s momentum, agreed
with them. No horseman could stick on that horse.
Suddenly Wildfire tripped in the sage, and went sprawling
in the dust, throwing his rider ahead. Both man
and beast were quick to rise, but the rider had a foot
in the stirrup before Wildfire was under way.
Then the horse plunged, ran free, came circling back,
and slowly gave way to the rider’s control.
Those few moments of frenzied activity had brought
out the foam and the sweat Wildfire was
wet. The man pulled him in before Bostil and
dismounted.
“Sometimes I ride him, then
sometimes I don’t,” he said, with a smile.
Bostil held out his hand. He
liked this rider. He would have liked the frank
face, less hard than that of most riders, and the fine,
dark eyes, straight and steady, even if their possessor
had not come with the open sesame to Bostil’s
regard a grand, wild horse, and the nerve
to ride him.
“Wal, you rode him longer ’n
any of us figgered,” said Bostil, heartily shaking
the man’s hand. “I’m Bostil.
Glad to meet you.”
“My name’s Slone Lin
Slone,” replied the rider, frankly. “I’m
a wild-horse hunter an’ hail from Utah.”
“Utah? How’d you
ever get over? Wal, you’ve got a grand hoss an’
you put a grand rider up on him in the race....
My girl Lucy ”
Bostil hesitated. His mind was
running swiftly. Back of his thoughts gathered
the desire and the determination to get possession
of this horse Wildfire. He had forgotten what
he might have said to this stranger under different
circumstances. He looked keenly into Slone’s
face and saw no fear, no subterfuge. The young
man was honest.
“Bostil, I chased this wild
horse days an’ weeks an’ months, hundreds
of miles across the canyon an’ the
river ”
“No!” interrupted Bostil, blankly.
“Yes. I’ll tell you
how later.... Out here somewhere I caught Wildfire,
broke him as much as he’ll ever be broken.
He played me out an’ got away. Your girl
rode along saved my horse an’
saved my life, too. I was in bad shape for days.
But I got well an’ an’
then she wanted me to let her run Wildfire in the
big race. I couldn’t refuse.... An’
it would have been a great race but for the unlucky
accident to Sage King. I’m sorry, sir.”
“Slone, it jarred me some, thet
disappointment. But it’s over,” replied
Bostil. “An’ so thet’s how Lucy
found her hoss. She sure was mysterious....
Wal, wal.” Bostil became aware of others
behind him. “Holley, shake hands with Slone,
hoss-wrangler out of Utah.... You, too, Cal Blinn....
An’ Macomber an’ Wetherby, meet
my friend here young Slone.... An’,
Cordts, shake hands with a feller thet owns a grand
hoss!”
Bostil laughed as he introduced the
horse-thief to Slone. The others laughed, too,
even Cordts joining in. There was much of the
old rider daredevil spirit left in Bostil, and it
interested and amused him to see Cordts and Slone
meet. Assuredly Slone had heard of the noted
stealer of horses. The advantage was certainly
on Cordts’s side, for he was good-natured and
pleasant while Slone stiffened, paling slightly as
he faced about to acknowledge the introduction.
“Howdy, Slone,” drawled
Cordts, with hand outstretched. “I sure
am glad to meet yuh. I’d like to trade
the Sage King for this red stallion!”
A roar of laughter greeted this sally,
all but Bostil and Slone joining in. The joke
was on Bostil, and he showed it. Slone did not
even smile.
“Howdy, Cordts,” he replied.
“I’m glad to meet you so I’ll
know you when I see you again.”
“Wal, we’re all good fellers
to-day,” interposed Bostil. “An’
now let’s ride home an’ eat. Slone,
you come with me.”
The group slowly mounted the slope
where the horses waited. Macomber, Wetherby,
Burthwait, Blinn all Bostil’s friends
proffered their félicitations to the young rider,
and all were evidently prepossessed with him.
The sun was low in the west; purple
shades were blotting out the gold lights down the
valley; the day of the great races was almost done.
Indians were still scattered here and there in groups;
others were turning out the mustangs; and the majority
were riding and walking with the crowd toward the
village.
Bostil observed that Cordts had hurried
ahead of the group and now appeared to be saying something
emphatic to Dick Sears and Hutchinson. Bostil
heard Cordts curse. Probably he was arraigning
the sullen Sears. Cordts had acted first rate had
lived up to his word, as Bostil thought he would do.
Cordts and Hutchinson mounted their horses and rode
off, somewhat to the left of the scattered crowd.
But Sears remained behind. Bostil thought this
strange and put it down to the surliness of the fellow,
who had lost on the races. Bostil, wishing Sears
would get out of his sight, resolved never to make
another blunder like inviting horse-thieves to a race.
All the horses except Wildfire stood
in a bunch back on the bench. Sears appeared
to be fussing with the straps on his saddle. And
Bostil could not keep his glance from wandering back
to gloat over Wildfire’s savage grace and striking
size.
Suddenly there came a halt in the
conversation of the men, a curse in Holley’s
deep voice, a violent split in the group. Bostil
wheeled to see Sears in a menacing position with two
guns leveled low.
“Don’t holler!” he called.
“An’ don’t move!”
“What ’n the h l now, Sears?”
demanded Bostil.
“I’ll bore you if you
move thet’s what!” replied Sears.
His eyes, bold, steely, with a glint that Bostil knew,
vibrated as he held in sight all points before him.
A vicious little sand-rattlesnake about to strike!
“Holley, turn yer back!” ordered Sears.
The old rider, who stood foremost
of the group’ instantly obeyed, with hands up.
He took no chances here, for he alone packed a gun.
With swift steps Sears moved, pulled Holley’s
gun, flung it aside into the sage.
“Sears, it ain’t a hold-up!”
expostulated Bostil. The act seemed too bold,
too wild even for Dick Sears.
“Ain’t it?” scoffed
Sears, malignantly. “Bostil, I was after
the King. But I reckon I’ll git the hoss
thet beat him!”
Bostil’s face turned dark-blood
color and his neck swelled. “By Gawd, Sears!
You ain’t a-goin’ to steal this boy’s
hoss!”
“Shut up!” hissed the
horse-thief. He pushed a gun close to Bostil.
“I’ve always laid fer you! I’m
achin’ to bore you now. I would but fer
scarin’ this hoss. If you yap again I’ll
kill you, anyhow, an’ take a chance!”
All the terrible hate and evil and
cruelty and deadliness of his kind burned in his eyes
and stung in his voice.
“Sears, if it’s my horse
you want you needn’t kill Bostil,” spoke
up Slone. The contrast of his cool, quiet voice
eased the terrible strain.
“Lead him round hyar!” snapped Sears.
Wildfire appeared more shy of the
horses back of him than of the men. Slone was
able to lead him, however, to within several paces
of Sears. Then Slone dropped the reins.
He still held a lasso which was loosely coiled, and
the loop dropped in front of him as he backed away.
Sears sheathed the left-hand gun.
Keeping the group covered with the other, he moved
backward, reaching for the hanging reins. Wildfire
snorted, appeared about to jump. But Sears got
the reins. Bostil, standing like a stone, his
companions also motionless, could not help but admire
the daring of this upland horse-thief. How was
he to mount that wild stallion? Sears was noted
for two qualities his nerve before men
and his skill with horses. Assuredly he would
not risk an ordinary mount. Wildfire began to
suspect Sears to look at him instead of
the other horses. Then quick as a cat Sears vaulted
into the saddle. Wildfire snorted and lifted
his forefeet in a lunge that meant he would bolt.
Sears in vaulting up had swung the
gun aloft. He swept it down, but waveringly,
for Wildfire had begun to rear.
Bostil saw how fatal that single instant
would have been for Sears if he or Holley had a gun.
Something whistled. Bostil saw
the leap of Slone’s lasso the curling,
snaky dart of the noose which flew up to snap around
Sears. The rope sung taut. Sears was swept
bodily clean from the saddle, to hit the ground in
sodden impact.
Almost swifter than Bostil’s
sight was the action of Slone flashing
by in the air himself on the
plunging horse. Sears shot once, twice.
Then Wildfire bolted as his rider whipped the lasso
round the horn. Sears, half rising, was jerked
ten feet. An awful shriek was throttled in his
throat.
A streak of dust on the slope a
tearing, parting line in the sage!
Bostil stood amazed. The red
stallion made short plunges. Slone reached low
for the tripping reins. When he straightened up
in the saddle Wildfire broke wildly into a run.
It was characteristic of Holley that
at this thrilling, tragic instant he walked over into
the sage to pick up his gun.
“Throwed a gun on me, got the
drop, an’ pitched mine away!” muttered
Holley, in disgust. The way he spoke meant that
he was disgraced.
“My Gawd! I was scared
thet Sears would get the hoss!” rolled out Bostil.
Holley thought of his gun; Bostil
thought of the splendid horse. The thoughts were
characteristic of these riders. The other men,
however, recovering from a horror-broken silence,
burst out in acclaim of Slone’s feat.
“Dick Sears’s finish!
Roped by a boy rider!” exclaimed Cal Blinn,
fervidly.
“Bostil, that rider is worthy
of his horse,” said Wetherby. “I think
Sears would have bored you. I saw his finger pressing pressing
on the trigger. Men like Sears can’t help
but pull at that stage.”
“Thet was the quickest trick
I ever seen,” declared Macomber.
They watched Wildfire run down the
slope, out into the valley, with a streak of rising
dust out behind. They all saw when there ceased
to be that peculiar rising of dust. Wildfire
appeared to shoot ahead at greater speed. Then
he slowed up. The rider turned him and faced back
toward the group, coming at a stiff gallop. Soon
Wildfire breasted the slope, and halted, snorting,
shaking before the men. The lasso was still trailing
out behind, limp and sagging. There was no weight
upon it now.
Bostil strode slowly ahead. He
sympathized with the tension that held Slone; he knew
why the rider’s face was gray, why his lips only
moved mutely, why there was horror in the dark, strained
eyes, why the lean, strong hands, slowly taking up
the lasso, now shook like leaves in the wind.
There was only dust on the lasso.
But Bostil knew they all knew that none
the less it had dealt a terrible death to the horse-thief.
Somehow Bostil could not find words
for what he wanted to say. He put a hand on the
red stallion patted his shoulder. Then
he gripped Slone close and hard. He was thinking
how he would have gloried in a son like this young,
wild rider. Then he again faced his comrades.
“Fellers, do you think Cordts
was in on thet trick?” he queried.
“Nope. Cordts was on the
square,” replied Holley. “But he must
have seen it comin’ an’ left Sears to
his fate. It sure was a fittin’ last ride
for a hoss-thief.”
Bostil sent Holley and Farlane on
ahead to find Cordts and Hutchinson, with their comrades,
to tell them the fate of Sears, and to warn them to
leave before the news got to the riders.
The sun was setting golden and red
over the broken battlements of the canyons to the
west. The heat of the day blew away on a breeze
that bent the tips of the sage-brush. A wild
song drifted back from the riders to the fore.
And the procession of Indians moved along, their gay
trappings and bright colors beautiful in the fading
sunset light.
When Bostil and, his guests arrived
at the corrals, Holley, with Farlane and other riders,
were waiting.
“Boss,” said Holley, “Cordts
an’ his outfit never rid in. They was last
seen by some Navajos headin’ for the canyon.”
“Thet’s good!” ejaculated
Bostil, in relief. “Wal boys, look after
the hosses. ... Slone, just turn Wildfire over
to the boys with instructions, an’ feel safe.”
Farlane scratched his head and looked
dubious. “I’m wonderin’ how
safe it’ll be fer us.”
“I’ll look after him,” said Slone.
Bostil nodded as if he had expected
Slone to refuse to let any rider put the stallion
away for the night. Wildfire would not go into
the barn, and Slone led him into one of the high-barred
corrals. Bostil waited, talking with his friends,
until Slone returned, and then they went toward the
house.
“I reckon we couldn’t
get inside Brack’s place now,” remarked
Bostil. “But in a case like this I can
scare up a drink.” Lights from the windows
shone bright through the darkness under the cottonwoods.
Bostil halted at the door, as if suddenly remembering,
and he whispered, huskily: “Let’s
keep the women from learnin’ about Sears to-night,
anyway.”
Then he led the way through the big
door into the huge living-room. There were hanging-lights
on the walls and blazing sticks on the hearth.
Lucy came running in to meet them. It did not
escape Bostil’s keen eyes that she was dressed
in her best white dress. He had never seen her
look so sweet and pretty, and, for that matter, so
strange. The flush, the darkness of her eyes,
the added something in her face, tender, thoughtful,
strong these were new. Bostil pondered
while she welcomed his guests. Slone, who had
hung back, was last in turn. Lucy greeted him
as she had the others. Slone met her with awkward
constraint. The gray had not left his face.
Lucy looked up at him again, and differently.
“What what has happened?” she
asked.
It annoyed Bostil that Slone and all the men suddenly
looked blank.
“Why, nothin’,” replied Slone, slowly,
“’cept I’m fagged out.”
Lucy, or any other girl, could have
seen that he, was evading the truth. She flashed
a look from Slone to her father.
“Until to-day we never had a
big race that something dreadful didn’t happen,”
said Lucy. “This was my day my
race. And, oh! I wanted it to pass without without ”
“Wal, Lucy dear,” replied
Bostil, as she faltered. “Nothin’
came off thet’d make you feel bad. Young
Slone had a scare about his hoss. Wildfire’s
safe out there in the corral, an’ he’ll
be guarded like the King an’ Sarch. Slone
needs a drink an’ somethin’ to eat, same
as all of us.”
Lucy’s color returned and her
smile, but Bostil noted that, while she was serving
them and brightly responsive to compliments, she gave
more than one steady glance at Slone. She was
deep, thought Bostil, and it angered him a little
that she showed interest in what concerned this strange
rider.
Then they had dinner, with twelve
at table. The wives of Bostil’s three friends
had been helping Aunt Jane prepare the feast, and they
added to the merriment. Bostil was not much given
to social intercourse he would have preferred
to be with his horses and riders but this
night he outdid himself as host, amazed his sister
Jane, who evidently thought he drank too much, and
delighted Lucy. Bostil’s outward appearance
and his speech and action never reflected all the workings
of his mind. No one would ever know the depth
of his bitter disappointment at the outcome of the
race. With Creech’s Blue Roan out of the
way, another horse, swifter and more dangerous, had
come along to spoil the King’s chance.
Bostil felt a subtly increasing covetousness in regard
to Wildfire, and this colored all his talk and action.
The upland country, vast and rangy, was for Bostil
too small to hold Sage King and Wildfire unless they
both belonged to him. And when old Cal Blinn
gave a ringing toast to Lucy, hoping to live to see
her up on Wildfire in the grand race that must be
run with the King, Bostil felt stir in him the birth
of a subtle, bitter fear. At first he mocked
it. He Bostil afraid to
race! It was a lie of the excited mind. He
repudiated it. Insidiously it returned. He
drowned it down smothered it with passion.
Then the ghost of it remained, hauntingly.
After dinner Bostil with the men went
down to Brackton’s, where Slone and the winners
of the day received their prizes.
“Why, it’s more money
than I ever had in my whole life!” exclaimed
Slone, gazing incredulously at the gold.
Bostil was amused and pleased, and
back of both amusement and pleasure was the old inventive,
driving passion to gain his own ends.
Bostil was abnormally generous in
many ways; monstrously selfish in one way.
“Slone, I seen you didn’t
drink none,” he said, curiously.
“No; I don’t like liquor.”
“Do you gamble?”
“I like a little bet on a race,”
replied Slone, frankly.
“Wal, thet ain’t gamblin’.
These fool riders of mine will bet on the switchin’
of a hoss’s tail.” He drew Slone a
little aside from the others, who were interested
in Brackton’s delivery of the different prizes.
“Slone, how’d you like to ride for me?”
Slone appeared surprised. “Why,
I never rode for any one,” he replied, slowly.
“I can’t stand to be tied down. I’m
a horse-hunter, you know.”
Bostil eyed the young man, wondering
what he knew about the difficulties of the job offered.
It was no news to Bostil that he was at once the best
and the worst man to ride for in all the uplands.
“Sure, I know. But thet
doesn’t make no difference,” went on Bostil,
persuasively. “If we got along wal,
you’d save some of thet yellow coin you’re
jinglin’. A roamin’ rider never builds
no corral!”
“Thank you, Bostil,” replied
Slone, earnestly. “I’ll think it over.
It would seem kind of tame now to go back to wild-horse
wranglin’, after I’ve caught Wildfire.
I’ll think it over. Maybe I’ll do
it, if you’re sure I’m good enough with
rope an’ horse.”
“Wal, by Gawd!” blurted
out Bostil. “Holley says he’d rather
you throwed a gun on him than a rope! So would
I. An’ as for your handlin’ a hoss, I
never seen no better.”
Slone appeared embarrassed and kept
studying the gold coins in his palm. Some one
touched Bostil, who, turning, saw Brackton at his elbow.
The other men were now bantering with the Indians.
“Come now while I’ve got
a minnit,” said Brackton, taking up a lantern.
“I’ve somethin’ to show you.”
Bostil followed Brackton, and Slone
came along. The old man opened a door into a
small room, half full of stores and track. The
lantern only dimly lighted the place.
“Look thar!” And Brackton
flashed the light upon a man lying prostrate.
Bostil recognized the pale face of
Joel Creech. “Brack! ... What’s
this? Is he dead?” Bostil sustained a strange,
incomprehensible shock. Sight of a dead man had
never before shocked him.
“Nope, he ain’t dead,
which if he was might be good for this community,”
replied Brackton. “He’s only fallen
in a fit. Fust off I reckoned he was drunk.
But it ain’t thet.”
“Wal, what do you want to show
him to me for?” demanded Bostil, gruffly.
“I reckoned you oughter see him.”
“An’ why, Brackton?”
Brackton set down the lantern and,
pushing Slone outside, said: “Jest a minnit,
son,” and then he closed the door. “Joel’s
been on my hands since the flood cut him off from
home,” said Brackton. “An’ he’s
been some trial. But nobody else would have done
nothin’ for him, so I had to. I reckon
I felt sorry for him. He cried like a baby thet
had lost its mother. Then he gets wild-lookin’
an’ raved around. When I wasn’t busy
I kept an eye on him. But some of the time I couldn’t,
an’ he stole drinks, which made him wuss.
An’ when I seen he was tryin’ to sneak
one of my guns, I up an’ gets suspicious.
Once he said, ’My dad’s hosses are goin’
to starve, an’ I’m goin’ to kill
somebody!’ He was out of his head an’
dangerous. Wal, I was worried some, but all I
could do was lock up my guns. Last night I caught
him confabin’ with some men out in the dark,
behind the store. They all skedaddled except Joel,
but I recognized Cordts. I didn’t like
this, nuther. Joel was surly an’ ugly.
An’ when one of the riders called him he said:
’Thet boat never drifted off.
Fer the night of the flood I went down there myself
an’ tied the ropes. They never come untied.
Somebody cut them jest before the flood to
make sure my dad’s hosses couldn’t be crossed.
Somebody figgered the river an’ the flood.
An’ if my dad’s hosses starve I’m
goin’ to kill somebody!’”
Brackton took up the lantern and placed
a hand on the door ready to go out.
“Then a rider punched Joel I
never seen who an’ Joel had a fit.
I dragged him in here. An’ as you see,
he ain’t come to yet.”
“Wal, Brackton, the boy’s crazy,”
said Bostil.
“So I reckon. An’
I’m afeared he’ll burn us out he’s
crazy on fires, anyway or do somethin’
like.”
“He’s sure a problem.
Wal, we’ll see,” replied Bostil, soberly.
And they went out to find Slone waiting.
Then Bostil called his guests, and with Slone also
accompanying him, went home.
Bostil threw off the recurring gloom,
and he was good-natured when Lucy came to his room
to say good night. He knew she had come to say
more than that.
“Hello, daughter!” he
said. “Aren’t you ashamed to come
facin’ your poor old dad?”
Lucy eyed him dubiously. “No,
I’m not ashamed. But I’m still a
little afraid.”
“I’m harmless, child.
I’m a broken man. When you put Sage King
out of the race you broke me.”
“Dad, that isn’t funny.
You make me an angry when you hint I did
something underhand.”
“Wal, you didn’t consult me.”
“I thought it would be fun to
surprise you all. Why, you’re always delighted
with a surprise in a race, unless it beats you....
Then, it was my great and only chance to get out in
front of the King. Oh, how grand it’d have
been! Dad, I’d have run away from him the
same as the others!”
“No, you wouldn’t,” declared Bostil.
“Dad, Wildfire can beat the King!”
“Never, girl! Knockin’
a good-tempered hoss off his pins ain’t beatin’
him in a runnin’-race.”
Then father and daughter fought over
the old score, the one doggedly, imperturbably, the
other spiritedly, with flashing eyes. It was
different this time, however, for it ended in Lucy
saying Bostil would never risk another race.
That stung Bostil, and it cost him an effort to control
his temper.
“Let thet go now. Tell
me all about how you saved Wildfire, an’ Slone,
too.”
Lucy readily began the narrative,
and she had scarcely started before Bostil found himself
intensely interested. Soon he became absorbed.
That was the most thrilling and moving kind of romance
to him, like his rider’s dreams.
“Lucy, you’re sure a game
kid,” he said, fervidly, when she had ended.
“I reckon I don’t blame Slone for fallin’
in love with you.”
“Who said that!” inquired Lucy.
“Nobody. But it’s true ain’t
it?”
She looked up with eyes as true as
ever they were, yet a little sad, he thought, a little
wistful and wondering, as if a strange and grave thing
confronted her.
“Yes, Dad it’s it’s
true,” she answered, haltingly.
“Wal, you didn’t need to tell me, but
I’m glad you did.”
Bostil meant to ask her then if she
in any sense returned the rider’s love, but
unaccountably he could not put the question. The
girl was as true as ever as good as gold.
Bostil feared a secret that might hurt him. Just
as sure as life was there and death but a step away,
some rider, sooner or later, would win this girl’s
love. Bostil knew that, hated it, feared it.
Yet he would never give his girl to a beggarly rider.
Such a man as Wetherby ought to win Lucy’s hand.
And Bostil did not want to know too much at present;
he did not want his swift-mounting animosity roused
so soon. Still he was curious, and, wanting to
get the drift of Lucy’s mind, he took to his
old habit of teasing.
“Another moonstruck rider!”
he said. “Your eyes are sure full moons,
Lucy. I’d be ashamed to trifle with these
poor fellers.”
“Dad!”
“You’re a heartless flirt same
as your mother was before she met me.”
“I’m not. And I don’t
believe mother was, either,” replied Lucy.
It was easy to strike fire from her.
“Wal, you did dead wrong to
ride out there day after day meetin’ Slone,
because young woman if he ever
has the nerve to ask me for you I’ll beat him
up bad.”
“Then you’d be a brute!” retorted
Lucy.
“Wal, mebbe,” returned
Bostil, secretly delighted and surprised at Lucy’s
failure to see through him. But she was looking
inward. He wondered what hid there deep in her.
“But I can’t stand for the nerve of thet.”
“He he means to to ask
you.”
“The h .... A-huh!”
Lucy did not catch the slip of tongue.
She was flushing now. “He said he’d
never have let me meet him out there alone unless he he
loved me and as our neighbors and the riders
would learn of it and talk he
wanted you and them to know he’d asked to to
marry me.”
“Wal, he’s a square young
man!” ejaculated Bostil, involuntarily.
It was hard for Bostil to hide his sincerity and impulsiveness;
much harder than to hide unworthy attributes.
Then he got back on the other track. “That’ll
make me treat him decent, so when he rides up to ask
for you I’ll let him off with, ’No!”
Lucy dropped her head. Bostil
would have given all he had, except his horses, to
feel sure she did not care for Slone.
“Dad I said ’No’ for
myself,” she murmured.
This time Bostil did not withhold
the profane word of surprise. “... So he’s
asked you, then? Wal, wal! When?”
“To-day out there
in the rocks where he waited with Wildfire for me.
He he ”
Lucy slipped into her father’s
arms, and her slender form shook. Bostil instinctively
felt what she then needed was her mother. Her
mother was dead, and he was only a rough, old, hard
rider. He did not know what to do to
say. His heart softened and he clasped her close.
It hurt him keenly to realize that he might have been
a better, kinder father if it were not for the fear
that she would find him out. But that proved he
loved her, craved her respect and affection.
“Wal, little girl, tell me,” he said.
“He he broke his word to me.”
“A-huh! Thet’s too bad. An’
how did he?”
“He he ” Lucy seemed
to catch her tongue.
Bostil was positive she had meant
to tell him something and suddenly changed her mind.
Subtly the child vanished a woman remained.
Lucy sat up self-possessed once more. Some powerfully
impelling thought had transformed her. Bostil’s
keen sense gathered that what she would not tell was
not hers to reveal. For herself, she was the soul
of simplicity and frankness.
“Days ago I told him I cared
for him,” she went on. “But I forbade
him to speak of it to me. He promised. I
wanted to wait till after the race till
after I had found courage to confess to you. He
broke his word.... Today when he put me up on
Wildfire he he suddenly lost his head.”
The slow scarlet welled into Lucy’s
face and her eyes grew shamed, but bravely she kept
facing her father.
“He he pulled me
off he hugged me he k-kissed
me.... Oh, it was dreadful shameful!
... Then I gave him back some something
he had given me. And I told him I I
hated him and I told him, ‘No!’”
“But you rode his hoss in the race,” said
Bostil.
Lucy bowed her head at that. “I I
couldn’t resist!”
Bostil stroked the bright head.
What a quandary for a thick-skulled old horseman!
“Wal, it seems to me Slone didn’t act so
bad, considerin’. You’d told him
you cared for him. If it wasn’t for thet!
... I remember I did much the same to your mother.
She raised the devil, but I never seen as she cared
any less for me.”
“I’ll never forgive him,”
Lucy cried, passionately. “I hate him.
A man who breaks his word in one thing will do it
in another.”
Bostil sadly realized that his little
girl had reached womanhood and love, and with them
the sweet, bitter pangs of life. He realized also
that here was a crisis when a word an unjust
or lying word from him would forever ruin any hope
that might still exist for Slone. Bostil realized
this acutely, but the realization was not even a temptation.
“Wal, listen. I’m
bound to confess your new rider is sure swift.
An’, Lucy, to-day if he hadn’t been as
swift with a rope as he is in love wal,
your old daddy might be dead!”
She grew as white as her dress.
“Oh, Dad! I knew something had happened,”
she cried, reaching for him.
Then Bostil told her how Dick Sears
had menaced him how Slone had foiled the
horse-thief. He told the story bluntly, but eloquently,
with all a rider’s praise. Lucy rose with
hands pressed against her breast. When had Bostil
seen eyes like those dark, shining, wonderful?
Ah! he remembered her mother’s once only
once, as a girl.
Then Lucy kissed him and without a
word fled from the room.
Bostil stared after her. “D n
me!” he swore, as he threw a boot against the
wall. “I reckon I’ll never let her
marry Slone, but I just had to tell her what I think
of him!”