A Horse in Need
He came into the town as a solid,
swiftly moving dust cloud. The wind from behind
had kept the dust moving forward at a pace just equal
to the gallop of his horse. Not until he had
brought his mount to a halt in front of the hotel
and swung down to the ground did either he or his
horse become distinctly visible. Then it was seen
that the animal was in the last stages of exhaustion,
with dull eyes and hanging head and forelegs braced
widely apart, while the sweat dripped steadily from
his flanks into the white dust on the street.
Plainly he had been pushed to the last limit of his
strength.
The rider was almost as far spent
as his mount, for he went up the steps of the hotel
with his shoulders sagging with weariness, a wide-shouldered,
gaunt-ribbed man. Thick layers of dust had turned
his red kerchief and his blue shirt to a common gray.
Dust, too, made a mask of his face, and through that
mask the eyes peered out, surrounded by pink skin.
Even at its best the long, solemn face could never
have been called handsome. But, on this particular
day, he seemed a haunted man, or one fleeing from
an inescapable danger.
The two loungers at the door of the
hotel instinctively stepped aside and made room for
him to pass, but apparently he had no desire to enter
the building. Suddenly he became doubly imposing,
as he stood on the veranda and stared up and down
at the idlers. Certainly his throat must be thick
and hot with dust, but an overmastering purpose made
him oblivious of thirst.
“Gents,” he said huskily,
while a gust of wind fanned a cloud of dust from his
clothes, “is there anybody in this town can gimme
a hoss to get to Stillwater, inside three hours’
riding?”
He waited a moment, his hungry eyes
traveling eagerly from face to face. Naturally
the oldest man spoke first, since this was a matter
of life and death.
“Any hoss in town can get you
there in that time, if you know the short way across
the mountain.”
“How do you take it? That’s the way
for me.”
But the old fellow shook his head
and smiled in pity. “Not if you ain’t
rode it before. I used to go that way when I was
a kid, but nowadays nobody rides that way except Doone.
That trail is as tricky as the ways of a coyote; you’d
sure get lost without a guide.”
The stranger turned and followed the
gesture of the speaker. The mountain rose from
the very verge of the town, a ragged mass of sand
and rock, with miserable sagebrush clinging here and
there, as dull and uninteresting as the dust itself.
Then he lowered the hand from beneath which he had
peered and faced about with a sigh. “I guess
it ain’t much good trying that way. But
I got to get to Stillwater inside of three hours.”
“They’s one hoss in town
can get you there,” said the old man. “But
you can’t get that hoss today.”
The stranger groaned. “Then
I’ll make another hoss stretch out and do.”
“Can’t be done. Doone’s
hoss is a marvel. Nothing else about here can
touch him, and he’s the only one that can make
the trip around the mountain, inside of three hours.
You’d kill another hoss trying to do it, what
with your weight.”
The stranger groaned again and struck
his knuckles against his forehead. “But
why can’t I get the hoss? Is Doone out of
town with it?”
“The hoss ain’t out of town, but Doone
is.”
The traveler clenched his fists.
This delay and waste of priceless time was maddening
him. “Gents,” he called desperately,
“I got to get to Martindale today. It’s
more than life or death to me. Where’s
Doone’s hoss?”
“Right across the road,”
said the old man who had spoken first. “Over
yonder in the corral—the bay.”
The traveler turned and saw, beyond
the road, a beautiful mare, not very tall, but a mare
whose every inch of her fifteen three proclaimed strength
and speed. At that moment she raised her head
and looked across to him, and the heart of the rider
jumped into his throat. The very sight of her
was an omen of victory, and he made a long stride in
her direction, but two men came before him. The
old fellow jumped from the chair and tapped his arm.
“You ain’t going to take
the bay without getting leave from Doone?”
“Gents, I got to,” said
the stranger. “Listen! My name’s
Gregg, Bill Gregg. Up in my country they know
I’m straight; down here you ain’t heard
of me. I ain’t going to keep that hoss,
and I’ll pay a hundred dollars for the use of
her for one day. I’ll bring or send her
back safe and sound, tomorrow. Here’s the
money. One of you gents, that’s a friend
of Doone, take it for him.”
Not a hand was stretched out; every
head shook in negation.
“I’m too fond of the little
life that’s left to me,” said the old
fellow. “I won’t rent out that hoss
for him. Why, he loves that mare like she was
his sister. He’d fight like a flash rather
than see another man ride her.”
But Bill Gregg had his eyes on the
bay, and the sight of her was stealing his reason.
He knew, as well as he knew that he was a man, that,
once in the saddle on her, he would be sure to win.
Nothing could stop him. And straight through
the restraining circle he broke with a groan of anxiety.
Only the old man who had been the
spokesman called after him: “Gregg, don’t
be a fool. Maybe you don’t recognize the
name of Doone, but the whole name is Ronicky Doone.
Does that mean anything to you?”
Into the back of Gregg’s mind
came several faint memories, but they were obscure
and uncertain. “Blast your Ronicky Doone!”
he replied. “I got to have that hoss, and,
if none of you’ll take money for her rent, I’ll
take her free and pay her rent when I come through
this way tomorrow, maybe. S’long!”
While he spoke he had been undoing
the cinches of his own horse. Now he whipped
the saddle and bridle off, shouted to the hotel keeper
brief instructions for the care of the weary animal
and ran across the road with the saddle on his arm.
In the corral he had no difficulty
with the mare. She came straight to him in spite
of all the flopping trappings. With prickly ears
and eyes lighted with kindly curiosity she looked
the dusty fellow over.
He slipped the bridle over her head.
When he swung the saddle over her back she merely
turned her head and carelessly watched it fall.
And when he drew up the cinches hard, she only stamped
in mock anger. The moment he was in the saddle
she tossed her head eagerly, ready to be off.
He looked across the street to the
veranda of the hotel, as he passed through the gate
of the corral. The men were standing in a long
and awe-stricken line, their eyes wide, their mouths
agape. Whoever Ronicky Doone might be, he was
certainly a man who had won the respect of this town.
The men on the veranda looked at Bill Gregg as though
he were already a ghost. He waved his hand defiantly
at them and the mare, at a word from him, sprang into
a long-striding gallop that whirled them rapidly down
the street and out of the village.
The bay mare carried him with amazing
speed over the ground. They rounded the base
of the big mountain, and, glancing up at the ragged
canyons which chopped the face of the peak, he was
glad that he had not attempted that short cut.
If Ronicky Doone could make that trail he was a skillful
horseman.
Bill Gregg swung up over the left
shoulder of the mountain and found himself looking
down on the wide plain which held Stillwater.
The air was crystal-clear and dry; the shoulder of
the mountain was high above it; Gregg saw a breathless
stretch of the cattle country at one sweep of his
eyes.
Stillwater was still a long way off,
and far away across the plain he saw a tiny moving
dot that grew slowly. It was the train heading
for Stillwater, and that train he must beat to the
station. For a moment his heart stood still;
then he saw that the train was distant indeed, and,
by the slightest use of the mare’s speed, he
would be able to reach the town, two or three minutes
ahead of it.
But, just as he was beginning to exult
in the victory, after all the hard riding of the past
three days, the mare tossed up her head and shortened
her stride. The heart of Gregg stopped, and he
went cold. It was not only the fear that his
journey might be ruined, but the fear that something
had happened to this magnificent creature beneath him.
He swung to the side in the saddle and watched her
gallop. Certain she went laboring, very much
as though she were trying to run against a mighty
pull on the reins.
He looked at her head. It was
thrown high, with pricking ears. Perhaps she
was frightened by some foolish thing near the road.
He touched her with the spurs, and she increased her
pace to the old length and ease of stride; but, just
as he had begun to be reassured, her step shortened
and fell to laboring again, and this time she threw
her head higher than before. It was amazing to
Bill Gregg; and then it seemed to him that he heard
a faint, far whistling, floating down from high above
his head.
Again that thin, long-drawn sound,
and this time, glancing over his right shoulder, he
saw a horseman plunging down the slope of the mountain.
He knew instantly that it was Ronicky Doone. The
man had come to recapture his horse and had taken
the short cut across the mountain to come up with
her. Just by a fraction of a minute Doone would
be too late, for, by the time he came down onto the
trail, the bay would be well ahead, and certainly
no horse lived in those mountains capable of overtaking
her when she felt like running. Gregg touched
her again with the spurs, but this time she reared
straight up and, whirling to the side, faced steadily
toward her onrushing master.