The Flying U Ranch by B. M. Bower (ebook reader online free txt) 📕
"By gosh, a man might do worse than locate that Native Son for asilver mine," Cal began, eyeing the interloper scornfully. "It'splumb wicked to ride around with all that wealth and fussy stuff.He must 'a' robbed a bank and put the money all into a ridingoutfit."
"By golly, he looks to me like a pair uh trays when he comesbow-leggin' along with them white diamonds on his legs," Slimstated solemnly.
"And I'll gamble that's a spot higher than he stacks up in thecow game," Pink observed with the pessimism which matrimony hadgiven him. "You mind him asking about bad horses, last night?That Lizzie-boy never saw a bad horse; they don't grow 'em wherehe come from. What they don't know about riding they make up forwith a swell rig--"
"And, oh, mamma! It sure is a swell rig!" Weary paid generoustribute. "Only I will say old Banjo reminds me of an Irish cookrigged out in silk and diamonds. That outfit on Glory, now--" Hesighed enviously.
"Well, I've gone up agains
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to you, all right!”
“One learns to seize opportunities without stuttering,” Miguel
observed calmly—and a queer look came into his eyes as they
rested upon the face of Andy. “And, if the chance comes, I’ll do
as much for you. By the way, did you see the saddle those Arizona
boys sent me? It’s over here. It’s a pip-pin—almost as fine as
the spurs, which I keep in the bunk-house when they’re not on my
heels. And, if I didn’t say so before, I’m sure glad to meet the
man that helped me through that alley. That big, fat devil would
have landed me, sure, if you hadn’t—”
“Ah—what?” Andy leaned and peered into the face of Miguel, his
jaw hanging slack. “You don’t mean to tell me—it’s true?”
“True? Why, I thought you were the fellow—” Miguel faced him
steadily. His eyes were frankly puzzled.
“I’ll tell you the truth, so help me,” Andy said heavily. “I
don’t know a darned thing about it, only what I read in the
papers. I spent the whole winter in Colorado and Wyoming. I was
just joshing the boys.”
“Oh,” said Miguel.
They stood there in the dusk and silence for a space, after which
Andy went forth into the night to meditate upon this thing.
Miguel stood and looked after him.
“He’s the real goods when it comes to lying—but there are
others,” he said aloud, and smiled a peculiar smile. But for all
that he felt that he was going to like Andy very much indeed.
And, since the Happy Family had shown a disposition to make him
one of themselves, he knew that he was going to become quite as
foolishly attached to the Flying U as was even Slim, confessedly
the most rabid of partisans.
In this wise did Miguel Rapponi, then, become a member of Jim
Whitmore’s Happy Family, and play his part in the events which
followed his adoption.
CHAPTER III. Bad News
Andy Green, that honest-eyed young man whom everyone loved, but
whom not a man believed save when he was indulging his love for
more or less fantastic flights of the imagination, pulled up on
the brow of Flying U coulee and stared somberly at the picture
spread below him. On the porch of the White House the hammock
swung gently under the weight of the Little Doctor, who pushed
her shipper-toe mechanically against a post support at regular
intervals while she read.
On the steps the Kid was crawling laboriously upward, only to
descend again quite as laboriously when he attained the top. One
of the boys was just emerging from the blacksmith shop; from the
build of him Andy knew it must be either Weary or Irish, though
it would take a much closer observation, and some familiarity
with the two to identify the man more exactly. In the corral were
a swirl of horses and an overhanging cloud of dust, with two or
three figures discernible in the midst, and away in the little
pasture two other figures were galloping after a fleeing dozen of
horses. While he looked, old Patsy came out of the messhouse, and
went, with flapping flour-sack apron, to the woodpile.
Peaceful it was, and home-like and contentedly prosperous; a
little world tucked away in its hills, with its own little
triumphs and defeats, its own heartaches and rejoicings; a lucky
little world, because its triumphs had been satisfying, its
defeats small, its heartaches brief, and its rejoicings untainted
with harassment or guilt. Yet Andy stared down upon it with a
frown; and, when he twitched the reins and began the descent, he
sighed impatiently.
Past the stable he rode with scarcely a glance toward Weary, who
shouted a casual “Hello” at him from the corral; through the big
gate and up the trail to the White House, and straight to the
porch, where the Little Doctor flipped a leaf of her magazine and
glanced at him with a smile, and the Kid turned his plump body
upon the middle step and wrinkled his nose in a smile of
recognition, while he threw out an arm in welcome, and made a
wobbling effort to get upon his feet.
Andy smiled at the Kid, but his smile did not reach his eyes, and
faded almost immediately. He glanced at the Little Doctor, sent
his horse past the steps and the Kid, and close to the railing,
so that he could lean and toss the mail into the Little Doctor’s
lap. There was a yellow envelope among the letters, and her
fingers singled it out curiously. Andy folded his hands upon the
saddle-horn and watched her frankly.
“Must be from J. G.,” guessed the Little Doctor, inserting a slim
finger under the badly sealed flap. “I’ve been wondering if he
wasn’t going to send some word—he’s been gone a week—Baby! He’s
right between your horse’s legs, Andy! Oh-h—baby boy, what won’t
you do next?” She scattered letters and papers from her lap and
flew to the rescue. “Will he kick, Andy? You little ruffian.” She
held out her arms coaxingly from the top of the steps, and her
face, Andy saw when he looked at her, had lost some of its color.
“The horse is quiet enough,” he reassured her. “But at the same
time I wouldn’t hand him out as a plaything for a kid.” He leaned
cautiously and peered backward.
“Oh—did you ever see such a child! Come to mother, Baby!” Her
voice was becoming strained.
The Kid, wrinkling his nose, and jabbering unintelligibly at her,
so that four tiny teeth showed in his pink mouth, moved farther
backward, and sat down violently under the horse’s sweat-roughened belly. He wriggled round so that he faced forward,
reached out gleefully, caught the front fetlocks, and cried
“Dup!” while he pulled. The Little Doctor turned white.
“He’s all right,” soothed Andy, and, leaning with a twist of his
slim body, caught the Kid firmly by the back of his pink dress,
and lifted him clear of danger. He came up with a red face,
tossed the Kid into the eager arms of the Little Doctor, and
soothed his horse with soft words and a series of little slaps
upon the neck. He was breathing unevenly, because the Kid had
really been in rather a ticklish position; but the Little Doctor
had her face hidden on the baby’s neck and did not see.
“Where’s Chip?” Andy turned to ride back to the stable, glancing
toward the telegram lying on the floor of the porch; and from it
his eyes went to the young woman trying to laugh away her
trembling while she scolded adoringly her adventurous man-child.
He was about to speak again, but thought better of it, and
sighed.
“Down at the stables somewhere—I don’t know, really; the boys
can tell you. Mother’s baby mustn’t touch the naughty horses.
Naughty horses hurt mother’s baby! Make him cry!”
Andy gave her a long look, which had in it much pity, and rode
away. He knew what was in that telegram, for the agent had told
him when he hunted him up at Rusty Brown’s and gave it to him;
and the horse of Andy bore mute testimony to the speed with which
he had brought it to the ranch. Not until he had reached the
coulee had he slackened his pace. He decided, after that glance,
that he would not remind her that she had not read the telegram;
instead, he thought he ought to find Chip immediately and send
him to her.
Chip was rummaging after something in the store-house, and, when
Andy saw him there, he dismounted and stood blotting out the
light from the doorway. Chip looked up, said “Hello” carelessly,
and flung an old slicker aside that he might search beneath it.
“Back early, aren’t you?” he asked, for sake of saying something.
Andy’s attitude was not as casual as he would have had it.
“Say, maybe you better go on up to the house,” he began
diffidently. “I guess your wife wants to see yuh, maybe.”
“Just as a good wife should,” grinned Chip. “What’s the matter?
Kid fall off the porch?”
“N-o-o—I brought out a wire from Chicago. It’s from a doctor
there—some hospital. The—Old Man got hurt. One of them cussed
automobiles knocked him down. They want you to come.”
Chip had straightened up and was hooking at Andy blankly. “If
you’re just—”
“Honest,” Andy asserted, and flushed a little. “I’ll go tell some
one to catch up the team—you’ll want to make that 11:20, I take
it.” He added, as Chip went by him hastily, “I had the agent wire
for sleeper berths on the 11:20 so—”
“Thanks. Yes, you have the team caught up, Andy.” Chip was
already well on his way to the house.
Andy waited till he saw the Little Doctor come hurriedly to the
end of the porch overlooking the pathway, with the telegram
fluttering in her fingers, and then led his horse down through
the gate and to the stable. He yanked the saddle off, turned the
tired animal into a stall, and went on to the corral, where he
leaned elbows on a warped rail and peered through at the turmoil
within. Close beside him stood Weary, with his loop dragging
behind him, waiting for a chance to throw it over the head of a
buckskin three-year-old with black mane and tail.
“Get in here and make a hand, why don’t you?” Weary bantered, his
eye on the buckskin. “Good chance to make a ‘rep’ for yourself,
Andy. Gawd greased that buckskin—he sure can slide out from
under a rope as easy—”
He broke off to flip the hoop dexterously forward, had the reward
of seeing the buckskin dodge backward, so that the rope barely
flicked him on the nose, and drew in his rope disgustedly. “Come
on, Andy—my hands are up in the air; I can’t land him— that’s
the fourth throw.”
Andy’s interest in the buckskin, however, was scant. His face was
sober, his whole attitude one of extreme dejection.
“You got the tummy-ache?” Pink inquired facetiously, moving
around so that he got a fair look at his face.
“Naw—his girl’s went back on him!” Happy Jack put in, coiling
his rope as he came up.
“Oh, shut up!” Andy’s voice was sharp with trouble. “Boys, the
Old Man’s—well, he’s most likely dead by this time. I brought
out a telegram—”
“Go on!” Pink’s eyes widened incredulously. “Don’t you try that
kind of a load, Andy Green, or I’ll just about—”
“Oh, you fellows make me sick!” Andy took his elbows off the rail
and stood straight. “Dammit, the telegram’s up at the house—go
and read it yourselves, then!”
The three stared after him doubtfully, fear struggling with the
caution born of much experience.
“He don’t act, to me, like he was putting up a josh,” Weary
stated uneasily, after a minute of silence. “Run up to the house
and find out, Cadwalloper. The Old Man—oh, good Lord!” The tan
on Weary’s face took a lighter tinge. “Scoot—it won’t take but a
minute to find out for sure. Go on, Pink.”
“So help me Josephine, I’ll kill that same Andy Green if he’s
lied about it,” Pink declared, while he climbed the fence.
In three minutes he was back, and before he had said a word, his
face confirmed the bad news. Their eyes besought him for details,
and he gave them jerkily. “Automobile run over him. He ain’t
dead, but they think—Chip and the Little Doctor are going to
catch the night train. You go haze in the
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