“Reckon so?” asked Bud, looking at Ben out of the corner of a twinkling eye.
“Oh, dear me, but he’s awfully ugly,” said Stella, coming from the tent which she and her aunt, Mrs. Graham, occupied a short distance from the camp.
She was as spick and span as a new dollar, nattily dressed in a bifurcated riding skirt, from beneath which peeped a pair of high tan riding boots.
Her white Stetson had just the right curl of brim to be most becoming, and her wavy hair fell in profusion over her shoulders.
She was pulling on a pair of fringed gauntlets, and her braided quirt, with a silver knob for a handle, hung by its thong from her slender wrist.
“Now, see here, Stella, don’t yer go ter feelin’ knocky about yer mount, er yer won’t hev no confidence in him, an’ will lose. I want ter say ter yer right now that this hoss what looks like ther last rose o’ summer, ther last run o’ shad, an’ ther breakin’ up o’ a hard winter in a last year’s bird’s nest, is all right, an’ he can’t lose this race. Ride him true, an’ don’t give him ther gad none. All yer got ter do is ter encourage him by a word now an’ then, an’ pilot him straight ter ther wire.”
“All right, Bud. I was only joking,” laughed Stella. “It isn’t the prettiest horse that wins the race. I know that well, but, you see, like every girl, I like pretty things, and a horse might as well look good as run fast. It has always seemed to me that the two go together.”
During the middle of the forenoon the broncho boys started for the town of Snyder to attend the race.
Bud led Hatrack, and a troublesome job he had of it, for the animated skeleton objected to being on the halter, as any self-respecting range horse would, and he pulled back and sideways and almost dragged Bud from his saddle several times.
“Ding bat yer,” Bud would shout, “yer ornery, unsanctified, muley, harebrained, contaminated son o’ a zebra, git down on yer feet an’ foller. Ye’ll git all that’s comin’ ter yer when ther race starts. Save yer sweat until then.”
But Hatrack thought differently, and before they were halfway to Snyder it took all the efforts of Bud in the lead and Ben, Kit, and Clay Whipple in the rear, to keep him moving in a forward direction.
Only enough boys were left with the herd to keep it from scattering. Ted and Stella rode in the lead as they entered the town, which was crowded with a motley assemblage of cow-punchers, gamblers, and Indians in their gay blankets and with painted faces.
The Indians of the plains are keen on horse racing, and among the various tribes are to be found some of the fleetest horses in the West, many of them trained to all the tricks of racing. An Indian jockey is the shrewdest of his class, and is an adept at all the tricks of the trade.
“Hi! Look at the livin’ skeleton!”
Bud swung around in his saddle and stared at a cow-puncher standing on the sidewalk in Snyder, as he rode into town dragging behind him the dejected Hatrack, who looked as if he had been living on two oats for dinner and a spear of grass for supper all his life.