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Read Ebook: Grace Harlowe's Overland Riders on the Great American Desert by Chase Josephine
Font size: Background color: Text color: Add to tbrJar First Page Next Page Prev PageEbook has 1471 lines and 42326 words, and 30 pages"Surely, Grace, you girls aren't going to ride those wild animals!" protested Tom Gray. "Judging from the performances I have just witnessed, I am inclined to think we are not," replied Grace whimsically. "Which is Mr. Lang?" "The man with his hat off leading the pony from the corral." Tom beckoned to the man who was to guide the Overlanders across the desert, and, as soon as he had turned the protesting bronco over to a cowboy, the guide responded to Tom Gray's summons. "Lang, this is Mrs. Gray and Miss Briggs," said Tom by way of introduction. "Reckon I'm mighty glad to know you all," greeted the guide, mopping the perspiration from his forehead with his sleeve. Hi Lang interested Grace at once. Of medium height, thin-featured, with a complexion that reminded her of wrinkled parchment, eyes that, though intelligent and alert, frequently took on a dreamy, far-away expression, Hiram Lang proved a new type of westerner to Grace Harlowe. "Got your telegram that you reckoned on starting to-day," he told her. "Yes. Of course we do not wish to hurry you, but we are eager to get on our way. What about the supplies and equipment! Have you ordered everything that I suggested?" The guide nodded. "The stuff already has gone on ahead in charge of Ping Wing--" "Who?" laughed Elfreda Briggs. "Ping Wing, a Chinaman, with four lazy burros. Good man. Can cook, too. Been on the desert before. Lively as a cricket. Only trouble with Ping is that he thinks he can sing. Ride and shoot?" he demanded, abruptly changing the subject. "I am not much of a rider, but manage to stick to the saddle most of the time," answered Grace. "I shoot a little. We are all novices, with the exception of Lieutenant Wingate who is an excellent shot. The lieutenant was a fighting aviator in the war." Hi nodded and stroked his chin. "Reckoned you could ride some. When we get out on the desert I'll see how you can shoot. When do you think you want to start?" "I will leave that to you," replied Grace. "Three o'clock this afternoon. We'll make the range where Ping will be waiting for us, and have chow there, then go on in the cool of the evening. Want to look over the broncos?" "If you please. I should like to try the ponies that we are to ride." "Do--do they always kick and buck as we saw them do just now?" questioned Miss Briggs apprehensively. The guide shook his head and grinned. "They don't like to be roped, that's all. No bronco does. They'll be as all right as a bronc' can be, so long as you don't use the spur or get the critters stubborn." "If you say they are perfectly safe for my friends to ride, I am satisfied, though I should like to try them out. Hippy, have you ridden any of these animals?" asked Grace, turning to Lieutenant Wingate. "He tried to," observed Tom Gray dryly. "Hippy mounted one on one side and promptly fell off on the other before getting his feet in the stirrups. It was not the pony's fault, however, but Hippy's clumsiness that caused the disaster." "That's right, have all the fun at my expense you wish. I am the comedian of this outfit anyway," protested Hippy. "Let's see you ride one of them, Brown Eyes," he urged, speaking to Grace. "Please have them saddled one by one and I will try them, Mr. Lang," directed Grace. "Any pony that I can ride, the others surely can." The guide nodded and turned away. Grace watched the saddling with keen interest, especially the saddling of the first pony selected for her, which squealed and pawed and danced as the cinch-girth was being tightened. "Vicious!" objected Elfreda Briggs. "No," answered Grace. "Just playful. If the others are no worse, we shall have a good bunch of horses." The saddle being secured, Grace stepped up and petted the little animal for a few moments, then mounted. The pony danced under her, then, at a word, galloped off. The Overland girl rode but a short distance, and, turning back, trotted up to the group smilingly. "Spirited but sweet," was her comment as she dismounted. "He will be all right if he is used right. Try him, Elfreda. I know you will like him." Miss Briggs took her test without falling off, and promptly claimed the little brown animal as her own private mount. "You made a most excellent selection, Mr. Lang," complimented Grace, after she had tried the ponies for the rest of the girls and found them suitable. Each girl also tried out and selected her own mount from those that Grace had approved, the cowboys and half the village being interested spectators. Grace was pleased, both with the ponies and with the riding of her girl friends. Not the least of those who were pleased was Hi Lang, who, before the coming of the outfit, had felt considerable doubt as to the success of the proposed jaunt. Now he knew that the Overland Riders were not rank greenhorns, as he expressed it to himself. "Which animal did you think of selecting for me!" asked Grace smilingly. "Reckoned you'd do that for yourself," answered the guide. "Thank you. Please have that black roped and brought out. He is the one I think will please me," replied Grace promptly. "What, that black bronc'? He's a lively one, Mrs. Gray. Don't reckon you'll be able to stick on him at all," warned Hi Lang. "I have fallen off before, sir. Have him roped and brought out. I'll try him out." The guide shrugged his shoulders and walked over to the head wrangler. "Why take such unnecessary chances!" begged Tom Gray. "Surely there are plenty of ponies in the bunch that are safe for you to ride." "Tom, surely the black one can be no worse than that wild western pony that I bought last fall and rode. You know he was supposed to be the last word in viciousness and bucking ability, but I rode him successfully." "Very well, go ahead. You won't be satisfied until you have tried him, but remember, I warned you," returned Grace's husband with some heat. "Now, Tom," begged Grace pleadingly. "Please don't be a cross bear and spoil my trip. You have been so perfectly lovely about it right up to this moment, that it would be too bad if you were to get peevish now. If you say I must not, of course I will not try to ride the animal, but I do so want him." Tom Gray shrugged his shoulders and laughed. "Go to it, little woman. You have my full permission to break your neck if you insist. I will see that little Yvonne keeps your memory green." "Oh, Tom! You are such a dear, but I promise you that you won't have occasion to keep my memory green so far as that mischievous little black pony is concerned." Grace Harlowe's confidence in herself was not without good and sufficient reason. The western pony that she had ridden the previous winter had demonstrated nearly all the tricks known to the stubborn broncos of the great west. At first Grace had had some bad spills, but eventually she learned to outwit her pony and ride him no matter how savagely he tried to unhorse her. Not only had Grace learned to ride, in anticipation of another summer in the saddle, but, under her husband's instruction, she had taken up revolver shooting, and by spring was capable of qualifying as an expert, especially in quick shooting at moving targets. Thus fitted for the strenuous life in the wilder parts of her native land, Grace looked forward with calm assurance to the experiences that she knew lay before her. "Bring out the black," Hi Lang had directed. "Cinch him so tight it will make him squeal." When a wrangler's rope caught him, the wiry little animal fought viciously for a few moments, then suddenly surrendered and was led out as docile as a lamb. "Who said that black is vicious?" demanded Hippy Wingate. Add to tbrJar First Page Next Page Prev Page |
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