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PAGE 2

The Colonel And The Horse-Thief
by [?]

They’d entered two pretty good-lookin’ horses and had their jockeys stripped down to breech-clouts, while Hollis and me wore our whole outfits on our backs, as we didn’t exactly figger on dressin’ after the race, leastways, not on that side of the river.

Just before we lined up, Jim says: “Now you —- all ride like —-, and when you git to the far turn we’ll let the guns loose and stampede the crowd. Then jest leave the track and make a break fer the river, everybody fer himself. We’ll all meet at them cottonwoods on the other side, so we can stand ’em off if they try to swim across after us.”

That would have been a sure enough hot race if we had run it out, for we all four got as pretty a start as I ever see and went down the line all together with a-bangin’ of hoofs and Indian yells ringin’ in our ears.

I had begun to work Black Hawk out of the bunch to get a clear start across the prairie at the turn, when I heard the guns begin snappin’ like pop-corn.

“They’ve started already,” yelled Hollis, and we turned the rearin’ horses toward the river, three miles away, leavin’ them two savages tearin’ down the track like mad.

I glanced back as I turned, but, instead of seein’ the boys in the midst of a decent retreat, the crowd was swarmin’ after ’em like a nest of angry hornets, while Donnelly, with his reins between his teeth, was blazin’ away at three reds who were right at Barrett’s heels as he ran for his horse. Martin was lashin’ his jumpin’ cayuse away from the mob which sputtered and spit angry shots after him. Bucks were runnin’ here and there and hastily mountin’ their ponies–while an angry roar came to me, punctuated by the poppin’ of the guns.

Hollis and I reached the river and swam it half a mile ahead of the others and their yellin’ bunch of trailers, so we were able to protect ’em in their crossin’.

I could see from their actions that Bennett and Martin was both hurt and I judged the deal hadn’t panned out exactly accordin’ to specifications.

The Crows didn’t attempt to cross in the teeth of our fire, however, being satisfied with what they’d done, and the horses safely brought our three comrades drippin’ up the bank to where we lay takin’ pot-shots at every bunch of feathers that approached the opposite bank.

We got Barrett’s arm into a sling, and, as Martin’s hurt wasn’t serious, we lost no time in gettin’ away.

“They simply beat us to it,” complained Barrett, as we rode south. “You all had jest started when young Long Hair grabs the sack and ducks through the crowd, and the whole bunch turns loose on us at once. We wasn’t expectin’ anything so early in the game, and they winged me the first clatter. I thought sure it was oft with me when I got this bullet in the shoulder, but I used the gun in my left hand and broke for the nearest pony.”

“They got me, too, before I saw what was up,” added Martin; “but I tore out of there like a jack-rabbit. It was all done so cussed quick that the first thing I knew I’d straddled my horse and was makin’ tracks. Who’d a thought them durned Indians was dishonest enough fer a trick like that?”

Then Donnelly spoke up and says: “Boys, as fur as the coin goes, we’re out an’ injured; we jest made a ‘Mexican stand-off’–lost our money, but saved our lives–and mighty lucky at that, from appearances. What I want to know now is, how we’re all goin’ to get home, clean across the State of Texas, without a dollar in the outfit, and no assets but our guns and the nags.”

That was a sure tough proposition, and we had left it teetotally out of calculations. We’d bet every bean on that race, not seein’ how we could lose. In them days there wasn’t a railroad in that section, ranches were scatterin’, and people weren’t givin’ pink teas to every stranger that rode up–especially when they were as hard-lookin’ as we were.