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VB smiled.
"What do I want for him?" he repeated. "I want--feed and water for the rest of his life; shelter when he needs it; the will to treat him as he should be treated. And I guess that's about all."
The other again removed his cigar, and his jaw dropped. A cow-puncher talking so! He could not believe it; and the idea so confused him that he blundered right on with the bargaining. "Five hundred? Seven-fifty?
No? Well, how much?"
VB smiled again, just an indulgent smile prompted by the knowledge that he possessed a thing beyond the power of even this man's wealth.
"The Captain is not for sale," he said. "Not to-day--or ever. That's final."
There was more talk, but all the kindly bluffness, all the desire instinctive in Bob Thorpe to give the other man an even break in the bargain, fell flat. This stranger, this thirty-five-dollar-a-month ranch hand, shed his offers as a tin roof sheds rain and with a self-possession characterized by unmistakable a.s.surance.
"Tell Jed I was over," the big man said as they gave up their errand and turned to go. "And"--as he set a foot on the running board of his car--"any time you're our way drop in."
"Yes, do!" added the girl, and her father could not check the impulse which made him turn halfway as though to shut her off.
CHAPTER XIII
VB Fights
Jed returned that evening, worn by a hard day's riding. He was silent.
VB, too, was quiet and they spoke little until the housework was finished and Jed had drawn off his boots preparatory to turning in.
Then VB said: "Bob Thorpe was over to-day."
"So?"
"Uh-huh; wanted to buy the Captain."
After a pause Jed commented: "That's natural."
"Wanted me to give you the good word."
The old man walked through the doorway into the little bunk room and VB heard him flop into the crude bed.
A short interval of silence.
"Jed," called VB, "ever hear where his daughter went to school?"
A long yawn. Then:
"Yep--don't remember."
Another pause.
"She was over, too."
"Oh-ho-o-o!"
The boy felt himself flushing, and then sat bolt upright, wondering soberly and seriously why it should be so--without reason.
Young VB slept restlessly that night. He tossed and dreamed, waking frequently under a sense of nervous tension, then falling back to half-slumber once more. Thorpe came, and his daughter, offering fabulous sums for the Captain, which were stubbornly refused.
Then, shouting at the top of her voice, the girl cried:
"But I will give you kisses for him! Surely that is enough!"
And VB came back to himself, sitting up in bed and wadding the blankets in his hands. He blinked in the darkness and herded his scattered senses with difficulty. Then the hands left off twisting the covers and went slowly to his throat. For the thirst was on him and in the morning he rose in the grip of the same stifling desire, and his quavering hands spilled things as he ate.
Jed noticed, but made no comment. When the meal was finished he said:
"S'pose I could get you to crawl up on the Captain an' take a shoot up Curley Gulch with an eye out for that black mare an' her yearlin'?"
VB was glad to be alone with his horse, and as he walked to the corral, his bridle over his arm, he felt as though, much as Jed could help him, he could never bring the inspiration which the black beast offered.
He opened the gate and let it swing wide. The Captain came across to him with soft nickerings, deserting the alfalfa he was munching. He thrust his muzzle into the crook of VB's elbow, and the arm tightened on it desperately, while the other hand went up to twine fingers in the luxurious mane.
"Oh, Captain!" he muttered, putting his face close to the animal's cheek. "You know what it is to fight for yourself! You know--but where you found love and help when you lost that fight, I'd find--just blackness--without even a candle--"
The stallion moved closer, shoving with his head until he forced VB out of the corral. Then with his teasing lips he sought the bridle.
"You seem to understand!" the man cried, his tired eyes lighting. "You seem to know what I need!"
Five minutes later he was rushing through the early morning air up the gulch, the Captain bearing him along with that free, firm, faultless stride that had swept him over those mountains for so many long, unmolested years.
Throughout the forenoon they rode hard. VB looked for the mare and colt, but the search did not command much of his attention.
"Why can't I turn all this longing into something useful?" he asked the horse. "Your l.u.s.t for freedom has come to this end; why can't my impulses to be a wild beast be driven into another path?"
And the Captain made answer by bending his superb head and lipping VB's chap-clad knee.
The quest was fruitless, and an hour before noon VB turned back toward the ranch, making a short cut across the hills. In one of the gulches the Captain nickered softly and increased his trotting. VB let him go, unconscious of his brisker movement, for the calling in his throat had risen to a clamor. The horse stopped and lowered his head, drinking from a hole into which crystal water seeped.
The man dropped off and flopped on his stomach, thrusting his face into the pool close to the nose of the greedily drinking stallion. He took the water in great gulps. It was cold, as cold as spring water can be, yet it was as nothing against the fire within him.
The Captain, raising his head quickly, caught his breath with a grunt, dragging the air deep into his great lungs and exhaling slowly, loudly, as he gazed off down the gulch; then he chewed briskly on the bit and thrust his nose again into the spring.
VB's arm stole up and dropped over the horse's head.
"Oh, boy, you know what one kind of thirst is," he said in a whisper.
"But there's another kind that this stuff won't quench! The thirst that comes from being in blackness--"
They went on, dropped off a point, and made for the flat little buildings of the ranch. As he approached, VB saw three saddled horses standing before the house, none of which was Jed's property. Nothing strange in that, however, for one man's home is another's shelter in that country, whether the owner be on the ground or not, and to VB the thought of visitors brought relief. Contact with others might joggle him from his mood.