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Автор: B. M. Bower
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Cecil Granthum.”

      Dr. Cecil advanced with hand out invitingly. “I’ve heard so much about Chip that I feel very well acquainted. I hope you won’t expect me to call you Mr. Bennett, for I shan’t, you know.”

      Too utterly at sea to make reply, Chip took the offered hand in his. Hate Dr. Cecil? How could he hate this big, breezy, blue-eyed young woman? She shook his hand heartily and smiled deep into his troubled eyes, and drew the poison from his wounds in that one glance.

      The Little Doctor plumped into the seat and made room for Cecil, like the spoiled little girl that she was, compared with the other.

      “I’m going to sit in the middle. Cecil, you’re the biggest and you can easily hang on—and, beside, this young man is so fierce with strangers that he’d snub you something awful if we’d give him a chance. He’s been scheming, ever since I told him you were coming, to get out of driving in to meet you. He tried to make me take Slim. Slim!”

      Dr. Cecil smiled at Chip behind the Little Doctor’s back, and Chip could have hugged her then and there, for he knew, somehow, that she understood and was his friend.

      I should like very much to say that it seemed to Chip that the sun shone brighter, and that the grass was greener, and the sky several shades bluer, on that homeward drive—but I must record the facts, which are these:

      Chip did not know whether the sun shone or the moon, and he didn’t care—just so there was light to see the hair blowing about the Little Doctor’s face, and to watch the dimple come and go in the cheek next him. And whether the grass was green and the sky blue, or whether the reverse was the case, he didn’t know; and if you had asked him, he might have said tersely that he didn’t care a darn about the grass—that is, if he gave you sufficient attention to reply at all.

       Table of Contents

      “Bay Denver’s broke out uh the little pasture,” announced the Old Man, putting his head in at the door of the blacksmith shop where Chip was hammering gayly upon a bent branding iron, for want of a better way to kill time and give vent to his surplus energy. “I wish you’d saddle up an’ go after him, Chip, if yuh can. I just seen him takin’ down the coulee trail like a scared coyote.”

      “Sure, I’ll go. Darn that old villain, he’d jump a fence forty feet high if he took a notion that way.” Chip threw down the hammer and reached for his coat.

      “I guess the fence must be down som’ers. I’ll go take a look. Say! Dell ain’t come back from Denson’s yit. Yuh want t’ watch out Denver don’t meet her—he’d scare the liver out uh her.”

      Chip was well aware that the Little Doctor had not returned from Denson’s, where she had been summoned to attend one of the children, who had run a rusty nail into her foot. She had gone alone, for Dr. Cecil was learning to make bread, and had refused to budge from the kitchen till her first batch was safely baked.

      Chip limped hurriedly to the corral, and two minutes later was clattering down the coulee upon Blazes, after the runaway.

      Denver was a beautiful bay stallion, the pride and terror of the ranch. He was noted for his speed and his vindictive hatred of the more plebeian horses, scarcely one of which but had, at some time, felt his teeth in their flesh—and he was hated and feared by them all.

      He stopped at the place where the trail forked, tossed his crinkly mane triumphantly and looked back. Freedom was sweet to him—sweet as it was rare. His world was a roomy box stall with a small, high corral adjoining it for exercise, with an occasional day in the little pasture as a great treat. Two miles was a long, long way from home, it seemed to him. He watched the hill behind a moment, threw up his head and trotted off up the trail to Denson’s.

      Chip, galloping madly, caught a glimpse of the fugitive a mile away, set his teeth together, and swung Blazes sharply off the trail into a bypath which intersected the road further on. He hoped the Little Doctor was safe at Denson’s, but at that very moment he saw her ride slowly over a distant ridge.

      Now there was a race; Denver, cantering gleefully down the trail, Chip spurring desperately across the prairie.

      The Little Doctor had disappeared into a hollow with Concho pacing slowly, half asleep, the reins drooping low on his neck. The Little Doctor loved to dream along the road, and Concho had learned to do likewise—and to enjoy it very much.

      At the crest of the next hill she looked up, saw herself the apex of a rapidly shortening triangle, and grasped instantly the situation; she had peeped admiringly and fearsomely between the stout rails of the little, round corral too often not to know Denver when she saw him, and in a panic turned from the trail toward Chip. Concho was rudely awakened by a stinging blow from her whip—a blow which filled him with astonishment and reproach. He laid back his ears and galloped angrily—not in the path—the Little Doctor was too frightened for that—but straight as a hawk would fly. Denver, marking Concho for his prey and not to be easily cheated, turned and followed.

      Chip swore inwardly and kept straight ahead, leaving the path himself to do so. He knew a deep washout lay now between himself and the Little Doctor, and his only hope was to get within speaking distance before she was overtaken.

      Concho fled to the very brink of the washout and stopped so suddenly that his forefeet plowed a furrow in the grass, and the Little Doctor came near going clean over his head. She recovered her balance, and cast a frightened glance over her shoulder; Denver was rushing down upon them like an express train.

      “Get off—your—H-O-R-S-E!” shouted Chip, making a trumpet of his hands. “Fight Denver off—with—your whip!”

      The last command the Little Doctor did not hear distinctly. The first she made haste to obey. Throwing herself from the saddle, she slid precipitately into the washout just as Denver thundered up, snorting a challenge. Concho, scared out of his wits, turned and tore off down the washout, whipped around the end of it and made for home, his enemy at his heels and Chip after the two of them, leaning low over his horse as Blazes, catching the excitement and urged by the spurs, ran like an antelope.

      The Little Doctor, climbing the steep bank to level ground, gazed after the fleeing group with consternation. Here was she a long four miles from home—five, if she followed the windings of the trail—and it looked very much as if her two feet must take her there. The prospect was not an enlivening one, but she started off across the prairie very philosophically at first, very dejectedly later on, and very angrily at last. The sun was scorching, and it was dinner time, and she was hungry, and hot, and tired, and—“mad.” She did not bless her rescuer; she heaped maledictions upon his head—mild ones at first, but growing perceptibly more forcible and less genteel as the way grew rougher, and her feet grew wearier, and her stomach emptier. Then, as if her troubles were all to come in a lump—as they have a way of doing—she stepped squarely into a bunch of “pincushion” cactus.

      “I just HATE Montana!” she burst out, vehemently, blinking back some tears. “I don’t care if Cecil did just come day before yesterday—I shall pack up and go back home. She can stay if she wants to, but I won’t live here another day. I hate Chip Bennett, too, and I’ll tell him so if I ever get home. I don’t see what J. G.‘s thinking of, to live in such a God-forgotten hole, where there’s nothing but miles upon miles of cactuses—” The downfall of Eastern up-bringing! To deliberately say “cactuses”—but the provocation was great, I admit. If any man doubts, let him tread thin-shod upon a healthy little “pincushion” and be convinced. I think he will confess that “cactuses” is an exceedingly conservative epithet, and all too mild for the occasion.

      Half an hour later, Chip, leading Concho by the bridle rein, rode over the brow of a hill and came suddenly upon the Little Doctor, sitting disconsolately upon a rock. She had one shoe off, and was striving petulantly to extract a cactus thorn from the leather with a hat pin. Chip rode close and stopped, regarding her with satisfaction from the saddle. It was the first