CHAPTER 16
Diablo greeted them with a throwing up of his formidable head. He took his place
in the very middle of his corral, but when Bull Hunter and his small guide
reached the bars, the black stallion seemed to go suddenly mad. He flung himself
into the air and came down bucking. Back and forth across the corral he threw
himself in the wildest swirl of pitching that Bull Hunter had ever seen or ever
dreamed of.
"He's an educated bucker, you see?" said the boy in admiration. "They ain't any
trick that he don't know. Look!"
Diablo had begun to sunfish in the most approved method, and swirled from this
to some fence rowing as swift as the jagged course of lightning. At every jump
Bull could see an imaginary rider snapped from the back of the black giant. A
cloud of dust was sent swishing up, and in the midst of this fog, Diablo came to
a pause as sudden as the beginning of his strange struggle against an imaginary
foeman; but it seemed to Bull Hunter that the ground beneath his feet was still
quivering from the impacts of that mighty body.
"That's just his way of telling you what he'll do when you try to saddle him,"
chuckled the boy.
As he spoke he slipped through the bars of the corral.
"Look out!" exclaimed Bull in horror, for the stallion had rushed at the small
intruder with gaping mouth. Bull reached for his gun--Diablo was already on the
child, but at the last minute he swerved, and flashed around Tod in a circle.
"He's all right," Tod was shrilling through his laughter, for the horrified face
of Bull amused him. "That's just his way of saying that he's glad to see me!"
In fact, Diablo came to a sudden halt directly behind the child, his head
towering aloft above that of Tod while he flashed his defiance at Bull Hunter,
as though he were making use of the small bulwark of Tod against the stranger.
"Diablo, you old fool," the boy was saying, as he reached up and managed to wind
his fingers in the end of Diablo's mane, "you come along and meet my friend,
Bull Hunter. I figure you're going to get to know him pretty good before long.
Hey, Bull, come up close to the bars so's he can see you ain't got a rope or a
whip or spurs, and stick your hand out so's he can sniff at it. That's his way
of saying how d'ye do."
Bull obeyed, and to his amazement, Diablo responded to the small forward urge of
the child's hand and approached the bars one trembling step at a time. Bull
began to talk to him softly. He had never talked like this to any living
creature. He did not know exactly what he said. The words came of their own
accord into his throat. He only knew that he wanted to reassure the big,
powerful, uncertain brute, and though Diablo stopped short at the first sound of
Bull's voice and laid his ears back, he presently pricked one of those ears
again and allowed himself to be drawn forward with long, crouching strides.
"That's the way!" said the child softly, as though he feared that a loud voice
might break in upon the spell. "You know how to talk to him! And, outside of me,
you're the only one that does! I knew you'd have it in you!"
For Diablo had extended his long neck and actually sniffed the hand of Bull
Hunter. He immediately tossed his head aloft, but he did not flinch away.
"That's half the fight won already," advised the boy in the same soft voice. "D'you
want to try the saddle on him now?"
"The saddle? Now?" exclaimed Bull. "I should say not! Why, he don't hardly know
me; I'll have to get acquainted before I try anything like that."
He discovered that Tod was nodding in hearty approval.
"You do know," he said. "Don't tell me that you ain't been around hosses a pile.
Yep, you got to get acquainted. What you want to do now?"
Bull considered. "I'd like to have something to show him that it isn't
unpleasant having me around. I'd like to have him see some good results, you
know? Is there anything I could feed him?"
The boy chuckled. "Best thing is some dried prunes with the pits taken out of 'em.
I have some at the house. They get stuck in Diablo's teeth and it's sure funny
to see him eat 'em. But he just nacherally plumb likes the taste of the prunes."
He followed his own suggestion by scampering away to the house and returned
almost at once with a hat full of the prunes.
"You want to feed him these now?"
"First," said Bull, "I'd like to have you leave us alone. If I can't teach him
to like me all by myself, then I'd better give up right away."
The boy looked at him in surprise and then impulsively stretched out his hand.
They shook hands gravely.
"You got the right idea, pardner," said Tod. "Go ahead--and good luck! And keep
talking to him all the time. That's the main thing!"
He retreated accordingly, but before the evening was over, Bull regretted
dismissing his little ally so quickly, for although Diablo indulged in no more
threatening outbreaks of temper, he resolutely refused to eat the prunes from
Bull's hand. Several times he approached the bars of the corral and the
patiently extended hand, but always he drew back, snorting, and sometimes he
would run around the corral, shaking his head and throwing up his heels after
the manner of a horse tempted but still afraid of being overruled.
It was long after dark when Bull gave up the attempt. He went back to the
bunkhouse, rolled up the blankets which had been assigned to him, and carried
them out to the corral. Close to the fence he laid them down, and a few minutes
later he was wrapped in them and sound asleep. The last thing he remembered was
the form of the great stallion, standing watchfully in the exact middle of the
corral, the starlight glimmering very faintly in his big eyes.
Bull Hunter fell asleep and had a nightmare of the arrival of the famous Hal
Dunbar the next day, a fierce conquest of Diablo, and the battle ending with the
departure of Dunbar on the back of the stallion.
The dream waked him, nervous, and he turned and saw Diablo standing huge and
formidable in the darkness, as though he had not moved from his first position.
In the morning the arduous labors of the building began again, and though the
prodigious appetite of Bull at the breakfast table made even old Bridewell look
askance, Bull had not been at work an hour handling the ponderous uprights and
joists before his employer was smiling to himself. His new hand was certainly
worth his keep, and more, for weariness seemed a stranger to that big body, and
no weight was too great to be cheerily assumed. And always he worked with a sort
of nervous anxiety as though he feared that he might not be doing enough.
During the day Bridewell attempted to probe the past history of his hired man,
expecting a story as big as the body of the man, but Bull was discreetly vague,
for he had no wish to reveal his connection with Pete Reeve; and if he left out
Reeve, he felt that there was nothing in his life worth talking about. Many a
time he wondered what the little gunfighter was doing, and what trail he was
riding now. A dangerous trail, he doubted not, and a lawless trail, he greatly
feared. But someday he might be able to find the terrible little man and bring
him back to a truer place in society.
That night he began again the long, quiet struggle with Diablo; and before he
ended, Diablo had gathered some of the dried fruit from the palm of his hand
with a sensitive, trembling pair of lips. And he had come back for more, and
more. Yet it was not until the next night that Bull ventured inside the bars of
the corral and sat cross-legged on the ground, with a vague feeling that Diablo
would be less alarmed if his visitor bulked less large.
Inside the bars he seemed an entirely new proposition to the stallion. The big
black kept discreetly on the far side of the corral with much snorting and
stamping, and it was not until the next evening that he ventured to approach the
man. Still another day passed before Bull was allowed to stand and touch the
neck of the black; and that, it seemed to him, was the greatest forward step
toward the conquest.
It was terribly slow work, and in the meantime the skeleton frame of the barn
was fast rising. Would he accomplish his purpose by the time the barn was
completed and Bridewell no longer had a use for him? Or would Hal Dunbar arrive
before that appointed time? That night, however, another portentous event
happened. Waking in the night, Bull heard a sound of deep, regular breathing
close to him, and, turning on his side, he saw that Diablo had lain down as
close to him as the corral fence would allow, and there he slept, panther-black,
sleek in the starlight. Bull stretched out his hand. The head of the stallion
jerked up, but a moment later he carelessly sniffed the extended fingers and
resumed his position of repose. And the heart of Bull Hunter swelled with
triumph.
That event gave him a new idea, and the following evening he made a groundwork
of branches in the corner of the corral itself, and put down his blankets on the
evergreens. Diablo was much concerned and walked about examining the new work
from every angle. There Bull slept, and the next night he found that during the
day the stallion had torn the boughs to pieces and scattered them about. He
patiently laid a new foundation, and after this the bed was left strictly alone.
In the meantime Bull had made a light, strong halter of rawhide, and after
several attempts he managed to slip it onto the head of Diablo. Once in place,
it was easy to teach Diablo that he must follow when he felt a pull on the
halter--the first steps were rewarded with dried prunes, and after that it was
simple.
On that evening, also, Bull made his next step forward toward the most difficult
proposition of all--he took a partly filled barley sack and put it on the back
of Diablo. The next moment the sack was shot into the air as Diablo leaped up
and arched his back like a cat at the height of his leap. He came down trembling
and snorting, but Bull picked up the fallen sack and allowed him to smell it.
Diablo found that the smell was good and that the hateful sack even contained
things very good to eat. The next time the sack was put on his back he quivered
and shrank, but he did not buck it off.
After that, Bull spent his evenings in gradually increasing the weight of that
sack until a full hundred pounds caused Diablo no worry whatever, and when this
point had been attained, Bull decided that he might venture his own bulk on the
back of Diablo. He confided his purpose to Tod, and the boy, greatly excited,
hid himself at a distance to watch.
In the beginning it was deceptively easy. Diablo stood perfectly unconcerned as
Bull raised himself on the bars of the fence. And when the long legs of Bull
were passed over his back, Diablo merely turned his head and sniffed the shoe
tentatively. Slowly, very softly, steadying himself on the top bar of the fence,
Bull lowered his weight more and more until the whole burden was on the back of
the stallion--and then he took his hands from the top rail.
But the moment he released that grip there was a change in Diablo, as though he
realized that the man had suddenly trusted himself entirely to his mount. Bull
felt a sudden wincing of all that great body; the quarters sank and trembled. He
thought at first that it was because the horse was failing under the weight of
this ponderous burden; but instinct told him a moment later that it was fear,
and a mixture of suspicious anger.
Diablo took one of his long, catlike steps, and paused without bringing up his
other foot. In vain Bull spoke to him, softly, steadily. Diablo took another
step, quickened to a soft trot, and stopped suddenly. That weight on his back
failed to leave him. He began to tremble violently. Bull felt the sudden
thundering of the great heart beneath the pressure of his knee.
To the stallion, this man had been a friend, a constant companion. The touch of
his hand was pleasant. Pleasanter still was the continual deep murmur of the
voice, reassuring, telling him of a superior and guardian mind looking out for
his interests. Now that hand was stroking his sleek neck and that voice was
steadily in his ear. But the position was the most hated one. To be sure, there
was no saddle, no cutting, binding cinch, no drag of cruel Spanish curb to
control his head, no tearing spurs to threaten him. But his flanks twitched
where the spurs had dug in many a time, and he panted, remembering the cinches.
Those memories built up a panic. He became unsure. The voice reached him less
distinctly. Moreover it was a strange time of the evening. The light of the day
was nearly done; the moon was barely up, and all things were ghostly and unreal
in that slant light.
Something of all that went through the mind of Diablo was understood by Bull
Hunter. It was telegraphed to him by the twitching and vibration of great
muscles, by the stiff arching of the neck, and the snorting breathing. But he
was beginning to forget fear. The stallion danced lightly forward, and as the
wind struck the face of Bull Hunter he suddenly rejoiced. This was what he had
dreamed of, to be carried thus lightly, easily. The weight that had crushed
other horses was nothing to Diablo. It made him feel buoyant. He became
tinglingly alert. On the back of Diablo not a horse of the mountains could
overtake him if he fled; and not a man of the mountains could escape him if he
pursued on the back of the stallion.
That thought had hardly formed in his excited mind when Diablo sprang,
cat-footed, to one side. It made Bull Hunter sway, and he naturally sought to
preserve his balance by gripping the powerful barrel of the horse with his
knees. But at the first touch of the knee Diablo went suddenly mad. Exactly what
he did Bull Hunter never knew. Indeed, it seemed that Diablo left his feet, shot
a dizzy height into the air, and at the crest of his rise did three or four
things at once. At any rate, as the stallion landed, Bull pitched from the
arched back and hurtled forward and to the right side. He landed heavily against
the ground, his head striking a small rock; and he lay there a moment, stunned.
Far off he heard Tod shrilling at him, "Bull! Are you hurt?"
He gathered himself together and arose, "I'm all right. Stay where you are!"
"Don't try him again. He'll kill you, Bull!"
"Maybe. But I'm going to try."
Diablo stood on the far side of the corral in the moonlight, a splendid figure
with haughty tail and head. Inwardly he was trembling, enraged. He knew what
would come. He had thrown men before, and usually he had tried to batter them to
pieces after they fell. This man he had no desire to batter. There had been no
saddle, no bridle, no spurs, no quirt--nevertheless, he must not be controlled
by the hand of any man! But having thrown the fellow, now other men would run on
him, swinging the accursed ropes over their heads, shouting, cursing at him in
strident voices. Vitally he yearned to break through the bars of the corral and
flee, but the bars were there and he must stay in the inclosure with this
friendly enemy. It was not the prostrate man he feared so much as vengeance from
other men, for that had always been the way.
But no one came. No shouts were heard except from the small, thin, familiar
voice of Tod. And presently the giant arose from the ground where he had fallen
and came toward him. Diablo flattened his ears expectantly. At the first
throat-tearing curse he would charge. But no curse came. The man approached, as
always, with extended hand, and the voice was the smooth, gentle murmur that
carries peace into the shadowy mind of a horse.
Something relaxed in Diablo. If the man did not resent being thrown off--if that
were a sort of game, as it were--why should he, Diablo, resent having the man on
his back? The hand touched his nose gently; another hand was stroking his neck.
Presently he was led to the fence and again that heavy weight slid onto his
back. He crouched again, with waves of blind panic surging up in him, but the
panic did not master his sense this time, and as his brain cleared he began to
discover that there was no urging, no will of another imposed upon him. He could
walk where he pleased, following his own sweet will, or else he could stand
still. It made no difference; but the soft-touching hand and the deep, quiet
voice were assuring him that the man was glad to be up there on his back.
Diablo turned his head. One ear quivered and came forward tentatively; then the
other. He had accepted Bull Hunter.
Afterward Bull found Tod. The boy wrung his hand ecstatically.
"That's what I call game!" he said.
"Why, Tod," the big man smiled, "you did the same thing."
"He knew I was nothing. But you're a growed man. But--what's this, Bull? Your
back's all wet."
"It's nothing much," said Bull calmly. "When I fell, my head hit a stone.
There's some things worth paying for, and Diablo's one of them."