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<h2> CHAPTER X. — What Whizzer Did. </h2>
<p>"I guess Happy lost some of his horses, las' night," said Slim at the
breakfast table next morning. Slim had been kept at the ranch to look
after the fences and the ditches, and was doing full justice to the expert
cookery of the Countess.</p>
<p>"What makes yuh think that?" The Old Man poised a bit of tender, broiled
steak upon the end of his fork.</p>
<p>"They's a bunch hangin' around the upper fence, an' Whizzer's among 'em.
I'd know that long-legged snake ten miles away."</p>
<p>The Little Doctor looked up quickly. She had never before heard of a
"long-legged snake"—but then, she had not yet made the acquaintance
of Whizzer.</p>
<p>"Well, maybe you better run 'em into the corral and hold 'em till Shorty
sends some one after 'em," suggested the Old Man.</p>
<p>"I never c'd run 'em in alone, not with Whizzer in the bunch," objected
Slim. "He's the orneriest cayuse in Chouteau County."</p>
<p>"Whizzer'll make a rattlin' good saddle horse some day, when he's broke
gentle," argued the Old Man.</p>
<p>"Huh! I don't envy Chip the job uh breakin' him, though," grunted Slim, as
he went out of the door.</p>
<p>After breakfast the Little Doctor visited Silver and fed him his customary
ration of lump sugar, helped the Countess tidy the house, and then found
herself at a loss for something to do. She stood looking out into the hazy
sunlight which lay warm on hill and coulee.</p>
<p>"I think I'll go up above the grade and make a sketch of the ranch," she
said to the Countess, and hastily collected her materials.</p>
<p>Down by the creek a "cotton-tail" sprang out of her way and kicked itself
out of sight beneath a bowlder. The Little Doctor stood and watched till
he disappeared, before going on again. Further up the bluff a striped
snake gave her a shivery surprise before he glided sinuously away under a
sagebush. She crossed the grade and climbed the steep bluff beyond,
searching for a comfortable place to work.</p>
<p>A little higher, she took possession of a great, gray bowlder jutting like
a giant table from the gravelly soil. She walked out upon it and looked
down—a sheer drop of ten or twelve feet to the barren, yellow slope
below.</p>
<p>"I suppose it is perfectly solid," she soliloquized and stamped one stout,
little boot, to see if the rock would tremble. If human emotions are
possible to a heart of stone, the rock must have been greatly amused at
the test. It stood firm as the hills around it.</p>
<p>Della sat down and looked below at the house—a doll's house; at the
toy corrals and tiny sheds and stables. Slim, walking down the hill, was a
mere pigmy—a short, waddling insect. At least, to a girl unused to
gazing from a height, each object seemed absurdly small. Flying U coulee
stretched away to the west, with a silver ribbon drawn carelessly through
it with many a twist and loop, fringed with a tender green of young
leaves. Away and beyond stood the Bear Paws, hazily blue, with splotches
of purple shadows.</p>
<p>"I don't blame J. G. for loving this place," thought the Little Doctor,
drinking in the intoxication of the West with every breath she drew.</p>
<p>She had just become absorbed in her work when a clatter arose from the
grade below, and a dozen horses, headed by a tall, rangy sorrel she
surmised was Whizzer, dashed down the hill. Weary and Chip galloped close
behind. They did not look up, and so passed without seeing her. They were
talking and laughing in very good spirits—which the Little Doctor
resented, for some inexplicable reason. She heard them call to Slim to
open the corral gate, and saw Slim run to do their bidding. She forgot her
sketching and watched Whizzer dodge and bolt back, and Chip tear through
the creek bed after him at peril of life and limb.</p>
<p>Back and forth, round and round went Whizzer, running almost through the
corral gate, then swerving suddenly and evading his pursuers with an ease
which bordered closely on the marvelous. Slim saddled a horse and joined
in the chase, and the Old Man climbed upon the fence and shouted advice
which no one heard and would not have heeded if they had.</p>
<p>As the chase grew in earnestness and excitement, the sympathies of the
Little Doctor were given unreservedly to Whizzer. Whenever a particularly
clever maneuver of his set the men to swearing, she clapped her hands in
sincere, though unheard and unappreciated, applause.</p>
<p>"Good boy!" she cried, approvingly, when he dodged Chip and whirled
through the big gate which the Old Man had unwittingly left open. J. G.
leaned perilously forward and shook his fist unavailingly. Whizzer tossed
head and heels alternately and scurried up the path to the very door of
the kitchen, where he swung round and looked back down the hill snorting
triumph.</p>
<p>"Shoo, there!" shrilled the Countess, shaking her dish towel at him.</p>
<p>"Who—oo-oof-f," snorted he disdainfully and trotted leisurely round
the corner.</p>
<p>Chip galloped up the hill, his horse running heavily. After him came
Weary, liberally applying quirt and mild invective. At the house they
parted and headed the fugitive toward the stables. He shot through the big
gate, lifting his heels viciously at the Old Man as he passed, whirled
around the stable and trotted haughtily past Slim into the corral of his
own accord, quite as if he had meant to do so all along.</p>
<p>"Did you ever!" exclaimed the Little Doctor, disgustedly, from her perch.
"Whizzer, I'm ashamed of you! I wouldn't have given in like that—but
you gave them a chase, didn't you, my beauty?"</p>
<p>The boys flung themselves off their tired horses and went up to the house
to beg the Countess for a lunch, and Della turned resolutely to her
sketching again.</p>
<p>She was just beginning to forget that the world held aught but soft
shadows, mellow glow and hazy perspective, when a subdued uproar reached
her from below. She drew an uncertain line or two, frowned and laid her
pencil resignedly in her lap.</p>
<p>"It's of no use. I can't do a thing till those cow-punchers take
themselves and their bronchos off the ranch—and may it be soon!" she
told herself, disconsolately and not oversincerely. The best of us are not
above trying to pull the wool over our own eyes, at times.</p>
<p>In reality their brief presence made the near future seem very flat and
insipid to the Little Doctor. It was washing all the color out of the
picture, and leaving it a dirty gray. She gazed moodily down at the whirl
of dust in the corral, where Whizzer was struggling to free himself from
the loop Chip had thrown with his accustomed, calm precision. Whatever
Chip did he did thoroughly, with no slurring of detail. Whizzer was fain
to own himself fairly caught.</p>
<p>"Oh, he's got you fast, my beauty!" sighed the Little Doctor, woefully.
"Why didn't you jump over the fence—I think you COULD—and run,
run, to freedom?" She grew quite melodramatic over the humiliation of the
horse she had chosen to champion, and glared resentfully when Chip threw
his saddle, with no gentle hand, upon the sleek back and tightened the
cinches with a few strong, relentless yanks.</p>
<p>"Chip, you're an ugly, mean-tempered—that's right, Whizzer! Kick him
if you can—I'll stand by you!" This assertion, you understand, was
purely figurative; the Little Doctor would have hesitated long before
attempting to carry it out literally.</p>
<p>"Now, Whizzer, when he tries to ride you, don't you let him! Throw him
clear-over-the STABLE—so there!"</p>
<p>Perhaps Whizzer understood the command in some mysterious, telepathic
manner. At any rate, he set himself straightway to obey it, and there was
not a shadow of doubt but that he did his best—but Chip did not
choose to go over the stable. Instead of doing so, he remained in the
saddle and changed ends with his quirt, to the intense rage of the Little
Doctor, who nearly cried.</p>
<p>"Oh, you brute! You fiend! I'll never speak to you again as long as I
live! Oh, Whizzer, you poor fellow, why do you let him abuse you so? Why
DON'T you throw him clean off the ranch?"</p>
<p>This is exactly what Whizzer was trying his best to do, and Whizzer's best
was exceedingly bad for his rider, as a general thing. But Chip calmly
refused to be thrown, and Whizzer, who was no fool, suddenly changed his
tactics and became so meek that his champion on the bluff felt tempted to
despise him for such servile submission to a tyrant in brown chaps and
gray hat—I am transcribing the facts according to the Little
Doctor's interpretation.</p>
<p>She watched gloomily while Whizzer, in whose brain lurked no thought of
submission, galloped steadily along behind the bunch which Slim made haste
to liberate, and bided his time. She had expected better—rather,
worse—of him than that. She had not dreamed he would surrender so
tamely. As they crossed the Hog's Back and climbed the steep grade just
below her, she eyed him reproachfully and said again:</p>
<p>"Whizzer, I'm ashamed of you!"</p>
<p>It did certainly seem that Whizzer heard and felt the pricking of pride at
the reproof. He made a feint at being frightened by a jack rabbit which
sprang out from the shade of a rock and bounced down the hill like a
rubber ball. As if Whizzer had never seen a jack rabbit before!—he
who had been born and reared upon the range among them! It was a feeble
excuse at the best, but he made the most of it and lost no time seeking a
better.</p>
<p>He stopped short, sidled against Weary's horse and snorted. Chip, in none
the best humor with him, jerked the reins savagely and dug him with his
spurs, and Whizzer, resenting the affront, whirled and bounded high in the
air. Back down the grade he bucked with the high, rocking, crooked jumps
which none but a Western cayuse can make, while Weary turned in his saddle
and watched with sharp-drawn breaths. There was nothing else that he could
do.</p>
<p>Chip was by no means passive. For every jump that Whizzer made the rawhide
quirt landed across his flaring nostrils, and the locked rowels of Chip's
spurs raked the sorrel sides from cinch to flank, leaving crimson streams
behind them.</p>
<p>Wild with rage at this clinging cow-puncher whom he could not dislodge,
who stung his sides and head like the hornets in the meadow, Whizzer
gathered himself for a mighty leap as he reached the Hog's Back. Like a
wire spring released, he shot into the air, shook himself in one last,
desperate hope of victory, and, failing, came down with not a joint in his
legs and turned a somersault.</p>
<p>A moment, and he struggled to his feet and limped painfully away, crushed
and beaten in spirit.</p>
<p>Chip did not struggle. He lay, a long length of brown chaps,
pink-and-white shirt and gray hat, just where he had fallen.</p>
<p>The Little Doctor never could remember getting down that bluff, and her
sketching materials went to amuse the jack rabbits and the birds. Fast as
she flew, Weary was before her and had raised Chip's head upon one arm.
She knelt beside him in the dust, hovering over the white face and still
form like a pitying, little gray angel. Weary looked at her impersonally,
but neither of them spoke in those first, breathless moments.</p>
<p>The Old Man, who had witnessed the accident, came puffing laboriously up
the hill, taking the short cut straight across from the stable.</p>
<p>"Is he—DEAD?" he yelled while he scrambled.</p>
<p>Weary turned his head long enough to look down at him, with the same
impersonal gaze he had bestowed upon the Little Doctor, but he did not
answer the question. He could not, for he did not know. The Little Doctor
seemed not to have heard.</p>
<p>The Old Man redoubled his exertions and reached them very much out of
breath.</p>
<p>"Is he dead, Dell?" he repeated in an awestruck tone. He feared she would
say yes.</p>
<p>The Little Doctor had taken possession of the brown head. She looked up at
her brother, a very unprofessional pallor upon her face, and down at the
long, brown lashes and at the curved, sensitive lips which held no hint of
red. She pressed the face closer to her breast and shook her head. She
could not speak, just then, for the griping ache that was in her throat.</p>
<p>"One of the best men on the ranch gone under, just when we need help the
worst!" complained the Old Man. "Is he hurt bad?"</p>
<p>"J. G.," began the Little Doctor in a voice all the fiercer for being
suppressed, "I want you to kill that horse. Do you hear? If you don't do
it, I will!"</p>
<p>"You won't have to, if old Splinter goes down and out," said Weary, with
quiet meaning, and the Little Doctor gave him a grateful flash of gray
eyes.</p>
<p>"How bad is he hurt?" repeated the Old Man, impatiently. "You're supposed
t' be a doctor—don't you know?"</p>
<p>"He has a scalp wound which does not seem serious," said she in an attempt
to be matter-of-fact, "and his left collar bone is broken."</p>
<p>"Doggone it! A broken collar bone ain't mended overnight."</p>
<p>"No," acquiesced the Little Doctor, "it isn't."</p>
<p>These last two remarks Chip heard. He opened his eyes and looked straight
up into the gray ones above—a long, questioning, rebellious look. He
tried then to rise, to free himself from the bitter ecstasy of those soft,
enfolding arms. Only a broken collar bone! Good thing it was no worse!
Ugh! A spasm of pain contracted his features and drew beads of moisture to
his forehead. The spurned arms once more felt the dead weight of him.</p>
<p>"What is it?" The Little Doctor's voice called to him from afar.</p>
<p>Must he answer? He wanted to drift on and on—"Can you tell me where
the pain is?"</p>
<p>Pain? Oh, yes, there had been pain—but he wanted to drift. He opened
his eyes again reluctantly; again the pain clutched him.</p>
<p>"It's—my—foot."</p>
<p>For the first time the eyes of the Little Doctor left his face and
traveled downward to the spurred boots. One was twisted in a horrible
unnatural position that told the agonizing truth—a badly dislocated
ankle. They returned quickly to the face, and swam full of blinding tears—such
as a doctor should not succumb to. He was not drifting into oblivion now;
his teeth were not digging into his lower lip for nothing, she knew.</p>
<p>"Weary," she said, forgetting to call him properly by name, "ride to the
house and get my medicine case—the little black one. The Countess
knows—and have Slim bring something to carry him home on. And—RIDE!"</p>
<p>Weary was gone before she had finished, and he certainly "rode."</p>
<p>"You'll have another crippled cow-puncher on yer hands, first thing yuh
know," grumbled the Old Man, anxiously, as he watched Weary race
recklessly down the hill.</p>
<p>The Little Doctor did not answer. She scarcely heard him. She was stroking
the hair back from Chip's forehead softly, unconsciously, wondering why
she had never before noticed the wave in it—but then, she had
scarcely seen him with his hat off. How silky and soft it felt! And she
had called him all sorts of mean names, and had wanted Whizzer to—she
shuddered and turned sick at the memory of the thud when they struck the
hard road together.</p>
<p>"Dell!" exclaimed the Old Man, "you're white's a rag. Doggone it, don't
throw up yer hands at yer first case—brace up!"</p>
<p>Chip looked up at her curiously, forgetting the pain long enough to wonder
at her whiteness. Did she have a heart, then, or was it a feminine trait
to turn pale in every emergency? She had not turned so very white when
those kids—he felt inclined to laugh, only for that cussed foot.
Instead he relaxed his vigilance and a groan slipped out before he knew.</p>
<p>"Just a minute more and I'll ease the pain for you," murmured the girl,
compassionately.</p>
<p>"All right—so long as you—don't—use—the stomach
pump," he retorted, with a miserable makeshift of a laugh.</p>
<p>"What's that?" asked the Old Man, but no one explained.</p>
<p>The Little Doctor was struggling with the lump in her throat that he
should try to joke about it.</p>
<p>Then Weary was back and holding the little, black case out to her. She
seized it eagerly, slipping Chip's head to her knees that she might use
her hands freely. There was no halting over the tiny vials, for she had
decided just what she must do.</p>
<p>She laid something against Chip's closed lips.</p>
<p>"Swallow these," she said, and he obeyed her. "Weary—oh, you knew
what to do, I see. There, lay the coat down there for a pillow."</p>
<p>Relieved of her burden, she rose and went to the poor, twisted foot.</p>
<p>Weary and the Old Man watched her go to work systematically and disclose
the swollen, purpling ankle. Very gently she did it, and when she had
administered a merciful anaesthetic, the enthusiasm of the Old Man
demanded speech.</p>
<p>"Well, I'll be eternally doggoned! You're onto your job, Dell, doggoned if
yuh ain't. I won't ever josh yuh again about yer doctorin'!"</p>
<p>"I wish you'd been around the time I smashed MY ankle," commented Weary,
fishing for his cigarette book; he was beginning to feel the need of a
quieting smoke. "They hauled me forty miles, to Benton."</p>
<p>"That must have been torture!" shuddered the Little Doctor. "A dislocated
ankle is a most agonizing thing."</p>
<p>"Yes," assented Weary, striking a match, "it sure is, all right."</p>
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