<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</SPAN></h2>
<p>That was a severe winter, with plenty of snow and ice
after the middle of December. How I did enjoy skimming
over the smooth roads, with Master in the light cutter
behind me, and the merry jingle of the bells keeping time to
my flying footsteps. No matter how great the hurry when
we stopped, he never neglected to blanket me, and blanketing
with him does not mean merely to throw a robe or
blanket loosely over a horse's back, but it means to put a
thick covering that buttons or buckles over the chest and
far up onto the neck. He grows righteously indignant
every time he gets to speaking of people who think their
duty done when the back of an animal is protected, while
the part containing the lungs, etc.—the most delicate, susceptible
part of the horse's anatomy—is left exposed to the
pitiless blast.</p>
<p>My doctor is one of the few sensible, consistent men in
the world; heaven bless him!</p>
<p>My heart always aches for the thin, neglected animals,
many of them without even the pretense of a blanket, that
stand for hours shivering in the wind and storm. The man
who will button his own warm coat around him and hurry
indoors, leaving his helpless servants tied unprotected outside,
must have a heart of flint.</p>
<p>One day the humane blacksmith came to Master and told<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</SPAN></span>
him he thought something had ought to be done. That he
had just found out that a span of horses had stood in an old
shed, belonging to a saloon, for two whole days and nights,
the week before, with neither food nor water. The owner
was on a protracted spree. Dr. Dick was furious. He
never shows anger excepting under some such circumstance
as this. He immediately wrote two letters, one to the
saloon-keeper and the other to the man who had neglected
the team, boldly signing his name and warning them not to
repeat or be party to such an offence again.</p>
<p>Further than this, between himself and the smith, the
sheds and alleys of the little town were closely watched.</p>
<p>Several times in daylight, when Master knew that animals
had stood for hours unfed and unwatered, he would send
Bob to untie them and bring them to our barn. There they
would be rubbed and cared for, then returned to their post;
and as fast as our blankets grew shabby he found some
poor, shivering beast whose back needed them.</p>
<p>One day while Bob was unhitching a sorry-looking horse
that had stood unprotected and uncared for for eight hours
in a cold wind, the owner rushed out of the saloon and began
a tipsy tirade, threatening to have the youth arrested
for horse-stealing if he dared take the creature a foot.</p>
<p>Bob came home to report. Dr. Fred bade him mind his
own business and let other people's property alone.</p>
<p>Dr. Dick told him that so long as a man did not abuse his
property, he proposed to let it alone; but that when a living
creature was being imposed on and abused, that he had a
right—a God-given right—to interfere, so long as he did
not injure the man or make him poorer.</p>
<p>Fred had been drinking a little himself, and becoming
furious, shook his fist in Master's face and called him hard
names. The latter, without replying, turned away and
bade Bob attend to the work at home. Supposing that he
had won the day, Fred strutted off to the house. No sooner
was he indoors than Dr. Dick was striding down street, and
in ten minutes more the half-frozen subject of the trouble
was being rubbed and fed in the stall to the right of mine.</p>
<p>When the animal was finishing her oats the owner came
swearing in. Expecting something of the kind, Master was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span>
on hand. I can't begin to tell you all he said to that poor,
drunken wretch, but it was a sermon, a temperance lecture,
and a humane plea all in one. When the fellow went away
he seemed pretty well sobered and ashamed, and even
thanked Master for his kindness and promised to use the
blanket given and go right straight home.</p>
<p>"Dr. Dick is a queer un," Bob remarked to a neighbor lad
to whom he related the incident later. "Most folks let on
they hain't no right to meddle with what they call other
people's affairs, but I guess it's more 'cause they're too lazy
and cowardly. He says he ain't afeard of devil nor man,
but is afeard of doin' wrong. Now, ain't he queer?"</p>
<p>"I should snicker!" replied the other emphatically, not
looking in the least inclined to do so, though. I suppose it
was his way of saying yes.</p>
<p>What do you think?</p>
<p>In spite of all the family could say Dr. Fred sold Ross
toward spring. I shall never forget the look of sadness in
the poor old fellow's eyes, and the mournful whinny he gave
as he turned his head at the barn door and looked back at
the empty stall. It happened that the man who bought
him came for him when both doctors, the bays and Bob
were away. The little boys were playing in the barn.</p>
<p>"I've come for the old horse I bought," he said.</p>
<p>"It's that 'un," Chet answered, pointing to Ross, so we
knew there was no mistake. I called after him as long as I
could make him hear.</p>
<p>He said he wished he could die, that there was never a
moment that he was not in pain. He had stringhalt, I
think, and Dr. Fred said he was getting less worth every
day and after awhile would not be fit to travel.</p>
<p>Master said, better put him out of his misery, then, but he
belonged to Fred, so that settled it.</p>
<p>Before I forget it, I want to tell of a former mate of Ross
that he used to talk about.</p>
<p>His name was Billy. They belonged to a very passionate
man, who, when he became excited, would pound them unmercifully.
Some little thing went wrong one day, nothing
that the team was to blame for, and the man dealt Billy
several blows on the head with a linch-pin. He staggered,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</SPAN></span>
and the man, fearing he had killed him, cooled down and
quickly brought some water, giving him some to drink and
pouring some on his head. This seemed to help him and
he worked on all day. Before morning, though, Ross said
the animal woke him, but received no answer, only groans
and queer sounds. By this time Billy had knocked down
the thin partition between their stalls and was dealing him
some terrible blows with his heels. He crept as far away
as he could and longed for daylight. When it came Billy
lay on the floor bruised, exhausted and almost choked from
the wrenching of the halter strap.</p>
<p>As far as he could reach in every direction things were
demolished.</p>
<p>The owner seemed much frightened when he came out,
and at once put a boy on Ross to go for a veterinary. The
latter, after an examination, asked if any blow had been
given on the head. Shamefacedly the master acknowledged
the truth.</p>
<p>"Well," replied the other, "if you got any satisfaction
out of it at the time it is all you ever will get. This horse
is ruined. There is inflammation of the brain. He may
get better, but I think he will have one or two more spells
of delirium and then die. It is something similar to mad
staggers."</p>
<p>They bled the horse [I am so glad that the barbarous notion
of blood-letting is a thing of the past] and put some
cloths wet in cold water on his head. He seemed to get
better and was put to work again, but a week or so later,
while plowing corn in the hot sun, another attack came on,
and rearing, he fell backward, narrowly missing crushing
his master. When better again, he was taken some distance
from home and sold.</p>
<p>Some two years passed and Ross himself had changed
hands, when one day as he was standing tied to a post before
a country grocery, a weary, shabby-looking horse near
him asked if he did not know him.</p>
<p>"It's Billy's voice," said Ross, "but this never can be
Billy."</p>
<p>"But it is," said the other, mournfully, "or what is left of
him; I'm pretty well used up."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Then he told how he had passed from hand to hand and
something of his bodily sufferings. He had been experimented
on by every quack in the country, but each augmented
his torture.</p>
<p>"One man," he said, "helped me. He was kind and gentle;
never yelled at me (oh, how I wish they knew how noise
hurts my head!) and always gave me water every hour
through the day, and left it where I could reach it at night.
Sometimes cold water throws off a fit. He used to work me
early and late in the day, but through the hot part kept me
in the shade. He also used cold pads on my head and gave
me pills of belladonna, one or two a day, when my head was
hot and my eyes red. He sometimes gave aconite, too; and
when I had been in the sun, gelseminum was the remedy.
I think I might have recovered had he lived, but when I had
been there four months he died, and soon I was sold and
abused worse than ever. Strange, how we dumb brutes can
linger and suffer!"</p>
<p>Ross never saw him again, and often wondered if he still
lived.</p>
<p>Dr. Fred soon bought a new horse—a gay fellow, with
wicked eyes and a temper to match. His name was Prince.
He was a well-built, dark iron-gray about eight years old.</p>
<p>"He's mighty nervous!" commented Bob. "Jest acts as
if he expected me to hit or kick him every time I come
round him, 'nd jerks his head back if I so much as put my
hand on the manger. He's ugly, too, fer he lays his ears
back and shows his teeth mighty frequent."</p>
<p>Our stalls were so far apart that we could not talk much,
so I knew almost nothing about him until one morning Bob
put me in one sleigh for Master and Prince in another for
Dr. Fred.</p>
<p>Such a time as the boy had to get that horse hitched up.
He would not stand, and was rearing and jerking the whole
time.</p>
<p>"Ain't he a beauty?" cried Dr. Fred, proudly. "Most too
much of a horse for you to manage, ain't he, Bob? Here,
Prince, be quiet, sir!" The animal quieted a little and
looked at him.</p>
<p>"See, he minds me. You must use authority in your tone<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</SPAN></span>
when—" but the sentence never was finished, for just at
that moment the "beauty" reached out and caught his admirer
by the shoulder, lifting him off his feet at the first
shake.</p>
<p>Then there was a scene! That brute shook his master as
a cat would a rat, despite the frantic blows dealt by Fred's
left hand and Bob's vigorous fists. Dr. Dick was in the office,
but the noise drew him barely in time to see his brother
flung a dozen feet or more into a snowdrift.</p>
<p>I am afraid that Master smiled, it seemed so to me, anyway;
but he, of course, rushed to the rescue.</p>
<p>No sooner did Fred get on his feet than he flew at that
horse with the butt of a riding whip, raining down the
blows alike on the face, over the head, anywhere he could
strike in his wild anger.</p>
<p>"I'll teach you, you wretch! I'll make you suffer!" and
kindred remarks, shot explosively from his mouth.</p>
<p>Master, white to the lips, now interfered, but only conquered
by superior muscle, for Fred was crazed with pain
and anger. Of course, had he been a horse he would have
had to endure ten times as much suffering and injustice
quietly, but he was a man and bent on revenge. I do not
think Prince did right, indeed he did very wrong, but he
had far less than most horses have to endure. Oft-times I
had seen Dr. Fred strike Ross or the bays for nothing at all;
simply he was out of sorts, so I could not pity him much.</p>
<p>"Don't call the entire neighborhood together," said
Master, "you are acting very silly! Go in the house and
have Nannie bathe your shoulder, and I will try the new
horse awhile. Bob, you may put Dandy back."</p>
<p>After considerable more fuss Fred limped off to the house
and Dr. Dick stepped to Prince's head. Back went the latter's
ears and his lips quivered. Calmly Master looked him
in the eye, then began stroking his face and talking to him.
He gradually quieted down, but his glance was both
treacherous and distrustful.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</SPAN></span></p>
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