<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</SPAN></h2>
<p>Such a variety of horses as one meets when boarding at a
livery stable, and what stories they can tell!</p>
<p>A tough-looking pair of mustangs gave a little of their
experience one night. They said they were once wild,
roaming over the western prairies at will; but that some
Indians caught them with a lasso, and then sold them to a
cowboy. The latter named them "Daredevil" and "Wildcat,"
and began to break them.</p>
<p>"Regularly, as he took us in hand," said Daredevil, "he
knocked us each down from ten to fifty times. Why, I used
to be just crazy from fright and pain, but he called me vicious,
and said he would pound it out of me. Sometimes he
would strike me on the head and stun me so that he would
think me dead, but he never seemed to care. Had he used
us kindly I do not think we would have been hard to manage
at all, after the strangeness and fright wore off a little,
but such treatment as he gave us brought out all that was
bad and wild; I guess it would have made a daredevil and
wildcat out of any creature. He did not mind at all if the
bit tore our mouths till the blood poured out, or the whip
laid open our shoulders and flanks till he could lay his three
fingers in; a mustang can stand anything. How frantic we
were for release from such torture, and how hard we tried
to kill ourselves."</p>
<p>"And then," put in Wildcat, "when he considered us
broken, he used to ride us almost to death. Many and
many a mile have I run without stopping for breath, with
those dreadful spurs pressed deep into my bleeding sides."</p>
<p>"Indeed," said Daredevil, "the wound never healed in
mine; it was just tearing a little deeper each day."</p>
<p>Then it seems they were stolen by a half-breed Indian
and sold to another white man, who treated them no better.
His business was to assist emigrants across the mountains,
and he used to overload them and goad them with a sharp
pointed staff until they were obliged to move on, some way.
They lived this sort of life for three years; then being<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</SPAN></span>
almost worthless, he sold them to an Eastern man who was
buying up mustangs. They were shipped to Chicago in a
close, wretched car, being forty-eight hours at a time without
food or water.</p>
<p>"I can give you no idea of the horrors of those days,"
said Wildcat. "It was just like what burning alive must
be, and we all got so ugly that we kicked and bit furiously.
Two or three of the weaker ones were trampled to death,
but when once the agony was over, they were objects of
envy. We all wanted to die. A few became delirious and
had to be shot when we were taken out.</p>
<p>"Daredevil and I match so perfectly that we were at once
sold together again to a little fellow from Wisconsin. He
seemed to think that being mustangs we would require a
good deal of abuse and hard work and not much to eat.
Anyway he only paid a few dollars apiece for us. I have
noticed that the more an animal costs, usually, the better
care it receives. This fellow used to pound us till the
neighbor women would come out, wringing their hands and
crying, and beg him to stop. He would tell them that it
was the only way to manage a mustang.</p>
<p>"Desperate at last, Daredevil watched her chance, and
planted both her hind feet in the small of his back, one day,
and doubled him up. It did me good to see the folks venture
gingerly up, expecting us to scalp them, I suppose, and
bear him off. He'd knocked us down a good many times,
and then without pity kicked us till we got up.</p>
<p>"We were immediately sold to an easy-going individual
who worked us very hard, but was decent in his treatment.
This was the best place we had had, and we tried to please
him. His easy-goingness got him into debt, though, and
we had to go for that to the man who now owns us. He is
a notion peddler, and well enough when sober, but he is
usually drunk. He may start in the morning and drive us
till after dark without a drop of water or bite of food."</p>
<p>"There is one thing," said Daredevil, as her mate
paused, "if only men knew half as much as they think they
do, they would never pound and abuse a mustang pony.
There is lots of work and endurance in us, if well treated;
and we can appreciate kindness as well as a thoroughbred,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</SPAN></span>
if they will give us time enough to realize it. We have no
sort of chance to be good, and the way they treat us would
spoil any creature."</p>
<p>There was a little silence after the mustangs had ceased
speaking, and then "Jennie," a livery horse, spoke.</p>
<p>"Well, you certainly have had a hard life and probably
always will, but if there is any fate to be prayed to be delivered
from, it is the fate of a livery horse. We are always
on the road. Why, this is the first night I've been in this
week, and every sound I hear I think they are coming for
me. I have grown so nervous that I can't sleep, and my
whole body aches.</p>
<p>"A drummer hired us last week on Wednesday, to drive
out to S——, nineteen miles. Said he would be there all
day and possibly all night. Do you know he only stopped
there about half an hour, gave us—Nellie and I—some
water and then drove fifteen miles to L——; there he had
us fed and watered, and in an hour was off fourteen miles
to K——. It was late when we got there, and by daylight
he was on his way here, a good forty miles by the nearest
route. We had barely been rubbed and fed, when a young
man wanted a team to take his girl to a party ten miles out.
The boss, supposing we had been in the barn at S—— all
the time since the morning before, only while going the
thirty-eight miles there and back, sent us out again.</p>
<p>"It did seem to me when they began to harness us that I
should scream right out; how I longed for the power of
human speech!</p>
<p>"My, but didn't that fellow drive!</p>
<p>"We acted pretty tired, I suppose, for presently the girl
said: 'John, don't drive so fast, the poor horses seem tired.'</p>
<p>"'Nonsense, they are livery horses, and that is one of
their tricks.'</p>
<p>"He tied us, dripping with sweat, in an open shed and
left us until near morning. Actually we were so stiff we
could not seem to get along at all, but he was not sparing
of the whip.</p>
<p>"We were in until afternoon some time, and one of the
boys used us to carry a couple of women to S——. He
rested us an hour and then came home again.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"And so it has been right along, and I am so tired; and
then this being driven by every one is ruinous on mouth
and nerves. It is jerk, jerk, jerk! and no two mean quite
the same thing by the way they twitch the lines, and half of
them don't know how to drive anyway."</p>
<p>"Yes," put in Crusoe, another livery horse, "and the
worst of it is the spirit people manifest toward us. Why a
clergyman had me the other day to go up to B——, and he
drove faster than any jockey. On the way he picked up an
acquaintance who remarked after a while on his fast driving.</p>
<p>"'Well,' said the minister, 'I always like to get the
worth of my money, and I've got three dollars invested in
this animal to-day.'"</p>
<p>"Oh me, and how they swear at us!" chimed in a small
bay mare from another stall.</p>
<p>"Who, the clergyman?" cried Julie, now for the first time
speaking up.</p>
<p>"No, I did not quite mean them, though I carried a bishop,
or some sort of a big gun, once to the train and we were
late. I am inclined to think he swore to himself, though all
he said out loud was: 'I could have made that team cover
the ground,' but I meant people in general."</p>
<p>Then somebody from another stall spoke out in a tone
quivering with sadness.</p>
<p>"My friends, if you are not blind don't complain of your
lot."</p>
<p>"Amen," came softly, but distinctly, from another corner
and we all kept silent.</p>
<p>Presently the first voice said:</p>
<p>"It seems strange enough to be counted old and only fit
to be banged around without this dreadful sightlessness."</p>
<p>She paused again, and I ventured to ask the cause of her
misfortune.</p>
<p>"It is inherited. My mother was blind and not of much
use but to raise colts, they said. Whether they knew that
blind mothers are liable to transmit their misfortune or not
I do not know; but the fact remains. I could see all right
until I was four years old; when one day, getting pretty
warm, a mist seemed to come before my eyes. It remained
growing steadily more dense, until at night I was entirely<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</SPAN></span>
guided by my mate, and when loosened from him could not
even find the familiar watering trough.</p>
<p>"'What ails Kate?' somebody asked, while some one else
added, 'She acts blind.'</p>
<p>"Presently my master examined my eyes and gave it as
his opinion that I was stone blind, and I was and have been
ever since.</p>
<p>"No words can describe what I suffer. No one has a
thought of pity for a blind horse; it is just rush them along!
I am so much afraid; everything startles and terrifies me; I
am always stepping on stones or bruising myself on stumps
and things that I cannot see. I stretch my neck out long to
listen, and I am jerked and called an old blind fool!</p>
<p>"It hurts my feelings, too; it is so dreadful to be afflicted
and then be taunted with it and scolded about it. Nearly
all my brothers and sisters went blind in the same way."</p>
<p>We Wallace horses longed for a barn of our own, where
we could have our little family visits once more, and where
we should not see and hear so many harrowing things.</p>
<p>Topsy was growing a fine, little animal, but between
Chet and Park she was bound to be ruined. These two
were never friends, and the latter was, besides, jealous of
the young owner. He tried a variety of means to make her
nervous and unmanageable, always picking at and tormenting
her. He had her so that she would both kick and
bite.</p>
<p>Remembering his own unhappy experience, it made
Prince furious, and then there would be trouble between him
and Park. Of course, the former got the worst of it, because
man is the stronger, in the only sense that tells, and the
latter would tie him short and then whip him or kick him.
Chet had no judgment, and being exceedingly passionate, he
whipped the colt for doing what Park taught her.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Mrs. Wallace's sister, Minnie Winters, had become
almost a member of the family. She was not very old
nor ugly, and professed the most unlimited admiration for
"that dear little Dandy," as she gushingly termed me,
though why she called me "little" I can't imagine, and I
did not like it either. I noticed, though, that she did not
make as much fuss over me when my master was not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</SPAN></span>
around. She said a great deal about horseback riding, and
hinted strongly that she would like to try my back.</p>
<p>"Dandy's life is like my own," said Master, "all work
and no play."</p>
<p>By this he intended her to understand that I had no time
to take her out for pleasure. One day Master and I were
starting for the country, when some one called him. It just
happened that I was tied near an open window inside of
which sat Mrs. Wallace and her sister, and I was obliged to
hear their conversation.</p>
<p>"You ain't half trying, Min," the former said.</p>
<p>"Goodness, Fan, do you expect me to throw myself at the
man's head? Dick Wallace is a different man from Fred;
and not to be so easily won. Indeed, I don't believe he has
any notion of marrying."</p>
<p>"Notion of it? Of course he hasn't, but you must put
him in the notion. He has a romantic idea that his heart
is buried and all that——"</p>
<p>"Oh, do hush, Fan. Somehow I can't bear to think of
his having loved any woman like that, and I think Dandy
was hers! It all seems like a novel."</p>
<p>"Of course, but if I were in your place I'd be Mrs. Dr.
Dick, or know the reason why."</p>
<p>"I know the reason why now," laughed the girl; then
growing sober, she added: "I am not good enough for him
if he wanted me; few women are."</p>
<p>"Nonsense! Well, you are evidently badly smitten
any——"</p>
<p>"Hush, he's coming," interrupted Min.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</SPAN></span></p>
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