The Pulp Hero

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by Theodore A. Tinsley


  CHAPTER VI

  SILVER

  After Penny left the clearing, Tonto stepped to the side of the big white horse. He stroked the silken sheen of the stallion’s nose and said, “Soon girl come back with plenty food. Then we go to white friend.”

  A rare bond of friendship existed between the wounded Texas Ranger in the cave, the Indian named Tonto, and the mighty stallion, Silver. Tonto and Silver were of royal blood. Tonto was the son of a chief; Silver, a former ruler. But these were honors of the past. Destiny had even greater things ahead for the white man.

  Tonto lost his chance to reign when his tribe was wiped out in his boyhood. Silver had abdicated. The stallion’s background is a story in itself:

  Wild Horse Valley, nestled in the heart of green hills, was a sanctuary where men had never been. The grass was green and lush; great trees spread leafy boughs to cast soft shade. Here, from the living rock, came waterfalls that were sweet and pure. King Sylvan and his gentle mate, Moussa, ruled this land. Their court was made up of untamed horses. Horses that had never known restraining bit or binding saddlestrap. Happy, carefree horses they were, that had never seen men nor known men’s inventions. Sylvan had won the right to rule his followers by might and courage. He was the fleetest of foot, the quickest of eye, the greatest of strength. Sylvan, the King!

  Then Moussa bore the king a son—a prince—and Sylvan’s happiness was complete. His fleet hoofs pounded the turf, racing, turning, flashing a white coat in the bright sun. He hoped his little son would see his strength, his speed, and emulate them. Less than two hours after his birth, the prince was trying his slim, straight legs. In the months that followed, the white colt developed the strength and fearlessness of Sylvan. Added to these were the gentleness, grace, and beauty of Moussa.

  For many weeks the prince of Wild Horse Valley stayed close to his mother’s side, and his little shadow merged with hers as the two moved through the valley, guided by Sylvan, who knew where water was sweetest and grass most tender.

  Then came the days when colthood was left behind, and the son could outrun Moussa and keep pace with mighty Sylvan. Like the wind, the white one and Sylvan raced side by side. How the sun flashed from their sleek bodies as they raced, cut back, reared, and whirled in sheer joy! Life was good. Life was sweet. And Moussa watched with pride.

  Tragedy came into the prince’s life when Moussa went to the everlasting happiness of other green pastures. By this time the prince was fully grown and the equal in strength of his father. Day after day, the prince met and defeated new challengers in the field of combat. While Sylvan remained king, the prince fought to hold his own exalted position. The battles were furious. No quarter was asked, none given. The white prince never paused in the fray until his opponent lay conquered at his feet. Finally, when the last challenger was beaten, the prince called out in his victory. Sylvan responded with mighty pride. A king and his son, both conquerors and champions. Stronger, greater, than any other in their herd. Acknowledged by all as the ones who should lead while others followed.

  Then, one day, at the narrow entrance to the valley, strange creatures waited with cruel weapons; creatures new to the horses. Men who came with tragedy and pain. These were intruders who were looked upon as enemies to be driven away. The king sounded the attack, and led the charge. Fire, like lightning, flashed before the horses. Thunder roared deafeningly close at hand. The fury of those hammering hoofs could not long be withstood, and the men retreated—then rode away to save their lives.

  The prince raised his strong voice in shrill exultation, but his cry was short. The king was on the ground beside him. Mighty Sylvan was dead.

  Burning hatred for men grew in Silver’s heart while he gently nuzzled his father’s prostrate form. There was little left for the prince in that valley. Nothing to conquer or to love. For some time he stood motionless, looking at the soft grass, the trees, the valley that had been his home. Then he turned to leave the valley.

  Alone, the white horse made his way through the mountains. Hour after hour he held a steady lope that carried him ever further from the place where he had known happiness and joy, then tragedy and sudden death. The white stallion wanted to travel far, far from the place where he had seen those hated men who had killed his father. The mountains gave way to level plains.

  Here was a new world! Level land, as far as he could see. He raced across it, ignoring the danger of gopher holes and rocks. Then, suddenly, quite out of wind, he stopped. Ahead of the prince there was a challenger. Not another horse, and not a man. A dirty beast, of muddy color, with a tangled mane and a huge hump on its back. A buffalo. The prince saw tiny blood-red eyes that seemed filled with evil and hatred. As if in anger at intrusion of its domain, the huge beast stamped and pawed the ground. From the monster there came a horrible bellow, and then the muddy fury charged.

  With all the agility the white one could command in his exhaustion, he stepped aside to dodge the charge. Here was a new kind of battle! As the buffalo raced past him, the prince felt the rough fur brush his body, and a foul odor assailed his nostrils. Mad with fury, screaming with rage, the buffalo turned and charged again. Again the white horse sidestepped. Time after time, the game was played, but it could not last forever. Soon the two must come to grips, and this would be a battle to the death.

  Great bellows filled the air. Mountains of dust rose from beneath the churning hoofs as the battle began in earnest. The buffalo drew blood from the horse’s side. The prince reared high, and struck down, with all his strength. The power of the huge horse’s hoofs seemed ineffectual against the hairy beast. The massive head was a battering ram, driving relentlessly into the white body of the prince. Trembling and weak, the white one grew unsteady, but his gallant heart knew no defeat. He fought on, desperately and hopelessly, against the greater strength of his opponent. Utter exhaustion robbed the brave horse of the power to stand. He slumped to the ground, legs useless.

  The king of horses raised his head to meet the death that was at hand. Evil, hate-filled eyes glowed redder than before as the buffalo drew back, head lowered for the final rush.

  The buffalo charged—then seemed to halt in mid-air—and crumpled to the ground. The white one didn’t understand at first. And then the echo of a gun—the same sort of sound he’d heard when Sylvan had been struck down!

  It was later that the white horse opened his eyes, which were bright with pain. He knew then that man was not always an enemy. Gentle hands caressed him, and he felt cool water on his wounds. His strength, some of it, was returning, and the proud head came up once more. He remembered Sylvan. Here were hated men again, two of them. The tired body rose from the ground on trembling, weakened legs. For a moment Silver stood there, then he turned and fled.

  He ran for a time, but slower with each passing moment. For some reason, the prince felt that he had left a friend behind him. He had learned a grim lesson in the wilderness outside of Wild Horse Valley. There were creatures there far stronger than any horse had been. Huge, shaggy, ugly brutes who could kill him. Beasts that fell only before the weapons of man. The horse slowed, then stopped and looked back. He seemed to know that in this new world outside the Valley he needed friends with another strength than his. He recalled the gentle touch and the deep, kindly voice of the man who had bathed his wounds.

  He took a few steps toward the recent scene of battle where the two men stood, still watching him. The terrible weapon that had killed the buffalo was quiet now. Some strong force drew Silver nearer. He was tense, ready to turn and flee forever from creatures in the form of men if the thundering machine of Death was fired again, but there was only silence. The touch of the man’s hand was so like the soft caress of Moussa—Silver wanted more of it. The voice of the man was good to hear. It was rich, friendly. Silver went still closer, still tense, ready to bolt. And then he was at the side of the tall man who had saved his life. He touched his sensitive nostrils to the bro
wn hand and a new emotion was born in the heart of the horse. A love of beast for man.

  The Texan found it hard to restrain his excitement. “The finest horse I’ve ever seen,” he told the Indian beside him. “Look at him, Tonto! These muscles, and the eyes! The tail and mane are like silk! Look at his coat, how it glistens in the sun. I’m going to ride this horse. He came back after he’d left us. I’m going to ride him. And his name shall be Silver.”

  The horse stood quietly while the tall man with the deep voice and gentle touch mounted his bare back.

  “You, Silver—” the man said, “—we’re going to be friends, aren’t we, old boy?” A gentle caress on the white neck. To show his happiness and demonstrate the fact that he was strong again, the white horse rose high on his hind legs, then came down without a jar. He would prove to this white man who had defended him that he was glad to have a friend.

  “High, Silver!” the man cried out. “High up again!”

  Trying to understand what the man on his back wanted, Silver repeated his rearing action. He heard the happy laugh of his rider.

  “Now, big fellow,” the man called out, “let’s travel. Away there, Silver.” For a moment the white horse couldn’t comprehend. Then he felt a nudge from the heels of the man on his back.

  “Hi there you, Silver horse, away!” Silver moved ahead, carrying his master. He was desperately anxious to do what this man wanted. Eager to show his happiness at the finding of a friend. As he moved, he heard shouts of encouragement.

  “That’s it, Silver! Hi you, Silver, away!”

  The horse moved faster. Another shout, this time contracted.

  “Hi-Yo’ Silver, Away!”

  Silver broke into a run. Now he knew what the master wanted. At the next shout, the big stallion gave all his strength in a burst of speed that made his snowy figure like a flash of light across the open plains. The shout was one that later rang throughout the West—the clarion call—the tocsin of a mystery rider who wore a mask.

  “Hi-Yo Silver, Away-y-y-y.”

  CHAPTER VII

  YUMA

  It was midafternoon before Penelope returned to the clearing in the woods. She had found some difficulty in slipping unobserved into the storeroom on the ranch to secure the things that now reposed in saddlebags. While in the Basin the girl had made sure that Mort Cavendish would be occupied with the supervision of branding a lot of new cattle. He could hardly get back home before dark. This would give Penny ample time to make her call on Becky and be with her when Mort came in.

  When Penny turned the supplies over to Tonto, she saw the gratitude in the Indian’s eyes. “It was almost as if the food were going to save his life,” she later thought. The truth of the matter was that the food was to save a life that was more important to the Indian than his own could possibly be.

  While in the clearing Penny tried to learn more about the trail, but Tonto either would not or could not inform her regarding its origin. She tried again to make friends with the horse called “Silver,” but her overtures were rejected. Silver remained aloof. Las Vegas stood by, and Penny had the impression that he was laughing at her rebuff by Silver in whatever way a mustang had of laughing. It irked her.

  “I’ll come back,” she said to Silver, “and bring some sugar and oats that’ll make you beg to be friends.”

  She mounted Las Vegas and rode away, little realizing the grim sequence of events that was to be started simply because she decided to take sugar to a stallion, or the appalling episode that portended in the Basin.

  Penny reached the Basin and rode directly to the ranch house. As she rounded the corner and came into view of the porch, she saw, first of all, big, stockinged feet resting on the railing, then long legs, and then the sleepy-looking face of Cousin Jeb.

  Jeb was looked upon by everyone as worthless. Details of work about the ranch were mysteries he’d never tried to fathom, and he helped best by keeping out of people’s way. While Penny had no respect for Jeb, she disliked him far less than she did her other cousins, Jeb’s three brothers.

  She had thought several times that Jeb was not nearly so simple as he was thought to be. He had a lot of idle time and he spent it all in thinking. Sometimes the results of his periods of concentration were surprisingly astute.

  The girl dismounted near the steps and slapped Las Vegas in the proper place. “Get going,” she said, her respect for the mustang lessened after seeing the silver stallion. Las Vegas scampered toward the corral while Penny mounted the porch and perched on the railing.

  “What’s new, Jeb?” she greeted her cousin.

  Jeb looked at the girl with eyes that were watery and weak. “Nothin’ much, I guess,” he replied without breaking the rhythm of his long-jawed chewing of a match.

  He stared off at the distant Gap. “Got some more thinkin’ tuh do before I come tuh any conclusions. So far, I’d say they hain’t nothin’ much that’s new.”

  He let his tilted-back chair drop to its normal four-legged position. He slipped his feet into heavy lace-up shoes that had no laces, and pushed himself by the arms of the chair to his feet. Standing erect, Jeb Cavendish would have been uncommonly tall. Even in his slouching posture he was well over six feet two inches. His growin’ all went one way, he explained from time to time, and it was true. The same poundage would have made a normal man of five feet eight. Jeb was that lean.

  “Lot o’ thinkin’ tuh git done,” he repeated musingly, as he pushed his tapering hands deep into the pockets of faded dungarees that ended halfway between his knees and shoe-tops. Penny waited, knowing that Jeb would have more to say if given sufficient time. Jeb spat through teeth that were large and horsy. Then he took off a battered hat that was ventilated with several holes, and scratched the naked part of his head that was constantly widening with the ebbing of his thin, sandy-colored hair.

  “Yuh know, Penelope,” he said at length, “it’s writ’ in Scripture that the Lord tempers the wind tuh the shorn lamb.”

  So Jeb was in one of the Scripture-quoting moods.

  “What about it?” asked Penny. “I’ve heard of that, and I’ve always thought that if the lamb hadn’t been shorn, the wind wouldn’t have had to be tempered.”

  Jeb looked at the girl reprovingly and went on. “Mebbe, reasonin’ along them same lines, it’s the Lord’s will tuh blind Uncle Bryant so’s he can’t see what goes on around here.”

  “Meaning what?” asked Penny quickly.

  “Meanin’ it’d save Bryant a powerful lot of mental sufferin’ an’ bloody sweat if he didn’t see too much.”

  Penny rose and faced her cousin directly. “Jeb,” she said, “is it true that Uncle Bryant’s eyes are going back on him?”

  “Dunno.”

  “But you think they are?”

  “Bryant’s never complained about his sight.”

  “Why do you think he’s losing it?”

  Jeb answered with another question. “Have yuh seen him readin’ of late?”

  Penny hadn’t and she said so. “But he never did spend much time reading, so you can’t tell anything by that.”

  “Yuh seen the God-defyin’ sort o’ men that’s come tuh work here?”

  Penny nodded. “I don’t like their looks at all.”

  “Jest so. Neither would Bryant. He’s left the hirin’ of new hands tuh Mort an’ Vince. If he’d seen Rangoon, an’ Sawtell, an’ some o’ the rest, he’d shoot ’em on general principles in the same way a man’d step on a pizon-bad, murder-spider. Those men’ve been here; Bryant’s had chances tuh see ’em an’ done nothin’.” Having delivered himself of this, Jeb resumed his chair and slipped his feet out of the shoes again. “Take’s more thinkin’,” he finished, letting his eyes return to far-off places.

  Penny gripped her cousin’s arm. “Look here, Jeb,” she said, “I want to know more about things in the Basin. Everyone h
as been so darned quiet, and so strained-acting, that it almost seems as if the place is filled with…with ghosts or something. What’s it all about?”

  Jeb fixed his pale eyes on the girl. They seemed to cover themselves with a veil. He leaned forward and spoke in a soft confidential voice.

  “Cousin, t’others around here think I’m tetched in the head. None of ’em listens tuh me but you. They don’t figger me worth listenin’ to, but I ain’t sleepin’. I see things, I think things out. I dunno what it is, I can’t put my finger on’t, but they’s ugly happenin’s in this here Basin. They’ll be some killin’ here.”

  Jeb’s voice took on a quality that chilled Penelope more than the rain that had but recently stopped falling. There was something almost sepulchral about the way he spoke. He seemed to be foretelling events with an authority that could not be doubted.

  “Things can’t boil underneath without breakin’ out soon. Murder is comin’ an’ that won’t be all. And I’ll tell yuh some more.” His voice fell to a hoarse whisper. “Uncle Bryant is gettin’ ready tuh die.”

  Penelope broke in. “But that’s—”

  Jeb stopped the girl. “It’s true. Don’t ask fer no more. Bryant is makin’ ready. I know it, he’s makin’ ready tuh die.”

  Penny knew that she’d gain nothing by pressing Jeb for further information at that time. She also knew that it was time for her to go to Rebecca. She crossed the porch and entered the house, to find another cousin sprawling in the living room. The mere fact that Wallie was there in his overdressed glory was substantial evidence that Bryant was not around. Bryant hated Wallie chiefly for his clothes, secondarily for his indolent love of social life and the girls in the nearest town. Wallie was experimenting with a guitar, doubtless practicing some new tune to play in his part of Don Juan. His shirt and the tightly wound neckerchief on his fat neck were of the finest silk and of brilliant hue. His trousers were of high-priced fawnskin, and his boots, as usual, gleamed like mirrors. He had practiced long to strum the strings of his guitar in the manner that would best bring out the sparkle of the imitation diamond on one of ten fat fingers.

 

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