Laughing Bill Hyde and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 283 pages of information about Laughing Bill Hyde and Other Stories.

Laughing Bill Hyde and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 283 pages of information about Laughing Bill Hyde and Other Stories.

“Don’t get sore,” he grinned.  “I got my chance to beat the game and I’m goin’ to take it.  I can’t run foot-races, and win ’em, all my life.  Some day I’ll step in my beard and sprain my ankle.  Ambition’s a funny thing.  I got the ambition to quit work.  Besides, she—­you know—­she’s got a dimple you could lay your finger in.  You’d ought to hear her say ‘Emmike’; it’s certainly cute.”

We bet everything we had—­everything except that pinto pony and the cream-colored mare.  I held them two out, for I figgered we was goin’ to need ’em and need ’em bad, if my scheme worked out.

The course—­it was a quarter-mile, straight-away—­was laid out along the bottom-land where the grass was thick and short.  Me and the chief and his girl set on a blanket among the little piles of silver, and the rest of the merry villagers lined up close to the finish-line.  We white men had been the prime attraction up till now, but it didn’t take me long to see that we wasn’t any more.  Them people was all wrapped up in the lad with the gold name-plate, and they was rootin’ for him frantic.  Last thing he done was to give his eighteen-carat squaw-catcher the once-over with his buckskin buffer, then he shined it at the chief’s girl and trotted down to the startin’-line.  I noticed that she glued her big-and-liquids on him and kept ’em there.

It was beautiful to watch those two men jockey for a start; the Injun was lean and hungry and mighty smart—­but Mike was smarter still.  Of course he got the jump.

It was a pretty start, and Mike held his lead for fifty yards or more.  I’ll admit I was worked up.  I’ve had my heart in my mouth so often over his races that it’s wore smooth from swallerin’, but this time it just wouldn’t go down.  Our dental patient was runnin’ an awful race, but it looked like Mike had him; then, just as the boy settled down and reached out into that long, strong stride of his’n, something happened.  He slipped.  He would have fell, except that he caught himself.  The next second he slipped again, and Mr.  “Man in Love with a Gold Fillin’” passed him.

With that them Injuns begun to speak.  Some of their yells brought hunks of throat with ’em, and that whole region begun to echo as far south as the Rio Bravo.

My scheme had worked, all right.  You see, when Mike was doin’ his heavy courtin’ I’d planted my ace in the hole; I’d took off the outer soles of his runnin’-shoes and filed the spikes almost in two, close up to the plate.  When I sewed the leather back on, it never showed, but the minute he struck his gait they broke with him and he begin to miss his pull.  He might have won at that, for he’s got the heart of a lion, but I s’pose the surprise did as much as anything else to beat him.  It made my heart bleed to see the fight he put up, but he finished six feet to the bad and fell across the mark on his face, sobbin’ like a child.  It’s the game ones that cry when they’re licked; analyze a smilin’ loser and you’ll find the yellow streak.  I lifted him to his feet, but he was shakin’ like a bush in the wind.

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Project Gutenberg
Laughing Bill Hyde and Other Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.