Tangled Trails eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 271 pages of information about Tangled Trails.

Tangled Trails eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 271 pages of information about Tangled Trails.

The gunny sack was pushed and pulled over the eyes.  Wild Fire subsided, trembling, while bridle was adjusted and saddle slipped on.  The girl attended to the cinching herself.  If the saddle turned it might cost her life, and she preferred to take no unnecessary chances.

She was dressed in green satin riding clothes.  A beaded bolero jacket fitted over a white silk blouse.  Her boots were of buckskin, silver-spurred.  With her hat on, at a distance, one might have taken her for a slim, beautiful boy.

Wild Rose swung to the saddle and adjusted her feet in the stirrups.  The gunny sack was whipped from the horse’s head.  There was a wild scuffle of escaping wranglers.

For a moment Wild Fire stood quivering.  The girl’s hat swept through the air in front of its eyes.  The horse woke to galvanized action.  The back humped.  It shot into the air with a writhing twist of the body.  All four feet struck the ground together, straight and stiff as fence posts.

The girl’s head jerked forward as though it were on a hinge.  The outlaw went sunfishing, its forefeet almost straight up.  She was still in the saddle when it came to all fours again.  A series of jarring bucks, each ending with the force of a pile-driver as Wild Fire’s hoofs struck earth, varied the programme.  The rider came down limp, half in the saddle, half out, righting herself as the horse settled for the next leap.  But not once did her hands reach for the pommel of the saddle to steady her.

Pitching and bucking, the animal humped forward to the fence.

“Look out!” a judge yelled.

It was too late.  The rider could not deflect her mount.  Into the fence went Wild Fire blindly and furiously.  The girl threw up her leg to keep it from being jammed.  Up went the bronco again before Wild Rose could find the stirrup.  She knew she was gone, felt herself shooting forward.  She struck the ground close to the horse’s hoofs.  Wild Fire lunged at her.  A bolt of pain like a red-hot iron seared through her.

Through the air a rope whined.  It settled over the head of the outlaw and instantly was jerked tight.  Wild Fire, coming down hard for a second lunge at the green crumpled heap underfoot, was dragged sharply sideways.  Another lariat snaked forward and fell true.

“Here, Cole!” The first roper thrust the taut line into the hands of a puncher who had run forward.  He himself dived for the still girl beneath the hoofs of the rearing horse.  Catching her by the arms, he dragged her out of danger.  She was unconscious.

The cowboy picked her up and carried her to the waiting ambulance.  The closed eyes flickered open.  A puzzled little frown rested in them.

“What’s up, Kirby?” asked Wild Rose.

“You had a spill.”

“Took the dust, did I?” He sensed the disappointment in her voice.

“You rode fine.  He jammed you into the fence,” explained the young man.

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Project Gutenberg
Tangled Trails from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.