"Shut up, you a.s.s!" said the girl as she released the bob-tail.
He was away with a roar, scattering the fan-tails, as he launched on his way to exchange jibes with Maudie, languid, secure, and insolent on the top of the wall.
The girl went to the saddle-room, took down her saddle and bridle, and turned into the stable.
For once she was not the first.
Monkey Brand was before her, standing at the head of a now familiar chestnut pony, waiting, saddled, on the pillar-reins.
"Is Mr. Silver down?" the girl asked, surprised.
"Yes, Miss. Came late last night. Down for the week-end, I believe. He"s goin" for a stretch before he looks at the "orses," the little jockey informed her. "They"re goin" to gallop Make-Way-There this morning."
"Are they?" said the girl sharply.
It was rarely anything took place in the stable without her knowledge.
And Make-Way-There, who was one of Mr. Silver"s horses, was to run at the Paris Meeting two weeks hence.
The girl, to hide her resentment, placed her hand on the pony"s neck, hard as marble beneath a skin that was soft to the touch as a mole"s.
"Ain"t he a little clinker?" said Monkey Brand in hushed voice. "They say Mr. Silver refused 600 for him at Hurlingham. And he took champion at the Poly Pony Show."
The girl"s hand travelled down the pony"s neck with firm, strong, rhythmical stroke.
"Heart of Oak!" she purred affectionately.
Ragam.u.f.fin, the old roan pony in the next stall, began to move, restless and irritable.
"He"s jealous, is old Rags," smiled Monkey.
The girl went to the roan.
"Now, then, old man," she said. "Old friends first."
She saddled him and led him out into the yard.
Attached to the d"s of the light saddle was a string forage bag such as cavalry soldiers carry. Into it she stuffed her towel and all that it contained.
Monkey Brand held the pony"s head as she mounted.
"How"s the old mare?" she asked, gathering her reins.
"Four Pound?" queried the jockey. "I didn"t see her this morning as I come along, Miss. She must ha" been layin" behind the trees. Another week, I should say."
"William!" called the girl, and rode through the gate into the Paddock Close.
Since the Polefax Meeting Silver had come and gone continually. His week-ends he spent frequently at Putnam"s, returning to London by the first train on Monday morning.
"He don"t like the Bank, and I don"t blame him," said Old Mat. "I reck"n he"d like to be all the while in the saddle on the Downs."
"Why does he stick to the Bank?" the girl blurted out.
It was the only question she had ever put about Mr. Silver.
"Because he"s got to, my dear," replied the sagacious old man. "If he don"t stick to the Bank, the Bank won"t stick to him, I guess."
In those months the girl had learned a good deal about Mr. Silver. He was different from the other men she knew. She had felt that at once on meeting him. She was shy with him and short; and it was rare for her to be shy with men. Indeed, in her heart she knew that she was almost afraid of him. And she had never known herself afraid of a man before.
That made her angry with him, though it was no fault of his.
Then she had resented the unconscious part he had played in the affair of the wood. She was sure he was laughing at her. And that good, plain, smileless face of his, and the very fact that he never referred to the incident, only made her the more suspicious.
His awkward big-dog attempts at friendliness had been repulsed. She played the Maudie to his Billy Bluff, and all would have been well but that he refused to get back upon her by bounding. Instead, he apparently had come to the conclusion that she disliked him, and had withdrawn.
That made her angrier still.
Now she had not even known that he was coming down last night. And worst and most unforgivable of all, she had not been told that Make-Way-There was to be galloped that morning.
Ragam.u.f.fin, the roan, was surprised when his mistress picked him up immediately she entered the Paddock Close and pushed him into a canter.
CHAPTER XIV
Old Man Badger
Ragam.u.f.fin was old, but his heart was good. Directly his mistress asked him he s.n.a.t.c.hed for his head and went away smooth and swift as a racing boat.
Boy pulled off to the right and made for the clump of trees half-way up the hill.
The gypsy"s mare was grazing by herself behind them.
The girl steadied to a halt and watched her critically, calling Billy Bluff to heel.
She didn"t want the boisterous young dog to worry the old mare just now, and it was clear that Four Pound didn"t want it either.
As Billy Bluff skirmished about, she put back her ears and lowered her head with an irritable motion; but she was far too lazy to make the charge she threatened.
The girl"s inspection made, and conclusions drawn, she pursued her way up the hill, popped her pony over the low post and rails which fenced off the Paddock Close from the untamed Downs, and walked leisurely over the brow, the gorse warm and smelling in the sun.
Beneath her a valley stretched away to the sea. There the cliff rose steeply to a lighthouse, standing on a bare summit; dipped, and rose again. In the hollow between the two hills a white coastguard station sentinelled the Gap, across which the line of the sea stretched like a silver wire.
n.o.body was yet astir save a ploughman driving a team of slow-moving oxen to the fields. To Boy the beauty of the early morning lay in the fact that she had the hills and heavens and seas to herself, and could enjoy them in her own way without thought of interference from a world too frivolous, too feverish, and above all too loud, to understand.
As she rode along, her young face was uplifted to catch the rivulets of song that came pouring down on her from the blue.