They beat us proper. Why, they"re sharper than a Goldfield real estate man, and those fellows would make you believe an alkali desert was a pine forest."
"Look there!" interrupted Tad, pointing.
"What is it, kiddie?" demanded the horse-hunter, pulling up sharply.
"One of the horses, I think it must be the leader, seems to have left the trail here and started off at right angles."
Stevens rode over to the other side of Tad, and gazed down, his forehead wrinkling in a frown.
"Yes, that"s the Angel. Don"t know what he"s side-tracked himself here for. He can"t see far, so it was not an observation that he was about to take. He"s either seen or scented something. Hold my pony while I take a look."
The cowboy dismounted, striding rapidly away with gaze fixed on the trail ahead of him. A few moments later he returned.
"Find anything?" asked Tad.
"The big one scented something, or thought he did."
"But where did he go?"
"Turned just beyond here and followed along the same way the others were going. You"ll find his trail joining ours after we get on a piece. I"d like to know what he thought he smelled," mused Bud.
"I didn"t know horses could scent a person or thing like that."
"What, horses? Wild horses have got a scent that"s keener than a coyote"s."
"There"s the white stallion"s trail again," exclaimed the lad.
Bud nodded. "Told you he"d come back."
For the next hour they rode along without anything of incident occurring, Tad constantly adding to his store of knowledge regarding mountain and plain. The lad was himself a natural plainsman and proved himself an apt pupil.
All at once Bud pulled up his pony sharply and studied the ground.
"What is it?" questioned Tad.
"We"ve struck luck for sure. Boy, I"ll show you something that"ll make your eyes stick out so you can hang your hat on them," cried the cowboy exultingly.
"You--you mean we have come upon the wild horses?" asked the lad.
"Yes, and more. Come this way and I"ll show you. See this trail?"
Tad nodded.
"Well, it was made by another band of horses."
The announcement did not strike Tad as especially significant.
"They headed for the mesas, too?"
"Looks that way," grinned Bud. "And they"re headed for trouble at the same time. There"s going to be music in the air pretty soon, kiddie, and you and I want to be on hand to hear the first tune."
Tad gazed at him questioningly.
"This second bunch of horses is led by a big black stallion known to the hunters as Satan. He"s up to his name too. He"s one of the most vicious cayuses on the open range. Don"t you see what this trail means?"
The lad confessed that he did not.
"It means that Satan is on the trail of the Angel. When Satan and the Angel meet there"ll be the worst sc.r.a.p you ever heard of, kiddie."
"Will they fight?"
"Will they fight?" scoffed Bud Stevens. "Guess you never saw two wild stallions mix it up."
"No."
"There"s bad blood between Satan and the Angel and there has been for a long time. The black stallion has been on the white one"s trail for more than a year. I don"t know what it"s all about, but I know that, if they come up with each other, there is going to be trouble. If they don"t look out we"ll bag the whole bunch. I wish our outfit was here.
I suppose we ought to hustle back and get ready for the drive, but I"m going to see Satan and the Angel meet, if it"s the last thing I ever do. Come on--we"ll have to ride fast."
Putting spurs to their ponies, they set off at a fast pace over the uneven, rugged trail.
CHAPTER XVI
THE BATTLE OF THE STALLIONS
The trail grew hotter as they advanced.
"See, Satan"s running now."
The pursuers increased their speed, although they could not hope to travel as rapidly as the black stallion and his followers. The wild horses" trot had by this time become leaps, as the followers could plainly see from the trail that had been left behind. Satan and his band were traveling in single file, their whole attention being centered on running down the Angel.
"Do you think Satan scented the others?" asked Tad, when they struck a level piece of ground so that they could relax their vigilance a little.
"No doubt of it at all. But he didn"t know it was just then. He only knew it was a horse. He knows now that the other bunch is ahead of him."
"How do you know that?" queried Tad.
"By the trail," replied Stevens. "Don"t you see, the Angel is going faster. They are both on a run now."
"Then the Angel must be afraid. Is that it?"
"Not much. He wants to find a better place in which to fight. This place is bad medicine for a horse battle. They"re all heading for the mesas, just as I thought first."
The cowboy was leaning well forward in his saddle, eyes on the trail, instead of looking ahead. Tad, on the contrary, was straining his eyes, hoping to catch sight of the two bands of fleeing horses; but not a sign of them did he see. Bud was the first to inform him that they were nearing the object of their chase.
"Satan"s going slower. He is coming up with the others. Let up a little, and don"t talk in a loud tone. We don"t want to disturb them nor let either of the bands get an idea they are followed. They might race off to some other part of the range. We want to catch them all later, if we can."