The Pony Rider Boys in the Grand Canyon.

by Frank Gee Patchin.

CHAPTER I

WESTWARD, HO!

"Ow, Wow, Wow, Wow! Y-E-O-W!"

Tad Butler, who was industriously chopping wood at the rear of the woodshed of his home, finished the tough, knotted stick before looking up.

The almost unearthly chorus of yells behind him had not even startled the boy or caused him to cease his efforts until he had completed what he had set out to do. This finished, Tad turned a smiling face to the three brown-faced young men who were regarding him solemnly.

"Haven"t you fellows anything to do?" demanded Tad.

"Yes, but we have graduated from the woodpile," replied Ned Rector.

"I got my diploma the first time I ever tried it," added Chunky Brown, otherwise and more properly known as Stacy Brown. "Cut a slice of my big toe off. They gave me my diploma right away. You fellows are too slow."

"Come in the house, won"t you? Mother"ll be glad to see you," urged Tad.

"Surely we will," agreed Walter Perkins. "That"s what we came over to do."

"Oh, it is, eh?"

"Didn"t think we came over to help you chop wood, did you?" demanded Chunky indignantly.

"Knowing you as I do, I hadn"t any such idea," laughed Tad. "But come in."

The boys filed in through the wood house, reaching the sitting room by way of the kitchen. Tad"s mother gave them a smiling welcome, rising to extend a warm, friendly hand to each.

"Sit down, Mrs. Butler," urged Walter.

"Yes, we will come to you," added Ned.

"We haven"t lost the use of our legs yet, Mrs. Butler," declared the fat Chunky, growing very red in the face as he noted the disapproving glances directed at him by his companions.

"I hope you won"t mind Chunky, Mrs. Butler," said Ned apologetically.

"You know he has lived among savages lately, and-----"

"Yes, ma"am, Ned and I have been constant companions for---how long has it been, boys?"

"Shut up!" hissed Ned Rector in the fat boy"s ear. "I"ll whale you when we get outside, if you make any more such breaks."

"Never mind, boys; Stacy and myself are very old, old friends," laughed Mrs. Butler.

"Yes, ma"am, about a hundred years old, more or less. Oh, I beg your pardon. I didn"t mean it just that way," stammered Chunky, coloring again and fumbling his cap awkwardly.

"Now you have said it," groaned Walter.

"Go way back in the corner out of sight and sit down before I start something," commanded Ned. "You must excuse us, Mrs. Butler. It is as Chunky has said. We are all savages---some of us more so than others, some less."

"It is unnecessary to make apologies. You are just a lot of healthy young men, full of life and spirits." Mrs. Butler patted Tad affectionately on the head. "Tad knows what I think of you all and how appreciative we both are over what Mr. Perkins has done for us.

Now that I have had a little money left me, I am glad that Tad is able to spend more time with you in the open. I presume you will soon be thinking of another trip."

"We"re always thinking of that, Mrs. Butler," interrupted Ned. "And we couldn"t think of a trip without thinking of Tad. A trip without Tad would be like---like-----"

"A dog"s tail wagging down the street without the dog," interjected the solemn voice of Chunky Brown from his new headquarters.

"I move we throw Chunky out in the wood house," exploded Ned. "Will you excuse us while we get rid of the enc.u.mbrance, Mrs. Butler?"

"Sit down and make your peace. I know you boys have some things to talk over. I can see it in your faces. Go on with your conference.

I"ll bring you some lemonade in a few moments," said Mrs. Butler, as she left the room.

"Well, fellows, is this just a friendly call or have you really something in mind?" asked Tad after all had seated themselves.

"I"m the only one with a mind that will hold anything. And I"ve got plenty in it, too," piped Chunky.

Ned Rector sighed helplessly. The other boys grinned, pa.s.sing hands across their faces that Stacy might not observe their amus.e.m.e.nt.

"We want to pow-wow with you," said Walter.

"That means you"ve something ahead---another trip?"

"Yes, we"re going to the-----" began young Brown.

"Silence! Children should be seen, but not heard," commanded Ned.

Chunky promptly hitched his chair out, joining the circle.

"I"m seen," he nodded, with a grimace.

"Then see that you"re not heard. Some things not even a Pony Rider boy can stand. You"re one of them."

"Yes, I"m a Pony Rider," answered Chunky, misapplying Ned Rector"s withering remark.

"Another trip, eh?"

"That"s it, Tad. Walt"s father has planned it out for us. And what do you think?"

"Yes, what d"ye think? He"s going-----"

"Look here, Chunky, are you telling this or am I?" demanded Ned angrily.

"You"re trying to, but you"re making an awful mess of the whole business.

Better let me tell it. I know how and you don"t."

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