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he second mountain and saw far below them a long saddle back split in the middle by a narrow cleft. At that distance it looked very narrow. In reality, it was forty feet wide. Racey stopped and swept with squinting eyes the place where he knew the bridge to be. "See," he said, suddenly, pointing for Molly's benefit. "There's the Daisy trail. I can see her plain--to the left of that arrowhead bunch of trees. And the bridge is behind the trees." "But I don't see any trail." "Grown up in grass. That's why. It's behind the trees mostly, anyhow. But she's there, the trail is. You can bet on it." "I don't want to bet on it." Shortly. She was still mad at him. He had saved her life, he had succeeded in saving the family ranch, he had put her under eternal obligations, but he had called her thought for him foolishness. It was too much. Yet all the time she was ashamed of herself. She knew that she was small and mean and narrow and deserved a spanking if any girl did. She wanted to cuff Racey, cuff him till his ears turned red and his head rang. For that is the way a woman feels when she loves a man and he has hurt her feelings. But she feels almost precisely the same way when she hates one who has. Truth it is that Love and Hate are close akin. Down, down they dropped two thousand feet, and when they came out upon the fairly level top of the saddle back Racey mounted behind Molly. "He'll have to carry double now," he explained. "She's two mile to the bridge, and my wind ain't good enough to run me two mile." It was not his wind that was weak, it was his feet--his tortured, blistered feet that were two flaming aches. Later they would become numb. He wished they were numb now, and cursed silently the man who first invented cowboy boots. Every jog of the trotting horse whose back he bestrode was a twitching torture. "We'll be at the bridge in another mile," he told her. "Thank Heaven!" Silent and grass-grown lay the Daisy trail when they came out upon it winding through a meagre plantation of cedars. "No one's come along yet," vouchsafed Racey, turning into the trail after a swift glance at its trackless, undisturbed surface. He tickled the horse with both spurs and stirred him into a gallop. There was not much spring in that gallop. Racey weighed fully one hundred and seventy pounds without his clothes, Molly a hundred and twenty with all of hers, and the saddle, blanket, sack, rifle, and cartridges
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