<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>A RACE FOR LIFE.<br/><br/></div>
<div class='cap'>"JACK, don't you think we are going too
near the corrals?" Olive inquired timidly.</div>
<p>It was high noon. The cattle had been
brought by the cowboys into the open field
and each ranchman had divided his own
stock from the herds. The animals had been
driven into the corrals, separate enclosures
made of fence rails, one belonging to each of
the neighboring ranches. In the afternoon
the branding of the cattle took place, but
most of the cowboys had now gone off to get
something to eat before the real business of
the day began. Only a dozen men guarded
the entire stockade.</p>
<p>"Oh, no, Olive," Jack answered lightly.
"I believe, if we ride a little closer, we may
get some news of Jim. I would like to see
him to ask him some questions, before we
start back home." Jack rode gaily ahead,
forgetting her disagreeable scene with Dan
Norton. The swarming hundreds of cows and
calves, the bright sunshine, the brilliantly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</SPAN></span>
blue sky overhead, the noise and splendid
action of the scene interested her tremendously.</p>
<p>"I think Miss Olive is right, Miss Ralston,"
Frank insisted gravely. "We must not ride
too near the stock, for fear of a stampede."</p>
<p>"Just a few feet more," Jack begged, turning
half way around in her saddle to glance
back at Olive and Frank.</p>
<p>At this moment an immense bull burst out
of one of the corrals and made a wild dash
across an open field. He was not headed
toward Jack, or Olive, or Frank, and there
did not appear to be the least danger.</p>
<p>Two of the cowboys made a rush to cut off
the bull's charge but turned back a moment
later to their companions. It was more important
for the men to keep the other animals
from following their leader, than to recapture
the one infuriated beast.</p>
<p>Jim Colter had warned Jacqueline, when
he first gave her the new pony, that "Tricks"
was well named. He had told her that she
would have to watch the little animal pretty
closely, but Jack was a trained rider and so
far the mare had not given her any trouble.
She had not realized, when she came to the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</SPAN></span>
round-up, that "Tricks" was one of the
ponies that had been formerly used by the
cow-punchers at the round-ups.</p>
<p>Tricks saw the bull break away from the
stockade and make its plunge for freedom at
the moment that Jack turned her head and
slightly relaxed her hold on the broncho's
bridle.</p>
<p>The pony's fighting blood was up. She did
not intend to see a bull escape when it was her
business as a cowboy's pony, to head him off
and turn him back toward the herd. She made
a leap forward, running diagonally across the
plain, in order to cross in front of the bull at
the shortest possible distance. For the first
time in her experience, Jack Ralston completely
lost control of the horse she was
riding; the pony's headlong rush had been too
unexpected. Tricks was a good-sized broncho
with a will of her own and was convinced that
she was doing her duty.</p>
<p>Jack had unfortunately taken off her
gloves. People in the West never ride the
hard-mouthed little Western ponies, without
thick leather gauntlets. She pulled on her
reins until they cut into her flesh, but the
pony ran on. Still Jack had no idea of not<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</SPAN></span>
being able to control her before she got into
danger.</p>
<p>No one, except Frank and Olive, saw Jack's
wild dash. The cowboys were riding in and
out among the corrals, swinging their long
ropes and forcing the excited cattle back into
their enclosures.</p>
<p>"Get back out of the way," Frank commanded
Olive quickly. Almost before she
realized what had taken place, Frank Kent
was off like a shot after the flying Jack.</p>
<p>His horse pounded along, but Jack was
yards ahead. Frank did not know what he
could do, if he reached Jack. He could only
grasp her bridle and try to stop both of their
ponies. At best, if he got ahead of her, he
might be able to shut off the bull's mad charge.
There would be only one way to do it and that
would be to let the animal rush upon his
horse. He knew nothing of the cowboys'
methods. He had no lasso. He had seen
pictures of Spanish toreadors with their
flaming scarlet scarfs. If he only had as
much as a red handkerchief, perhaps he might
divert the bull's course. Of course Frank
realized that this would have been a forlorn
hope. But nothing really mattered. Jack's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</SPAN></span>
pony continued to gain on his; he had not a
fighting chance of overtaking her.</p>
<p>Frank hardly dared look at Jack. He could
see so clearly what would happen: the range-bred
pony would take her straight in front of
the furious bull, not knowing that her rider
was not a cowboy and would be unequal to
the task of turning the great brute aside. She
would do her part and expected Jack to do
the rest. Jack did not have so much as a
small riding whip in her hand, having lost
it in her pony's first plunge ahead. But she
now realized her peril; one glimpse of her face
would have revealed this. It was white as
marble save for the flying, bronze gold of her
hair. Her eyes were wide open and almost
black and her lips were parted. But there
was no give-up in her expression; determination
marked every fine cut line.</p>
<p>Jack had considered but two alternatives.
Either she must stop her wild pony or drive
back the maddened bull. Now she knew she
could do neither. She was only a few yards
from the bull and understood that an animal
in a wild rush for liberty, never turns aside
unless he is driven.</p>
<p>Half unconsciously Frank Kent closed his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</SPAN></span>
eyes. Jacqueline Ralston had seemed to him
so splendid, typifying to him the free, outdoor
life of the great West. He realized that
Jack had lots of faults, but that she was the
kind of girl who would make a wonderful
woman. She was a true American girl, brave,
generous and gay. The thought of her being
injured, or killed, was horrible. She was the
very spirit of youth and energy.</p>
<p>Frank looked again. Jack was going to
face death squarely, or else to drive her pony
across the bull's course, before it reached her.
Yet the last method seemed hopeless, because
the pony was master of the race, not Jack.
The girl had stooped low in her saddle. Her
feet were out of the stirrups and she lay almost
flat across the pony's back. She seemed to
slip to one side. Frank watched for another
horrified second. Jack and her horse were
not a hundred feet from the bull.</p>
<p>Then something slid along the ground
on the right side of the pony, ran a few feet,
let go of the bridle and sat down limply in the
brown grass.</p>
<p>Frank shouted as he had never thought
it in him to shout. The trick of dropping
from her horse that Jack had just effected,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</SPAN></span>
he had seen accomplished once in a Buffalo
Bill show in London. The vision of a girl
doing it for her own safety was the most
thrilling sight he had ever seen in his life.</p>
<p>Tricks, deserted by her rider, and uncertain
what she should do alone, sprang to one side
as the bull lunged at her, and the danger was
all over in an instant.</p>
<p>Frank found Jack shaking like one in
a chill. But she smiled at him bravely and
put out her hand to let him pull her off the
ground.</p>
<p>"Perhaps, Frank," she said, forgetting
formalities in her thankfulness, "if I live
long enough, I may some day learn to do what
I am told. Please take me back to Olive."</p>
<p>Tricks, exhausted by her wild run, was led
back to Jack, a weary and repentant pony.</p>
<p>Jack was silent and shaken. She followed
Frank back to the spot where they had left
Olive, without a word.</p>
<p>The cowboys were returning to the work
of branding the cattle and it was high time
the ranch girls started for home. But
neither Jack nor Frank could find a trace of
Olive. She had completely disappeared.
They rode over to the spot where they had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</SPAN></span>
lunched with Mr. and Mrs. Simpson, but the
automobile party had left for their ranch.
Frank inquired of a dozen cowboys. No one
of them had seen Olive.</p>
<p>Jack tried not to cry, but the day's experiences
had been too much for her. She had
never been so utterly wretched before.</p>
<p>"Don't worry, Miss Ralston," Frank urged.
"I'll bet you anything that Miss Olive has
run across your overseer, Jim Colter, and has
returned to Rainbow Ranch with him."</p>
<p>Jack shook her head despairingly. "Olive
would not go away without telling me, for
anything in the world," she insisted. "Besides,
Jim would not leave me here. He is
somewhere around, won't you find him?"</p>
<p>Frank insisted that Jack wait in a place
of safety a mile farther along the trail toward
their ranch. For an hour Jack walked up and
down a few yards of barren ground, her pony
resting near her. The time seemed an eternity.</p>
<p>By and by Frank arrived with Jim Colter.
Jim looked sternly at Jack, but she was past
caring what he said or thought of her.</p>
<p>"Can't you find Olive, Jim?" Jack pleaded.</p>
<p>"I'll do my best," Jim returned. "Mr.
Kent will take you home to the ranch."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"But I can't go without Olive, Jim. I'll
stay here until you find her. She has probably
just lost her way," Jack entreated.</p>
<p>"Hope so," Jim repeated shortly. "But
in any case, your place is at home."</p>
<p>Jack hesitated.</p>
<p>"Haven't you made enough trouble for
yourself and other people already to-day,
Jack?" Jim questioned keenly. And Jack
submissively bowed her head.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</SPAN></span></p>
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