Boy Woodburn - LightNovelsOnl.com
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It was Old Mat's horse, Old Mat's race; and they had all got a bit on.
They were pleased with themselves, pleased with the horse, pleased with the jockey, who, perched up aloft on the great sweating bay, his hands still mechanically at work, his little dark face s.h.i.+ning, chaffed his chaffers in the voice of a Punchinello.
"Get off him, Monkey," called a joker; "get off quick afore he falls to pieces. _Do!_"
"Same as you do when I get talkin' to ye!" retorted the little jockey.
There was a roar of laughter at the expense of the joker, who turned suddenly nasty.
"Who said Chukkers?" he cried.
There was an instant of silence, and then some groans.
"Not me," replied the little jockey grimly.
A sn.i.g.g.e.r rippled through the crowd.
"What you done with your old friend this time, Monkey?" somebody asked.
"Laid him out again lately?"
"No such luck," the other answered. "He's beat it."
"Where is he then?"
The little jockey tossed his head backward.
"Gone back to G.o.d's Own Country to find his birf certificate. No flowers by request."
The reference was to the fact that Monkey's old-time enemy, the vanquished of Cannibal's National fifteen years before, Chukkers, the greatest of cross-country riders, was an American citizen of uncertain origin.
The thrust was received with a fresh outburst from the hilarious crowd.
Monkey Brand's relations with his "old friend" were well known to all.
The little jockey prepared to dismount.
Amid a burst of jeers and cheers, he threw his leg over his horse's withers, slipped to the ground, stripped off the saddle, and limped off to the weighing machine.
Old Mat watched him go.
"On his hoss, on his day," he muttered confidentially to the young man, "Monkey Brand can show his heels to most of 'em yet."
"How old is he?" asked the other.
The old trainer frowned and shook his head mysteriously.
"You must never ask a jockey his age, no more than a woman," he said.
"He come to me the year I was married, and that's twenty year since come Michaelmas. And when he come he looked much just the very same as he do now. Might ha' been any age atween ten and a hundred." He dropped his voice. "Only way he shows his years--he ain't so fond of fallin' as he was. And I don't blame him. Round about forty a man begins to get a bit brittle like."
He lilted off after his jockey.
Goosey Gander stood stripped of everything but his bridle, with dark flanks and lowered head reaching at his bit.
He was a typical Woodburn horse: a great upstanding bay, full of bone and quality. But he showed wear. A tube was in his throat, a leather-boot on each fore-leg, and he was bandaged to the hocks, both of which showed the serrated lines of the firing iron.
The girl in front of him pulled his sweating ears. Jim Silver watched with admiration not untinged with awe her stern young face. She was entirely unconscious of his gaze, and unaware of the people thronging her. Her whole spirit was concentrated on the dark and sweating head, trying to rub against her knees. The crowd pressed in upon her inconveniently.
"Give the lady a chance to breathe," cried the young man in his large and lazy voice.
The crowd withdrew a little.
"Say, Guv'nor!--do they call you Tinee?" called one.
"No; his name's Silver," said another. "They calls you Silver Mug, don't they, mister?"
"I believe so," replied the young man, unmoved.
He was fair game: for he was very big, clearly good-humoured, spick and span to a fault, and a member of another cla.s.s.
They gathered with glee to the baiting.
"That ain't because of his name, stoopid. That's because he's got a silver linin' to his mug, ain't it, sir?"
"Silver!--gold, you mean. 'E breathes gold, that bloke do, and then it settles on the roof of his jaw. Say, Blokey, open your mug and let's 'ave a peep. I'll put a penny in."
A little red ball was run up an improvised pole. Old Mat was waving.
"All right," he called.
The girl led Goosey Gander out of the Paddock into the field at the back. Women in parti-coloured shawls selling oranges, labourers, riff-raff, and children were gathered about the merry-go-rounds and cocoanut-s.h.i.+es, listening apathetically to the hoa.r.s.e exhortations of the owners to come and try their luck.
Silver followed the girl thoughtfully.
She led the winner past the side-shows toward the group of stately elms under which the carriages and carts were gathered.
The ejected stable-lad, Albert Edward, now in his s.h.i.+rt-sleeves, came toward her, carrying a bucket. The girl rinsed out the old horse's mouth. Then with swift, accustomed fingers she unlaced the leather-boots, and set to work to unwind a bandage.
Jim Silver watched her attentively and then began clumsily on the other bandage.
"No," she said. "Like so," and taking it from him unwound it in a trice.
The old horse shook himself.
"Go and fetch his rug from the buggy," ordered the girl, addressing Albert.
The lad went off.
The young man took off his long-waisted gray coat and flung it over the horse's loins, lining down.