<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>LLOYD'S DUCK HUNT</div>
<p><span class="smcap">Meanwhile</span>, Lloyd and Jack, riding along
toward the river, were enjoying every moment of
the sunny afternoon. Leaving the road at the
White Bachelor's, they followed the trail across
a strip of desert.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_181.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="331" alt="riding horses" /> <span class="caption">"ENJOYING EVERY MOMENT OF THE SUNNY AFTERNOON"</span></div>
<p>"Look out for gopher holes," called Jack. "If
your horse should happen to stumble into one,
you'll be over his head before you can say 'scat.'
The little pests burrow everywhere."</p>
<p>As he spoke, his pony sprang to one side of the
road with a suddenness that nearly threw him from
the saddle.</p>
<p>"You old goose!" he exclaimed. "That was
nothing but a stick you shied at. But it does look
remarkably like a snake, doesn't it, Lloyd? That's
the way with all these ponies. They're always on
the watch for rattlers, and they'll shy at anything
that looks the least bit like one."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I didn't know that we'd find snakes out heah in
this dry sand," said Lloyd, in surprise.</p>
<p>"Yes, you'll find almost anything if you know
just where to look,—a whole menagerie. There
are owls and snakes living together in the same
holes. Wait! It looks as if there might be a nest
of them yonder. I'll stir it up and see."</p>
<p>Leaving the trail, he rode up between a clump of
sage-brush and greasewood bushes, and threw his
hat with all his force toward a hole beneath them. A
great, sleepy owl fluttered out, and sailed off with
a slow flapping of wings to the shelter of a stubby
mesquit farther on.</p>
<p>"If we had time to dig into the nest, we'd find
a snake in there," declared Jack, hanging down
from his saddle, cowboy fashion, to pick up his hat
from the ground as he rode along. He could feel
that Lloyd admired the easy grace with which he
did it, and that she was interested in the strange
things he had to tell about the desert. He was glad
that Phil was not along, for Phil, with his three
years' advantage in age and six inches in height,
had a way of monopolizing attention that made
Jack appear very young and insignificant. He resented
being made to feel like a little boy when he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></SPAN></span>
was almost a year older than Lloyd and several
inches taller.</p>
<p>This was the first time he had been out alone
with her, and the first time that he had had a chance
to show her that he could be entertaining when he
tried. Joyce and Mary and Phil had always had so
much to say that he had kept in the background.</p>
<p>The sun on Lloyd's hair made it gleam like sunshine
itself, tucked up under her jaunty little hunting-cap.
The exercise was bringing a deeper colour
to the delicate wild-rose pink of her cheeks,
and, as her eyes smiled mischievously up at him
whenever he told some tale that seemed almost too
big to believe, he decided that she was quite the
nicest girl he had ever known, except Joyce, and
fully as agreeable to go hunting with as any boy.</p>
<p>In that short trip he pointed out more strange
things than she could have seen in a whole afternoon
in the streets of Paris or London. There were
the wonderful tiny trap-doors leading down into
the silk-lined tunnels of the cunning trap-door
spiders; the hairy tarantulas; the lizards; the burrows
of the jack-rabbits; a trail made by the feet
of coyotes on their way to the White Bachelor's
poultry-yard.</p>
<p>Then he pointed out a great cactus, sixty feet<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165"></SPAN></span>
high, branched like a candelabrum, and told her
that the thorny trunk is like a great sealed cup,
full of the purest water, and that more than one
traveller has saved his life by boring into one of
these desert wells when he was perishing of thirst.</p>
<p>He told her how the Navajo Indians hunt the
prairie-dogs, sticking up a piece of mirror at the
entrance to the mound, and lying in wait for the
little creature to come out. When it meets its own
reflection, and sees what it supposes to be a strange
prairie-dog mocking it at its own front door, it
hurries out to fight, and the Indian pins it to the
ground with his arrow.</p>
<p>"Now, we'll have to go faster and make up for
lost time," he exclaimed, as they left the desert
and turned into a road leading to Tempe, a little
town several miles away on Salt River. "There
is an old ruin near this road, where the Indians
had a fort of some kind, that I'd like to show you,
but it's getting late, and we'd better hurry on to
the river. Let's gallop."</p>
<p>Lloyd had enjoyed many a swift ride, but none
that had been so exhilarating as this. The pure,
fresh air blowing over the desert was unlike any
she had ever breathed before, it seemed so much
purer and more life-giving. It was a joy just to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166"></SPAN></span>
be alive on such a day and in such a place. She
felt that she knew some of the delight a bird must
feel winging its wild, free way through the trackless
sky.</p>
<p>"I'd like to show you the town, too," Jack said,
as they came to the ford in the river leading over
to Tempe. "The Mexican quarter is so foreign-looking.
But, as we're out to kill, we'll just keep
on this side, and follow the river up-stream a piece.
Chris said that is where he saw the ducks."</p>
<p>"Oh, I'd be the proudest thing that evah walked,"
she exclaimed, "if I could only shoot one. A peacock
couldn't hold a candle to me. It would be
worth the trip to Arizona just to do that, if I nevah
did anothah thing. How I could crow ovah Malcolm
and Rob. Oh, Jack, you haven't any idea
how much I want to!"</p>
<p>"You shall have first pop at them," Jack answered.
"You don't stand as good a show with
that little rifle as I do. You'll have to wait till you
get up just as close as possible."</p>
<p>Compared to the broad Ohio, which Lloyd was
accustomed to seeing, Salt River did not look much
wider than a creek. She was in a quiver of excitement
when they turned the bend, and suddenly
came in sight of the beautiful water-fowl. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167"></SPAN></span>
ponies, trained to stand perfectly still wherever they
were left, came to a sudden halt as the two excited
hunters sprang off, and crept stealthily along the
bank.</p>
<p>"They'll see your white sweater," cautioned Jack.
"Stoop down, and sneak in behind the bushes."</p>
<p>"Then I'd bettah wait heah," returned Lloyd,
"and you go on. I don't believe I could hit a
bahn doah now, I'm in such a shake. I must have
the 'buck ague.' If I bang into them, I'll just
frighten them all away, and you won't get a shot."</p>
<p>It was a temptation to Jack to do as she urged.
This was the first sight he had had of a duck since he
had owned a gun, and the glint of the iridescent
feathers as the pretty creatures circled and dived
in the water made him tingle with the hunters'
thrill.</p>
<p>"No," he exclaimed, as she insisted. "I brought
you out here to shoot a duck, and I don't want to
take you back without one."</p>
<p>"Then I'll get down and wiggle along in the
sand so they can't see me," said Lloyd, "just like
'Lawless Dick, the Half-breed Huntah.' Isn't this
fun!"</p>
<p>Crawling stealthily through the greasewood
bushes, they crept inch by inch nearer the water,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168"></SPAN></span>
fairly holding their breath with excitement. Then
Lloyd, rising to her knees, levelled her rifle to take
aim. But her hands shook, and, lowering it, she
turned to Jack, whispering, "I'm suah I'll miss, and
spoil yoah chance. You shoot!"</p>
<p>"Aw, go on!" said Jack, roughly, forgetting,
in his excitement, that he was not speaking to a
boy. "Don't be a goose! You can hit one if you
try!"</p>
<p>The commanding tone irritated Lloyd, but it
seemed to steady her nerves, for, flashing an indignant
glance at him, she raised her rifle again, and
aimed it with deliberate coolness. <i>Bang!</i></p>
<p>Jack, who knelt just beside her, prepared to fire
the instant her shot should send a whir of wings
into the air, gave a wild whoop, and dropped his
gun.</p>
<p>"Hi!" he yelled. "You've hit it! See it floating
over there! Wait a minute. I'll get it for
you!"</p>
<p>Crashing through the bushes he ran back to where
Washington stood waiting, and, swinging himself
into the saddle, spurred him down the bank. But
the pony, who had never balked before with him
at any ford, seemed unwilling to go in.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Hurry up, you old slow-poke!" called Jack.
"Don't you see it's getting away?"</p>
<p>He succeeded in urging him into the middle of
the river, where the water was almost up to the
pony's body, but half-way across, the pony began
to plunge, and turned abruptly about. Then his
hind feet seemed to give way, and he went suddenly
back on his haunches. At the same instant a gruff
voice called from the bank, "Come out of that,
you little fool! Don't you know there's quicksand
there? Head your cayuse down the river! Quick!
Spur him up! Do you want to drown yourself?"</p>
<p>With a desperate plunge and a flounder or two,
the pony freed himself, and struggled back to safe
ground, past the treacherous quicksand. As Jack
reached the bank he saw the White Bachelor peering
at him from the back of his white horse. He
was evidently on the same mission, for he wore a
hunting-coat, as brown and weather-beaten as his
swarthy face, and carried an old gun on his shoulder.</p>
<p>"You'd have been sucked clean through to China,
if you'd gone much farther over," he said, crossly.
"That's one of the worst places in the river." Although
his tone was savage, there was a pleasant<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170"></SPAN></span>
gleam in his eyes as he added: "Too bad you've
lost your duck."</p>
<p>"Haven't lost it yet," said Jack, with a glance
toward the dark object floating rapidly down-stream.
He kicked off his boots as he spoke.</p>
<p>"Oh, Jack, please don't go in after it!" begged
Lloyd. "It isn't worth such a risk." The word
quicksand had frightened her, for she had heard
much of the dangerous spots in the rivers of this
region.</p>
<p>"Bound to have it!" called Jack, "for you
might not get another shot, and I'm bound not to
take you back home without one."</p>
<p>Striking out into the water regardless of his
sweater and heavy corduroy trousers, he paddled
after it. By this time the entire flock was out of
sight, and when Jack emerged from the river dripping
like a water-dog, the man remarked, coolly:
"Well, your hunt's up for this day, Buddy. Better
skip home and hang yourself up to dry, or you'll
be having pneumonia. Aren't you one of the kids
that lives at that place where they've got Ware's
Wigwam painted on the post, and all sorts of outlandish
figgers on the tents?"</p>
<p>"Yes," acknowledged Jack, in a surly tone, resenting
the name kid. Then, remembering the fate<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171"></SPAN></span>
that the man's warning had saved him from, he
added, gratefully: "It was lucky for me you yelled
out quicksand just when you did, for I was so bent
on getting that duck that I'd have kept on trying,
no matter how the pony cut up. I thought he had
taken a stubborn spell, and wanted to balk at the
water. I'm a thousand times obliged. Here, Lloyd,"
he added. "Here's your trophy. We'll hang it
on your saddle."</p>
<p>He held out the fowl, a beautifully marked drake,
but she drew back with a little shrug of the shoulders.</p>
<p>"Oh, mercy, no!" she answered. "I wouldn't
touch it for the world!"</p>
<p>"Haw! Haw!" roared the White Bachelor, who
had watched her shrinking gesture with a grin.
"Afraid of a dead duck!"</p>
<p>"I'm not!" she declared, turning on him, indignantly.
"I'm not afraid of anything! But I just
can't beah to touch dead things, especially with fu'h
or feathahs on them. Ugh! It neahly makes me
sick to think about it!"</p>
<p>"Well, if that don't beat the Dutch," said the
man, in an amused tone, after a long stare. She
seemed to be a strange species of womankind, with
which he was unacquainted. Then, after another<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172"></SPAN></span>
prolonged stare, he swung his heels against the sides
of his old white horse as a signal to move, and
ambled slowly off, talking to himself as he went.</p>
<p>"Meddlesome old thing!" muttered Lloyd, casting
an indignant glance after him. "It's none of
his business. I don't see what he wanted to poke
in for."</p>
<p>"It was lucky for me that he did," answered Jack.
"I never once thought of quicksand. Queer that
I didn't, too, when I've heard so much about it ever
since I came. It's all through Southern Arizona,
and more than one man has lost his life blundering
into it."</p>
<p>Lloyd grew serious as she realized the danger
he had escaped. "It was mighty brave of you to
go back into the rivah aftah you came so neah being
drowned, and just fo' my pleasuah—just because
you knew I wanted that duck. I'll remembah it
always of you, Jack."</p>
<p>"Oh, that's nothing," he answered, carelessly,
blushing to the roots of his wet hair. "When I once
start out to get a thing, I hate to be beaten. I'd
have swam all the way to Jericho rather than let
it get away. But I hope you won't always think
of me as sloshing around in the water, though I
suppose you can't help that, for you know the first<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173"></SPAN></span>
time you saw me I was over my elbows in a washtub."</p>
<p>"That's so," laughed Lloyd. "But you weren't
quite as wet then as you are now. It's a pity you
can't wring yourself as dry as you did those towels."</p>
<p>While Jack was tugging into his boots, she went
back to the bushes for the gun he had dropped.
Then she stood drawing out the loads while he tied
the duck to his saddle.</p>
<p>"Poah thing," said Lloyd. "It looked so beautiful
swimming around in the watah a few minutes
ago. Now it's mate will be so lonesome. Papa
Jack says wild ducks nevah mate again. Of co'se,"
she went on, slowly, "I'm proud to think that I hit
it, but now that it's dead and I took it's life, I feel
like a murdahah. Jack, I'm nevah going to kill
anothah one as long as I live."</p>
<p>"But it isn't as if you'd done it just for sport,"
protested Jack. "They were meant for food. Wait
till Joyce serves it for dinner, and you'll change
your mind."</p>
<p>"No," she said, resolutely, "I'll keep my rifle
for rattlesnakes and coyotes, in case I see any, and
for tah'get practice, but I'm not going to do any
moah killing of this kind. I'm glad that I got this
one, though," she added, as she swung herself into<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174"></SPAN></span>
the saddle. "I'll send grandfathah a feathah, and
one to Mom Beck. They'll both be so proud. And
I'll send one to Malcolm and one to Rob, and they'll
both be so envious, to think that I got ahead of
them."</p>
<p>"May I have one?" asked Jack, "just to keep to
remember my first duck hunt?"</p>
<p>"Yes, of co'se!" cried Lloyd. "I wouldn't have
had any myself, if it hadn't been for you. You
have given me one of the greatest pleasuahs I evah
had. This has been a lovely aftahnoon."</p>
<p>"Then I can count that quite a 'feather in my
cap,' can't I," said Jack, laughingly. Reaching
down, he selected the prettiest feather he could find,
and thrust the long quill through his hatband.
Lloyd glanced quickly at him. She would have expected
such a complimentary speech from Malcolm
or Phil, but coming from the quiet, matter-of-fact
Jack, such a graceful bit of gallantry was a surprise.</p>
<p>"You can save the down for a sofa-cushion, you
know," he added. "Even if you have sworn off
shooting any more yourself, you can levy on all that
Phil and I get, to finish it."</p>
<p>"Oh, thank you," she called back over her shoulder.
Her pony, finding that he was turned homeward,
was setting off at his best gait. Slapping<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175"></SPAN></span>
his hat firmly on his head, Jack hurried to overtake
her, and the two raced along neck to neck.</p>
<p>"This is how they brought the good news from
Ghent to Aix," he called. "I recited it once at
school!</p>
<div class='poem'>
"'Not a word to each other; we kept the great pace,—<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Neck by neck, stride by stride, never changing our place.'"</span><br/></div>
<p>"Isn't it glorious?" called back Lloyd. Her
cheeks dimpled with pleasure, and were growing
red as a sun-ripened peach from the exercise. Her
hat-pin began slipping out. Snatching at the little
cap, she caught it just in time to save it from sailing
off into the desert, but her hair came slipping down
over her shoulders to her waist, in soft, shining
waves. Jack thought that he had never seen anything
prettier than the little golden ripples in it, as
it floated back behind her in the sunshine.</p>
<p>"You look like Goldilocks when the three bears
chased her," he laughed. "Don't try to put it up
again. That's squaw fashion. You ought to wear
it that way all the time you're out here, if you want
to be in style."</p>
<p>Across the road from the Wigwam, Mary and
Norman were waiting for the return of the hunters.
They had rolled a barrel from the back yard over<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176"></SPAN></span>
to the edge of the desert, where they could watch the
road, and, turning it on its side, had laid a plank
across it, left from flooring the tents. On this they
were seesawing up and down, taking turns at occupying
the end which faced in the direction Jack
and Lloyd would come. Mary happened to have
the coveted seat when they came in sight.</p>
<p>"Gay go up, and gay go down," she chanted, as
the seesaw rose and fell with delightful springiness.
"All the way to London town." Norman was high
in the air when she began again, "Gay go up," but
it was anything but gay go down for Norman.
With an unexpectedness that he was wholly unprepared
for, Mary's chant ended with a whoop of
"Here they come!" She sprang off, and ran to
meet them, regardless of the other end of the plank.
It fell with such a thud that Norman felt that his
spinal column must certainly have become unjointed
in the jolt, and his little white teeth shut down violently
on his little red tongue.</p>
<p>His cries and Mary's shout of "Here they come"
brought Joyce to the door. Mr. Ellestad was just
leaving. She had prevailed upon him to read the
legend to her mother, and then he had stayed on
till sundown, discussing the different things that
a girl might do on the desert to earn money. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177"></SPAN></span>
story of Shapur had inspired her with a hope that
made all things possible. She was glad that Lloyd's
triumph gave her an outlet for her enthusiasm.</p>
<p>As soon as Mr. Ellestad left, she hustled Jack off
to his mother's tent to change his wet clothes, and
then started to build the fire for supper. "It's a
pity that it's too dark for me to take a snap shot
of you with that duck," she said. "But the first
one that Jack or Phil kills we'll have a picture of it.
It will do just as well. Then if I were you I'd
make some little blotting-pads of white blotting-paper,
put a blue-print on the top sheet, of you and
your rifle and the duck, and at the top fasten one
of the feathers made into a pen. You can split the
end of the quill, you know, just as they used to
make the old-fashioned goose-quill pens."</p>
<p>"So I can!" cried Lloyd. "I'm so glad you
thought of it. Oh, Joyce, I've had the best time
this aftahnoon! I had no idea the desert could be
so interesting!"</p>
<p>"Nor I, either," began Joyce. "I'll tell you
about it some other time," she added, as Holland
burst in, demanding to see the duck that Lloyd had
killed. Mary had run down the road to meet him
with the news, but he stoutly declined to believe
that a girl could have accomplished such a feat,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></SPAN></span>
until he had the proof of it in his hands. Then
to Lloyd's delight he claimed the honour of picking
it. She felt that she would rather throw it
away than go through the ordeal herself, yet she
could not impose such a task on any one else at
such a late hour on a busy Saturday.</p>
<p>"Oh, if you only will," she cried, "I'll let you
use my rifle all next Saturday. I didn't see how
I could possibly touch it! That down is so thick
undah the long outside feathahs, that it would be
as bad as picking a—a <i>cat</i>!"</p>
<p>Holland ripped out a handful with a look of fine
scorn. "Well, if you aren't the funniest!" he exclaimed.
"Girls are awful finicky," he confided to
Mary later. "I'm glad that I'm not one."</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />