Part 3 (1/2)

”It is one of the many little absurdities in American customs; the old story of the survival of the two b.u.t.tons at the back of the coat, and, by the way, Miss Esmeralda, the two b.u.t.tons on the back of your habit are out of place, not because of your tailor's fault, but because of yours. They should make a line at right angles with your horse's spinal column. Draw yourself back a little, until you can feel the pommel under your right knee.

'Draw' yourself back; don't lean, but keep yourself perfectly erect, your back perpendicular to your horse's. Sit a little to the left; lean a little to the right. Let your left shoulder go forward a little, your right shoulder backward. Now you are exactly right. Try to remember your sensations at this minute, in order to be able to reproduce them. When I say 'Careful,' pa.s.s yourself in review and endeavor to feel where you are wrong.

But,” addressing the cavalryman, who was in advance with Versatilia, ”is this procession a funeral?”

”Not exactly,” said the cavalryman, and the, after a backward glance, he cried, in the fas.h.i.+on of a military riding-school master: ”Pr-r-re-pare to tr-r-r-ot--Trot!”

Esmeralda remembered to shorten her reins, and resigned herself to the Fates, who were propitious, enabling her to catch the cadence of the trot, and to rise to it during the few seconds before the cavalryman slackened rein. ”Careful,” said the master, and she shook herself into place, eliciting a hearty ”Good!” from him. ”Look at your pretty girl,” he growled softly, but savagely, and truly the beauty solicited attention. Slipping to the left in her saddle, one elbow pointing toward Cambridgeport and the other toward Dorchester, her right foot visible through her habit, and her left all but out of the stirrup, she was attractive no longer, and to complete the master's disgust she e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed: ”My hair is coming down!”

”Better bring a nurse and a ladies' maid for her,” he muttered to Esmeralda, confidentially. ”Hairpins in your saddle pocket? Well, you are a sensible girl,” and he rode forward with the little packet, giving it to the lawyer to pa.s.s to the unfortunate young woman. But here arose a little difficulty. The s.p.a.ce between the lawyer's horse and the beauty's as they stood was too wide to allow him to lay the parcel in her outstretched fingers. The Texan, on her right hand, had enough to do to keep her horse and his own absolutely motionless that she might not be thrown by any unexpected motion of either animal. Versatilia exclaimed in remonstrance, ”Don't leave me,” when the cavalryman said, ”Wait a second, I'll come and give them to her;” the master sat quiet and smiling.

”Why don't you dismount and give them to her?” cried Theodore, and was out of his saddle, had placed the parcel in her hand, and was back in his place again before either of the other three men could speak.

”Very well done,” said the master, approvingly, ”but not the right thing to do. Never leave your saddle without good cause, and never leave your horse loose for a moment. Yes, I saw that you retained your hold of the reins; I was talking at Miss Esmeralda.”

”Why didn't you make your horse step sideways?” he asked the lawyer.

”I can't. He won't. See there!”

Sundry pulls, precisely like those which he might have used had he intended the horse to turn, a pair of absolutely motionless legs, and an unused whip were accepted as evidence that the lawyer's ”I can't” was perfectly true, and the master and the cavalryman exchanged comprehending glances as the latter said: ”Well, don't mind. An eminent authority announced after the Boston horse show of 1889 that high-school airs were of no use on the road. To make a horse move a step sideways is the veriest little zephyr of an air, but it would have been of some use to you, then. Are we ready now? What's that? Dropped your whip?”

Up went the Texan's left heel, catching cleverly on the saddle as he dropped lightly to the right, after the fas.h.i.+on of the Arab, the Moor, the Apache, of all the nations which ride for speed and for fighting rather than for leaping and hunting, and he caught the whip from the ground and was back in his place in a twinkling. The ladies were unmoved, because inappreciative; the lawyer looked savagely envious, the cavalryman and the master approving, and Theodore, frankly admiring, but no one said anything, the little cavalcade rearranged itself, and once more moved on at a footpace until an electric car appeared.

”Ronald is like a rock,” said the master, ”and you need not be afraid, but I'll take this beast along in advance. He will shy, or do some outrageous thing, and he has a mouth as sensitive as the Mississippi's, and no more.”

The ”beast” did indeed sidle and fret and prance, and manifest a disposition to hasten to drown himself in the reservoir, beyond the reach of self-propelling vehicles, and he repeated the performance a the sight of two other cars, although evidently less alarmed than at first, but the fourth car was in charge of a kindly-disposed driver, who came to a dead stop, out of pure amiability.

This was too much for the ”beast” to endure; a moving house he was beginning to regard as tolerable, but a house which stopped short and glared at him with all its windows was more than horse nature could endure, and he started for the next county to inst.i.tute an inquiry as to whether such actions were to be allowed, but found himself forced to stop, and not altogether comfortable, while the master cried good-naturedly: ”Go along and take care of your car. I'll take care of my horse!”

”More than some other folks can do,” said the driver, with a quiet grin at the lawyer, whose angry, ”Here, what are you doing!” shouted to his plunging steed, had brought all the women in the car to the front, to explain to one another that ”that man was abusing his horse, poor thing.”

The car glided off, and Versatilia turned to look at it; her horse stumbled slightly, jerking her wrists sharply, and but for the cavalryman's quick s.h.i.+fting of the reins to his right hand and his strong grasp of her reins with his left, she might have been in danger.

”Never look back,” lectured the master. Esmeralda was his pupil, and he would have taken the whole centennial quadrille and all the cabinet ladies to point his moral, had he seen them making equestrian blunders. ”Where your horse has been, where, he is, is the past. Look to the future, straight before you.”

”The cavalryman looked back just now,” Esmeralda ventured to say.

”Yes, but he turned his horse very slightly to do it, and he may do almost anything because he has a perfect seat, and is a good horseman.”

”Suppose I hear something or somebody coming up behind me?”

”If it have any intelligence, it will not hurt you. If it have none, looking will do you no good. Turn out to the right as far as you can and look to the front harder than ever, so as to be ready to guide your horse and to avoid any obstacles in case he should start to run. What is the trouble with the ladies now?”

”O, dear!” cried the beauty to the society young lady, ”your horse.”

”What's the matter with him?” asked the other, still very stately and not turning.

”Oh! The dreadful creature has caught his tail on my horse's bit,” said the beauty.

”Then you'd better take your horse's bit away,” retorted the other. ”My horse's eyes are not at that end of him, and he can't be expected to look at his tail.”

”And you may be kicked,” added the Texan. ”Check him a little; there! We ought not to be so close together, and we ought to be moving a little, I think. Shall we trot again?”

Everybody a.s.sented, the cavalryman and Versatilia set off, the others followed as best they might, the beauty ”going to pieces”