“Hollo, Harry!” exclaimed Charley; “hold on a bit. Here’s this monster begun his tricks.”
“Hit him a crack with the whip,” shouted Harry.
Charley acted upon the advice, which had the effect of making the horse shake his head with a sharp snort, and back more vigorously than ever.
“There, my fine fellow, quiet now,” said Charley, in a soothing tone, patting the horse’s neck. “It’s a comfort to know you can’t go far in that direction, anyhow!” he added, as he glanced over his shoulder, and saw an immense drift behind.
He was right. In a few minutes the horse backed into the snow-drift. Finding his hind-quarters imprisoned by a power that was too much even for his obstinacy to overcome, he gave another snort and a heavy plunge, which almost unseated his young rider.
“Hold on fast,” cried Harry, who had now come up.
“No fear,” cried Charley, as he clinched his teeth and gathered the reins more firmly.—“Now for it, you young villain!” and raising his whip, he brought it down with a heavy slash on the horse’s flank.
Had the snow-drift been a cannon, and the horse a bombshell, he could scarcely have sprung from it with greater velocity. One bound landed him on the road; another cleared it; and, in a second more, he stretched out at full speed—his ears flat on his neck, mane and tail flying in the wind, and the bit tight between his teeth.
“Well done,” cried Harry, as he passed. “You’re off now, old fellow; good-bye.”
“Hurrah!” shouted Charley, in reply, leaving his cap in the snow as a parting souvenir; while, seeing that it was useless to endeavour to check his steed, he became quite wild with excitement; gave him the rein; flourished his whip; and flew over the white plains, casting up the snow in clouds behind him like a hurricane.