Barney stared for a moment in consternation at the man before him. He had previously grown accustomed to the horrors suggested by pistols, knives, red-hot branding-irons, and even pitchforks, but rocks in a stocking—that smacked of barbarism. Moreover, to mount on the back of a bronco, wild or tame—the very meditation made the walls drop out of his stomach. However, he smiled.
“Child’s play!” he answered, with fine disgust. “You warty infant! No matter, an odious child would become a more detestable reptile! Till to-morrow, don’t speak to me—don’t speak to me! Or I shall cheat myself of the morning’s pastime.” And with that he strode haughtily away.
“Howlin’ coyotes!” said Slivers, when he met the gaze of a dozen pair of gleaming eyes. “Take him dose for dose he’s worse than pizen! By gar! just see if he burned any holes in my shirt.”
Nearly all night long, however, little Barney lay awake, wildly fashioning excuses to avoid that horrid duel in the morning. He had always escaped by a margin so narrow that no precedent of the past gave assurance of luck for the future. He was mortally afraid that at last he had challenged such a monster of brute courage, malignity, and strength that nothing terrestrial could avert his untimely demise.
Then in the morning the first sight that met his troubled gaze was that of Slivers rounding up a pair of unbroken ponies, as wild as meteors, in the field of honor, hard by the camp. Every cell in Barney’s structure was in a panic. How he managed to walk to the water-bench to wash was more than he knew. After that there was no retreat. The citizens of Bitter Hole surrounded him, according to preconcerted arrangement, and began to coach him for his fight.
“Barney, you’d better have a jolt of whiskey in yer vitals,” suggested one. “Slivers is a regular expert with a stockin’ of rocks.”
“If I was you, Barney,” said Tuttle, “I’d leave my bronco throw me right at him. Then. I’d turn in the air and soak my heels into Slivers’s grub-basket and knock him into pieces small enough to smoke in a cigarette.”
“Barney,” counselled another, “you take my advice and fight standin’ up on your hoss, so you can jump over onto Slivers’s bronco and cram your stockin’ of rocks down that there mule-driver’s neck and choke him clean to death.”
They were “herding” the speechless Barney toward the corral, in which the two vicious ponies had now been confined. Slivers himself came forward.
“Leave me see how much the little scarecrow has shrunk in the night,” said he.