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The Ridin' Kid from Powder River by Henry Herbert Knibbs
page 68 of 481 (14%)
la Crux that has sent him. For the new provisions I do not pay.
Adios, seƱors."

Pete thought that this was rather tame--but still Montoya's manner was
decidedly business-like. No one controverted him--not even the
storekeeper, who was the loser.

A small crowd had assembled. Excitement such as this was rare in
Laguna. While still in plain sight of the group about the store, and
as Montoya plodded slowly along behind the burros, Pete turned and
launched his parthian shot--that eloquently expressive gesture of
contempt and scorn wherein is employed the thumb, the nose, and the
outspread fingers of one hand. He was still very much a boy.

About a year later--after drifting across a big territory of grazing
land, winter-feeding the sheep near Largo, and while preparing to drive
south again and into the high country--Pete met young Andy White, a
clean-cut, sprightly cowboy riding for the Concho outfit. Andy had
ridden down to Largo on some errand or other and had tied his pony in
front of the store when Montoya's sheep billowed down the street and
frightened the pony. Young Pete, hazing the burros, saw the pony pull
back and break the reins, whirl and dash out into the open and circle
the mesa with head and tail up. It was a young horse, not actually
wild, but decidedly frisky. Pete had not been on a horse for many
months. The beautiful pony, stamping and snorting in the morning sun,
thrilled Pete clear to his toes. To ride--anywhere--what a contrast to
plodding along with the burros! To feel a horse between his knees
again! To swing up and ride--ride across the mesa to that dim line of
hills where the sun touched the blue of the timber and the gold of the
quaking-asp and burned softly on the far woodland trail that led south
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