The Curlytops at Uncle Frank's Ranch - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel The Curlytops at Uncle Frank's Ranch Part 27 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
"What made Clipclap stumble?" asked the little girl.
"I guess he stepped in a gopher's hole," answered her brother.
"Let's look," proposed Janet.
Brother and sister went to the place where Clipclap had stumbled. There they saw a little hole in the ground. It was the front, or maybe the back, door of the home of a little animal called a gopher, which burrows under the earth. A gopher is a sort of squirrel-like rat, and on the prairies they make many holes which are dangerous if a horse suddenly steps into them. Prairie dogs are another species of animal that burrow on the Western plains, making holes into which horses or ponies often step, breaking their legs and throwing their riders.
This time nothing had happened except that Teddy and the pony had been shaken up. The pony might have broken a leg but did not, nor was Teddy even scratched.
Cowboys always dread gopher and prairie dog holes, especially at night when they can not be so easily seen.
"Oh, I know what let's do!" exclaimed Janet, when she found that her brother was all right.
"What?" asked Teddy.
"Let's wait here until the gopher comes up!"
"All right. Then we'll catch him and take him home to Trouble."
CHAPTER XV
TROUBLE "HELPS"
Janet and Teddy sat beside the gopher hole, while their ponies, not far from them, ate the sweet gra.s.s of the prairie. Clipclap and Star Face did not wander away, even if they were not tied to a hitching post. For Western horses and cow ponies are trained to stand where their master leaves them, if he will but toss the reins over their heads and let them rest on the ground.
When a pony sees that this has been done he will never run away, unless perhaps something frightens him very much. It may be that he thinks, when the reins are over his head and down on the ground, they are tied to something, so he could not run away if he wanted to.
At any rate, Clipclap and Star Face stayed where Ted and Janet left them, and the little Curlytops watched the gopher hole.
"I wonder when he'll come out," said Janet after a bit.
"Shs-s-s-s!" whispered Teddy. "Don't talk!"
"Why not?" asked his sister.
"'Cause you might scare him. You mustn't talk any more than if you were fis.h.i.+ng."
"A gopher isn't a fis.h.!.+"
"I know it," said Teddy. "But you've got to keep quiet."
So he and Janet remained very quiet, watching the hole. Suddenly Janet gave Teddy a slight tap with her hand. He had looked off to see if the ponies were all right.
"What's the matter?" asked Teddy.
"Hus.h.!.+" whispered Janet. "There he is."
She pointed to the gopher's hole. Teddy saw a tiny black nose and a pair of sparkling eyes as a head was thrust a little way out of the burrow.
"I'll get him!" cried the little boy.
With outstretched hand he made a grab toward the hole. But his fingers only grasped a lot of dirt and stones. The gopher had dived down back into his hole as soon as he saw Teddy's first move.
"Oh, he got away!" said Janet sorrowfully.
"I'll get him next time," declared Teddy.
But he did not. Three or four times more the little animal put his small head and bright eyes out of the top of the hole, and each time Teddy made a grab for him; but the gopher was too quick. Finally Janet said:
"I guess we better go home, Teddy."
"Why?"
"Oh, it's getting late, and I'm getting hungry."
"So'm I. I'll wait until he comes up once more and then we'll go."
Once more the gopher peeped up, as if wondering why in the world those two strange children did not go away and let him alone. Ted made a grab for him, but missed and then the little boy said:
"Come on, Jan. Now we'll go home!"
"And we haven't any nice little gopher to take to Trouble," said Janet sadly.
"Oh, well, maybe it would bite him if we did catch one," reflected her brother. "I'll take him some of these pretty stones," and he picked up some from the ground. "He'll like to play with these."
Teddy whistled for his pony and Clipclap came slowly up to his little master. Janet held out a bunch of gra.s.s to Star Face and her pony, just as he had been taught, came up to her. Teddy helped his sister get up in the saddle. It was not hard for them, as the ponies were small, and Jim Mason had showed them how to put one foot in the stirrup, and then, with one hand on the saddle and the other grasping both the bridle and the pony's mane, give a jump that carried them up. But though Janet could mount her pony alone Teddy always helped her when he was with her by holding the stirrup.
"Let's have another race home," suggested Teddy, when they had started.
"No," answered his sister. "You might fall some more and get hurt. We'll ride slow."
So they did, though Teddy was anxious for a good, fast gallop.
"Well, did you have a nice time?" asked Mother Martin, as they came to the house after putting away their ponies.
"We had lots of fun," answered Janet. "Teddy fell off his pony----"
"Fell off his pony!" cried her mother.
"He threw me!" explained Ted, and then he told what had happened.
"An' didn't you catch noffin for me?" asked Trouble, who heard his brother telling the story of his adventure.
"I brought you these nice stones," and Teddy took them out of his pocket. "You can play with them, Trouble."