the teachings of John Big Moose, the educated Dakota, who acted
as tutor for Injun and Whitey. Not that John was impatient with his
pupils. He was too patient, if anything, his own boyhood not being so
far behind him that he had forgotten that outdoors, in the Golden West,
is apt to prove more interesting to fifteen-year-old youth than printed
books--especially when one half the class is of Indian blood.
As Whitey stood near the bunk house and thought of these things, his
eye was attracted by a speck moving toward him across the prairie. He
watched it with the interest one might have in a ship at sea; as one
watches in a place in which few moving things are seen. The speck was
small, and was coming toward Whitey slowly.
From around the corner of the bunk house Injun approached. It will be
remembered by those who have read of Injun that he was very fond of
pink pajamas. As garments, pink pajamas seemed to Injun to be the real
thing. It had been hard to convince him that they were not proper for
everyday wear, but when he was half convinced of this fact, he had
done the next best thing, and taken to a very pink shirt. This, tucked in
a large pair of men's trousers, below which were beaded moccasins,
was Injun's costume, which he wore with quiet dignity.
"What do you s'pose that is?" asked Whitey, pointing at the speck.
"Dog," Injun answered briefly.
"A dog!" cried Whitey, who, though he had never ceased to wonder at
Injun's keenness of sight, was inclined to question it now. "What can a
dog be doing out there?"
"Dunno," Injun replied. "Him dog." Injun's education had not as yet
sunk in deep enough to affect his speech.
Whitey again turned his eyes toward the object, which certainly was
moving slowly, as though tired, and, as the boys watched, sure enough,
began to resolve itself into the shape of a dog. Here at last was
something happening to break the dullness of the day. A strange dog
twenty-five miles from any place in which a dog would naturally be.
Furthermore, when the animal was near enough to be seen distinctly, he
furnished another surprise. He was entirely unlike any of the dogs of
that neighborhood--the hounds, collies, or terriers. He was white, short,
chunky. His head was very large for his size, his jaw undershot, his
mouth enormous, and his lower lip drooped carelessly over a couple of
fangs on each side. Under small ears his eyes popped almost out of his
head, and his snub nose could scarcely be said to be a nose at all. From
a wide chest his body narrowed until it joined a short, twisted tail, and
his front legs were bowed, as though he had been in the habit of riding
a horse all his life.
Injun gazed at this strange being with something as near surprise as he
ever allowed himself. "Him look like frog," he declared.
"Why, it's a bulldog, an English bulldog!" exclaimed Whitey, who had
seen many of this breed in the East.
"More like bullfrog," Injun maintained solemnly. "What him do--eat
bulls?"
The brute's appearance surely was forbidding enough, and if Injun had
been subject to fear, which he wasn't, he would have felt it now. He did
not know, as many better informed people do not, that beneath this
breed's fierce appearance lies the deepest of dog love for a master--and
that's a pretty deep love--and that no other "friend of man" holds
gentler, kinder feeling for the human race than this queerly shaped
animal. And this in spite of the fact that he owes the very queerness of
his appearance to man, who has had him bred in that shape, through
countless generations, to the end that the poor, faithful beast may do
brutal deeds in the bull ring and the dog pit.
Whitey did not know all this--that the wide jaws were designed for a
grip on the enemy, the snub nose to permit breathing while that grip
was held, the widespread legs to secure a firm ground hold; in short,
that he was looking at an animal built for conflict, which had the
courage of a lion where his enemies were concerned, and the love of a
wild thing for its young where its human friends were concerned.
But Whitey knew the latter part of it--that bulldogs were friendly, and
usually misunderstood, and he proceeded to let Injun in on his
knowledge. "You needn't be afraid of him," he said.
"No 'fraid, but no go too close," replied the cautious Injun.
Now that this dog was in reach of humans he sat down, opened his
cave-like mouth, allowing a few inches of tongue to
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