When Helen Morrell made up her mind
to do a thing, she usually did it. A cataclysm
of nature was about all that would thwart her determination.
This being yielded to and never thwarted,
even by her father, might have spoiled a girl of different
calibre. But there was a foundation of good common
sense to Helen’s nature.
“Snuggy won’t kick over
the traces much,” Prince Morrell had been wont
to say.
“Right you are, Boss,”
had declared Big Hen Billings. “It’s
usually safe to give her her head. She’ll
bring up somewhar.”
But when Helen mentioned her eastern
trip to the old foreman he came “purty nigh
goin’ up in th’ air his own se’f!”
as he expressed it.
“What d’yer wanter do
anythin’ like that air for, Snuggy?” he
demanded, in a horrified tone. “Great jumping
Jehosaphat! Ain’t this yere valley big
enough fo’ you?”
“Sometimes I think it’s
too big,” admitted Helen, laughing.
“Well, by jo! you’ll
fin’ city quarters close’t ‘nough an’
that’s no josh. Huh! Las’ time
ever I went to Chicago with a train-load of beeves
I went to see Kellup Flemming what useter work here
on this very same livin’ Sunset Ranch.
You don’t remember him. You was too little,
Snuggy.”
“I’ve heard you speak of him, Hen,”
observed the girl.
“Well, thar was Kellup, as smart
a young feller as you’d find in a day’s
ride, livin’ with his wife an’ kids in
what he called a flat. Be-lieve me!
It was some perpendicular to git into, an’ no
flat.
“When we gits inside and inter
what he called his parlor, he looks around like he
was proud of it (By jo! I’d be afraid
ter shrug my shoulders in it, ‘twas so small)
an’ says he: ‘What d’ye think
of the ranch, Hen?’
“‘Ranch,’ mind yeh!
I was plumb insulted. I says: ’It’s
all right what there is of it only,
what’s that crack in the wall for, Kellup?’
“‘Sufferin’ tadpoles!’
yells Kellup jest like that! ‘Sufferin’
tadpoles! That ain’t no crack in the wall.
That’s our private hall.’
“Great jumping Jehosaphat!”
exclaimed Hen, roaring with laughter. “Yuh
don’t wanter git inter no place like that in
New York. Can’t breathe in the house.”
“I guess Uncle Starkweather
lives in a little better place than that,” said
Helen, after laughing with the old foreman. “His
house is on Madison Avenue.”
“Don’t care where it is;
there natcherly won’t be no such room in a city
dwelling as there is here at Sunset Ranch.”
“I suppose not,” admitted the girl.
“Huh! Won’t be room
in the yard for a cow,” growled Big Hen.
“Nor chickens. Whatter yer goin’
to do without a fresh aig, Snuggy?”
“I expect that will be pretty
tough, Hen. But I feel like I must go, you see,”
said the girl, dropping into the idiom of Sunset Ranch.
“Dad wanted me to.”
“The Boss wanted yuh to?” gasped
the giant, surprised.
“Yes, Hen.”
“He never said nothin’
to me about it,” declared the foreman of Sunset
Ranch, shaking his bushy head.
“No? Didn’t he say
anything about my being with women folk, and under
different circumstances?”
“Gosh, yes! But I reckoned
on getting Mis’ Polk and Mis’ Harry Frieze
to take turns coming over yere and livin’ with
yuh.”
“But that isn’t all dad
wanted,” continued the girl, shaking her head.
“Besides, you know both Mrs. Polk and Mrs. Frieze
are widows, and will be looking for husbands.
We’d maybe lose some of the best boys we’ve
got, if they came here,” said Helen, her eyes
twinkling.
“Great jumping Jehosaphat!
I never thought of that,” declared the foreman,
suddenly scared. “I never did like
that Polk woman’s eye. I wouldn’t,
mebbe, be safe myse’f; would I?”
“I’m afraid not,”
Helen gravely agreed. “So, you see, to please
dad, I’ll have to go to New York. I don’t
mean to stay for all time, Hen. But I want to
give it a try-out.”
She sounded Dud Stone a good bit about
the big city. Dud had to stay several days at
Sunset Ranch because he couldn’t ride very well
with his injured foot. And finally, when he did
go back to Badger’s, they took him in a buckboard.
To tell the truth, Dud was not altogether
glad to go. He was a boyish chap despite the
fact that he was nearly through law school, and a
sixteen-year-old girl like Helen Morrell especially
one of her character appealed to him strongly.
He admired the capable way in which
she managed things about the ranch-house. Sing
obeyed her as though she were a man. There was
a “rag-head” who had somehow worked his
way across the mountains from the coast, and that
Hindoo about worshipped “Missee Sahib.”
The two or three Greasers working about the ranch
showed their teeth in broad smiles, and bowed most
politely when she appeared. And as for the punchers
and wranglers, they were every one as loyal to Snuggy
as they had been to her father.
The Easterner realized that among
all the girls he knew back home, either of her age
or older, there was none so capable as Helen Morrell.
And there were few any prettier.
“You’re going right to
relatives when you reach New York; are you, Miss Morrell?”
asked Dud, just before he climbed into the buckboard
to return to his friend’s ranch.
“Oh, yes. I shall go to
Aunt Eunice,” said the girl, decidedly.
“No need of my warning you against
bunco men and card sharpers,” chuckled Dud,
“for your folks will look out for you. But
remember: You’ll be just as much a tenderfoot
there as I am here.”
“I shall take care,” she returned, laughing.
“And and I hope I may see you in
New York,” said Dud, hesitatingly.
“Why, I hope we shall run across
each other,” replied Helen, calmly. She
was not sure that it would be the right thing to invite
this young man to call upon her at the Starkweathers’.
“I’d better ask Aunt Eunice about that
first,” she decided, to herself.
So she shook hands heartily with Dud
Stone and let him ride away, never appearing to notice
his rather wistful look. She was to see the time,
however, when she would be very glad of a friend like
Dud Stone in the great city.
Helen made her preparations for her
trip to New York without any advice from another woman.
To tell the truth she had little but riding habits
which were fit to wear, save the house frocks which
she wore around the ranch.
When she had gone to school in Denver,
her father had sent a sum of money to the principal
and that lady had seen that Helen was dressed tastefully
and well. But all these garments she had outgrown.
To tell the truth, Helen had spent
little of her time in studying the pictures in fashion
magazines. In fact, there were no such books about
Sunset Ranch.
The girl realized that the rough and
ready frocks she possessed were not in style.
There was but one store in Elberon, the nearest town,
where ready-to-wear garments were sold. She went
there and purchased the best they had; but they left
much to be desired.
She got a brown dress to travel in,
and a shirtwaist or two; but beyond that she dared
not go. Helen was wise enough to realize that,
after she arrived at her Uncle Starkweather’s,
it would be time enough to purchase proper raiment.
She “dressed up” in the
new frock for the boys to admire, the evening before
she left. Every man who could be spared from the
range even as far as Creeping Ford came
in to the “party.” They all admired
Helen and were sorry to see her go away. Yet
they gave her their best wishes.
Big Hen Billings rode part of the
way to Elberon with her in the morning. She was
going to send the strawberry roan back hitched behind
the supply wagon. Her riding dress she would
change in the station agent’s parlor for the
new dress which was in the tray of her small trunk.
“Keep yer eyes peeled, Snuggy,”
advised the old foreman, with gravity, “when
ye come up against that New York town. ’Tain’t
like Elberon no, sir! ’Tain’t
even like Helena.
“Them folks in New York is rubbing
up against each other so close, that it makes ’em
moughty sharp yessir! Jumping Jehosaphat!
I knowed a feller that went there onct and he lost
ten dollars and his watch before he’d been off
the train an hour. They can do ye that quick!”
“I believe that fellow must
have been you, Hen,” declared Helen,
laughing.
The foreman looked shamefaced.
“Wal, it were,” he admitted. “But
they never got nothin’ more out o’ me.
It was the hottest kind o’ summer weather an’
lemme tell yuh, it can be some hot in that
man’s town.
“Wal, I had a sheepskin coat
with me. I put it on, and I buttoned it from
my throat-latch down to my boot-tops. They’d
had to pry a dollar out o’ my pocket with a
crowbar, and I wouldn’t have had a drink with
the mayor of the city if he’d invited me.
No, sirree, sir!”
Helen laughed again. “Don’t
you fear for me, Hen. I shall be in the best
of hands, and shall have plenty of friends around me.
I’ll never feel lonely in New York, I am sure.”
“I hope not. But, Snuggy,
you know what to do if anything goes wrong. Just
telegraph me. If you want me to come on, say the
word
“Why, Hen! How ridiculous
you talk,” she cried. “I’ll
be with relatives.”
“Ya-as. I know,”
said the giant, shaking his head. “But relatives
ain’t like them that’s knowed and loved
yuh all yuh life. Don’t forgit us out yere,
Snuggy and if ye want anything ”
His heart was evidently too full for further utterance.
He jerked his pony’s head around, waved his
hand to the girl who likewise was all but in tears,
and dashed back over the trail toward Sunset Ranch.
Helen pulled the Rose pony’s
head around and jogged on, headed east.