CHAPTER XIII - NEARING HOME
AT
THE WELL IN THE DESERT,
October
21.
DEAR FRIEND,
We shall reach Green River City to-night.
We will rest the teams one day, then start home.
It will take us two days from Green River to reach
home, so this is the last letter on the road.
When we made camp here last night we saw some one
coming on horseback along the canyon rim on the opposite
side. The form seemed familiar and the horse
looked like one I had seen, but I dared not believe
my eyes. Clyde, who was helping to draw water
from the eighty-foot well without a pulley, thought
I was bereft as I ran from the camp toward the advancing
rider. But although I thought what I saw must
be a mirage, still I knew Mrs. Louderer on Bismarck.
Out of breath from my run, I grasped
her fat ankle and panted till I could speak.
“Haf they run you out of camp,
you iss so bad?” she asked me by way of greeting.
Then, more kindly, “Your boy iss all right, the
mutter also. I am come, though, to find you.
It iss time you are home with the kinder.
Haf you any goose-grease left?”
I had, all she had given me.
At camp, joy knew no bounds.
Never was one more welcome than our beloved neighbor.
Her astonishment knew no bounds either, when her big
blue eyes rested upon Mrs. O’Shaughnessy’s
“twins.”
“Frau O’Shaughnessy,”
she said severely, “what have you here?
You iss robbed an orphan asylum. How haf you
come by these?”
Mrs. O’Shaughnessy is so full
of life and good spirits and so delighted to talk
about her “childher” that she gave a very
animated recital of how she became a happy mother.
In turn Mrs. Louderer told how she grew more and more
alarmed by our long absence, but decided not to alarm
the neighbors, so she had “made a search party
out of mineself,” and had fared forth to learn
our fate.
We had a merry supper; even Haynes
became cheerful, and there was no lagging next morning
when we started for home. When people go on elk
hunts they are very likely to return in tatters, so
I am going to leave it to your imagination to picture
our appearance when we drove up to the rear of the
hotel about sundown. Our friend Mrs. Hutton came
running to meet us. I was ashamed to go into her
house, but she leaned up against the house and laughed
until tears came. “What chased you?”
she gasped. “You must have been run through
some of those barbed wire things that they are putting
up to stop the German army.”
Mrs. Hutton is a little lady who bolsters
up self-respect and makes light of trying situations,
so she “shooed” us in and I sneaked into
my room and waited until Clyde could run down to the
store and purchase me a dress. I feel quite clean
and respectable now, sitting up here in my room writing
this to you. I will soon be at home now.
Until then good-bye.
E. R.
S.