Bostil went toward the house with
his daughter, turning at the door to call a last word
to his riders about the care of his horses.
The house was a low, flat, wide structure,
with a corridor running through the middle, from which
doors led into the adobe-walled rooms. The windows
were small openings high up, evidently intended for
defense as well as light, and they had rude wooden
shutters. The floor was clay, covered everywhere
by Indian blankets. A pioneer’s home it
was, simple and crude, yet comfortable, and having
the rare quality peculiar to desert homes it was cool
in summer and warm in winter.
As Bostil entered with his arm round
Lucy a big hound rose from the hearth. This room
was immense, running the length of the house, and it
contained a huge stone fireplace, where a kettle smoked
fragrantly, and rude home-made chairs with blanket
coverings, and tables to match, and walls covered
with bridles, guns, pistols, Indian weapons and ornaments,
and trophies of the chase. In a far corner stood
a work-bench, with tools upon it and horse trappings
under it. In the opposite corner a door led into
the kitchen. This room was Bostil’s famous
living-room, in which many things had happened, some
of which had helped make desert history and were never
mentioned by Bostil.
Bostil’s sister came in from
the kitchen. She was a huge person with a severe
yet motherly face. She had her hands on her hips,
and she cast a rather disapproving glance at father
and daughter.
“So you’re back again?” she queried,
severely.
“Sure, Auntie,” replied the girl, complacently.
“You ran off to get out of seeing Wetherby,
didn’t you?”
Lucy stared sweetly at her aunt.
“He was waiting for hours,”
went on the worthy woman. “I never saw a
man in such a stew.... No wonder, playing fast
and loose with him the way you do.”
“I told him No!” flashed Lucy.
“But Wetherby’s not the
kind to take no. And I’m not satisfied to
let you mean it. Lucy Bostil, you don’t
know your mind an hour straight running. You’ve
fooled enough with these riders of your Dad’s.
If you’re not careful you’ll marry one
of them.... One of these wild riders! As
bad as a Ute Indian! ... Wetherby is young and
he idolizes you. In all common sense why don’t
you take him?”
“I don’t care for him,” replied
Lucy.
“You like him as well as anybody....
John Bostil, what do you say? You approved of
Wetherby. I heard you tell him Lucy was like an
unbroken colt and that you’d ”
“Sure, I like Jim,” interrupted
Bostil; and he avoided Lucy’s swift look.
“Well?” demanded his sister.
Evidently Bostil found himself in
a corner between two fires. He looked sheepish,
then disgusted.
“Dad!” exclaimed Lucy, reproachfully.
“See here, Jane,” said
Bostil, with an air of finality, “the girl is
of age to-day an’ she can do what
she damn pleases!”
“That’s a fine thing for
you to say,” retorted Aunt Jane. “Like
as not she’ll be fetching that hang-dog Joel
Creech up here for you to support.”
“Auntie!” cried Lucy, her eyes blazing.
“Oh, child, you torment me worry
me so,” said the disappointed woman. “It’s
all for your sake.... Look at you, Lucy Bostil!
A girl of eighteen who comes of a family! And
you riding around and going around as you are now in
a man’s clothes!”
“But, you dear old goose, I
can’t ride in a woman’s skirt,”
expostulated Lucy. “Mind you, Auntie, I
can ride!”
“Lucy, if I live here forever
I’d never get reconciled to a Bostil woman in
leather pants. We Bostils were somebody once,
back in Missouri.”
Bostil laughed. “Yes, an’
if I hadn’t hit the trail west we’d be
starvin’ yet. Jane, you’re a sentimental
old fool. Let the girl alone an’ reconcile
yourself to this wilderness.”
Aunt Jane’s eyes were wet with
tears. Lucy, seeing them, ran to her and hugged
and kissed her.
“Auntie, I will promise from
to-day to have some dignity. I’ve
been free as a boy in these rider clothes. As
I am now the men never seem to regard me as a girl.
Somehow that’s better. I can’t explain,
but I like it. My dresses are what have caused
all the trouble. I know that. But if I’m
grown up if it’s so tremendous then
I’ll wear a dress all the time, except just
when I ride. Will that do, Auntie?”
“Maybe you will grow up, after
all,” replied Aunt Jane, evidently surprised
and pleased.
Then Lucy with clinking spurs ran away to her room.
“Jane, what’s this nonsense
about young Joel Creech?” asked Bostil, gruffly.
“I don’t know any more
than is gossiped. That I told you. Have you
ever asked Lucy about him?”
“I sure haven’t,” said Bostil, bluntly.
“Well, ask her. If she
tells you at all she’ll tell the truth.
Lucy’d never sleep at night if she lied.”
Aunt Jane returned to her housewifely
tasks, leaving Bostil thoughtfully stroking the hound
and watching the fire. Presently Lucy returned a
different Lucy one that did not rouse his
rider’s pride, but thrilled his father’s
heart. She had been a slim, lithe, supple, disheveled
boy, breathing the wild spirit of the open and the
horse she rode. She was now a girl in the graceful
roundness of her slender form, with hair the gold
of the sage at sunset, and eyes the blue of the deep
haze of distance, and lips the sweet red of the upland
rose. And all about her seemed different.
“Lucy you look like like
she used to be,” said Bostil, unsteadily.
“My mother!” murmured Lucy.
But these two, so keen, so strong,
so alive, did not abide long with sad memories.
“Lucy, I want to ask you somethin’,”
said Bostil, presently. “What about this
young Joel Creech?”
Lucy started as if suddenly recalled,
then she laughed merrily. “Dad, you old
fox, did you see him ride out after me?”
“No. I was just askin’ on on
general principles.”
“What do you mean?”
“Lucy, is there anythin’ between you an’
Joel?” he asked, gravely.
“No,” she replied, with her clear eyes
up to his.
Bostil thought of a bluebell.
“I’m beggin’ your pardon,”
he said, hastily.
“Dad, you know how Joel runs
after me. I’ve told you. I let him
till lately. I liked him. But that wasn’t
why. I felt sorry for him pitied him.”
“You did? Seems an awful waste,”
replied Bostil.
“Dad, I don’t believe
Joel is perfectly right in his mind,”
Lucy said, solemnly.
“Haw! haw! Fine compliments you’re
payin’ yourself.”
“Listen. I’m serious.
I mean I’ve grown to see –looking
back that a slow, gradual change has come
over Joel since he was kicked in the head by a mustang.
I’m sure no one else has noticed it.”
“Goin’ batty over you.
That’s no unusual sign round this here camp.
Look at ”
“We’re talking about Joel
Creech. Lately he has done some queer things.
To-day, for instance. I thought I gave him the
slip. But he must have been watching. Anyway,
to my surprise he showed up on Peg. He doesn’t
often get Peg across the river. He said the feed
was getting scarce over there. I was dying to
race Buckles against Peg, but I remembered you wouldn’t
like that.”
“I should say not,” said Bostil, darkly.
“Well, Joel caught up to me and
he wasn’t nice at all. He was worse to-day.
We quarreled. I said I’d bet he’d
never follow me again and he said he’d bet he
would. Then he got sulky and hung back. I
rode away, glad to be rid of him, and I climbed to
a favorite place of mine. On my way home I saw
Peg grazing on the rim of the creek, near that big
spring-hole where the water’s so deep and clear.
And what do you think? There was Joel’s
head above the water. I remembered in our quarrel
I had told him to go wash his dirty face. He
was doing it. I had to laugh. When he saw
me he then then he ”
Lucy faltered, blushing with anger and shame.
“Well, what then?” demanded Bostil, quietly.
“He called, ‘Hey, Luce take
off your clothes and come in for a swim!’”
Bostil swore.
“I tell you I was mad,”
continued Lucy, “and just as surprised.
That was one of the queer things. But never before
had he dared to to-”
“Insult you. Then what ’d you do?”
interrupted Bostil, curiously.
“I yelled, ’I’ll
fix you, Joel Creech!’... His clothes were
in a pile on the bank. At first I thought I’d
throw them in the water, but when I got to them I
thought of something better. I took up all but
his shoes, for I remembered the ten miles of rock
and cactus between him and home, and I climbed up
on Buckles. Joel screamed and swore something
fearful. But I didn’t look back. And
Peg, you know maybe you don’t know but
Peg is fond of me, and he followed me, straddling his
bridle all the way in. I dropped Joel’s
clothes down the ridge a ways, right in the trail,
so he can’t miss them. And that’s
all.... Dad, was it was it very bad?”
“Bad! Why, you ought to
have thrown your gun on him. At least bounced
a rock off his head! But say, Lucy, after all,
maybe you’ve done enough. I guess you never
thought of it.”
“What?”
“The sun is hot to-day.
Hot! An’ if Joel’s as crazy an’
mad as you say he’ll not have sense enough to
stay in the water or shade till the sun’s gone
down. An’ if he tackles that ten miles before
he’ll sunburn himself within an inch of his
life.”
“Sunburn? Oh, Dad!
I’m sorry,” burst out Lucy, contritely.
“I never thought of that. I’ll ride
back with his clothes.”
“You will not,” said Bostil.
“Let me send some one, then,” she entreated.
“Girl, haven’t you the
nerve to play your own game? Let Creech get his
lesson. He deserves it.... An’ now,
Lucy, I’ve two more questions to ask.”
“Only two?” she queried, archly.
“Dad, don’t scold me with questions.”
“What shall I say to Wetherby for good an’
all?”
Lucy’s eyes shaded dreamily,
and she seemed to look beyond the room, out over the
ranges.
“Tell him to go back to Durango
and forget the foolish girl who can care only for
the desert and a horse.”
“All right. That is straight
talk, like an Indian’s. An’ now the
last question what do you want for a birthday
present?”
“Oh, of course,” she cried,
gleefully clapping her hands. “I’d
forgotten that. I’m eighteen!”
“You get that old chest of your
mother’s. But what from me?”
“Dad, will you give me anything I ask for?”
“Yes, my girl.”
“Anything any horse?”
Lucy knew his weakness, for she had inherited it.
“Sure; any horse but the King.”
“How about Sarchedon?”
“Why, Lucy, what’d you
do with that big black devil? He’s too high.
Seventeen hands high! You couldn’t mount
him.”
“Pooh! Sarch kneels for me.”
“Child, listen to reason.
Sarch would pull your arms out of their sockets.”
“He has got an iron jaw,”
agreed Lucy. “Well, then how
about Dusty Ben?” She was tormenting her father
and she did it with glee.
“No not Ben.
He’s the faithfulest hoss I ever owned.
It wouldn’t be fair to part with him, even to
you. Old associations ... a rider’s loyalty
... now, Lucy, you know ”
“Dad, you’re afraid I’d
train and love Ben into beating the King. Some
day I’ll ride some horse out in front of the
gray. Remember, Dad! ... Then give me Two
Face.”
“Sure not her, Lucy. Thet
mare can’t be trusted. Look why we named
her Two Face.”
“Buckles, then, dear generous
Daddy who longs to give his grown-up girl anything!”
“Lucy, can’t you be satisfied
an’ happy with your mustangs? You’ve
got a dozen. You can have any others on the range.
Buckles ain’t safe for you to ride.”
Bostil was notably the most generous
of men, the kindest of fathers. It was an indication
of his strange obsession, in regard to horses, that
he never would see that Lucy was teasing him.
As far as horses were concerned he lacked a sense
of humor. Anything connected with his horses
was of intense interest.
“I’d dearly love to own Plume,”
said Lucy, demurely.
Bostil had grown red in the face and
now he was on the rack. The monstrous selfishness
of a rider who had been supreme in his day could not
be changed.
“Girl, I I thought
you hadn’t no use for Plume,” he stammered.
“I haven’t the
jade! She threw me once. I’ve never
forgiven her .... Dad, I’m only teasing
you. Don’t I know you couldn’t give
one of those racers away? You couldn’t!”
“Lucy, I reckon you’re
right,” Bostil burst out in immense relief.
“Dad, I’ll bet if Cordts
gets me and holds me as ransom for the King as
he’s threatened you’ll let him
have me!”
“Lucy, now thet ain’t funny!” complained
the father.
“Dear Dad, keep your old racers!
But, remember, I’m my father’s daughter.
I can love a horse, too. Oh, if I ever get the
one I want to love! A wild horse a
desert stallion pure Arabian broken
right by an Indian! If I ever get him, Dad, you
look out! For I’ll run away from Sarch
and Ben and I’ll beat the King!”
The hamlet of Bostil’s Ford
had a singular situation, though, considering the
wonderful nature of that desert country, it was not
exceptional. It lay under the protecting red bluff
that only Lucy Bostil cared to climb. A hard-trodden
road wound down through rough breaks in the canyon
wall to the river. Bostil’s house, at the
head of the village, looked in the opposite direction,
down the sage slope that widened like a colossal fan.
There was one wide street bordered by cottonwoods
and cabins, and a number of gardens and orchards, beginning
to burst into green and pink and white. A brook
ran out of a ravine in the huge bluff, and from this
led irrigation ditches. The red earth seemed
to blossom at the touch of water.
The place resembled an Indian encampment quiet,
sleepy, colorful, with the tiny-streams of water running
everywhere, and lazy columns of blue wood-smoke rising.
Bostil’s Ford was the opposite of a busy village,
yet its few inhabitants, as a whole, were prosperous.
The wants of pioneers were few. Perhaps once
a month the big, clumsy flatboat was rowed across
the river with horses or cattle or sheep. And
the season was now close at hand when for weeks, sometimes
months, the river was unfordable. There were
a score of permanent families, a host of merry, sturdy
children, a number of idle young men, and only one
girl Lucy Bostil. But the village
always had transient inhabitants friendly
Utes and Navajos in to trade, and sheep-herders
with a scraggy, woolly flock, and travelers of the
strange religious sect identified with Utah going
on into the wilderness. Then there were always
riders passing to and fro, and sometimes unknown ones
regarded with caution. Horse-thieves sometimes
boldly rode in, and sometimes were able to sell or
trade. In the matter of horse-dealing Bostil’s
Ford was as bold as the thieves.
Old Brackton, a man of varied Western
experience, kept the one store, which was tavern,
trading-post, freighter’s headquarters, blacksmith’s
shop, and any thing else needful. Brackton employed
riders, teamsters, sometimes Indians, to freight supplies
in once a month from Durango. And that was over
two hundred miles away. Sometimes the supplies
did not arrive on time occasionally not
at all. News from the outside world, except that
elicited from the taciturn travelers marching into
Utah, drifted in at intervals. But it was not
missed. These wilderness spirits were the forerunners
of a great, movement, and as such were big, strong,
stern, sufficient unto themselves. Life there
was made possible by horses. The distant future,
that looked bright to far-seeing men, must be and
could only be fulfilled through the endurance and
faithfulness of horses. And then, from these men,
horses received the meed due them, and the love they
were truly worth. The Navajo was a nomad horseman,
an Arab of the Painted Desert, and the Ute Indian
was close to him. It was they who developed the
white riders of the uplands as well as the wild-horse
wrangler or hunter.
Brackton’s ramshackle establishment
stood down at the end of the village street.
There was not a sawed board in all that structure,
and some of the pine logs showed how they had been
dropped from the bluff. Brackton, a little old
gray man, with scant beard, and eyes like those of
a bird, came briskly out to meet an incoming freighter.
The wagon was minus a hind wheel, but the teamster
had come in on three wheels and a pole. The sweaty,
dust-caked, weary, thin-ribbed mustangs, and the gray-and-red-stained
wagon, and the huge jumble of dusty packs, showed
something of what the journey had been.
“Hi thar, Red Wilson, you air
some late gettin’ in,” greeted old Brackton.
Red Wilson had red eyes from fighting
the flying sand, and red dust pasted in his scraggy
beard, and as he gave his belt an upward hitch little
red clouds flew from his gun-sheath.
“Yep. An’ I left
a wheel an’ part of the load on the trail,”
he said.
With him were Indians who began to
unhitch the teams. Riders lounging in the shade
greeted Wilson and inquired for news. The teamster
replied that travel was dry, the water-holes were
dry, and he was dry. And his reply gave both
concern and amusement.
“One more trip out an’
back thet’s all, till it rains,”
concluded Wilson.
Brackton led him inside, evidently
to alleviate part of that dryness.
Water and grass, next to horses, were
the stock subject of all riders.
“It’s got oncommon hot early,” said
one.
“Yes, an’ them northeast winds hard
this spring,” said another.
“No snow on the uplands.”
“Holley seen a dry spell comin’.
Wal, we can drift along without freighters. There’s
grass an’ water enough here, even if it doesn’t
rain.”
“Sure, but there ain’t none across the
river.”
“Never was, in early season. An’
if there was it’d be sheeped off.”
“Creech’ll be fetchin’ his hosses
across soon, I reckon.”
“You bet he will. He’s trainin’
for the races next month.”
“An’ when air they comin’ off?”
“You got me. Mebbe Van knows.”
Some one prodded a sleepy rider who
lay all his splendid lithe length, hat over his eyes.
Then he sat up and blinked, a lean-faced, gray-eyed
fellow, half good-natured and half resentful.
“Did somebody punch me?”
“Naw, you got nightmare! Say, Van, when
will the races come off?”
“Huh! An’ you woke
me for thet? ... Bostil says in a few weeks, soon
as he hears from the Indians. Plans to have eight
hundred Indians here, an’ the biggest purses
an’ best races ever had at the Ford.”
“You’ll ride the King again?”
“Reckon so. But Bostil
is kickin’ because I’m heavier than I was,”
replied the rider.
“You’re skin an’ bones at thet.”
“Mebbe you’ll need to
work a little off, Van. Some one said Creech’s
Blue Roan was comin’ fast this year.”
“Bill, your mind ain’t
operatin’,” replied Van, scornfully.
“Didn’t I beat Creech’s hosses last
year without the King turnin’ a hair?”
“Not if I recollect, you didn’t.
The Blue Roan wasn’t runnin’.”
Then they argued, after the manner
of friendly riders, but all earnest, an eloquent in
their convictions. The prevailing opinion was
that Creech’s horse had a chance, depending
upon condition and luck.
The argument shifted upon the arrival
of two new-comers, leading mustangs and apparently
talking trade. It was manifest that these arrivals
were not loath to get the opinions of others.
“Van, there’s a hoss!” exclaimed
one.
“No, he ain’t,” replied Van.
And that diverse judgment appeared
to be characteristic throughout. The strange
thing was that Macomber, the rancher, had already traded
his mustang and money to boot for the sorrel.
The deal, whether wise or not, had been consummated.
Brackton came out with Red Wilson, and they had to
have their say.
“Wal, durned if some of you
fellers ain’t kind an’ complimentary,”
remarked Macomber, scratching his head. “But
then every feller can’t have hoss sense.”
Then, looking up to see Lucy Bostil coming along the
road, he brightened as if with inspiration.
Lucy was at home among them, and the
shy eyes of the younger riders, especially Van, were
nothing if not revealing. She greeted them with
a bright smile, and when she saw Brackton she burst
out:
“Oh, Mr. Brackton, the wagon’s
in, and did my box come? ... To-day’s my
birthday.”
“‘Deed it did, Lucy; an’
many more happy ones to you!” he replied, delighted
in her delight. “But it’s too heavy
for you. I’ll send it up or
mebbe one of the boys ”
Five riders in unison eagerly offered
their services and looked as if each had spoken first.
Then Macomber addressed her:
“Miss Lucy, you see this here sorrel?”
“Ah! the same lazy crowd and
the same old story a horse trade!”
laughed Lucy.
“There’s a little difference
of opinion,” said Macomber, politely indicating
the riders. “Now, Miss Lucy, we-all know
you’re a judge of a hoss. And as good as
thet you tell the truth. Thet ain’t in some
hoss-traders I know.... What do you think of this
mustang?”
Macomber had eyes of enthusiasm for
his latest acquisition, but some of the cock-sureness
had been knocked out of him by the blunt riders.
“Macomber, aren’t you
a great one to talk?” queried Lucy, severely.
“Didn’t you get around Dad and trade him
an old, blind, knock-kneed bag of bones for a perfectly
good pony one I liked to ride?”
The riders shouted with laughter while
the rancher struggled with confusion.
“’Pon my word, Miss Lucy,
I’m surprised you could think thet of such an
old friend of yours an’ your Dad’s,
too. I’m hopin’ he doesn’t side
altogether with you.”
“Dad and I never agree about
a horse. He thinks he got the best of you.
But you know, Macomber, what a horse-thief you are.
Worse than Cordts!”
“Wal, if I got the best of Bostil
I’m willin’ to be thought bad. I’m
the first feller to take him in.... An’
now, Miss Lucy, look over my sorrel.”
Lucy Bostil did indeed have an eye
for a horse. She walked straight up to the wild,
shaggy mustang with a confidence born of intuition
and experience, and reached a hand for his head, not
slowly, nor yet swiftly. The mustang looked as
if he was about to jump, but he did not. His
eyes showed that he was not used to women.
“He’s not well broken,”
said Lucy. “Some Navajo has beaten his head
in breaking him.”
Then she carefully studied the mustang point by point.
“He’s deceiving at first
because he’s good to look at,” said Lucy.
“But I wouldn’t own him. A saddle
will turn on him. He’s not vicious, but
he’ll never get over his scare. He’s
narrow between the eyes a bad sign.
His ears are stiff and too close. I
don’t see anything more wrong with him.”
“You seen enough,” declared
Macomber. “An’ so you wouldn’t
own him?”
“You couldn’t make me
a present of him even on my birthday.”
“Wal, now I’m sorry, for
I was thinkin’ of thet,” replied Macomber,
ruefully. It was plain that the sorrel had fallen
irremediably in his estimation.
“Macomber, I often tell Dad
all you horse-traders get your deserts now and then.
It’s vanity and desire to beat the other man
that’s your downfall.”
Lucy went away, with Van shouldering
her box, leaving Macomber trying to return the banter
of the riders. The good-natured raillery was
interrupted by a sharp word from one of them.
“Look! Darn me if thet ain’t a naked
Indian comin’!”
The riders whirled to see an apparently
nude savage approaching, almost on a run.
“Take a shot at thet, Bill,”
said another rider. “Miss Lucy might see No,
she’s out of sight. But, mebbe some other
woman is around.”
“Hold on, Bill,” called
Macomber. “You never saw an Indian run like
thet.”
Some of the riders swore, others laughed,
and all suddenly became keen with interest.
“Sure his face is white, if his body’s
red!”
The strange figure neared them.
It was indeed red up to the face, which seemed white
in contrast. Yet only in general shape and action
did it resemble a man.
“Damned if it ain’t Joel Creech!”
sang out Bill Stark.
The other riders accorded their wondering assent.
“Gone crazy, sure!”
“I always seen it comin’.”
“Say, but ain’t he wild? Foamin’
at the mouth like a winded hoss!”
Young Creech was headed down the road
toward the ford across which he had to go to reach
home. He saw the curious group, slowed his pace,
and halted. His face seemed convulsed with rage
and pain and fatigue. His body, even to his hands,
was incased in a thick, heavy coating of red adobe
that had caked hard.
“God’s sake fellers ”
he panted, with eyes rolling, “take this ’dobe
mud off me! ... I’m dyin’!”
Then he staggered into Brackton’s
place. A howl went up from the riders and they
surged after him.
That evening after supper Bostil stamped
in the big room, roaring with laughter, red in the
face; and he astonished Lucy and her aunt to the point
of consternation.
“Now you’ve done it Lucy
Bostil!” he roared.
“Oh dear! Oh dear!” exclaimed Aunt
Jane.
“Done what?” asked Lucy, blankly.
Bostil conquered his paroxysm, and,
wiping his moist red face, he eyed Lucy in mock solemnity.
“Joel!” whispered Lucy, who had a guilty
conscience.
“Lucy, I never heard the beat
of it.... Joel’s smarter in some ways than
we thought, an’ crazier in others. He had
the sun figgered, but what’d he want to run
through town for? Why, never in my life have I
seen such tickled riders.”
“Dad!” almost screamed Lucy. “What
did Joel do?”
“Wal, I see it this way.
He couldn’t or wouldn’t wait for sundown.
An’ he wasn’t hankerin’ to be burned.
So he wallows in a ‘dobe mud-hole an’
covers himself thick with mud. You know that ’dobe
mud! Then he starts home. But he hadn’t
figgered on the ‘dobe gettin’ hard, which
it did harder ‘n rock. An’
thet must have hurt more ’n sunburn. Late
this afternoon he came runnin’ down the road,
yellin’ thet he was dyin’. The boys
had conniption fits. Joel ain’t over-liked,
you know, an’ here they had one on him.
Mebbe they didn’t try hard to clean him off.
But the fact is not for hours did they get thet ’dobe
off him. They washed an’ scrubbed an’
curried him, while he yelled an’ cussed.
Finally they peeled it off, with his skin I guess.
He was raw, an’ they say, the maddest feller
ever seen in Bostil’s Ford!”
Lucy was struggling between fear and
mirth. She did not look sorry. “Oh!
Oh! Oh, Dad!”
“Wasn’t it great, Lucy?”
“But what will he do?”
choked Lucy.
“Lord only knows. Thet
worries me some. Because he never said a word
about how he come to lose his clothes or why he had
the ’dobe on him. An’ sure I never
told. Nobody knows but us.”
“Dad, he’ll do something
terrible to me!” cried Lucy, aghast at her premonition.