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+Project Gutenberg's The Ranch Girls at Home Again, by Margaret Vandercook
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Ranch Girls at Home Again
+
+Author: Margaret Vandercook
+
+Release Date: January 12, 2011 [EBook #34928]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RANCH GIRLS AT HOME AGAIN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Emmy and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE RANCH GIRLS SERIES
+
+
+
+
+The Ranch Girls at Home Again
+
+
+
+
+BOOKS BY MARGARET VANDERCOOK
+
+
+THE RANCH GIRLS SERIES
+
+ The Ranch Girls at Rainbow Lodge
+ The Ranch Girls' Pot of Gold
+ The Ranch Girls at Boarding School
+ The Ranch Girls in Europe
+ The Ranch Girls at Home Again
+ The Ranch Girls and their Great Adventure
+ The Ranch Girls and their Heart's Desire
+ The Ranch Girls and the Silver Arrow
+ The Ranch Girls and the Mystery of the Three Roads
+
+
+STORIES ABOUT CAMP FIRE GIRLS
+
+ The Camp Fire Girls at Sunrise Hill
+ The Camp Fire Girls Amid the Snows
+ The Camp Fire Girls in the Outside World
+ The Camp Fire Girls Across the Sea
+ The Camp Fire Girls' Careers
+ The Camp Fire Girls in After Years
+ The Camp Fire Girls on the Edge of the Desert
+ The Camp Fire Girls at the End of the Trail
+ The Camp Fire Girls Behind the Lines
+ The Camp Fire Girls on the Field of Honor
+ The Camp Fire Girls in Glorious France
+ The Camp Fire Girls in Merrie England
+ The Camp Fire Girls at Half Moon Lake
+ The Camp Fire Girls by the Blue Lagoon
+
+
+THE GIRL SCOUTS SERIES
+
+ The Girl Scouts of the Eagle's Wing
+ The Girl Scouts in Beechwood Forest
+ The Girl Scouts of the Round Table
+ The Girl Scouts in Mystery Valley
+ The Girl Scouts and the Open Road
+
+[Illustration: "WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT, RALPH MERRITT?" SHE
+DEMANDED]
+
+
+
+
+THE RANCH GIRLS SERIES
+
+
+The Ranch Girls at Home Again
+
+BY
+
+MARGARET VANDERCOOK
+
+
+ILLUSTRATED BY
+
+RALPH P. COLEMAN
+
+ THE JOHN C. WINSTON COMPANY
+ PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1915, by
+ THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO.
+
+ PRINTED IN U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I. THE RACE 9
+ II. AN UNANSWERED QUESTION 21
+ III. THE ENGINEER OF THE RAINBOW MINE 30
+ IV. OLIVE COMES HOME 40
+ V. THEIR RIDE TOGETHER 51
+ VI. THAT SAME AFTERNOON 66
+ VII. "COURAGE MAKES THE MAN" 79
+ VIII. THE MIDNIGHT CONFERENCE 91
+ IX. A DILEMMA AND A VISITOR 100
+ X. CROSS PURPOSES 110
+ XI. A DINNER PARTY 121
+ XII. TWO CONVERSATIONS 134
+ XIII. A VISIT TO RAINBOW MINE 146
+ XIV. THE EXPLOSION 155
+ XV. AN UNFORTUNATE DISCUSSION 165
+ XVI. A DESERT STORM 187
+ XVII. OLIVE'S REMORSE 200
+ XVIII. JACK SURRENDERS AT LAST 210
+ XIX. RAINBOW CASTLE 221
+ XX. A PARTY AT THE NEW HOUSE 230
+ XXI. MAIDS AND MEN 240
+ XXII. OLD FRIENDS AND SOMETHING MORE 254
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ "WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT, RALPH MERRITT?" SHE
+ DEMANDED _Frontispiece_
+ PAGE
+ "SHE HAD HEARD THAT MASTERFUL TONE BEFORE" 84
+ "THE STARS HAD DISAPPEARED AND BEYOND THE UNIVERSAL
+ GRAYNESS THERE WAS NOW A FAINT ROSE LIGHT" 211
+ "YOU WOULD HAVE MARRIED ME ANYHOW" 241
+
+
+
+
+The Ranch Girls at Home Again
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE RACE
+
+
+AN hour before sunset a number of persons were standing in a small group
+facing the western horizon. But although the prairie was covered with a
+crop of young grass, a pale green mirror to reflect the colors of the
+sun, they were not looking at the landscape but toward two figures on
+horseback, a girl and a boy who were riding across country as rapidly as
+their horses could carry them.
+
+"Will Jack Ralston ever learn to be less reckless about her riding,
+Jim?" Ruth Colter inquired. "Since we returned from Europe it seems to
+me that she has grown more attached to the Rainbow ranch than ever
+before. Yet at about the time we were married, dear, do you know I had a
+fancy that Jack and Frank Kent were going to care for each other
+seriously. Of course, I was mistaken since he has never been to see her
+in almost a year."
+
+Then with both hands held out invitingly, Ruth received a small pink and
+white bundle which Jim deposited in them with infinite care. For the
+bundle consisted of an absurdly tiny person measuring its early
+existence by weeks instead of months or years. And its face, though as
+delicately shell pink as the blanket enveloping it, yet bore a
+ridiculous resemblance to the tall man's in whose arms it had lately
+been borne.
+
+A moment later and Jim Colter strode forward with a blond girl at his
+side. For by this time the two riders were almost within hailing
+distance, the girl's horse scarcely a neck in advance of her
+companion's.
+
+"Carlos don't like Jack," Frieda Ralston remarked unexpectedly to her
+guardian, "so I do wish that she would not keep on doing things to
+irritate him. He perfectly hates to think that a girl can beat him at
+any outdoor sport and yet he rarely gets ahead of Jack. Indians are so
+strange and silent that sometimes I feel afraid he may try and revenge
+himself upon her for some fancied wrong. See, he is furious now at her
+having won their race!"
+
+"Well, I expect Miss Ralston will be able to manage him;" Jim returned.
+"Nevertheless, the boy has not turned out as I had hoped; he is lazy and
+proud and extremely ungrateful. Sometimes I have half an idea of turning
+him off the ranch, and I came very near doing it the other day, only
+Jack pleaded for him. Because he is Olive's friend she seems sentimental
+about keeping him on here, at least, until Olive joins us. Bravo, Jack!
+Be careful, you hoyden, don't you know you are a grown woman!" he cried.
+
+And with his tone divided between admiration and anger, Jim caught at
+the flying figure of a girl as she landed lightly on the ground at his
+feet. She had jumped from her pony while it was still going at full
+speed and then run along beside it until she was able to stop without
+losing her balance.
+
+"I wish you would not behave like a circus rider, Jack," Frieda scolded.
+For at eighteen Frieda Ralston had become a far more dignified and
+reposeful character than her older sister, who was now past twenty.
+
+Nevertheless Jack only made a slight grimace, calling back over her
+shoulder carelessly, "Carlos, see to my horse, will you, when it gets to
+the stable?" And then in a kinder tone, "Oh, never mind, I had
+forgotten; some one else can look after him. Of course you will be
+interested to hear the news from Olive--Miss Van Mater," she corrected
+herself. "I am going to tell the family at once." Then she walked on
+between Jim and Frieda, with an arm laid lightly across her sister's
+shoulder. And without replying Carlos followed the little party.
+
+He was a beautiful slender Indian boy of about fifteen or sixteen, with
+skin the color of bronze, with straight dark hair and moody, unsatisfied
+black eyes--the same Indian boy who had formerly helped Olive to return
+to the ranch after her enforced capture by old Laska, and had afterwards
+sought refuge there himself. As a small lad, in spite of his pride and
+difficult disposition, the Ranch girls and Ruth had been fond of him,
+but since their return from Europe they had found Carlos a problem. He
+was unwilling to work like the other men, either on the ranch or at the
+mine, and was equally determined not to go to school except when forced
+into it. Indeed, so far as possible, the boy had insisted upon living in
+the midst of civilization like one of his chieftain ancestors.
+Oftentimes he chose to sit idly in the sun doing nothing, save perhaps
+to clean his gun or else gaze for hours at the sky overhead. Then again
+he might without warning disappear on a hunting expedition, taking any
+horse from the stables that he wished for his purpose, and usually
+returning with game or furs, which he sometimes bestowed on Jean or
+Frieda or Ruth, but never on Jack.
+
+At the present moment his manner was absurdly dignified and haughty,
+since he particularly objected to being treated at any time as though he
+were a servant, and considered Jack's request in that light. However, as
+no one was paying the slightest attention to him, it was self-evident
+that he was longing to hear Jacqueline Ralston's news.
+
+"Have you heaps of letters, Jack? Do please hurry and give them to us."
+Jean Bruce called out, walking away from the two young men with whom she
+had been recently talking. One of them was Ralph Merritt, the engineer
+in charge of the Rainbow mine, and the other a visitor from one of the
+neighboring ranches. For as Jack had always insisted, wherever Jean was
+to be found there also was a masculine admirer, even in a wilderness.
+
+Over her shoulder Jack carried a small leather mail bag, which she now
+opened; but before drawing forth her letters she leaned over and glanced
+anxiously into the face of the small baby snuggled in Ruth's arms.
+
+"Nothing has happened to Jimmikins since I have been away? He has not
+cut a tooth or anything, has he, Ruth?" she queried. And as the others
+laughed, the baby being at the present hour only about seven weeks old,
+Jack drew forth more than a dozen letters and began passing them around
+to the different members of her family.
+
+"Here, Jean, of course there are more for you than for any of the rest
+of us, and in so many handwritings that it looks as if you kept a
+correspondence school for young men. And, Frieda, I am sorry I had to
+discover this was from Tom. But the youth does send you so many boxes of
+candy, I can't help recognizing the address. Ruth, won't you ask
+everybody please to wait here a moment for I have something really
+important to tell you." Then Jack's radiant face grew graver.
+
+"I have at last had a long letter from Olive," she explained. "And a
+week after her grandmother's death the will was read." The girl glanced
+about her. Ralph Merrit and their visitor had walked off several yards,
+so that only the few persons interested were standing near.
+
+"Of course old Madame Van Mater has made the curious will that we might
+have expected. For it seems that she has given Olive one more year to
+make up her mind whether or not she will marry Donald Harmon. If she
+does, of course they will then inherit the greater portion of the estate
+with only a few legacies to be paid outside. But if she does not decide
+to marry him--and here is the strange thing--at the end of the year
+another will is to be read, which will divide the property differently.
+And no one knows just how, for this second will is sealed and in the
+possession of her executors. So Olive may finally be left penniless or
+she may receive everything, or else Donald may suffer the same fate. It
+is a queer and interesting state of things, isn't it?" Jack concluded.
+
+"Yes, and pretty well calculated to make everybody that had anything to
+do with the old lady uncomfortable for another twelve months longer
+anyhow," Jim Colter replied frowning. "Funny how the old woman arranged
+to make her relatives and friends as miserable after her death as she
+had before it. It is pretty hard on both Olive and Donald. In the end I
+have an idea that the money will go to some charity."
+
+In reply Jean slowly shook her head, turning over the envelopes in her
+hand with pretended interest, but with her thoughts plainly not centered
+upon them.
+
+"Olive is very foolish," she remarked at length. "Really I can't see why
+she does not make up her mind to do as her grandmother wished. Don is a
+charming fellow and it is ridiculous not to appreciate the value of so
+much money. Why the longer I live the more important it seems to me!"
+
+Too displeased with Jean's unexpected burst of worldliness to discuss
+the question with her, Jim marched a few steps away. Ruth was
+distressed, but being a woman she was not so unmindful of what lay
+behind the girl's apparently careless speech, while Frieda became
+immediately influenced by her cousin's point of view, just as she
+always had been since they were small girls. So it was Jack who was the
+one person in the group to take Jean's statement lightly, for she merely
+laughed, saying:
+
+"Oh, of course we know that Jean is the really worldly person in our
+family, so we must watch and see how she lives up to her sentiments!
+Still you have not yet heard my most important piece of news. Olive has
+also written that she is completely worn out with all the business and
+worry of these last weeks and so she is coming to us at once. She asks
+if she may bring Miss Winthrop along with her for a visit?" Jack paused
+for a moment, looking inquiringly about at the faces of the others. "Of
+course she may," she ended. "It will be a pleasure to have Miss
+Winthrop, and besides I don't see how we possibly could refuse."
+
+Frieda held up two white hands protestingly. She was not an industrious
+person and so devoted a great deal of her valuable time to her toilet
+instead of to more serious labors. "Oh, dear," she began, "it will be
+just like going back to Primrose Hall again to have Miss Winthrop
+staying in our house. Goodness, how she will disapprove of me for
+having no ambition to improve myself as Olive does. I shall have to lead
+a changed life!"
+
+"Thank Providence, then. Do ask Miss Winthrop to come on the next
+train," Jim chuckled, returning at this instant, while Ruth shook her
+head thoughtfully.
+
+"Naturally it will be an opportunity for all of us to have a woman like
+Miss Winthrop for our guest," she declared, in a slightly worried tone.
+"But has it ever occurred to any one of you where we are to put her? The
+poor old Lodge is so crowded now with babies and girls and Jim Colter
+that we have not a single spare room. Oh, of course Olive can be tucked
+in anywhere, but----"
+
+"Jim, do take your son and let us walk over and look at our new house,"
+Jack at once suggested. "Surely there will be enough bedrooms finished
+by the time Olive and Miss Winthrop arrive, for some of the family, so
+that we may give ours to our guests. Funny how we cling to the dear old
+Rainbow Lodge in spite of our new grandeur."
+
+Then Jack moved on ahead, leading the way through the grove of
+cottonwood trees almost up to the old house. She turned to the left and
+about an eighth of a mile farther along came to a slight elevation,
+recently planted with shrubs and evergreens. There, facing the little
+party, was a splendid pile of stone and wood that was evidently growing
+into an old-time colonial house.
+
+For of course now that the girls were older and wealthier, and Jim and
+Ruth married, Rainbow Lodge was no longer suited to their needs. And as
+the Rainbow Mine still continued to yield a handsome income, the new
+house had occupied a great deal of the family's time and attention since
+their return from Europe. For it had been both Jim's and Jack's desire
+to build a wonderful colonial mansion here in their own beautiful
+Western country, where in times past men and women had been content with
+rude cabins. Since a colonial house meant to Jim Colter the beauty and
+dignity of the old Virginia homes that he remembered in his boyhood and
+since Jacqueline had long cherished a photograph of the place owned by
+her Southern grandfather who had been killed in the Confederate army,
+the new house was to be as nearly as possible a replica of the latter.
+
+In the interest of discussing what the workmen had accomplished since
+their last visit to the new building, no one noticed that the Indian
+boy, Carlos, who had followed the others up to this time, listening
+intently to every word of their conversation, had stalked silently away
+as soon as Olive's name ceased to be mentioned. His face wore a more
+pleasing expression, and unlike his usual habit he afterwards joined old
+Aunt Ellen in the kitchen, who was still the ranch girls' cook and
+devoted friend. To her he at once imparted the information concerning
+the expected visitors; then he retired to his own tent in the yard. For
+Carlos had absolutely refused to live in the ranch house with the other
+employees about the estate and had erected for himself an Indian tepee
+at some distance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+AN UNANSWERED QUESTION
+
+
+ON a pile of boards in a great unfinished room Frieda Ralston stood
+facing--the unknown future.
+
+In the family it was sometimes said that though on occasions the younger
+Miss Ralston could assume the airs of a social queen, at very many other
+times she was more of a baby than ever. For of course Frieda had not yet
+been touched by any of life's hard realities, and since her sister's
+recovery from her accident her way had been fairly plain sailing. For
+did she not have health, youth, plenty of money and an adoring family?
+What else was there to wish for? Thus far she had never taken any of her
+mild love affairs with the least seriousness and had no idea of
+"settling down," as she expressed it, for at least ten years to come. So
+what was there for Frieda to do but each day to grow fairer and more
+charming, like a lovely wax doll that had come to life and taken upon
+itself the airs and graces of a really grown-up person. Because Jack
+objected, Frieda some time ago had given up her former fashion of
+wearing her heavy yellow hair in a Psyche knot, and in these months at
+the ranch when no strangers were about had returned to her old childish
+custom of two long braids. On dress occasions, however, her coiffure,
+copied after a Paris model, could again be made bewilderingly lovely.
+
+On this particular occasion Frieda had unfortunately neglected to attire
+herself for the rôle which she was about to play, as she happened to be
+wearing an old blue and white middy blouse and a short duck skirt with
+one long plait hanging over each shoulder.
+
+"I wonder," she began at this moment, though no one chanced to be
+looking toward her, "which one of us will finally fall heir to this
+grand new house we are building? I have just been thinking, houses are
+not like clothes, meant for one person and to last through one or two
+seasons: they may last through many generations and no telling what
+changes in a family."
+
+"Hear! Hear!" cried Jean, straightway whirling around to regard her
+cousin with astonishment and then striking an attitude of mock
+admiration. "Listen, everybody, please, Frieda is making a speech! She
+wants to know which of us shall become the royal family of Rainbow
+Castle. It is an interesting question, dear; I never should have thought
+it of you!"
+
+Frieda hesitated, but the next instant went on quite seriously. "Of
+course it won't be you though, Jean, because of all of us, Ruth, Olive,
+Jim, and Jack and me, why I think you love the Rainbow ranch the least.
+You will never want to stay on in the West once you are married; that
+visit you made the Princess Colonna in Rome has completely spoiled you."
+
+And now it was Jean's turn to endure the family laughter, and though she
+made no reply, she showed more annoyance than the accusation merited.
+
+Still surprisingly thoughtful, Frieda continued: "I suppose that either
+Jim or Jack and their children ought to inherit the new house, for of
+course I am the youngest and have done nothing toward making the ranch a
+success as Jim and Jack have. Ruth, you and Jim would want Jack to have
+the place after she marries and has children, wouldn't you? And yet not
+long ago, do you know, I believed that in spite of loving the ranch
+best, Jack would be the first one of us to leave it for good. I don't
+think so now," she added hastily, catching an expression on her sister's
+face that she could not altogether understand.
+
+But by this time Jack had marched across the room and was gently but
+firmly pulling Frieda down from her exalted position.
+
+"I suppose hearing the news of old Madame Van Mater's will has gone to
+your head, Frieda darling," Jack protested. "But really no one of us
+wants to hear you arranging our futures and talking about our
+descendants, as if fifty years might suddenly pass away before tea time.
+Of course 'Rainbow Castle,' as Jean calls our new home, shall belong to
+the one of us who wishes it and needs it the most. But which of us that
+may be--well, in the words of Mr. William Shakespeare, 'that is the
+question.'"
+
+Jack now turned to her cousin, Jean, who was standing before one of the
+unfinished windows looking out at the beautiful view. For the prospect
+from the new house was far lovelier than any outlook from Rainbow Lodge,
+since it stood on a higher incline and showed a wider sweep of the
+prairies.
+
+"Jean," Jack asked, "I wonder if you happen to know where Ralph Merrit
+is? There is something Jim and I want particularly to talk over with
+him. I happened to notice he was with you last. Did he say whether he
+was going to have dinner with us tonight or with the men at the Ranch
+House?"
+
+The other girl shrugged her shoulders impatiently.
+
+"Really, Jack, I don't see why I should be expected to know Ralph
+Merrit's plans because I was talking to him for ten minutes. But what is
+all this mystery about anyway? What is going on down at the mine? Ralph
+looks either as if he were working himself to death or as if he had the
+weight of the world on his shoulders. To tell you the truth, I believe
+he did ask me to tell you that he was going away for several days
+perhaps. He preferred to talk over matters with you on his return. But
+do come on home, Ruth," Jean finished crossly, "it is much too cold for
+the baby to be outdoors now the sun is down. And Jim and Jack always
+prefer to have their business secrets alone. I suppose we have no right
+to be interested. But of course there can't be any serious trouble at
+the Rainbow Mine while Ralph is managing things." Then Ruth, Jean, the
+baby and Frieda walked on ahead, leaving Jim and Jack to follow slowly
+behind. For in spite of the accusation in Jean's speech, her cousin had
+made no denial.
+
+With her hand inside his, after the fashion she had as a little girl
+when anything about the big ranch troubled her, Jack gazed earnestly up
+into her old friend and guardian's strong and gentle countenance.
+
+"I am right not to speak of this trouble Ralph Merrit is having with the
+men at Rainbow Mine, don't you think so, Jim?" she queried. "You see I
+don't understand the situation anyhow, and it all may come to nothing in
+the end. So any discussion does not seem to me fair to Ralph. Surely the
+men are only grumbling! Why next to you I feel that we owe our fortune
+to the splendid way Ralph Merrit has managed the mine. And you know you
+have always liked him better than any other young man we have ever
+known, better even than Frank Kent."
+
+Jim cleared his throat. "Have I said that I had changed my mind about
+Merrit?" he demanded. "You are right, Jack; you just lie low and say
+nothing even to the men who may come to you with their complaints. In
+my opinion the trouble is this: The fellows at work on Rainbow Mine are
+most of them middle-aged men, kind of down-and-out miners and a hard
+lot, who have either given up the hope of discovering gold for
+themselves or postponed searching for it for a while so as to first make
+a good living out of us. Well, you see, compared to them Ralph Merrit is
+a kid. And of course his being a real mining engineer graduated out of a
+college and placed as the boss over them makes the older men kind of
+sore. Then, besides paying our miners their regular wages we have been
+giving them a percentage also of the amount of gold that is taken out of
+the mine each month. There is still enough pay dirt for us to live
+pretty comfortable, but the men say we ought to be getting a whole lot
+more. Merrit isn't certain yet, he wants to make some more
+investigations. The gold that is a whole lot deeper down under the earth
+may prove either too dangerous or too expensive to get out. So at bottom
+I believe that is what the real grievance is, they want Ralph to hurry
+up. It is nothing to them to have us sink, say a hundred thousand
+dollars, in new mining machinery and maybe get nothing back. So they
+have been spreading ugly stories, say Merrit does not know his job and
+that he is too busy speculating and trying to earn a fortune that way
+for himself to care what becomes of the mine."
+
+After this speech Jack kept silent for several moments and they were
+almost at the Lodge before she replied:
+
+"Look here, Jim, don't be angry with me if I say something. Of course I
+know Ralph is doing the best he can for us at the mine. But about that
+other story--really you ought to try and find out if it is true. John
+Raines, one of the miners, said he wanted to tell me something; do let
+him tell you instead. Because, Jim dear, if once you believe in a person
+you know you believe in him forever, and yet maybe Ralph may have gotten
+into mischief. You see I should not wish to be prying into his private
+affairs, but it is as plain as the nose on your face to everybody but
+you that Ralph is in love with Jean and always has been for that matter,
+though I must confess he has been paying her a good deal less attention
+lately. And as for Jean, well I don't believe she will marry any one who
+cannot give her wealth and position; yet just the same it would be wiser
+to know the truth about Ralph. Couldn't you ask him to tell you? I
+believe he would. Oh dear me, I do hope we won't have a strike at the
+mine or any other kind of trouble."
+
+"You sound pretty sensible, partner," Jim agreed, "maybe I had better
+look into things a little more. It never hurts any fellow to keep his
+eyes open. But let me tell you that I have never heard of a gold mine
+yet, whether it was a good one or a poor one, that did not keep on
+piling up trouble."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE ENGINEER OF THE RAINBOW MINE
+
+
+READERS of the Ranch Girls' Series probably remember that the first
+meeting between the members of the Rainbow Ranch family and Ralph Merrit
+occurred several years before, while they were making a caravan journey
+to the Yellowstone Park.
+
+And Jean Bruce had been Ralph's original acquaintance. How many times
+since had they not laughed at the vision of the girl idly washing her
+hair in an outdoor stream with no thought of a stranger in many miles.
+Then there was the story of their first luncheon together with only
+Frieda as chaperon and Ruth and Olive's return, the storm, and Jim and
+Jack's disaster by the deserted mine. Within less than a week Ralph
+Merrit had appeared like an old and tried friend. And from the hour of
+his arrival to advise and assist Jim Colter in regard to the Rainbow
+Mine he had seemed almost like one of the family. Only twice had he left
+his work for any length of time--once to visit his mother and sister in
+Chicago, and the second time to say farewell to the Ranch girls when
+they sailed for Europe. His friends understood that a large part of his
+generous salary went each month to the support of his people, and that
+in his present position Ralph was not making his fortune so quickly in
+the West as he had hoped. But was that the reason why he had been taking
+so many short trips away from the ranch in the past few months and why
+he had recently changed so decidedly in his appearance and manner?
+
+Though Jean may have had her own special reasons for observing these
+changes most, no one else was wholly blind. Could it be possible that
+Ralph Merrit's difficulties were graver than they suspected?
+
+There is a possibility that Jack Ralston's and even Jim's faith might
+have been shaken had they been able to follow the young man's
+proceedings on the afternoon of their conversation about him.
+
+He and the neighbor, who had simply been a visitor at the ranch for
+afternoon tea, walked along without much conversation until they came to
+within the neighborhood of Rainbow Creek--that portion of the creek
+where important mining machinery had been set up and near which a shaft
+had been sunk, forming a narrow entrance into the Rainbow Mine.
+
+As the hour for work had passed some time before, the place was now
+deserted and Ralph Merrit showed no interest in lingering in its
+vicinity. Yet the discovery of the surprising wealth contained in the
+Rainbow Mine had never ceased being a subject of interest, of
+speculation and oftentimes of acute envy to many of the ranch owners in
+that end of Wyoming, and the young man, Hugo Manning, who was Ralph's
+present companion, had only recently purchased a cattle ranch about ten
+miles away. He had come from the western part of New York State and this
+was his first sight of a gold mine.
+
+Plainly Ralph was at first simply bored by the stupid questions that his
+neighbor asked of him. Then unexpectedly the young engineer's expression
+changed and his face flushed angrily.
+
+"I hear that your famous Rainbow gold mine is panning out," the young
+man had remarked carelessly. "They tell me around here that you have
+already taken out all the gold that lies near enough to the surface to
+be of value. They insist that it is going to cost you more to buy new
+machinery and try out new methods of mining than the gold is worth.
+Better advise your friends to sell out while selling is good and before
+their mine loses its reputation."
+
+Ralph made a queer noise in his throat that was half anger, and yet he
+did not positively deny the suggestion. "Oh, they say that, do they?" he
+exclaimed. "It's funny how much sooner strangers find out about your
+affairs than you do yourself! I don't believe Mr. Colter or Miss Ralston
+have yet had to complain of any lack of money. When that time comes then
+we shall decide what is best to do."
+
+And Ralph started to move along, but his companion waited, hesitating
+for half a moment. "I say, Merrit," he continued, "if the Rainbow Mine
+owners should make up their minds that they want to get out, I wish you
+would let me hear the news first. Isn't it possible that they might be
+willing to take a lump sum down and not run the risk of losing what they
+have already got by investing in new machinery? I believe it mostly
+belongs just to the two Ralston girls. But a company of men, say in New
+York City, might look at the proposition differently. They could afford
+to sink a few hundred thousands easier."
+
+Ralph nodded dryly and this time walked on so resolutely that his
+companion was obliged to hurry in order to keep alongside and to hear
+the answer to his request.
+
+All the reply he received was: "Thank you; it is kind of surprising to
+meet a fellow who knows people who are willing to lose money."
+
+But when at the edge of the ranch the two men finally separated, Ralph
+Merrit went on alone to the nearest railroad station. It was several
+miles away and few persons from the Rainbow Ranch ever attempted walking
+so great a distance. But Ralph had not ordered a horse for one reason
+because he did not wish to have a boy accompany him to bring the animal
+home again and also because he preferred not having any one know just
+where he was going. That there was discussion and ill feeling concerning
+him among the men at work on the Rainbow Mine he understood, although
+Ralph was not yet aware how unkind the criticism was, nor just what was
+being said.
+
+By midnight he had finally arrived at his destination, Laramie, the
+largest city in Wyoming. He had then gone directly to a small,
+out-of-the-way hotel. But after his arrival, instead of getting
+immediately into bed as any tired, healthy fellow should, the young man
+dropped into a chair before his open window, sitting there most of the
+night. Now and then he dozed a few moments from sheer exhaustion, but
+the greater part of the time he stared out into the lighted streets
+below him, moody and restless and totally unlike the Ralph Merrit of
+former days.
+
+If one trait of character had previously distinguished Ralph from the
+Ranch girls' other young men friends, it had been his practical common
+sense. Unlike Frank Kent and Donald Harmon, Ralph Merrit was a self-made
+boy, who had earned his own way through college and had afterwards
+suffered many disappointments and disillusions on coming West to seek
+his fortune. Upon taking charge of the Rainbow Mine and making the
+success of it, which he certainly had, for a time Ralph felt happy and
+satisfied. He was doing work which many an older man might have envied
+him. Then why had he recently become so disheartened and dissatisfied?
+It was true that the Rainbow Mine was not yielding so much gold as it
+formerly had and that he was beginning to feel fearful that the veins
+near the surface, which had held valuable ore, were now nearly worked
+out. Yet Ralph did not even try to pretend to himself that his
+nervousness and discontent were due to conditions at Rainbow Mine. No,
+his anxiety and despondency were entirely personal.
+
+For in the past six months Ralph had been overtaken by an ambition that
+makes for more unhappiness and destroys the careers of more young men
+than almost any other vice. He had developed an overpowering desire to
+make a large fortune quickly, not by hard work or economy or any of the
+ordinary, slow methods for gaining wealth, but by some single, brilliant
+stroke of good luck that should make him a rich man at once.
+
+Yet this represented such a curious change in Ralph Merrit's former
+nature, in his good sense and sound judgment, that surely some outside
+influence must have been at work to render him so unlike himself. What
+that influence really was Ralph Merrit alone knew perfectly well.
+
+Now it is idle to deny that while under most circumstances a refined
+girl is an ennobling influence in a young fellow's life, now and then
+there may be exceptions to this fact as to all others. At the very
+beginning of their acquaintance Ralph Merrit had understood that he was
+falling hopelessly in love with Jean Bruce. But in the two years of her
+absence at school and in Europe he had fought the matter out with
+himself and decided that he had mastered his impossible fancy. During
+her short visits at the ranch they had remained especial friends as at
+the start, but nothing more. Now, however, since Jean's return to live
+at the Rainbow Lodge, Ralph had not only felt a return of his first
+affection, but an emotion that was very much stronger and more serious.
+
+And he felt this in spite of recognizing that Jean herself had greatly
+changed. No longer was she the fascinating unspoiled girl of his early
+acquaintance; she was a far more worldly-minded and ambitious Jean than
+he could have imagined. She was also far prettier and more alluring from
+her experiences and opportunities, and there was no doubt but that she
+was constantly yearning for the companionship of distinguished people,
+for more society, broader social opportunities of every kind. During
+the past year at the ranch she had not been altogether contented. Their
+former life now seemed too simple and uneventful to her, she no longer
+had Jack's intense interest in outdoor amusements. Yet to Ruth's and her
+cousin's suggestions that she make a visit in the east to her friends,
+Margaret and Cecil Belknap, Jean would not listen. Of course she was
+happy at home, and whatever her family might say to the contrary they
+would be absurdly lonely without her. Moreover, did they believe that
+she would miss Olive's home-coming? But any other influence that may
+have been at work in the back of the girl's heart or mind she did not
+mention. And assuredly Ralph Merrit did not dream that his presence on
+the ranch could be in any possible sense an added influence.
+
+For whatever Ralph's present weaknesses, he did not put the blame upon a
+woman. Jean had given him no false encouragement, had shown him no
+special favor. The fault was his, that moved by what he believed her
+attitude toward wealth, he had used the wrong method for obtaining it.
+He had not even given Jean the chance to say that his struggle was
+unwise or unnecessary, since he had been paying her far less attention
+recently.
+
+At ten o'clock the next morning Ralph learned from his stock broker that
+instead of being nearer the fortune he so much desired, he was several
+thousand dollars farther away. And this loss represented almost the last
+dollar he had in the world.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+OLIVE COMES HOME
+
+
+SOON after dinner Ruth and Jim Colter and of course the small son had
+retired to their rooms in Rainbow Lodge, leaving Jack, Jean and Frieda
+to amuse themselves in the living room until bedtime. A week had passed
+since their visit to their new house and tonight Frieda and Jack were
+busily studying over their original plans and discussing various
+alterations which they felt were absolutely necessary, while Jean,
+without seeming to regard them, was playing idly upon the piano.
+
+It was not cold, and one of the front windows was partly raised with the
+blind drawn down; but a small fire was burning in the old fireplace,
+since the Rainbow Lodge living room was never exactly the same
+delightful abode without it.
+
+Except for a few handsome, additional pieces of furniture and some odd
+pictures and china which the girls had brought home from abroad, there
+was no material change in the beloved room. For Ruth and the girls had
+the good taste to know that its primitive character with its decorations
+of bright Indian rugs and simple furnishings was far more suitable and
+beautiful than any alteration their money could bring. So the newer and
+more splendid furnishings which they had purchased in New York and in
+Europe had been safely stored away for the finishing of their new house.
+And this evening in their former familiar surroundings Jack, Jean and
+Frieda looked not unlike they had on that first evening years ago when
+Jack had returned from her original meeting with Frank Kent and before
+either Ruth or Olive had ever been seen at the Rainbow Lodge.
+
+"But, Frieda dear, it will be far too expensive to make such a change as
+you suggest," Jack protested. "You know that we agreed to have the four
+big bedrooms and two baths on one side of the house and just one
+upstairs sitting room. Now if we try to arrange a private sitting room
+off from your room, it will either make your bedroom too small or else
+rob the rest of us. And another big bay window would cost hundreds of
+dollars more."
+
+"Well, why not?" Frieda returned petulantly. "Here we have all been
+living quietly at the ranch for nearly a year and spending no outside
+money except on the house. It is only because you are suddenly growing
+stingy, Jack. I heard you tell Ruth that we had better not order as many
+new oriental rugs as we planned to have. Mr. Parker says that he can add
+the extra space to my apartment without spoiling the effect of the house
+in the least. Do let me have him do it, Jack darling, please? You know
+you and Jean and Olive will often be talking about things in our big
+sitting room that you won't wish me to hear and I do want a tiny den all
+to myself."
+
+Because Jack did not agree at once to her sister's pleading the girl at
+the piano ceased playing for an instant to glance at her cousin, and,
+surprised by her expression, did not look immediately away.
+
+Jack was frowning and was a little pale. But she had been out all day
+riding over the ranch and talking to the men at the mine, and naturally
+might be expected to be tired. She had gone to her own room and
+undressed almost immediately after dinner, and as there was no
+possibility of any visitors arriving unexpectedly at the ranch, she was
+now wearing a lovely old Chinese blue silk kimono and had her gold brown
+hair in a loose knot on top of her head. Leaning over she suddenly
+kissed Frieda, who sat on the other side of their small table puzzling
+over the drawings for their new place.
+
+"It isn't fair to say that I am stingy, baby," Jack declared, "when you
+know that our house is costing thousands of dollars more than we first
+expected. People say that is just what all houses do, yet just the same
+we have to set a limit somewhere. And of course I don't want you or Jean
+to worry, but there is a possibility that we may not get as much money
+out of Rainbow Mine in the future as we have for the past few years. And
+you know we have not a large fortune stowed away in bank. Besides, we
+have gotten into the habit of living pretty expensively and spending an
+awful lot of money thinking that our mine would hold out forever. Today
+Jim told me that frequently there were gold mines that ceased to yield
+almost altogether when certain veins had been worked out. I don't think
+he meant that this was going to happen to ours--only that our income
+might be cut down."
+
+As Jack finished speaking Jean Bruce got up from her piano stool and
+came across the room to face her cousin.
+
+"It's funny, Jack, that you let Jim give you all this information about
+affairs at the mine, instead of Ralph Merrit. It seems to me that Ralph
+must know more than Jim. And as he is head engineer you know you ought
+to get your information from him," she protested.
+
+Rather wearily Jack leaned back in her chair; yet she answered without
+any show of temper. "I thought you knew, Jean, that Ralph has not yet
+come back to the ranch. Five or six days ago he wrote Jim not to expect
+him for some little time as he had important business to look after. So
+you see I could not very well discuss business with him while he is
+away."
+
+With a little shrug Jean turned to stare into the fire.
+
+"Yes, but you could have waited until Ralph's return and then have had
+the conversation with him. Besides, it isn't only Jim who has been
+telling you that the gold in our mine will give out unless some new
+method for mining it is employed. No, it is the other miners who have
+been grumbling to both of you. I wonder if they can be dissatisfied with
+Ralph's management? But, Frieda, for goodness sake don't be a baby and
+don't worry Jack about spending more money on our new house than we can
+afford. Dear me, I wonder how we shall behave if suddenly we should
+become poor as church mice again. It would be my duty then, I suppose,
+Jack, to let you get rid of supporting such an expensive cousin by some
+means or other."
+
+Already won over by her sister's argument, since Jack's judgment was
+almost always hers in the end, Frieda had left her chair and was sitting
+on the arm of her sister's, pulling softly at the loose coils of her
+hair and trying to rearrange them.
+
+She and Jack both stared at Jean in surprise and consternation. What was
+the matter with her? Why should she talk in this absurd fashion? Had
+they ever felt or shown any difference between her and themselves in the
+right to everything they possessed? Something was making Jean unlike
+herself tonight.
+
+Seeing the hurt and surprise in the other two faces Jean at once changed
+the subject.
+
+"Jack, have you heard anything more about when Miss Winthrop and Olive
+are planning to come for their visit to us?" she demanded. "Just think,
+we have not seen Olive since our return from England! Won't it be
+splendid for you to have her with you again, Jack dear? Frieda and I are
+so dreadfully spoiled and lazy, we never do anything to help you about
+the ranch and only complain if things go wrong and we haven't more money
+to spend. I do wish somebody would show me how to be useful. I haven't
+even the beds to make now we have another girl to help Aunt Ellen."
+
+Jack shook her head. "I am sorry you are bored. I wish I could think of
+something to interest you. You seemed to like the ranch when we first
+came back and the work at the mine. The only word I have heard from
+Olive since her other letter was a short note in answer to my telegram
+that begged her to come at once. She said that she and Miss Winthrop had
+a lot of business matters to look after, but meant to run away as soon
+as possible. What in the world was that?" And Jack, who seemed unusually
+tired and nervous tonight, startled the other two girls by jumping up
+unexpectedly.
+
+Jean had also heard the noise and turned in the direction from which it
+came.
+
+"It is only that tiresome boy, Carlos," she explained. "I mean to tell
+Jim that I don't like his sneaking up here and peering into our window
+in that spooky fashion. Carlos can move more like a spirit than a human
+being anyway! But what has become of him recently, for now I think of it
+I have not seen him before for several days?"
+
+"He has been away from the ranch most of the time," Frieda answered
+sleepily, "for I wanted him to do an errand for me the other day and
+could not find him. But Aunt Ellen says he has come to her for food
+several times and then has gone off with as much as she would give him.
+Somehow I'm fond of Carlos--he was such a queer, handsome little boy
+when he first came to us. I hope Olive will understand him better than
+the rest of us do. But dear me, what does he mean by coming in at the
+front door without knocking?" And Frieda also jumped up hurriedly. "I
+hope he is not bringing us bad news!"
+
+Not only had the front door opened, which had not yet been locked for
+the night, but the door of the living room was mysteriously unclosing
+just half an inch at a time.
+
+The three girls were seriously annoyed and Jack spoke sharply:
+
+"Carlos, what do you mean by entering our room without asking
+permission? Unless you have something important to say I should prefer
+your waiting to speak to us until tomorrow."
+
+A soft voice, which was not that of the Indian boy, replied: "But I
+can't wait till morning or not another moment, Jack dearest, when I have
+traveled across a whole continent to see you. And please forgive Carlos
+for my sake, because he and I have been planning this surprise together
+ever since I left Primrose Hall."
+
+Afterwards Olive Van Mater could only get a few steps further inside the
+old Lodge living room, because Frieda, Jean and Jack at once flung
+themselves upon her. And the tears were gathering fast in the girl's big
+star-like black eyes as she tried her best to explain the mystery of her
+arrival and to embrace her three friends at the same instant.
+
+"You see, Miss Winthrop found that she could not leave home for some
+time yet and I was so tired and so nearly dead to see you that she would
+not let me wait until she could come. So I thought that I would rather
+surprise you than anything else I could imagine. I wrote Carlos when to
+expect me and to have a horse and carriage at the train. But the poor
+lad has been at the station apparently for several days, fearing he
+might make some mistake and that I should arrive without his knowing.
+But you brought me home safely after all, didn't you, Carlos?" And Olive
+disengaged her hand for a moment from the girls' hold to extend it to
+the Indian boy.
+
+"Goodness, how you have grown, I haven't had a good look at you until
+this moment," she ended admiringly.
+
+And surely Carlos made a handsome picture. In honor of Olive's
+home-coming he wore a soft shirt of some yellow material and a pair of
+clean khaki trousers with a bright sash knotted about his waist and a
+crimson tie at his throat. All the surliness had disappeared from his
+expression, his skin was like polished bronze and his eyes like shining
+coals, as he took his old friend's hand and for a moment pressed it
+reverently to his lips.
+
+Then Jack removed Olive's traveling hat and long broadcloth coat, with
+every movement of her hands a caress.
+
+"But please, Carlos and Olive," she demanded, "I don't pretend to be
+able to hear outdoor sounds as you can; yet I have fairly well trained
+ears of my own. Would you mind telling me how you managed to drive a
+rickety old hired carriage up to the very door of Rainbow Lodge with us
+in the living room and yet never a sound heard we?"
+
+Olive laughed. "That is our secret, but if you must know, we did no such
+thing. Half a mile away I sent the driver back to the station and Carlos
+and I ran on tiptoes under the stars all the way home." The girl ended
+her sentence with a slight catch in her breath. "Then please to remember
+that we are both Indians, or at least I am almost one. And now won't
+somebody go and find Ruth and Jim, for I just must see the baby this
+minute even if he cries his eyes out the rest of the night."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THEIR RIDE TOGETHER
+
+
+OLIVE and Jack had scarcely been alone for more than a half hour at a
+time since Olive's arrival almost a week before. But before ten o'clock
+this morning they had both started off on horseback with their lunch
+boxes packed, leaving word at home that they were not to be expected
+back until sundown.
+
+First of all they yearned for a long, uninterrupted gallop together over
+the sweet-smelling, wild, rose-strewn prairies. For not since the very
+first year of Olive's life at Rainbow Ranch had they enjoyed this
+formerly well-loved entertainment. Soon after then had come Jack's
+accident, and until this year she had not been in entirely good health
+during any of their days at the ranch.
+
+And the beauty of this special windswept, sunlit day was nature's gift
+to the two friends' reunion.
+
+Jack rode a little ahead on her own horse, Romeo, which she had bought
+immediately after their return from abroad and christened "Romeo" in a
+kind of joking recollection of their visit in Rome. Of course, he was
+the fastest riding horse on Rainbow Ranch, but not a beautiful animal,
+since he had been chosen for speed and endurance rather than appearance.
+And in truth he was only a rough Western pony with sagacity and
+knowledge of the country, dignified by the name of horse simply because
+of his slightly greater size and length of limb.
+
+Following close behind, her pretty nose almost able to touch the other
+animal's rough coat, came Olive's smaller mare, which Jean had named
+"Juliet" by reason of following Jack's horse about whenever they were
+permitted to graze in the open fields.
+
+Juliet had been no one's special property, since she had been born on
+the place and no one had chosen her for personal use. So shortly after
+Olive's return the other three girls had escorted her to the stables and
+there solemnly presented her with "Juliet," avowing that no one else
+should have the privilege of using the mare except with Olive's consent.
+
+The two friends rode for more than an hour after leaving the
+neighborhood of the Lodge without speaking, except now and then to call
+attention to some particularly beautiful effect in the landscape. First
+they galloped to the farthest outskirts of the great thousand-acre
+ranch, which was still as carefully and scientifically managed as during
+the time when the Rainbow Mine was an undiscovered quantity and when the
+girls and Jim's living depended entirely upon its success. There were
+groups of cattle scattered here and there wherever the alfalfa grass was
+ripe for eating, and mares with young colts were allowed free pasture.
+But by and by when a far-off rim of hills could be seen, with their
+summits glistening with caps of snow and the sky above them so scattered
+with fleece-like clouds that snow and cloud seemed to touch and melt
+into each other, Jack slowed down for a moment, waiting for her friend
+to come up alongside her.
+
+"Is it because I am a Western girl and all this means childhood and home
+to me that the country seems more beautiful and inspiring than anything
+we saw in Europe, Olive dear?" Jack asked.
+
+And Olive looked into the other girl's face searchingly for an instant
+before replying. She had been wondering for a good many months why
+Frank Kent had never come to America to see Jack when on leaving England
+she had believed that he and Jacqueline were almost on the point of
+being engaged. Several times recently she had actually written and asked
+Jack why on earth Frank had not made his promised visit to Rainbow
+Lodge. Without really answering, Jack had always arranged to evade her
+questioning. "Frank was too busy, he was thinking of running for
+Parliament, he preferred waiting until Olive was also able to be at
+home, so that they might be there together once again." None of these
+replies had made a very profound impression upon the questioner. So
+today Olive had planned in her own mind to get at the real truth. Jack
+would not dare to refuse to answer her direct inquiry if once she had
+the courage to demand it of her. Positively she must know whether
+Frank's apparent indifference was due to a change in his own feeling or
+to an unreasonable request on Jack's part for postponing her decision.
+
+Now at Jack's question, studying her friend's face, Olive feared that
+this last idea must be the true one. Love of her old home, the grip
+which the western country and atmosphere always had on the girl's
+character and affections--these must have been waging a winning battle
+against her former affection for Frank Kent.
+
+Must she ask Jack if this were true? No, Olive decided that she had best
+refrain until later in the day. For Jack was not at the present moment
+in the mood for confidences. She was just gloriously alive and filled
+with the physical beauty and splendor of the morning. Later on, when
+there had been opportunity for more conversation, Olive would make her
+query. For there were dozens of intimate personal things which she and
+her best beloved friend must get at the heart of before this ride of
+theirs together was over. So now Olive only laughed, and leaning over
+lightly stroked the neck of the other horse.
+
+"It is only because you are such a pagan, Jack, that Europe seems too
+crowded for you," she answered. "Besides you know how dearly you finally
+learned to love the English country, although it was the direct opposite
+of all this! Doesn't its wonderful greenness, the splendid old trees and
+the flowers and cultivated beauty of the fields make up to you for the
+great wide spaces and the colors in your prairies?"
+
+Slowly Jack shook her head, in reply, at the same instant taking off her
+soft brown felt hat and hanging it on the pommel of her saddle. "I don't
+know," she answered, drawing in a deep, quiet breath.
+
+The past year of outdoor work and amusement on the ranch had brought
+back to Jacqueline Ralston the glow and brilliant, healthy color of her
+childhood. Her complexion was several shades darker than it had been the
+summer before, her cheeks more vividly rose and her hair lighter from
+exposure to the sun. Then Jack had again grown dreadfully indifferent to
+clothes since their return home, much to Jean's and Frieda's disgust and
+to Jim Colter's secret amusement. For quite forgetting their fortune and
+the fact that she was now almost ready to cast her first vote in
+Wyoming, Jack had returned to wearing the old brown corduroys or faded
+khakis of her youth, together with almost any soft hat which she
+happened to find convenient for her outdoor jaunts. And only when the
+other girls insisted, or Ruth pleaded, or guests were expected to dinner
+at the Lodge, would Jack return to wearing the pretty toilets which she
+had brought home from Europe. For not one single dress had she given
+time or thought to purchasing since then, although Jean and Frieda
+frequently amused themselves by sending east for hats and gowns.
+
+So today, although Jack was actually the older and in times past had
+looked it, Olive would have been considered her senior. For one reason
+she was still weary from the shock and strain of her grandmother's death
+and from the business difficulties resulting from her strange will. Then
+there was a last and final interview with Donald Harmon which even yet
+the girl did not like to recall. She was sorry not to be able to return
+his affection. Moreover, Olive's new riding-habit was of black cloth,
+which Miss Winthrop had ordered from a well-known New York tailor,
+adding to her appearance of age and dignity. Yet in spite of the
+elegance and decorum of her own riding attire, Olive did not feel the
+objection to her friend's as Jean and Frieda undoubtedly would have. For
+Jack's costume was eminently characteristic. Moreover, the old corduroy
+skirt and leather leggings and slouch hat were not unbecoming now that
+her coat was open showing the curve of her strong white throat.
+
+It was equally characteristic of Jack when they finally reached the
+clump of trees where they were to have luncheon to jump first from her
+horse and then lift Olive as carefully down as though she had been her
+masculine escort. Afterwards it was she who led the horses to water, fed
+them and then tied them.
+
+Coming back, she flung herself down on the ground by her friend and
+taking one of the girl's hands in hers kissed it, saying carelessly:
+
+"Olive, child, did you hear any one or anything while I was away? I
+thought we were going to have a perfectly peaceful and uninterrupted
+day, but I have an idea that while I was looking after the horses I
+heard some one stirring about not so very far off. Still I may have been
+mistaken or it may have been a deer or a wildcat. This woods gets so
+much denser as one goes further into it. This is near the same place
+where I managed to break my poor little pony's legs several years ago.
+It was when we were making that horrid visit at the Norton's before it
+was finally decided that you were to come and live with us. I never have
+been able to think of having to shoot 'Hotspur' without its giving me
+the shivers." And Jack now took a small pistol out of a leather holster
+fastened about her waist. "I never go on a long ride with either of the
+girls without carrying this," she remarked carelessly, "but I don't
+believe I am ever going to like hunting again as I did when I was
+younger. That was one of the lessons I learned when I was ill so long--a
+greater respect for life, anybody's or anything's." Then the girl's
+voice grew suddenly hushed.
+
+"Didn't you hear a slight noise then?" she whispered.
+
+After a moment of enforced silence Olive shook her head. "No, or at
+least nothing of importance," she replied. "Of course these woods must
+have wild game in them, since it is the only place with running water
+nearer than Rainbow Creek. But it is odd your having this impression
+now. Several times I meant to tell you and forgot--that while we were
+riding I kept having the idea that some one was following after us. Half
+a dozen times I looked around thinking that it might possibly be either
+Jean or Frieda. But I saw no one, so of course it must have been only a
+fancy."
+
+"Well it certainly was neither Jean nor Frieda," Jack replied
+laughingly. "They have both grown too lazy for such a journey as we are
+taking. But come along, because if we are ever to get to your old Indian
+village and back again this afternoon, we must hurry."
+
+For this had been the supposed object of Jack's and Olive's free day
+together. Soon after her arrival at the Lodge Olive had suggested that
+she would very much like to go back to the little Indian village where
+she had lived as a child with old Laska, and see if the woman and her
+son were yet alive. She desired also to pay a visit to her former
+teacher and first friend, who was still at work among the Indian
+children at the little Indian reservation school.
+
+Before the two girls had finally arrived at their destination, it was
+Olive who discovered the ghost stealthily pursuing them. And it was he
+whom Jack must have heard in the woods.
+
+Olive at once turned apologetically to her friend. "Don't be cross,
+Jack, and don't scold if I tell you something," she began unexpectedly.
+"But just now I saw at some distance behind us a brown shadow on a brown
+horse. So I'm afraid it is Carlos who has been trailing after us. But
+really it is my fault for having told him where we intended going.
+Probably he won't trouble us if we don't wish to notice him."
+
+Frowning, Jacqueline returned: "I'm sorry to confess it to you, Olive
+dear, but really, Carlos is getting to be rather a nuisance to Jim and
+me. I do hope you may be able to influence him to settle down to some
+kind of work or study--to anything he likes. Neither Jim nor I care so
+much what except that his idleness is a bad influence among the men on
+the place. There is no use in my trying to do anything with him, for he
+has taken such a violent dislike to me. Frieda says that I am too much
+of a boss and it has offended the boy's dignity. But I shan't scold
+today since Carlos is only following us because he does not entirely
+trust me to look after you and adores you so that he does not wish you
+out of his sight."
+
+Just as though four or five years had not passed with its crowded and
+ever changing experiences, walking up to old Indian Laska's dirty hut
+alone Olive Van Mater found the Indian woman still sitting in her same
+open doorway, smoking the apparently identical pipe and clothed in the
+same old nondescript rags of former days with a brilliant Indian
+blanket across her shoulders. But at the sight of her beautifully
+dressed visitor the Indian woman showed not the slightest sign of
+recognition. Nor did she do anything further than nod and grunt several
+times in succession when Olive assured her that she had once been the
+girl "Olilie," who had lived with her from the time she was a baby.
+
+Possibly Laska could neither understand nor believe what this charming
+American girl was trying to explain to her, but certain it was that she
+never once invited Olive inside her former home, nor showed the
+slightest interest in her, except to smile at the handful of small
+change that was bestowed upon her in parting. For of course Olive had
+long since ceased to feel any bitterness against the old woman, whose
+ignorance and greed had not been nearly so responsible for her past
+unhappiness as her own grandmother's careless neglect of her.
+
+Olive's interview with her first teacher was such a great pleasure and
+satisfaction to them both, that except for Jack's insistence that it was
+already past time to go back to the ranch and that Olive and her old
+friend could now meet each other frequently, the two girls would never
+have started for home until nearly sundown. And as it was they were an
+hour later than they should have been in leaving.
+
+They were not able to ride as rapidly as in the morning because neither
+of the horses was so fresh. So that by and by, just as both girls had
+wished, they fell into the first long, confidential talk they had
+enjoyed in nearly a year.
+
+And there was so much to say! Olive had to repeat the strange terms of
+her grandmother's will and her own positive intention not to marry
+Donald Harmon, no matter what the second will might insist upon--even if
+it left her penniless.
+
+Then Jack confided the present trouble at the Rainbow Mine. For during
+Ralph's continued and unexplained absence the miners had grown uglier,
+threatening that unless a new engineer was secured at once they would go
+upon a strike. Moreover, they would see that no other men be allowed to
+take their places. Already they insisted that there was not enough gold
+in the former veins to make Rainbow Mine worth working. A new manager
+and new machinery must be procured at once.
+
+Just how to quell the disturbance and set things right neither Jim
+Colter nor Jacqueline could decide at present. Of course they were
+awaiting with impatience Ralph Merrit's return in order to have a talk
+with him. But afterwards what should they do? Would Ralph be forced by
+the miners into advising them to buy more machinery before he knew just
+what should be done? This might sink all their capital and make them
+poor again.
+
+"Really it is Jean and Frieda about whom I am worrying the most if we do
+lose our money," Jack frankly acknowledged. "For Ruth and Jim and I can
+be happy living as we used to do. But then of course the building of our
+new house must be completed, since the contract is already given for
+finishing it."
+
+So the two friends talked on, and it was small wonder that the sun was
+sinking as, followed by the ever watchful Carlos, they finally rode up
+to the Lodge. But Olive had not yet satisfied herself in regard to the
+state of affairs now existing between Jack and Frank Kent.
+
+In answer to a point-blank question Jack had simply replied that she and
+Frank had not been engaged to be married. Also that she had too much
+upon her mind at present to ask him to make them a visit. However, now
+that Olive had arrived, perhaps Frank would wish to come in a short
+time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THAT SAME AFTERNOON
+
+
+SINCE a short time after lunch Jean Bruce had been alone at the Rainbow
+Lodge, except for the presence of Aunt Ellen and the housemaid. For at
+about two o'clock Jim and Ruth, Frieda and the baby had driven off to
+pay a long visit to some old-time friends. For Ruth had not entirely
+recovered her strength since the baby's birth and therefore Jim was
+unwilling to have her far away from him.
+
+But Jean was not lonely, or at least not for the first few hours. She
+had letters to write--one to her New York friend, Margaret Belknap, and
+another to her adored Princess, who had never wavered in her interest
+and affection for the American girl since Jean's visit to her in Rome.
+
+Then, at about four o'clock, Jean strolled over to look at their new
+house, which seemed to have been making tremendous strides in the last
+few days, now that the outside had been entirely completed. She had one
+or two suggestions that she wished to make to the architect about her
+own room and this was the best hour for having a talk with him, as she
+happened to know that he had been spending most of the day with his men.
+The architect did not superintend their house building more than two or
+three times a week. Determined to have their new home as beautiful and
+as harmonious as possible, the girls, Jim and Ruth had decided upon
+employing the most distinguished architect in that part of the country.
+Theodore Parker was a Wyoming man with his central office in Laramie,
+and yet his work on public buildings and his creation of certain types
+of houses for western millionaires had given him a reputation throughout
+the country. So it was scarcely possible to expect him to devote a large
+portion of his valuable time even to the construction of "Rainbow
+Castle." For Jean's laughing title for their new home had somehow clung
+to it.
+
+The place would probably be almost, if not quite, as beautiful as many a
+palace, Jean thought, as she slowly approached the front entrance. This
+was to have a flight of broad, low stone steps leading up to it, while
+the base of the house would be banked with low, close-growing evergreen
+shrubs.
+
+For the outdoor work on their estate the girls had not consulted a
+landscape gardener, but they had studied many books and pictures of
+beautiful gardens and had then developed certain ideas of their own. In
+order to keep the view of the rolling prairies to the distant line of
+hills several miles beyond, the slope before the house was to be left
+unchanged. Here and there were flower beds in the carefully planted and
+tended blue grass lawn, which with constant watering and top soil might
+be persuaded to grow. But on either side and toward the back of the
+modified colonial mansion were to be the real gardens. Although the
+flowers had not yet been planted, bushes had been set out that were
+later to form green and blossoming aisles. In the preceding autumn a
+dozen or more large evergreen trees had been transplanted from the
+nearby forests, and zealously tended all through the winter, so that
+already they showed signs of growth.
+
+Jean's interview with Mr. Parker was entirely satisfactory and the girl
+would have liked to linger and talk at greater length with the big,
+purposeful man, who seemed to bring to one of the noblest of all the
+professions the spirit of the artist, and the executive ability of the
+business man. But Mr. Parker was plainly too busy to give her more than
+a few minutes of his attention, although in their conversation they did
+wander from her errand far enough to permit their discussing a few of
+their impressions of Europe. And, oddly enough, the architect who had
+studied in Paris and traveled a great deal, had never been to Italy, the
+mother of much that is most beautiful in modern architecture.
+
+A man of about thirty-five or six, Jean imagined he must be as she
+returned to the Lodge, and assuredly extremely good-looking, with his
+iron-gray hair, dark eyes and smooth face. One could hardly help
+wondering why he had never married.
+
+At home once more, Jean suddenly had a sensation of feeling deserted and
+forlorn. What could she do to amuse herself? Although she insisted upon
+denying it to her family, certainly there were occasions lately when
+their former life did seem dull and uninteresting to her. Yet perhaps
+Jack was right in thinking that this was due to her paying no special
+regard to the things that were happening on the ranch itself. Should
+she take a walk now, or go down to Rainbow Mine to see if anything was
+going on? Ralph Merrit was still away, certainly for an unaccountably
+great length of time! And undoubtedly there was some kind of trouble
+brewing among the workers in the mine, though what it was Jean had not
+the remotest idea. Yet Jack and Jim had been plainly annoyed and
+concerned over some disturbance, otherwise so many consultations between
+them and their workmen would have been unnecessary.
+
+But at the present moment Jean did not find the subject of the mine of
+sufficient interest to persuade her to walk down to it in an effort to
+make her own investigations. Things would clear up soon enough without
+her troubling. For there had to be friction every once and a while where
+so many people were employed.
+
+Yawning several times, Jean finally dropped into a hammock that had been
+swung for Ruth on the porch at Rainbow Lodge. She was holding a magazine
+in her hand and reading it fitfully.
+
+Probably Jean would have assured you that she was wearing the oldest and
+simplest dress in her entire wardrobe and that she really had not made
+any kind of toilet for the afternoon. Yet with Jean Bruce pretty
+clothes and a graceful and pleasing fashion of wearing them were second
+nature. It is true her pale pink cashmere frock was not new and was made
+in a straight piece with no trimming save a round lace collar and a
+girdle of broad pink silk ribbon. Yet Jean had wound a ribbon of the
+same color about her dark brown hair, until her usual pallor seemed to
+be warmed by its glow.
+
+For a half moment she must have fallen asleep, for she was awakened by
+thinking she heard some one coming toward the Lodge. The next moment
+Ralph Merrit stood beside her.
+
+He looked entirely unlike himself; his clothes were untidy; he seemed
+not to have slept for a number of nights; his face was worn and drawn.
+Jean was startled into sudden pity and interest. For Ralph had always
+seemed so capable and so efficient and if things worried him, he had
+always kept them to himself.
+
+Now as Jean struggled to her feet he only said: "How do you do, Jean.
+Will you tell me, please, whether Mr. Colter is at home or whether I may
+be apt to find him anywhere about the ranch?"
+
+But Jean's eyes questioned, although her lips as yet said nothing, and
+the young man flushed.
+
+"I must beg your pardon for my appearance," he began awkwardly, "but I
+have been doing some rather hard traveling and I have not yet been to my
+own quarters to fix up. I had no idea of running across you." Ralph
+stared hard for a moment at the dainty girl slowly rising out of the
+hammock and then at himself. She was like the inside of a sea shell in
+her pink costume with her white skin and the pretty detached air she so
+often wore.
+
+Ralph laughed uncomfortably and not very mirthfully.
+
+"Won't you wait a minute, please?" Jean asked quietly. "Jim is not here
+and won't be for some little time perhaps. But I have an idea that you
+are hungry as well as tired and I have been longing for some one to
+drink afternoon tea with me." And before her companion could reply the
+girl disappeared.
+
+Ralph Merrit fingered his hat uncertainly. He did not wish to remain and
+yet it would seem singularly ungracious to have Jean return and find him
+vanished. And since he had a confession to make, why not begin with her
+to whom it would be hardest to say it?
+
+Ralph dropped into a chair on one side of a small rustic table and Jean
+and the tea party had both arrived before he lifted his eyes again.
+Under the influence of the tea, strawberries and cream and Aunt Ellen's
+hot scones, with Jean making herself as charming as she knew how to be,
+Ralph could not help forgetting for a few moments the things that were
+weighing upon him, while he enjoyed the gifts that the fates provided.
+
+And Jean was truly kind, for she was shocked as well as a little bit
+frightened by Ralph's appearance. Naturally she was not unaware that he
+had once cared for her, even though he had not recently revealed it in
+any open fashion. And of course Jean felt that she had always regarded
+Ralph with the sincerest friendship.
+
+She was hoping now that he would tell her what was worrying him as a
+sign that their old friendship was yet alive, when Ralph spoke.
+
+"Jean, I might as well tell you now as a little later," he began, "it
+can't be delayed for any length of time at best. I am going to have to
+say good-bye to you all pretty soon."
+
+Jean's hand shook a little, so that she first set down her teacup.
+
+"You mean that you are having to go home for a visit. I hope nothing has
+happened to your mother or sister; I was afraid you were feeling
+troubled," the girl answered.
+
+With the old decision that she remembered the young man shook his head.
+
+"No, it is not that," he returned, "but simply that I am going to resign
+my position as engineer of Rainbow Mine. Fact of the matter is, I am not
+making good. The men don't like me, don't want to work under me, and
+things are in a muddle anyhow. My staying on would only embarrass Jim
+and Miss Ralston." (Ralph only called Jack by her grown-up title when he
+was considering her as his employer.)
+
+"So you are going to quit just because things at the mine are no longer
+plain sailing. Is it because you have had a better position offered you?
+Then of course I am sure, even though it makes everything much harder
+for them, Jack and Jim would neither of them wish to stand in your way,"
+Jean answered with intentional cruelty.
+
+And the young man understood her. "That is not fair, Jean; you know
+those are not my reasons," he declared. "I am leaving to _save_ Jim and
+Jack the trouble, not to make things more difficult. If I clear out the
+men will quiet down and perhaps they will get hold of some other
+engineer who will understand the present situation better. The truth is
+our old gold supply is giving out and we have got to find a different
+method of getting at the gold deeper down. I have been away studying how
+this might be done for the past ten days, but I have not yet made up my
+mind."
+
+"Then stay on until you can decide, Ralph," Jean replied quietly, "or at
+least until you are certain that you don't know what to do. Surely you
+must know the situation at the Rainbow Mine better than any one else. I
+have been guessing that both Jim and Jack were worried, but you know
+they won't go back on you until the very last minute and not then unless
+you say the word. So I don't think I would let the other miners frighten
+me away. It seems to me that a man will never be able to manage other
+men if he turns and runs at the first approach of a storm. I should
+never have believed this of you, Ralph, of all people!"
+
+With a little, quickly suppressed sound that was almost a groan Ralph
+suddenly dropped his head. "But a man isn't fit to govern other men if
+he can't govern himself, Jean," he answered.
+
+Even the color of her pink gown did not now hide the pallor of the
+girl's cheeks.
+
+"What are you talking about, Ralph Merrit?" she demanded a little
+unsteadily. "You behave as though you had robbed a bank or taken more
+than your share of gold out of the mine. I wish you would not be so
+absurd--I do hate uncomfortable people."
+
+The man got up. "I am sorry, Jean, and I did not mean to trouble you
+with my personal confession," he went on, "though I thought it only fair
+that I should tell Jim Colter. No, I have not been robbing anyone except
+myself and my own family, though the men may be saying even that of me
+soon," he added bitterly. "But the truth is that I have been speculating
+until I have lost every red cent that I have earned and I don't think a
+man who has been as big a fool as I have has the right to try and hold
+down a job the size of mine."
+
+"You have been speculating!" The girl repeated the words almost
+foolishly, as though not understanding at first what they meant. Then
+she flushed angrily. "Ralph, what a perfect goose you have been! For
+goodness sake tell me what ever induced a sensible, level-headed fellow
+like we all believed you were to do such a stupid thing?" Jean demanded.
+
+But this was the one question which of all the questions in the world
+Ralph Merrit could never answer Jean truthfully.
+
+"Hush, never mind!" Jean interrupted hurriedly, for she could see what
+her companion had evidently not yet observed and that was that another
+man was at this moment approaching the house. His face had looked ugly
+and forbidding, but at the sight of Jean he raised his hat.
+
+The girl recognized him as John Raines, a man of about fifty years of
+age and a kind of leader and spokesman among the other miners.
+
+"Beg your pardon, Miss," he began stiffly, "but having just heard that
+Mr. Merrit has returned to the ranch, I want to ask him if he will come
+and have a little talk with some of us men. We've been waiting for this
+talk for a considerable time."
+
+Ralph stepped down from the porch at once. "Certainly, I will come
+along with you now," he answered quietly. And then turning to Jean and
+with a gesture asking that she excuse him, the young man followed the
+older one. And Jean could not but notice how slender and boyish and,
+yes, how spent he looked as he walked behind the big, heavy miner, with
+arms and chest so powerful that he seemed able actually to have crushed
+the slighter man like a great bear, had he so desired.
+
+What could the miners be wishing with Ralph that they must see him at
+once, now when they knew that Jim Colter was not on the ranch?
+
+Without trying to answer the question herself and only lingering long
+enough to fasten a dark coat over her light frock Jean hurried after the
+two figures, taking care, however, that neither of them became conscious
+of her presence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+"COURAGE MAKES THE MAN"
+
+
+THERE were as many as twenty men waiting to talk to Ralph Merrit within
+the vicinity of the Rainbow Mine. And they chanced to be standing close
+together near one of the big rocks that rose like a miniature fortress
+beside Rainbow Creek. After Ralph had entered the group, Jean managed
+without being observed to slip behind this rock where she was in safe
+hiding.
+
+But just why she had followed the two men and what her motive was for
+concealing herself she did not try to explain to herself. Simply she had
+yielded to an impulse of fear, of curiosity and perhaps to some other
+instinct that was partly protective. One young fellow among so many
+older, rougher and more lawless characters! What might not happen to
+him?
+
+And yet Jean Bruce had not her cousin Jacqueline's physical bravery nor
+determination of purpose, and moreover she had an openly expressed
+dislike of mixing herself up in the things which she did not consider
+essentially feminine. However, she had no idea now of letting anyone
+guess her nearness, not even Ralph Merrit himself.
+
+Sitting down on the ground in a kind of scooped-out cave in a rock she
+could occasionally manage to get a glimpse of the miners, although at
+present while they were talking quietly she could only rarely catch a
+word or so of what they were saying, and not a sound from Ralph, who
+seemed the calmest and most self-controlled of them all. After a while
+she realized that John Raines, the man who had been sent to summon her
+companion, must now have been chosen as spokesman for the lot and was
+evidently making his voice sufficiently loud for them all to hear
+distinctly. And this of course included the unknown listener.
+
+"See here, Mr. Merrit," John Raines began quietly, "us men have been
+talking things over among ourselves for some time past and we have done
+come to the pretty positive conclusion that we don't like the way you're
+running things at Rainbow Mine. And we thought it might be fairer to
+you, all told, just to mention this little fact and to let you quit
+without any kind of rumpus or trouble for nobody."
+
+Jean could not see Ralph Merrit's face or even his figure, he was so
+closely surrounded, but because he too was speaking so that his entire
+audience might hear, Jean understood every word.
+
+"What's the trouble with me, Raines, as a boss?" he asked with such
+self-control and apparent lack of anger that Jean was both amazed and
+pleased.
+
+Then there was a kind of low muttering among the other men and finally
+their spokesman went on:
+
+"I guess you know most of our complaints pretty well by this time--we've
+been tellin' 'em to you long enough and hard enough. If this is a
+profit-sharing business, as you and Jim Colter and Miss Ralston said it
+was goin' to be, then you ain't gettin' gold enough out of the Rainbow
+Mine to suit us."
+
+"But we are getting all we can, aren't we? You men aren't loafing with
+the work?" Ralph interrupted.
+
+John Raines scowled. "That's senseless talk! You know what the trouble
+is; we have already gotten out most all the gold there is near the
+surface of the earth around here. Now what we have got to do to make it
+pay big again is to get more machinery and try different ways of
+working. And we want a boss to tell Miss Ralston and Jim Colter to get
+busy buying the new machinery and then to show us how to run it. We are
+not going to waste any more time around here on a few dollars pay a
+day."
+
+From her hiding place Jean did her best to hear Ralph. Here of course
+was the time and place for him to make the same confession to the miners
+that he had recently made to her. For he did intend to do just what the
+men had demanded of him, resign his work and give way for a better man.
+Nevertheless, he evidently intended delaying a bit longer before making
+the confession.
+
+"But I have explained to you men before this why I have not done what
+you ask," he went on, still in a reasonable tone of voice. "I told you
+that I did not feel certain that it was the _best_ thing to do. We are
+by no means sure that there is enough gold below the present mine to
+make it worth while to go deeper. You men know what a lot of money the
+machinery for certain kinds of gold digging takes. It would probably eat
+up pretty much all the capital that the owners of the Rainbow Mine
+have. And I don't want to tell them to buy this machinery until I am a
+lot surer that the gold is down there waiting to be hauled out."
+
+John Raines glanced about at the faces surrounding him. It was easy
+enough to take his tone from their expressions.
+
+"Then there is no use wasting any more of our time and yours in talk,
+Merrit," the older man announced in a rougher manner than he had before
+employed. "Your sentiments was pretty well known to us before you
+spouted them forth. And that's just the point! You don't know what ought
+to be done about things and we do. And we want a man to boss us that
+knows same as we. Now, young man, you just get out pleasant and the
+quicker the better."
+
+All over her body, to the very tips of her ears, Jean felt herself
+tingling with sudden, overpowering anger. Why had Ralph Merrit not said
+what he intended saying before now? To resign at this moment in the face
+of this other man's insolence, which represented the same feeling in his
+companions, was to behave like a small boy at school who had been stood
+up in a corner and soundly thrashed by his schoolmaster and then made
+to apologize for his pains. Jean felt that she would never care to look
+Ralph in the face again. But he was speaking now for the third time.
+
+[Illustration: "SHE HAD HEARD THAT MASTERFUL TONE BEFORE"]
+
+"Have Miss Ralston and Mr. Colter told you that they wanted me to quit?"
+he inquired. "It seems like they would have mentioned the matter to me
+first. I have usually taken my orders from them and not from the men
+_under_ me."
+
+There was quite a different ring in Ralph Merrit's voice during this
+speech that made the girl behind the rock unexpectedly put up her cold
+hands to cool her hot cheeks. She had heard that masterful tone before,
+but not in some time.
+
+"No, they ain't said nothing yet," Raines admitted. "But it don't
+matter; you got to quit just the same. You can't run a gold mine by
+yourself with all your 'book larnin,' and it's either you or us that
+gets out."
+
+"Then it'll be you," Ralph replied in such a matter-of-fact and
+undisturbed fashion that Jean could hardly believe she had heard him
+aright, or else she must have been dreaming less than an hour before.
+
+"Look here, fellows, don't be fools," Ralph went on, still showing no
+loss of temper. "The hour Mr. Colter and Miss Ralston tell me they want
+me to give up my job at the Rainbow Mine, that hour I go. And the minute
+I am really convinced that another man is able to do my work better than
+I can, that man gets my position, if I can persuade the Rainbow Mine
+owners to try him. But I've got to study things out here a little
+longer, I've got to make some new experiments and maybe kind of feel my
+way slowly toward deciding what had best be done. I have been away for
+the past ten days studying conditions at other mines and trying to find
+out some of the latest ideas in mining machinery."
+
+But the other men were making no pretense of listening and were
+muttering and talking among themselves as a direct and intentional
+insult to the speaker. Ralph waited in silence, and Jean had an
+intuition that the end of the discussion was about to take place. The
+noises that the miners were making were ugly, vicious sounds entirely
+unfamiliar to the girl's ears and she had no conception of what they
+might portend. She had a sudden fear that they might mean some bodily
+injury to the younger man. Then would she have the courage to rush out
+to his defense as Jack undoubtedly would have, no matter what overtook
+her?
+
+But she was mistaken in the form of her present uneasiness.
+
+"You can talk that way here, if it makes you feel better, young fellow,"
+one of the other miners announced contemptuously, "but it ain't goin' to
+make a mite of difference in the way things has to go. We give you
+thirty-six hours' notice to get clear of Rainbow Mine, and if you don't,
+why you can stay around here and play by yourself as long as you like
+provided your bosses are willing to give up the gold-mining business.
+Because if you stay, we git out and that means there is not another
+miner going to be allowed down a shaft in this here mine."
+
+"You mean," said Ralph, "that you are going to strike and make the other
+men boycott us. I don't believe your union will stand for it. You
+haven't got a kick coming to you about your hours of work, or your pay,
+or any of the conditions about the mine. And just because you don't
+think I've got brains enough for my job is no reason why you should
+strike. I want you to know, you fellows," and here Ralph's voice was no
+longer in the least conciliatory, but as firm and decisive as a judge's
+sentence, "I am a union man myself, but you must understand once and for
+all that if the Rainbow Mine owners agree to stand by me I am going to
+keep on with the job of bossing this mine. And I am going to keep on
+digging out the gold we can get with our old tools until there's a way
+of knowing what ought to be done next. But I think in the future it is
+going to suit me better to have another lot of men to work with me and I
+think I'll be able to get hold of them. You may go to your quarters now.
+I'll let you hear in the morning what Miss Ralston and Mr. Colter want
+to do."
+
+And to Jean Bruce's immense amazement, though some of the men laughed
+rudely and others muttered threats and curses, the entire number after
+some delay and further discussion among themselves, walked off, leaving
+Ralph Merrit entirely alone. Notwithstanding, the miners were evidently
+unanimous in their intention.
+
+Jean snuggled closer than before in her rocky alcove, scarcely daring to
+breathe for fear of their discovering her and so creating further ill
+feeling. Then after they had gone, and the last man of them was
+entirely out of sight, she still did not move. For Ralph Merrit had
+never stirred from his position and she did not know whether she even
+wished him to learn of her eavesdropping.
+
+Ralph did not move and Jean was growing bored with her cramped position,
+now that events were no longer sufficiently exciting to make her forget
+herself. Besides, did she not really wish to let Ralph know just how she
+felt about him?
+
+Curiously he did not turn around until she was within a few feet of him.
+Yet when he did, Jean laughed and clapped her hands childishly at the
+change in his expression since their interview on the veranda.
+
+"Why, Jean, where have you come from? You did not see anybody, did you,
+on your way from the house? This is not a place where you should be."
+
+Jean nodded. "Yes, I did see everybody and heard everything. Please
+forgive me for being a horrid spy," she confessed, "but I was hiding
+behind that rock the whole blessed time. And oh, Ralph, I am so pleased
+and proud of you! Of course Jack and Jim will stand by you to the bitter
+end--I should dare them not to; but then nobody need ever accuse Jim
+and Jack of not enjoying a good, clean fight."
+
+Jean put her hand through the young man's arm. "Do come on back to the
+Lodge with me. It is almost time for the others to be coming home. You
+must rest a while first and have dinner and then tell them what you
+intend to do."
+
+A little dazed by the girl's unexpected appearance and by her sudden
+flow of words, and still deeply engrossed on what had just taken place,
+Ralph Merrit allowed himself to be led along for a few steps in silence.
+
+"You must think I am a good deal of a turncoat, Jean, and don't know my
+own mind for half an hour," he said finally. "Maybe I haven't the right
+after all to get you people into trouble."
+
+Jean gave the young man's arm a vehement shake. "You haven't got the
+right to be anything but--a man, Ralph Merrit!" she announced.
+"Goodness, you don't know how ashamed I was of you and for you a while
+ago! I suppose it is because I am such a coward myself, because I am so
+afraid of rough things and rough places, that I love courage more than
+anything else in the world."
+
+"Do you, Jean?" Ralph murmured almost to himself. "Well, I have been a
+coward in more ways than one in these past six months."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE MIDNIGHT CONFERENCE
+
+
+FOR hours after dinner the family at the Rainbow Lodge sat in their big
+living room talking over matters with Ralph Merrit. Better than he had
+been able to explain to Jean he now made the present situation clear to
+his listeners. And by his frankness in acknowledging that he had not yet
+been able to make up his mind as to what was best to be done for the
+future of Rainbow Mine he restored Jim's and Jack's full confidence.
+
+The discussion was absorbing; only Frieda, after an hour or so of what
+seemed to her a repetition of the same conversation, grew sleepy and now
+and then dozed for a few moments with her yellow head nodding
+uncomfortably.
+
+Why stay awake longer when she understood the state of things perfectly?
+Ralph had said that they would probably have much less money out of the
+Rainbow Mine for a time. Later, if he saw his way clear by spending
+their capital and buying new machinery, they might become a great deal
+wealthier. And while naturally the first of this information was
+discouraging, the second idea had kept Frieda quite wide awake until ten
+o'clock. Earlier in the evening she had felt frightened at the thought
+of the miners striking and the trouble that they might be going to have
+on the ranch for the next few days; but Jim and Jack did not appear
+alarmed, so after a time her nervousness was partly allayed.
+
+They both had declared that Ralph must not for a moment consider
+surrendering to the men; for apparently they intended not only to
+dismiss him but thereafter to run the Rainbow Mine with no consideration
+for its owners. It might take a few days for Ralph to get together
+another group of capable miners, but the delay was the only annoyance.
+For no one appeared to believe that the old men would make trouble. They
+were merely trying to bluff and threaten Ralph.
+
+Jean, having seen with her own eyes the bitterness and dissatisfaction
+among the workers, was not so completely convinced. Nevertheless she
+said nothing of her own doubt, not regarding her opinion in the matter
+as of special value. Moreover, she enjoyed seeing Ralph Merrit so sure
+of himself once more and so determined to swing things to a successful
+issue. It recalled the days when he had first been summoned to help them
+with his judgment as to whether or not Rainbow Mine contained sufficient
+gold to make it of importance. And what a change in their lives their
+wealth had created for them! At least Jean had previously believed this
+to be true, but studying the faces in the little group about her tonight
+she was not so sure of the others. Assuredly Ruth and Jim, who were
+sitting on a sofa with Ruth's hand slipped quietly and quite
+unconsciously inside Jim's, were not dependent for their happiness on
+the possession of a great deal of money. And there was Jack leaning both
+elbows on a small table nearby with her face in her hands, listening
+intently to every word Ralph was saying. Had she ever seen her cousin
+more animated or more interested? Well, she had always known that the
+mere spending of money had never given Jack the same degree of pleasure
+that it had her. It was "making things happen" that Jack cared most for,
+and now that difficulties were presenting themselves in regard to the
+Rainbow Mine, actually Jack seemed almost to be enjoying the prospect.
+Frieda was nodding, so that even she could not be very deeply concerned
+at the prospect of poverty, and Olive could certainly not be accused of
+being mercenary, since she was calmly turning her back on a large
+fortune rather than fulfil the conditions of her grandmother's will.
+
+Jean smiled and sighed almost in the same breath. She could not pretend
+to any such highmindedness, she was afraid that she was the kind of girl
+whom she had heard people describe as "loving luxury like a cat."
+Certainly she did care more than she should for beautiful clothes,
+handsome houses, travel, society and everything that money alone could
+buy. And yet, after all, the wealth of Rainbow Mine was not hers: it
+belonged to Jack and Frieda, though they had always shared their income
+with her as though she had been their sister instead of their cousin.
+Whether their gold mine had now ceased to be of value or whether deeper
+down under the earth it should hold a larger fortune, was it not still
+her place to make her own future? With a start Jean came to herself. The
+clock had just struck midnight and Ralph had risen.
+
+"As soon as things straighten out, Mr. Colter, I am going to ask you to
+let me send for two or three of the big mining experts. For of course
+you would want their opinion as well as mine. I will tell the men your
+decision in the morning. Thank all of you for your faith in me and
+good-night."
+
+But Ralph's movement must have awakened Frieda, for she sat up suddenly
+and yawned. "Who is it you are going to send for to come to the ranch?"
+she demanded unexpectedly. "Oh, I do hope some one who isn't a hundred
+years old. Why can't you ever ask a young man's advice, Ralph
+Merrit--you are young yourself?"
+
+And then as everybody laughed, Jack pinched her sister's inviting pink
+cheek.
+
+"What a foolish baby you are, Frieda Ralston," she declared, "I hardly
+think that Ralph's mining experts will be of the slightest interest to
+you."
+
+After Jim and Ralph had gone out in the hall together and were talking
+quietly Jean slipped out after them.
+
+"Don't you think, Jim," she asked, "that Ralph had better not go down to
+his old quarters to sleep tonight? You know his room is in the same
+house with half a dozen of the miners and of course nothing will
+happen, but I don't believe the men are exactly devoted to him and--"
+Jean put her hand coaxingly on the young man's coat sleeve. "Sleep on
+the divan in the living room tonight, won't you? We haven't a spare
+room, but I assure you it is most comfortable."
+
+Jim nodded. "That isn't a bad idea, Ralph."
+
+But the younger man shook his head, although his eyes thanked the girl
+for her interest.
+
+"No, Jim," he said, "you and Jean are both awfully kind, but the one
+thing that the fellows I disagreed with today must not think is that I
+am in the least afraid of them. Oh, I realize I am up against a pretty
+tough proposition--they are not the kind to back down easily and are
+accustomed to getting their own way, but your faith and belief in
+me----"
+
+Ralph stopped, his voice a little husky. "Good-night, Jean, and thank
+you." Then he turned to Jim Colter. "I wonder if you would mind walking
+a short distance with me. There is something else I must tell you that I
+could not mention in there tonight."
+
+And as the two men disappeared Jean had a sudden feeling of
+thankfulness. How curiously things turned out. If she had not chanced to
+be on the porch at Rainbow Lodge that afternoon she might never have
+heard Ralph Merrit's confession. If the men had not summoned him for
+their talk just when they did, Ralph would have gone away from Rainbow
+Mine feeling that he had made a failure of his life and of his work.
+
+And Jean's pretty brown eyes filled with tears. They had all been fond
+of Ralph for several years and would have been sorry to have him vanish
+out of their lives. She was glad too that he had recovered from the idea
+that he once had of caring for her more than the other girls. Or at
+least Jean believed that she was glad, for it is a very rare woman who
+can honestly rejoice at the loss of a lover, even though he continues to
+be her friend.
+
+Out in the dark together Jim Colter put his great arm across the younger
+man's shoulder. "Yes, I know it is more serious, boy, than we pretended
+in there, but I'm with you to the uttermost and things will turn out all
+right. It may not hurt my girls to have less money for a while, though
+of course it would come pretty hard on them now to be poor, after we
+have taught them such extravagant tastes. But in any case, old fellow,
+the fault will not be yours and you must not take the result too
+seriously."
+
+Ralph had not spoken, but he now braced himself and drew a slow breath.
+
+"Look here, Jim, I didn't say all I ought to have said in there with
+your wife and the girls--somehow I couldn't. For I let you say you would
+stand by me and have faith in me when all the time I knew I wasn't worth
+it."
+
+Then Ralph made the same confession to his man friend and employer as he
+had to Jean earlier in the day. He told him that he had been speculating
+steadily for the past six months. To Jim's question as to why he felt he
+had to grow rich in such a hurry, again Ralph made no reply. When the
+older man put out his hand to say good-night, Ralph Merrit held it for a
+moment longer than usual.
+
+"Jim," he asked, "may I make a promise to you? This has been one of the
+biggest days in my life. I came home this afternoon pretty well
+down-and-out, intending to give up my work and pretty much everything I
+want to attain in the world. Then--well, wonderful, unexpected things
+began to happen. Now I hope I am a man again. So I want to promise, not
+so much you as myself, that I am going to cut this speculating business
+out absolutely and that I am going to keep on being a man if I can
+manage it, no matter what happens."
+
+There was something in Ralph's words and in his manner that made Jim's
+blue eyes shine and gave the extra warmth and heartiness to the farewell
+clasp of his hand. Moreover, he had suddenly recalled a confidence that
+Jack had made to him in regard to Ralph Merrit's feeling for Jean. And
+if ever there was a man who knew how to offer sympathy and understanding
+to a discouraged lover, that man was Jim Colter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+A DILEMMA AND A VISITOR
+
+
+"GREAT SCOTT," muttered Jim Colter at the breakfast table some days
+later, "if there was only another man around this place to take care of
+you women, I would not let Ralph Merrit carry so much of this burden
+alone. It's getting past a one-man's game to manage our present
+affairs."
+
+In return Jack shook her fist at him with what was not all a pretense of
+indignation. "Ruth, you may not object to hearing your husband speak of
+you as a burden," she protested, "but I can't say I ever like hearing
+that I am not able to look after myself. Oh, yes, I know what the family
+thinks of my vanity! But seriously, Jim, there isn't any danger, no
+matter what goes on down at the mine, of anybody's annoying us. You need
+not worry over leaving us alone. I am quite sure we don't need 'another
+man.' The ranch is too full of them already!" And Jack shrugged her
+shoulders in the face of her guardian.
+
+But from her place at the head of the table behind a big silver coffee
+urn, Ruth looked at the girl in the seat next her who had just finished
+speaking.
+
+"I am sorry to hear you say that, Jack," she began quietly, "because
+pretty soon we are going to have what you and Jim are pleased to call
+'another man' as our guest at the Rainbow Lodge and one whom of all
+others I most wish to see."
+
+Jack was puzzled, but Olive Van Mater, with a swift glance at the older
+woman, felt the blood leaving her face and her hands turning cold. Her
+lids drooped swiftly over her dark eyes and immediately she devoted
+herself to eating her breakfast, though all the while she was studying
+Jack's expression.
+
+At this moment a diversion was created by the entrance of a very fluffy,
+blue-eyed person in a pale blue breakfast toilet, who after kissing Ruth
+slipped into a place next her sister.
+
+"Sorry I'm late," she said, without any suggestion of real contrition,
+"but since Jim makes us stay in the house so much lately there isn't any
+reason for getting up."
+
+"Thank you, Frieda darling, for the pleasure you take in our society,"
+Jean murmured, setting down her coffee cup in mock indignation. "I am
+sure that each and every member of your family feels grateful to you for
+your flattering suggestion. But since we are of no interest to you,
+perhaps you would like to hear that Ruth has just said we are to have an
+unexpected visitor--a man!"
+
+Frieda first helped herself to the entire pile of griddle cakes. "I
+suppose everyone else has nearly finished," she remarked by way of
+explanation. And then: "Oh, I suppose the visitor is one of those
+tiresome men who is coming to help Ralph about the mine. I do wish
+things would quiet down, because as soon as our new house is finished
+Jean and I are dying to have a houseparty. Ralph said himself that his
+mining engineers were too old to be any fun--the youngest one is past
+thirty!"
+
+"Yet I am still able to get about at that age, Frieda Ralston," Jim
+Colter protested.
+
+At this instant Jack shook her head. "We are being very impolite to Ruth
+by talking so much," she declared. "Ruth was going to tell us about a
+new visitor and of course we are desperately anxious to hear. Who is
+he, Ruth, a stranger or an old friend? And where are you going to find a
+place for any one else at Rainbow Lodge?"
+
+Purposely Ruth waited a moment in the silence that followed.
+
+"I'll give you three guesses," she said finally.
+
+"Peter Drummond and Jessica! Wouldn't it be splendid if they came to us
+on their wedding trip?" Jack answered immediately.
+
+"No," Ruth answered.
+
+"Tom, the chocolate-drop boy!" Jean exclaimed, laughing at Frieda's
+sudden blush.
+
+But Olive Van Mater had put down her knife and fork and was looking
+quietly at Ruth. "May I have a turn at guessing, please?" she asked in
+her usual gentle fashion. "Isn't our visitor to be Frank Kent?"
+
+And then as Ruth nodded with a smile of pleasure every pair of eyes at
+the table immediately turned upon Jacqueline Ralston.
+
+And Jack's cheeks grew suddenly a deeper pink, like the heart of a pink
+rose, for she was too surprised for the present to be self-conscious.
+
+"You must be mistaken, Ruth dear," she insisted. "Frank hasn't written
+me; I haven't said that he could come." And then seeing what her words
+suggested, she went on in greater confusion, "I thought he was to wait
+until our house was finished or until later in the summer or until some
+time," she ended lamely. "I don't understand."
+
+"Perhaps Frank will explain to you, dear," Ruth replied carelessly. And
+then turning toward the other girls:
+
+"You see Frank has been writing me about his visit for several weeks.
+But he and I both wanted his coming to be a surprise. He has said that
+he could not endure waiting longer to see his dearest friends. So a week
+ago when he arrived in New York he telegraphed me to know when he could
+come to the Rainbow Ranch and of course I said 'at once.' I rather think
+he may be here some time this afternoon. You won't have to worry now,
+Jim, about taking care of your wife and family, for Frank will----"
+
+But Frieda was clapping her hands together with much more pleasure than
+that slightly selfish young person usually showed.
+
+"Oh, I am so glad, Jack. We do like Frank better than any one we know,
+don't we? And if you don't, I am sure Olive does," she persisted.
+
+Jim got up from his place. "I don't like this fashion you have, Mrs.
+Colter, of corresponding with gentlemen and not informing your husband,
+but just the same I am delighted that Kent is coming to us. It's amazing
+what a fine fellow he is for an Englishman, and certainly we owe him a
+lot. When a man marries at another's house--and such a wedding--it's
+hard work getting even with him!"
+
+Out to the door Ruth followed her husband.
+
+"I am dreadfully uneasy about this trouble at the mine. I did not dare
+show how much I am worried before the girls. But you must tell me just
+what the conditions are, Jim. You know we don't believe in marriages
+where the woman is shut out from facts," Ruth insisted.
+
+For half a moment the man hesitated. Then he kissed the little woman who
+had to stand on her tip-toes to be on a level with his chin.
+
+"I don't tell you the facts, Ruthie dear, because I don't know them," he
+answered. "How can I tell what a lot of crazy, obstinate men are going
+to do? But evidently the miners who deserted us have managed to
+intimidate the other mine workers in this neighborhood. Ralph has not
+been able to get hold of any men who want to work for us, and things at
+the mine have been idle for some time, as you know. So far, all we have
+been able to do is to have the cowboys do picket duty down at the mine
+so as to keep the other fellows from wrecking our machinery or blowing
+us up. There, don't turn white as a sheet, Ruth! I don't believe that
+the old miners are that anxious to injure us; yet we have to be on the
+look-out. Merrit has got to be away all day today hunting for men, so I
+must be on the job. Sorry I can't meet Kent, but you'll see that he is
+looked after all right and I'll be with you at dinner tonight. I'll
+bring Merrit with me if I can persuade him--he is apt to be pretty well
+fagged."
+
+The greater part of the day the four girls spent together in the garden
+near the Lodge. It was a lovely June day, with the air full of the
+scents of innumerable wild flowers. And everything within the immediate
+neighborhood of the Lodge was as peaceful and undisturbed as though the
+mine were a hundred miles away. Jean and Jack at least half a dozen
+times confessed to the desire to walk over to the mine and see what was
+taking place; but since Jim had given strict orders against it they did
+not quite dare.
+
+A part of the time they spent helping Frieda gather great bunches of
+violets from her old violet beds, which had never been allowed to die
+out, until the Lodge was finally filled with them and the big living
+room was fair and fragrant enough for any festival.
+
+Then, when other amusements failed, there was always the new house to be
+investigated. It was now so nearly completed that when things quieted
+down at the mine again, if they were still to have a sufficient income
+to meet expenses, the moving into the new home was to take place.
+
+While the other three girls were rummaging about making suggestions Jack
+managed to slip quietly away. She went directly to Ruth, who was in the
+nursery with her little son. And as Jack was never used to evasions or
+to trying to get her own way by indirect methods, she asked immediately:
+
+"Ruth dear, may Olive and I drive to the station and meet Frank Kent
+this afternoon? I have a special reason for wishing to be there. You
+see, dear, I don't want Frank to think that I am not delighted to see
+him or that I have put off his coming to us because I had forgotten him.
+You knew he had been wanting to come for a long time, didn't you?"
+
+Ruth nodded. "I had guessed it, Jack, though I did not know positively
+until Frank's letter to me. Nor do I know now why you put off his visit.
+I am not asking you to tell me," she added quickly. For, observing the
+sudden look of reserve on the girl's face, she appreciated that it must
+be respected. "Frank merely said that he wanted to see us so much, and I
+did not see how his coming could fail to give pleasure. You don't mind,
+do you, dear?" Ruth concluded, wondering if this might be the moment for
+confidence.
+
+Although still keeping her clear, almost transparently honest gray eyes
+on her friend, Jack flushed.
+
+"Yes dear, I do want Frank, now that Olive is here," she replied. "I
+meant to write him and ask him just as soon as things were quiet at the
+mine again. Now may we go to meet him?"
+
+Ruth looked worried. "I have been wondering what we ought to do about
+going to the station all morning," she returned. "Of course some of the
+family must meet Frank or he will feel deeply wounded, but I can't leave
+the baby and yet there seems no man about the place to go with you
+girls. Jim has taken possession of everybody."
+
+Jack kissed Ruth on the hair and then bent over and looked at the baby
+with a new expression of wonder and reverence. She had always been much
+more afraid of the "little Jimmikins" than the other girls.
+
+"Don't trouble over things a minute, Ruth. You know the danger that Jim
+is fearful of for us is what may happen here on the ranch. But we shall
+be leaving the ranch as soon as we drive through the gate. Moreover, we
+can take Carlos with us for an escort; he is only a boy, but he will do
+perfectly well. And if we don't take him, it won't make much difference
+since he would be more than likely to follow us. As far as I can see he
+trails constantly after Olive like a faithful dog. It would annoy me,
+but I don't believe she has even noticed how much he does it. I wonder
+what the boy's exact reason is? Nevertheless, as it gives Carlos a
+regular occupation, I suppose we should be grateful."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+CROSS PURPOSES
+
+
+OLIVE was not so unconscious of the Indian boy's attitude toward her as
+Jack believed. Indeed she could not well be. And now as the three of
+them drove together to the station she was pondering on whether or not
+she should confide her experience to Jack. But Jack was not sympathetic
+toward Carlos, for with her intense and forceful nature it was hard for
+her to understand the boy's idleness and dreaming. Therefore to tell her
+what had recently occurred would doubtless make her prejudice the
+deeper. For she was almost sure to regard the boy's behavior as
+impertinence and to wish to send him at once away from the ranch.
+
+Yet though Olive herself was annoyed, she did not wish matters to go so
+far as that. For she had a peculiar appreciation and pity for the Indian
+boy's difficulties which no one else could so readily have. Had she not
+been raised among the Indian people and did she not comprehend their
+shy, proud natures? For white people to realize that the Indian, even in
+the midst of his overthrow and degradation, still considers himself
+their superior is an almost impossible conception. Nevertheless Olive
+knew this to be true. The white man's religion is to the Indian less
+full of visions and of dreams. An educated Indian writes:
+
+"When we plant our plumes where the shrines are, our first prayer is for
+good thoughts--that our children may be wise and strong, and that the
+God of the sky may be glad of us. I have listened to the mission talk
+many days, and nothing in the words of the missionary is more white than
+the thought which we plant with the prayer plumes on our shrines."
+
+Neither does the Indian, though of course there are exceptions in his
+race as in all other things, have the respect that we feel he should
+have for the advantages of our education. What more does it teach him of
+the woods and the fields, of the beauty and imagery of nature, of all
+that he cares to know? Of a boy who had been to a government school an
+Indian says:
+
+"He comes back to his people and knows that if he lives there it must be
+as his father lived--except that now he has more cultivated tastes to
+satisfy, and no further means or methods of earning the price of them.
+To plant the corn, herd the sheep, hunt the rabbits, take care of his
+share of his own village--these are the life-work of the Indian. The
+schools teach him to do that no better than his fathers did it before
+him. He is taught to read and write, and he asks 'for what?'
+
+"The cities of the mesa have no books, and have never felt the need of
+them. Why should he read of the American life he lives apart from?"
+
+Therefore Olive understood that though the boy Carlos might not be able
+to express himself in this fashion, in his heart of hearts this was
+exactly the way that he felt. Why should he study what Jim Colter and
+the girls wished him to learn? Books and figures had no possible
+interest for him or relation to the life which he meant to lead. His
+world was the outdoor one, among the animals and birds, under the new
+moons of each succeeding month, and lifting up his eyes and his heart to
+the sun when he wished to be glad.
+
+To work like the other men did about the ranch, digging under the earth
+or plowing in the fields! This was not for the son and the grandson of
+many chieftains! It was not merely laziness on Carlos' part that kept
+him from making himself useful, but the feeling that any such labor as
+he might be expected to do was beneath his dignity. Therefore the boy
+could never really get into his mind the idea that the white people were
+his masters, although in a vague way he knew that they felt themselves
+to be. It was this thought that was always the foundation of Carlos'
+sullenness and lack of gratitude.
+
+So Olive realized that the Indian boy's letter to her, which she had
+found at her door one day hidden among a bunch of prairie roses, had not
+been written in any spirit of presumption or audacity. Had she not at
+one time seemed to be an Indian like himself? Had she not lived among
+them, eaten their food and spoken their speech? And was it not for her
+sake that Carlos had left his own tribe and taken upon himself many of
+the ways of the white man? The boy had cared for his "Princess Olilie"
+always, but in years past he had been a boy and felt as one. Now he was
+a man!
+
+All this and more Carlos had put into his note. Olive remembered it at
+the present moment almost word for word, for it had touched and hurt her
+at the same time. Although Carlos was too young to mean all that he had
+said, she knew that with his queer nature he must suffer from her reply.
+
+For he had written:
+
+ MY LADY OF THE LONE TRAIL:
+
+ Are you not weary of the life and the ways of the
+ white women and men? Are you not tired of having
+ your soul shut up between four walls of wood with
+ no vision for your eyes by day and no night wind
+ to touch your cheek as you lay asleep? You and I
+ have grown older now; there is no one in any
+ Indian tribe to hurt us. Have I not stayed quietly
+ here waiting and watching for you, learning many
+ things which I have hated, that we might not fail
+ to understand each other? For my love for you is
+ as the Tu-wa-ni-ne-ma, the sand of the desert.
+
+ Therefore will you not come away with me back to
+ the wonderful, free outdoor world, where we lived
+ together for a little while when both of us were
+ children. Under a tree in a dim forest I shall
+ build for you such a nest as only a man shall
+ build for his mate. Then in the day time I shall
+ plant corn while you weave the beautiful Indian
+ blanket, which the Indian Laska taught you to
+ make. And in the night we shall listen to the
+ little night bird of the desert, the Hoetska. But
+ both day and night we shall be alone and away
+ from these people who do not understand me as you
+ do and who will never love you as I do.
+
+ Whenever you will come with me, I shall have two
+ horses waiting.
+
+Olive stole a glimpse at Jacqueline's face. For a quarter of an hour
+they had been sitting beside each other, and yet neither one of them had
+uttered a word. But certainly she should not tell Jack of Carlos'
+unhappy and impossible letter. For Jack might be amused, she might be
+angry, and certainly she would be resentful.
+
+No, Olive decided that she must keep the boy's secret inviolate. Some
+day she would have a chance to see him alone. Then she might be able to
+explain how far she herself had traveled from the old Indian days--how
+she could never again love the things that the boy did, nor endure the
+life which he wished to lead. Besides, Carlos was only a boy, while she
+was almost a woman--at least a good many years his senior! Perhaps she
+might even tell Carlos that it would be best for him to go away from
+Rainbow Ranch, back to his own people where he could live with Indian
+boys and girls of his own age. There was the Indian village not far off
+to which she herself might return after a few years. For one of these
+days the Indians were to have a teacher who _could_ understand their
+point of view as well as that of the white people. Perhaps Carlos might
+by that time be married to a girl of his own race and be able to help
+her with her chosen work.
+
+But she must not speak of this idea to Jacqueline either, for the
+suggestion always made her friend unhappy. It was odd how utterly
+devoted she and Jack were and how intimate; yet they did not often speak
+of the deepest desires of their hearts to each other. Not once had Jack
+voluntarily mentioned Frank Kent's name since their return from the
+visit to Lord and Lady Kent the year before.
+
+Was Jack in love with Frank? Olive could not make up her mind. Because
+if she were, what was standing in the way of their engagement? Of course
+Jack could never have dreamed of her foolish, impossible affection for
+Frank, who had never been anything except her good friend. Olive was
+quite certain that she had never by any sign betrayed herself. She
+believed that she had entirely recovered from her former feeling, and
+was hoping with all her heart that Jack and Frank would now find out
+that they truly loved each other.
+
+But what was making Jacqueline so unusually quiet? Olive's slender hand
+slipped into her friend's larger and firmer one, and Jack's fingers
+closed over it lovingly.
+
+They were now almost at the depot and Frank Kent's train would be due in
+another quarter of an hour. If only Jack would not look so pale and
+reserved--she was not nearly so pretty as usual! Her face was white and
+her eyes had dark shadows under them. Jean and Frieda had insisted that
+Jack wear a new silk suit that had recently been made for her, but it
+was not half so becoming as her old brown corduroys or faded khaki;
+neither was her cream-colored straw hat with its single brown rose so
+picturesque as the ranch hat in which Frank had first seen her.
+
+Olive sighed, and the sigh attracted the other girl's attention.
+
+"I have been a dreadfully stupid companion, Olive dear. Forgive me,"
+Jack murmured penitently. And then: "How pretty you are looking! Frank
+will be so glad to see you, I know!"
+
+At this moment Carlos stopped the carriage and pair of horses before the
+station platform, where both girls got out without time for further
+speech. Yet all this while Jacqueline had been thinking: "If Olive still
+cares for Frank after this year of absence I am sure that her feeling
+will never change. So if this be true I shall tell Frank that I do not
+care for him enough to marry him. Olive has had too unhappy a life for
+me to add to her unhappiness. Surely when Frank believes that I do not
+love him, he will find out what Olive means to him and how immeasurably
+she is my superior, in beauty, brains, sweetness and everything that
+counts. Then he will know that he has liked her best all along!"
+
+Nevertheless and in spite of all her excellent reasoning as the whistle
+blew announcing the approaching train, Jack caught her breath. She hoped
+that Frank would not be angry with her for having refused to let him
+come to Rainbow Ranch for almost a year. Could she dare to pretend that
+she had forgotten the conversation which they had had in that last ride
+together between the hawthorn hedges of an English lane?
+
+When Frank Kent came down the steps of the train with his grave,
+handsome face flushed with eagerness--and something else--it was Olive
+Van Mater whom he found waiting for him alone on the platform. With all
+his old delightful friendliness and charm of manner he greeted her,
+dropping his luggage to hold both her hands close for a moment.
+
+Yet Olive to save her life could not at once be equally friendly and
+natural. For what in heaven's name had become of Jacqueline Ralston at
+this critical moment? As the train drew in, she had been standing close
+by her side. Here she was approaching them at last, holding out her hand
+stiffly, with a frozen smile on her face.
+
+"Awfully glad to see you, Frank; you are looking very fit after a trip
+across the continent. Sorry not to be here when your train got in, but I
+had to attend to something about the horses. Give me your check and let
+me see after your trunk. Everybody at the ranch is well and tremendously
+anxious to see you."
+
+Frank smiled. Holding on to his trunk check he followed the girl a few
+yards to the spot where his trunk had been thrown out. Olive waited
+alone to watch his bags.
+
+"Hope you will be more enthusiastic over seeing me yourself, dear, when
+I have a chance to talk to you," Frank remarked in the quiet fashion
+that always had its effect on the girl's ardent nature. "You are glad,
+aren't you?"
+
+And while Jack nodded, not entirely trusting herself to speak, Frank
+laughed, saying: "Here comes a porter. I'll have him carry my stuff to
+the carriage. It is like you, Miss America, to wish to start out by
+taking care of me. But if I am an Englishman and too much accustomed to
+being waited upon, at least I won't endure that!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+A DINNER PARTY
+
+
+DINNER at Rainbow Lodge on the evening of Frank Kent's arrival was
+sufficiently gay and delightful to make up for many preceding weeks of
+quietness.
+
+For not only was Frank's appearance an unexpected pleasure to the entire
+family, but a few hours before sundown Ralph Merrit had returned home
+with an old friend of his, whom quite by accident he had met in a nearby
+town and persuaded to come with him for a short visit at the ranch.
+Henry Tilford Russell was to be a new experience to the four girls,
+since never in their wandering either at home or abroad had they met any
+other young man in the least like him.
+
+Before bringing his guest up to the Lodge for dinner Ralph had managed
+to escape from him for a few moments in order to see Ruth privately and
+to explain to her a few of his friend's peculiarities, so that no member
+of the family need be unnecessarily surprised. For one thing, the
+stranger was inordinately shy, disliking girls more than anything in the
+whole world. In fact Ralph was at last obliged to confess that had his
+friend guessed how many maidens he would be obliged to face at dinner,
+gladly would he have preferred starvation to joining them. But since
+Russell had asked no uncomfortable questions, Ralph had not felt in duty
+bound to forewarn him. Then, as his guest was about thirty years old,
+according to Frieda Ralston's calculations he was much too elderly
+anyhow for the Ranch girls' consideration.
+
+Yet notwithstanding all these drawbacks Ralph Merrit had been
+exceedingly anxious to bring his friend to the Rainbow Ranch. For in
+spite of the young man's shyness and social awkwardness, he was
+exceptionally brilliant, and was regarded almost a genius in his chosen
+line of work. Henry Tilford Russell was the assistant professor of
+ancient languages in the University of Chicago and Ralph had known him
+there in his own student days. However, he had recently suffered a
+breakdown from overwork and was now in the West on a trip for his
+health. But the fact about his former friend over which Ralph Merrit
+was particularly enthusiastic and desired to have Ruth impart to the
+girls, was that of his own free will Professor Russell had chosen the
+life of a student. His father was a wealthy and prominent Chicago
+lawyer, at one time the American Ambassador to Greece, so had the son
+desired he might have followed the idle existence of most other rich
+young men.
+
+In the midst of seeing that the baby was safely stored away in his
+silk-lined crib and that the table was set for extra guests, and that
+Aunt Ellen prepare a specially good dinner, Ruth had no time for
+extended conversation with the girls. She did manage to mention to Jean
+and Frieda that Ralph had brought home a stranger to whom they were to
+try to be agreeable. But this bit of information was almost swallowed up
+in the more important news that Ralph had at last succeeded in getting
+hold of a new set of men and that work on Rainbow Mine was to begin
+again within the next day or so.
+
+Then, soon after, Frank appeared, and everything else was forgotten in
+the welcome to him.
+
+Just as though he had been her older brother and Frieda a little girl,
+Frank kissed her, insisting that she had grown, although at eighteen
+Frieda certainly considered herself quite past the growing stage.
+
+Introduced to the new baby, Frank did not seem in the least nervous or
+abashed as most men are by such very tiny persons. Indeed, he apparently
+had overcome all his old reserve and shyness and without this was simple
+and charming, as persons of high birth and breeding are most apt to be.
+
+Fifteen minutes before dinner Ruth had positively to force the four
+girls to dress. Then, as Jim was getting ready at the same time, she had
+a few moments alone with Frank Kent.
+
+"You know what I have come for, don't you, Mrs. Colter--Ruth?" Frank
+began with the directness that the woman had always admired in him.
+
+Ruth made no pretense of not understanding. "It would be hard for all of
+us, and I don't see how Jim would be able to get along on the ranch
+without Jack," she replied. "For you see he and Jack really are like
+'partners,' their old name for each other. But if it is for Jack's
+happiness you know how we should all feel. But, Frank, I feel I must
+warn you that Jack won't be easy to win, and it is because I care for
+you so much that I hope you will not be discouraged. She is not just
+like most girls, and----"
+
+Frank nodded. "I have understood that all along," he interrupted. "Still
+there is one thing, Ruth, that you do not know. Last summer I persuaded
+Jack to confess that she did care for me. Yet she insisted that there
+was something, she could not explain to me what it was, that stood in
+our way--some barrier that had to be broken down before she could
+consent to marry me. What it was I don't know and that is one of the
+things I have come half way across the world to find out. Can you guess
+of any possible obstacle to Jack's feeling for me?"
+
+In a puzzled fashion Ruth Colter drew her delicate brows together.
+Frank's remark had startled and surprised her. "No, not unless it is her
+affection for us and the ranch," she replied.
+
+Before another confidence could be exchanged, Jim had stamped into the
+living room, looking bigger and more splendid than ever, suggesting the
+strong wind from his own beloved prairies. A few moments later Ralph
+Merrit and his guest followed, and afterwards Olive, Jean and Jack.
+
+Perhaps because she remembered that Frank had always liked her best in
+white, Jack wore a plain white silk dress cut square in the neck and
+with no trimming but the girdle and little ruffle of lace. It was a
+dress which she had owned for over a year, and Frieda was annoyed with
+her for wearing it on the evening of Frank's arrival. Notwithstanding,
+as there was no time to change after her sister's protest, Frieda
+finally conceded as Jack left the room that she did look fairly well.
+For the truth was that no one of the older girl's more elaborate toilets
+could have suited her half so well.
+
+Jack was pale and not altogether sure whether she was the more happy or
+unhappy over Frank's presence, yet somehow her unusual pallor was not
+unattractive, with her burnished brown and gold hair and the healthy
+scarlet of her lips. Then in some indefinable fashion Jack's expression
+had recently grown gentler, indeed tonight her manner held a certain
+timidity, giving her one of the charms that she sometimes lacked.
+
+Both Olive and Jean were also simply dressed, since their dinner party
+was an impromptu one and entirely informal. Olive had on a lavender
+muslin with a bunch of Frieda's violets at her waist, while Jean was
+dressed in a pale yellow voile frock with primroses embroidered upon it.
+
+Ralph Merrit frowned and then tried to smile as Jean came forward to
+shake hands, congratulate him and meet his guest, "What right had a poor
+fellow even to dream of a girl so fitted by beauty and grace to every
+high position? Suppose by some miracle Jean should in time learn to care
+for him, what would he have to offer her? Here was Frank Kent (and Ralph
+was perfectly aware of Frank's intention), and if Jack cared for him she
+would have all the things of this world that Jean so frankly loved,
+wealth, a high social position and one day an old English title."
+
+But while Ralph Merrit was continuing to pursue this wholly futile train
+of thought, Jean was every now and then glancing toward him demurely
+from under her heavy shaded brown eyes with a look which he perfectly
+understood.
+
+"What in the world is the matter with your friend, Mr. Russell?" the
+look said plain as any words. For Jean was doing her level best to talk
+to the stranger and in return for her efforts he would not even turn
+towards her.
+
+On first being introduced to Jacqueline the Professor had turned crimson
+to the tips of his large ears, though in a measure he had been prepared
+for one girl, since Ralph had mentioned a "Miss Ralston" in connection
+with the ownership of the Rainbow Mine. Later the meeting with Olive had
+added resentment to his confusion. Why had Merrit not warned him of what
+he would have to endure? Jean was an impossible third. Why, no such
+misfortune as meeting with three girls had overtaken him since he
+reached the great womanless West! For though the West did have its
+tiresome quota of females, so far he had managed to escape speaking to
+any of them except on strictly business matters.
+
+Well, he was in for it now, and would have to endure the evening as best
+he could; yet already he had made up his mind to escape as soon as
+daylight came in the morning.
+
+Jean's well-meant efforts to make herself agreeable to Ralph's friend
+were entirely wasted; yet after dinner was announced the young Professor
+found himself more at ease. For fortunately he had been placed on Mrs.
+Colter's left and next him was an empty chair--evidently for some member
+of the family not at home he thought with a suppressed sigh of relief.
+
+Overhearing Frank Kent ask some question of interest in regard to the
+mine, Professor Russell forgot his embarrassment sufficiently to add
+several questions and comments of his own. And it happened to be during
+one of his own speeches that an unexpected movement near him made him
+glance toward the empty chair.
+
+"Great Scott! Was this a big wax doll about to take her place next him?"
+
+Yet, though the doll was struggling with the chair and evidently trying
+to draw it out from under the table, it never occurred to Henry Tilford
+Russell to render her the slightest assistance, in spite of the fact
+that she was smiling at him appealingly out of the very largest and
+bluest eyes he had ever seen.
+
+The lateness of Frieda Ralston's entrance did not appear to have
+surprised her family, who were entirely accustomed to it; however, the
+magnificence of her dinner toilet plainly did. For whatever had inspired
+Frieda to dress up as she had? It was small wonder that she was late.
+
+Even in the midst of her duties as hostess Ruth Colter's gray eyes
+widened and it was on the tip of her tongue to scold Frieda for her
+foolishness. Yet, recovering herself in time and recalling the presence
+of their guests, she said nothing.
+
+With a faint suggestion of reproach Jack shook her head at her sister,
+while Jean and Olive openly smiled at each other. So the situation would
+have passed off without any unpleasantness if it had not been for Jim
+Colter. When would Ruth teach Jim that he was not to tease the Ranch
+girls before strangers just as if they were tiny children?
+
+With real astonishment and some mock admiration Jim stared at the latest
+comer, at the same time giving a characteristic chuckle and low whistle.
+Then, in spite of the fact that Jack, who was sitting near, gave his
+foot a warning pressure, he exclaimed:
+
+"What in heaven's name, Baby, does all that finery mean? You aren't
+going to a ball later on this evening, are you, and forgotten to mention
+it?"
+
+Then, with everybody at the table staring at her, Frieda felt her lips
+beginning to tremble and her eyes fill with tears, as at last she
+slipped into her place. Why should her appearance create so much
+comment? She had dressed up because she wished to and for no other
+special reason.
+
+Often in the past year when things at the Lodge had been dull for a long
+time she had amused herself in trying on her pretty clothes. No one had
+ever objected before, but now, just because there were strangers, or at
+least one stranger, present, she had to be made the object of family
+criticism and ridicule. If only they were alone Frieda felt that she
+would like to tell Jim and everybody just how hateful they were. For of
+course there had been no thought in her mind of Ralph's guest when she
+had put on her blue _crępe de chîne_ dress with its low neck and elbow
+sleeves and floating chiffon draperies. The costume had been a present
+from her sister, Jack, who always could save more of her income than she
+or Jean. She had only wished to find out whether it was becoming to her
+and that was why she had also taken so much time and care in fixing her
+hair. Certainly she knew that Ralph's guest would be as old as the
+hills--Ralph had plainly stated that he would be.
+
+Frieda gave a little start, which she promptly repressed so that no one
+should notice it, when she heard a pleasant voice whispering
+unexpectedly close to her ear:
+
+"Don't mind their teasing you; I think you look--just jolly."
+
+And in reply Frieda smiled tremulously upon the newcomer.
+
+He was old, just as she had expected--his hair was already beginning to
+grow thin upon the top of his head. He was slender and delicate looking
+and of only medium height, yet his eyes were certainly the brownest and
+almost the kindest that she had ever seen, in spite of the fact that
+they had a kind of absent, far-away expression even while they seemed to
+be fastened upon her.
+
+"Thank you," Frieda returned a second later, having by this time
+regained both her lost dignity and self-possession. But this time the
+younger Miss Ralston found their latest visitor displaying a curious
+eccentricity. Now he was plainly laughing at her. Naturally Frieda could
+not have dreamed that Professor Russell, whom Ruth had finally concluded
+to introduce to her, considered her a little girl of about fourteen.
+Otherwise, not for anything in the world, would he have made the speech
+which he first addressed to her.
+
+The truth was that this old-young Professor was extremely fond of
+children and only objected to girls after they had grown up. Then
+because he was so shy himself he had a keen sympathy for embarrassment
+in other people. So it was to these two causes that Frieda owed his
+friendliness.
+
+Nevertheless, as she was entirely unconscious of this fact, Frieda
+continued to talk to him very calmly and comfortably during the entire
+meal. He did appear surprised over an occasional remark of hers, but as
+he hardly ever answered, Frieda guessed that this might be his method of
+revealing his appreciation of her attentions. Actually the two of them
+were out on the porch with every one else vanished from sight for the
+moment before Professor Russell entirely awoke to the fact that, though
+his companion was still extremely young, she could not exactly be
+regarded as a baby.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+TWO CONVERSATIONS
+
+
+"JACK, you have not played fair with me; what is it that has happened?"
+Frank Kent asked quietly.
+
+It was an hour since dinner time at the Lodge and Frank had so insisted
+upon Jack's taking a walk with him that without rudeness she had not
+been able to refuse. It was an enchanting June night, warmer than usual
+in that part of the western country, and with a moon that shines perhaps
+nowhere on this earth with exactly the same wide radiance.
+
+Jack and Frank had walked down the tall aisles of cottonwood trees near
+the house and were now standing a few yards on the farther side of them
+in a clear and revealing light. At Frank's words the girl flinched as he
+had known that she would. For just that reason he had chosen them, since
+nothing could hurt Jacqueline so much or make her come so immediately to
+her own defence as any suggestion that she had not played fair. Other
+girls might not suffer so greatly from this accusation; but honesty,
+candor and a kind of straightforwardness, which some persons are pleased
+to think as masculine traits, had always been Jack's leading
+characteristics. Now, however, though her companion waited impatiently
+for her reproach or her denial, for a moment he heard neither.
+
+"I am so sorry, Frank, that you feel in that way about me," Jack began
+finally. Then, almost in a whisper: "I have not intended to be unfair to
+you. I--I had not promised you anything."
+
+Jack was not looking into Frank's face as she spoke, but at the silvery
+whiteness of the ground beneath her feet.
+
+"But nothing has happened, if you mean that I have become either angry
+or disappointed in you," she added timidly.
+
+Difficult as the girl had anticipated this conversation might be, it was
+more trying than she had expected.
+
+What could she say? How could she truthfully present the situation to
+Frank, as it appeared to her, without putting Olive in an impossible
+position? Because in spite of Olive's denial through the message to Jean
+at the close of the last Ranch Girls' book, Jacqueline was still firmly
+convinced that her friend felt so great an affection for Frank Kent that
+it was influencing her whole life. Did it not explain why she absolutely
+refused to consider Donald Harmon's proposal of marriage, in spite of
+Don's devotion and her grandmother's expressed desire? Moreover, even if
+Olive did not like Donald sufficiently well to consider marrying him,
+why should she insist that she intended devoting her future to teaching
+the Indian children?
+
+To Jack Ralston such a career suggested pure martyrdom. Olive might do
+anything else in the world that she liked, even if her grandmother left
+her no inheritance. For there was Miss Winthrop, who regarded Olive
+almost as a daughter and who would do everything possible for her. She
+might have almost any happiness and yet Olive actually talked as if she
+meant to do what she had so long said she intended as soon as she was a
+few years older and the proper arrangements could be made.
+
+Jack bit her lips until they positively hurt. Actually she felt a shiver
+of repugnance at the idea of going away with Frank to every happiness if
+her going involved leaving her dearest friend to such a fate. Could she
+ever really be happy with this thought in the back of her mind?
+
+No, Jack decided once again that she was far stronger than Olive and
+better able to look after herself and to bear, if need be, both loss and
+loneliness. Besides, had she not had many joys in the past and Olive for
+many years so few? Surely if Olive still cared for Frank, as she
+believed, in a little while there need be no further doubt of it. In
+that event it must be her duty to tell Frank that she did not love him
+and would never consent to leave the ranch for his sake. After that
+Frank would undoubtedly turn at once to Olive, who had always been his
+friend and upon whose sympathy he could surely count. Olive, too, was so
+much prettier, her nature so much gentler and sweeter, she would make a
+far better wife. Frank might be angry with her at first, Jack
+acknowledged to herself at this moment, but he would be more than
+grateful in the end.
+
+Jack laid her hand pleadingly on the young man's coat sleeve.
+
+"Frank," she asked more wistfully than she herself realized, "won't you
+promise not to talk about your feeling for me for a time? Won't you just
+stay on here with us at the Rainbow Ranch as you used to do and let us
+have a happy time together? I am worried about such a number of things.
+Perhaps the money in Rainbow Mine is going to give out and we may have
+no further income from it. Then there is this strike of our miners. Jim
+and I don't say a great deal about it to the others, but we are so
+afraid the old men may resort to violence when we try to get things to
+running smoothly again and that Ralph or some one else may be seriously
+hurt. Don't you see that I just can't think about anything else now?"
+
+"No, Jack dear, I can't honestly see why your having all these worries
+and annoyances can affect your knowing whether or not you return my
+love. It is not as though I had never spoken of it--you have had a whole
+year to decide. But if you wish me to wait longer, of course I shall do
+as you ask. Only please don't let it be too long."
+
+Then before the girl could reply she and her companion had both started,
+and instinctively Jack clutched at the young man's arm.
+
+The next moment she gave a relieved laugh.
+
+"I don't see why I should jump in that fashion just because we heard a
+slight noise behind us," she apologized. "I suppose other people have
+just the same right that we have to be outdoors enjoying the moonlight."
+
+Jack then turned around, looking back into the grove of cottonwood
+trees. "Jean, Olive, Frieda," she called lightly, but when no one
+responded, thinking no more of the incident she moved on a few steps.
+
+"Come on, Frank, let us have a real walk, it is too lovely to go back to
+the Lodge so soon. I want to ask you such a lot of questions and about
+your mother and father and Kent Place," she pleaded.
+
+Frank's attention was not to be so easily diverted. For several moments
+he continued staring at the spot where undoubtedly he had heard the
+noise of light footsteps only a few seconds before. The sound had come
+from the neighborhood of the trees nearest them; but why did no figure
+emerge into the light or move off again in the opposite direction? The
+night was so bright and the air so clear that no one could have escaped
+without being either seen or heard. But Frank was too interested in the
+prospect of a longer time in the moonlight alone with Jacqueline to
+waste a great deal more thought upon a possible intruder. Once again he
+glanced back, but as no one was in sight, he and Jack were soon deep in
+an intimate and happy conversation.
+
+Notwithstanding, neither the girl nor the man were mistaken in their
+original impression that some one had been in their neighborhood during
+at least a part of their conversation. For when they were both safely
+out of sight a slender figure stole from behind one of the largest
+cottonwood trees and ran off with the fleetness and noiselessness of a
+wild creature. There was an ugly expression on the face--one of
+resentment and suspicion and yet of so great unhappiness that the other
+emotions might have been forgiven.
+
+For the Indian boy, Carlos, fifteen minutes before had just concluded a
+conversation with the only person in the world for whom he felt any real
+affection. And foolish and mistaken as his dream had been, it hurt no
+less to find it shattered.
+
+A few minutes after dinner, when all the family were together on the
+veranda at Rainbow Lodge, Olive had several times noticed Carlos
+hovering about in their vicinity, now on a pretence of bringing a
+message to Jim Colter which might as easily have waited until morning,
+then asking some perfectly unnecessary question of her. And finally with
+the persistence and stoicism of his race he had planted himself like a
+slender and upright column against a side of the house, deliberately to
+wait until he could have his way.
+
+There was not the slightest use of pretending that Olive did not
+understand what his intention was. Carlos wished to talk with her,
+wished to have an immediate answer to the letter which he had lately
+written her. Moreover, she feared that unless she gave in to him he
+might show some trace of his feeling before the assembled company.
+
+Quietly Olive slipped over to Ruth Colter.
+
+"Ruth," she whispered, when no one was paying any especial attention to
+either of them, "I have something rather important that I must say to
+Carlos. He is here now waiting. Do you think it would make any
+difference if I go and talk to him for a few moments? We won't go any
+distance from the house, just to some place where no one may be
+disturbed by us."
+
+And Ruth agreed to the girl's request without considering it seriously.
+To the older woman Carlos was only a child, sometimes rather a difficult
+one it was true, but at any rate only an idle, mischievous boy, whom the
+Ranch girls in their usual impulsive generosity had befriended and in a
+measure adopted. But that Carlos should think of himself as a man and
+actually have the impertinence to consider himself in love with Olive,
+Ruth simply could not have believed had she been told the truth at this
+moment.
+
+So Olive, pretending to go to her own room for a scarf, had afterwards
+stolen out of a side door and come close up to where the Indian boy was
+standing.
+
+"Carlos," she said kindly, "I would rather you did not linger about the
+veranda because you wish to speak to me. If you will come away with me
+for a little distance we can talk. I received your letter and you want
+to know what I think of it?"
+
+Without a word the boy nodded, but he followed the girl for a few yards
+until they were standing ankle deep in the shimmering green foliage of
+Frieda's violet beds which were not far from the Lodge. And although in
+the path a few feet away there was a small bench where the girls often
+rested after their work among the flowers, Olive would not consent to
+sitting down.
+
+Slowly and patiently as she could, she explained to Carlos the utter
+impossibility of his feeling for her. In the first place, he was a boy
+while she was a number of years his senior. Then he was completely
+mistaken in his idea that because she had been raised among Indian
+people she cared for their life or habits. Not for anything on earth
+would she return to their simple and primitive existence. Because Olive
+was essentially gentle and because her sympathy and understanding of the
+Indian boy's nature was a matter of experience as well as kindness of
+heart, she did try to take the sting away from the present situation so
+far as she could; yet she felt obliged to be firm, for there must be no
+repetition of Carlos' foolish letter to her. He must appreciate that she
+was fond of him because he had once befriended her in a difficulty, and
+that she was grateful and would always be interested in his welfare. But
+to care for him in any other fashion was absolutely out of the question.
+Never again must he even dare to refer to the subject.
+
+Notwithstanding her resolute attitude and the arguments which she had
+used so forcibly, at the end of their conversation Olive did not feel
+sure that Carlos was as entirely convinced of the absurdity of his
+desire as he should have been. For she had spared him the one course
+open to her that might have brought him to his senses--sheer ridicule.
+Therefore when Olive was back in her own room alone and undressing for
+the night, since she had not felt in the mood for rejoining her friends,
+she wondered if she had been altogether wise. Certainly she had not
+liked Carlos' manner, and two remarks of his near the conclusion of
+their talk had left her very angry.
+
+"It is Miss Ralston who has turned you against me," he had muttered
+sullenly. "She don't like me, she don't understand. She thinks I am no
+more than a servant about her place. If it had not been for her you
+might have stayed always in the wilderness with me when both of us were
+children. Then you would never have known of your people nor learned to
+love the stupid white man's world. Miss Ralston is my enemy; therefore I
+hate her." And with these words Carlos had drawn up his lean, boyish
+frame with the majesty of a deposed king.
+
+Olive's sudden wrath had humbled him for the moment at least; yet just
+before she turned to go he had said again with equal passion, although
+his manner was quieter and more subdued.
+
+"Then if it is not Miss Ralston who has come between us, there is some
+one you care for. I wonder if it can be the far-away guest and friend,
+who arrived this afternoon by the iron trail of the prairies?"
+
+When Olive did not answer but walked quietly back to the Lodge, Carlos
+stood for a time like a bronze statue, silent and unmoving; then swift
+as a shadow he threaded his way between the cottonwood trees, actually
+observing Jack and Frank from the beginning to the end of their
+conversation, although hearing little of what they said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+A VISIT TO RAINBOW MINE
+
+
+TWO days later, as things were once more in working order at the Rainbow
+Mine, Ralph Merrit suggested that Jim Colter bring Ruth and the girls
+and Frank Kent down to see how things were going. And soon after
+luncheon the little party started.
+
+A trip to the mine was actually like an expedition to a foreign place,
+so long a time had passed since the family had been allowed in its
+vicinity, and so of course everybody was in especially fine spirits. It
+was well to have Rainbow Mine running again and a relief to find that
+the striking miners had yielded to circumstances so much more readily
+and peaceably than their first threats suggested. They had influenced
+the mine workers near at home to have nothing to do with Ralph Merrit's
+management; nevertheless since the arrival of his new force the
+atmosphere about Rainbow Ranch had remained serene and untroubled, so
+that evidently the strikers were not to be heard from.
+
+True, a single ugly letter had mysteriously appeared at daylight this
+morning left before the door of the new foreman, but except for
+mentioning it to Ralph, the man had paid no further attention to it. And
+Ralph, in the interest and excitement of getting things into working
+order at the mine, had given it less consideration than it deserved. For
+the annoyance was not so much in the threat of trouble that the letter
+contained, as in the puzzle of its being found at the quarters built for
+the Rainbow Mine workers, which were not far from the old Ranch house.
+No outsider had been seen anywhere about the great ranch either on the
+preceding day or night.
+
+Jim and Frank and Jack walked on ahead in order that they might have a
+few moments' conversation with the new miners; for no one had yet gone
+down the shaft into the mine. Before lunch they had been going over the
+machinery and seeing that the elevators for the men and for the ore were
+in good working order.
+
+Now Ralph Merrit was insisting that he be lowered first into the mining
+pit and that his new men with their hammers and chisels and other
+mining paraphernalia follow after him. However, observing that Ruth and
+the other girls were coming nearer he went forward to speak to them. Not
+since the evening when he and his friend had taken dinner at the Rainbow
+Lodge had he seen any one of them.
+
+"We are awfully pleased, Ralph, that affairs are straightening out so
+comfortably," Ruth began. "I think we owe you a vote of thanks." She had
+not known what had been making Ralph Merrit so unlike himself for the
+past few months, since neither Jim nor Jean had seen fit to confide
+Ralph's weakness to any one else; but she did recognize the change for
+the better in him today. She had never before thought of Ralph as
+specially handsome, yet he looked so fine and capable; his expression
+was so full of energy and ability that instinctively Ruth held out her
+hand.
+
+"Go in and win, Ralph," she added, half laughing and half serious. "I
+don't just know what it is that you are fighting for, except to make
+more money for the girls who don't deserve it. But whatever it is I am
+going to put my money on you, even though betting is against my Puritan
+traditions; for you'll win in the end. Why, Ralph, you look like the
+famous statue of 'The Minute Man' near Boston, except that you have not
+his gun or knapsack. You're just as typical an American fighter and just
+as ready for action."
+
+Crimsoning like a small boy at unexpected praise, Ralph crushed Ruth's
+hand in reply until she had to repress a cry of pain.
+
+"I'm not worth the powder to blow me up if you really knew the truth
+about me, Mrs. Colter; but just the same any kind of fellow likes a
+compliment now and then, and I don't remember when I have had one," he
+returned.
+
+A movement of Jean's graceful shoulders and a single glance from her
+demure dark eyes made the young man swing half-way around to face her.
+
+"You are not disputing that statement, are you?" he demanded. "Why
+shouldn't a fellow like a compliment as well as a girl?"
+
+Jean slipped off the big pink straw hat she had been wearing and with
+the velvet ribbon about it, swung it on her arm like a basket.
+
+"Oh, I am not disputing _that_ part of your statement if you please,
+sir," she answered. "I am only regretting that you have forgotten all
+the other compliments which you have received in the past. For when I
+remember how many I have bestowed upon you lately, it is discouraging
+to think what a failure I have been in trying to make myself agreeable."
+
+Just why recently, indeed ever since their conversation together that
+afternoon on the veranda at the Lodge and later here in the shadow of
+one of the great rocks, Jean Bruce had been trying to make herself
+particularly agreeable to Ralph Merrit and to win back his former
+attention and friendship, the girl herself did not know. On her return
+from Europe, after a few months at home, she had certainly discouraged
+Ralph's devotion, feeling instinctively that his affection for her had
+now become more serious than in the past when he had looked upon her as
+only a half-grown girl. For Jean did not wish to be unkind or unfair,
+and assuredly Ralph had none of the things to offer her which she
+desired. Perhaps because of this she had talked more of wealth and of
+worldly ambitions than she might otherwise have done. And Ralph had
+either understood her intention or else had recovered from his former
+affection, for in the past few months, during his foolish and futile
+struggle for money through speculations, he had entirely ceased making
+love to her or treating her in any way differently from the other
+girls.
+
+At heart Jean was essentially a coquette, one of those girls and women
+who, having once gained a man's admiration, cannot bear to find
+themselves losing it. And surely Jack and Frieda and Olive had often
+accused her of this vice.
+
+Now, knowing that Ralph cared at present more for the successful working
+of the Rainbow Mine than for anything else, Jean pointed with apparently
+the deepest concern toward the group of new men.
+
+"Tell us about the new miners, won't you please, Ralph," she asked,
+"their names and where some of them came from--anything you know? They
+are a splendid-looking lot of fellows!"
+
+But at this moment Frieda interrupted the conversation to ask a
+question. "Who is that thin man over there all by himself in the blue
+overalls and old hat? Why isn't he with the others who are being
+introduced to Jim and Frank and Jack? I wonder if Jim knows him?"
+
+Then, quite unaccountably, Ralph Merrit appeared extremely
+uncomfortable.
+
+"See here, Frieda, I might as well tell you, for you would be sure to
+find out anyhow if I didn't. That fellow isn't one of the new miners.
+He is Russell, the friend I brought up to the Lodge with me to dinner
+the other night. You see----"
+
+But Frieda's eyes were widening and in truth the other three women
+seemed almost equally surprised.
+
+"But I thought Professor Russell had gone away from Rainbow Ranch,"
+Frieda protested, "why he told us good-by the night he left and said
+that he would have to be off so early the next morning that he could not
+see any of us again."
+
+Ralph nodded. "I know," he conceded in some embarrassment. "And you're
+still to think he has gone if you please. Don't any one of you go near
+enough to Russell to speak to him or he will probably die of confusion
+before your eyes. I am afraid I forgot he was around and he is under the
+impression that he is safely disguised. You see the truth of the matter
+is this. When Russell got me away from the Lodge the other night there
+is nothing he did not say to me for having taken him unprepared to a
+place where he had to meet four girls. He declared it nearly killed him
+and he had every intention of sneaking away from the Ranch house the
+next morning on foot rather than suffer the chance of meeting any one
+of you again. He is an awful ass, but just the same he is a tremendously
+clever fellow and I was awfully anxious to show him the mine and he
+wanted to see it almost as much. So I persuaded him that he could just
+stay on at the Ranch house with me for a few days, letting you believe
+he had disappeared until he saw how things down here looked and worked.
+I assured him no one of you ever came near the men's quarters, but now
+he is hanging around the mine waiting for me as I promised to take him
+down into the pit as soon as we start work. Don't scare him to death
+beforehand."
+
+Ruth and Jean and Olive laughed, and Olive said sympathetically:
+
+"Poor fellow, I can feel for him. I used to feel so shy that nearly all
+strangers made me wretched. But I don't see just why he should be so
+specially severe upon girls?"
+
+"Because he is a goose," Frieda returned so sententiously that every one
+else laughed. So plainly was she offended at her own failure to charm
+their strange guest a night or so before.
+
+It was time for Ralph to say good-by. Arrangements at the pit shaft had
+been made so that the first elevator could be lowered into it. He then
+waved his hand in farewell to his friends, as he and the new foreman of
+the mine and the odd-looking figure of Henry Russell climbed on to the
+elevator.
+
+"I shall go away before they come up again, so that foolish fellow won't
+even have to look at me," Frieda remarked scornfully, as without any
+hitch or delay the car slowly disappeared into the bowels of the earth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE EXPLOSION
+
+
+THE new crowd of miners were anxiously waiting about the mouth of the
+pit shaft, which led down into the deepest excavation that had yet been
+dug in the neighborhood of the Rainbow Creek.
+
+There were other openings, but because this was the largest, Ralph
+Merrit had desired that his workmen begin their labor here. For by
+extending and deepening the passages in the lower part of this shaft he
+hoped to make important discoveries of new veins of ore. And once
+convinced that a quantity of new gold was actually to be found under
+this ground the young engineer had no idea of giving up before he had
+devised some intelligent and not too expensive method of bringing more
+wealth to the surface of the earth.
+
+Not many feet from the company of men Jack Ralston and Frank Kent were
+standing together talking of some detail in connection with the work,
+while Jim Colter was hanging over the pit opening in company with the
+men who had charge of the lowering and raising of the mine elevator.
+
+Evidently Ralph Merrit and his two companions had made a safe landing
+below, for shortly after their disappearance there was a signal, and
+slowly the lift traveled up into the daylight again, now ready to take
+on another lot of passengers.
+
+"Steady, no crowding," Jim Colter called out as the next relay stepped
+hastily forward. "Merrit will want to start things going in the tunnel
+before you descend."
+
+One man had already gotten aboard, while another had one foot extended
+toward the platform, when suddenly from underneath them there came a
+tearing, splitting noise and then a muffled roar like the instantaneous
+explosion of a thousand guns.
+
+The passengers in the elevator fell on their knees and all around the
+opening of the pit there was powder and blackness and a fall of stones
+like a swift rain of meteors.
+
+By accident Ruth Colter's back happened to be turned away from the scene
+at the mine, so that the first sound she remembered hearing was her
+husband's hoarse shout of horror and then as she turned the sight of
+his great form lying prostrate on the ground with Jack and Frank trying
+to drag him away from danger.
+
+But when Ruth would have rushed toward him, Olive and Frieda held her
+fast, and the next instant a wave of weakness and darkness so
+overwhelmed her that she had no strength to move.
+
+When she opened her eyes she could see Jean's face, white as a sheet,
+dancing before her and hear her saying:
+
+"Jim isn't hurt, dear; only stunned by his fall. See, he is on his feet
+again giving orders. And Jack and Frank must be all right, they were not
+so near. But what could have happened, what caused the explosion? It's
+the men down inside the mine who must be horribly hurt. Ralph----"
+
+But Jean shook with such nervous terror that Frieda's arm encircled her,
+and the next moment the four women moved nearer the place of the
+disaster.
+
+They were just in time, for at the moment of their approach, although
+Jim Colter's face was so black that you could hardly distinguish him,
+with his forehead bleeding from an ugly wound and his clothes torn and
+burnt, he was giving orders like the general of an army and like trained
+soldiers the miners were obeying him.
+
+"I'll take four of you men who will volunteer to go down inside the mine
+with me. I don't know what has happened, but we are pretty apt to find
+things serious. It sounded like a dynamite explosion and there may be
+another. Fortunately for us the elevator is above ground and we can
+lower it. Some of you see that stretchers are brought here. Jack, keep
+your head and get hold of a doctor at once. I hope we may need him," the
+man added grimly, as he swung his great length aboard the small car, his
+companions crowding close against him.
+
+Unmindful of the awed silence that had followed the noise of the
+explosion, unmindful of the two score of rough strange men, Ruth
+breaking away from the girls now ran forward crying:
+
+"Jim, you can't go down into the mine first. I can't let you. There is
+the baby and me, you must think of us and of the girls. You may be
+horribly hurt."
+
+She was near enough now so that she could look straight into her
+husband's blue eyes and something in Jim's expression calmed her
+instantly. Then for the time he too seemed conscious of the presence of
+no one else.
+
+"Don't be frightened, Ruth, I shall be all right, dear, and back again
+with you in ten minutes perhaps. But in any case, girl, don't you see I
+have got to go down before the others? This is our mine and two of the
+men down there are almost boys."
+
+Some quiet order Jim then gave and slowly for the second time the lift
+sank down toward the dark abyss under the earth. For Ruth had made no
+other sound or protest, only keeping tight hold on Frieda's and Jean's
+hands. Olive had gone with Jack and Frank Kent in the direction of the
+Rainbow Lodge.
+
+To the watchers at the pit opening after the elevator had landed the
+second time there was a moment when they believed that they could hear
+voices below. Then the waiting seemed interminable. In point of fact
+only a few moments more had passed before the signal indicated that the
+car must be drawn up again.
+
+And this time it was Jean Bruce who covered her eyes with her hands.
+
+There was a grinding of the cables and then an unmistakable groan, so
+it was not only the faces of the women that blanched whiter. Many of
+these miners were middle-aged men who had been in mining disasters where
+many hundreds of lives were at stake. Now, since no further disturbance
+had followed the first brief explosion, they realized that only the
+three men who had first gone down into the pit had been injured. Yet it
+was nerve-racking not to be able to foretell whether these three men
+would be brought up alive or dead.
+
+Jim Colter and one of his helpers were standing upright in the car and
+Jim held in his arms a limp, crumpled figure, unconscious, his blue
+overalls charred and blackened, his absurd old hat quite gone. Indeed,
+the grave and learned professor of ancient languages looked like a
+broken slip of a boy in the big man's keeping.
+
+There on the floor of the car another figure was resting. The face was
+upturned to the light and though the eyes were closed the expression of
+the mouth showed that the man had not fainted but was suffering great
+pain.
+
+Frieda touched Jean Bruce on the arm.
+
+"It is not Ralph, but the new foreman who seems to be very badly hurt,"
+she whispered. "Look, the other men are carrying him off. I can't tell
+about Ralph's friend, Mr. Russell. But where is Ralph? Why hasn't he
+come up with the others?"
+
+And this last question of Frieda's was being echoed in the minds of the
+waiting woman and girl.
+
+Why had Jim brought up two of the wounded men and left the third, their
+oldest friend, still in the depth of Rainbow Mine? It was impossible not
+to believe that Jim had done this because these men were not too badly
+injured to be helped.
+
+For he had now placed his burden on the ground and was examining the
+young man with the skill and care of a surgeon, while some one else
+bathed the face. A stretcher had been secured for the foreman who was
+now being taken to his own quarters to await the coming of a surgeon.
+
+"Jim," Ruth Colter put her hand on her husband's shoulder and her face
+was almost as white and strained as it had been during her last speech
+with him, "the elevator is going down again and you are not going with
+it. Tell us, please, what has happened to Ralph?"
+
+Without waiting to hear her guardian's answer Frieda suddenly burst
+into tears. Of course she had been dreadfully unnerved by the recent
+accident and now this uncertainty about their friend, besides the sight
+of their new acquaintance stretched out there at her feet as though he
+were dead when the last time she had seen him he had been eating his
+dinner, was more than she could bear.
+
+"Ralph? Great Scott, I am a brute, Ruth, Jean, Frieda!" Jim Colter
+exclaimed. "Why didn't I tell you at once? Ralph isn't badly hurt at
+all; he is bruised and burnt and shaken up, but nothing more, so far as
+I could tell. So of course he insisted that we bring up the two other
+fellows first. It's a plain miracle that there's anything left of the
+three of them. So far as I could understand somebody had fixed a bomb
+down at the end of the pit shaft, but the thing was clumsily made and
+only half went off. Ralph said they were blown about a good deal and the
+atmosphere was pretty thick, but unless the new foreman has been injured
+internally there was no great harm done. I think this young man has
+nothing more serious the matter with him than a broken leg. And I expect
+we shall be able to mend that for him at Rainbow Lodge."
+
+At these words Henry Russell opened his eyes, but whether because of
+Jim's suggestion or the pain he was enduring, or whether because the
+sight of the girls, he groaned aloud and then closed his lips again.
+
+"I don't think he wants to be taken to the Lodge," Frieda suggested
+mournfully. "You see he wants us to think he has gone away."
+
+Then possibly because Ruth's and Jim's nerves had both been strained
+almost past endurance for the past half hour they laughed aloud at
+Frieda's speech.
+
+Jean had slipped away and it was her white and yet happy face that Ralph
+Merrit saw first as he came back into the world of daylight again.
+There, though he was staggering and nearly blind and covered with blood
+and grime from the shock he had just received, he found Jean's hands
+before any others and held them close for a moment while she murmured:
+
+"I am so glad, so glad; it is because you have some big work to do in
+the world that you have been saved, I am sure, Ralph."
+
+A moment later Ralph was quietly accepting the congratulations of his
+workmen, while he tried to explain to them just how the explosion had
+taken place. That the bomb had been placed down the shaft by one of the
+former miners there could be no shadow of doubt.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+AN UNFORTUNATE DISCUSSION
+
+
+"BUT why won't either Jean or Frieda come with us?" Olive asked a week
+after the unfortunate accident at the Rainbow Mine. With a surprise that
+she did not pretend to hide Jack Ralston turned to look at her friend.
+
+"I thought I had explained to you, dear," she protested, "that Jean said
+she felt it her duty to write a long letter of sympathy to the Princess
+Colonna. You see she only heard yesterday of the death of the old Prince
+and though she does not feel that the Princess will be exactly
+inconsolable (he was so much older and they thought so differently about
+many things), yet of course Jean has to say that she is dreadfully sorry
+and is there anything she can do and all that. It would not surprise me
+in the least if the Princess came west and made us a visit. I told Jean
+to invite her. She was born in this part of the country and I rather
+think she will be glad to get away from Rome while she is in heavy
+mourning. It is a pity she did not have a son, isn't it? The title will
+have to go to her husband's nephew, Giovanni Colonna. You remember he
+and Jean were such good friends."
+
+But although the two girls were walking along side by side toward the
+stables back of the Rainbow Lodge, it was plain that Olive Van Mater was
+not listening with any real interest to what her companion was saying.
+
+"Then why won't Frieda ride with us?" she expostulated. "I am sure it
+has been ages since we four girls had a long ride together and it is a
+wonderfully beautiful morning. What has become of Frieda lately
+anyhow--I almost never see her except at meal times?"
+
+With a laugh Jack Ralston laid her arm lightly across her friend's
+shoulder.
+
+"Poor Olive, to have only my poor society! But, dear, we have not had
+but one other ride together, the one that we took to the Indian village
+soon after your arrival. Does it bore you so dreadfully to have only me
+as a companion? You must not come with me then, simply because I asked
+you. I can get one of the boys to ride over the ranch with me; perhaps
+Carlos would be willing to do that much! I don't know what has happened
+to Frieda, but the child is making a perfect martyr of herself. That
+poor young Professor seems not to wish anyone to do things for him
+except Frieda or Ruth. You know he perfectly hates the sight of the rest
+of us. And as Ruth is so busy with Jimmikins and the house she can't
+nurse him a great deal. So he just lies in his room, which is Frieda's
+by the way, and moans and groans until Frieda comes to amuse him. What
+do you think I beheld our baby doing the other day? Reading him some
+dreadful article on Egyptian Hieroglyphics from a learned magazine. She
+hadn't the faintest idea what it was all about and she looked like a big
+yellow butterfly imprisoned in a dark place. I am sure I am awfully
+sorry the erudite young professor had to break his right leg in the
+depth of Rainbow Mine and that we have him on our hands for six weeks or
+more--almost as sorry as he is I expect. Still I am not going to have
+Frieda sacrificing herself to him much longer. I mean to tell her
+tomorrow that it is quite unnecessary. He is a dreadfully spoiled
+person."
+
+"But wouldn't Frank have enjoyed this long ride with you this morning,
+Jack?" Olive repeated, still refusing to take any interest in what Jack
+was saying, but instead clinging obstinately to her own train of
+thought. "I am sure Jim would have let Frank off from the trip with him
+if he had known that you had to take this long ride to hunt up the lost
+mares and colts."
+
+Jack nodded, but her expression was hurt and puzzled. "Of course Jim
+would have let Frank come with me or would have come himself if he had
+known of the trouble. But both Jim and Frank were away before I heard of
+the loss. Besides, it does not make any difference, for I am sure I have
+ridden over Rainbow Ranch looking up our lost horses and cattle ever
+since I was fourteen or fifteen years old. But if you think the ride may
+be too long for you, please don't come, Olive. I shan't be in the least
+hurt if you don't feel like it. Kiss me good-by and go back to the
+Lodge. Ruth will be overjoyed at your return and I'll be perfectly all
+right with Carlos."
+
+But although Jack Ralston spoke so cheerfully and in such good temper
+she was not truthful in pretending that Olive's present attitude was not
+hurting her feelings. The truth is that she felt that Olive had not
+been exactly the same toward her since Frank Kent's arrival. And if Jack
+had needed any further proof to add to her past conviction this was
+sufficient. Always before, Olive had loved her better than any one else,
+even more than she did her friend, Miss Winthrop. And Jack was certain
+that she had done nothing to make Olive angry or to wound her--she
+herself was so utterly unchanged in her own affection.
+
+What a hopeless, horrid puzzle it all was and of all persons was not
+Jacqueline Ralston the most inadequate for straightening it out? She had
+no methods but those of frankness. If only she dared ask Olive how she
+actually felt.
+
+But Olive would hardly have been able to explain to her, because in
+these last few weeks the girl had not understood herself. Before Frank
+Kent's coming to the Rainbow Lodge she had been sure of having entirely
+recovered from her past fancy for him. Had she not fought it all out in
+those final weeks in England when she had realized the extent of Frank's
+devotion to Jack and the impossibility of her own position? And
+now--well, whatever turn events might take, Olive felt the fault would
+be largely Jacqueline's. For why did Jack fail to return Frank's
+affection? Why did she continue to treat him with such disregard and yet
+keep him lingering on at the ranch? Really Olive wondered if her own
+emotion was not now one more of sympathy for Frank and impatience with
+Jack. Surely Frank was too fine a fellow from every point of view to be
+trifled with. And no one would ever have suspected Jack of being a girl
+of such a character.
+
+Olive again looked closely into her friend's face and what she saw there
+for the moment disarmed her. Of course she was more angry with Jack than
+she had ever dreamed it possible that she could be and yet she had not
+meant to wound her over this small question of their having another ride
+together to search for lost stock. Perhaps this very morning Jack might
+be in a humor to confide in her the cause of her mysterious conduct. She
+must have some vital reason, it was so unlike her to be cruel or not to
+know her own mind.
+
+"Of course I won't go back to the Lodge," Olive finally protested. "For
+I do wish the ride immensely; it was only that I thought it might be a
+pleasure for the others too."
+
+And to this half-hearted apology the other girl made no reply.
+
+A few moments later, having arrived at the beautiful new stables built
+within the past year at the Rainbow Ranch, Jack and Olive found their
+two horses already saddled. And a little while after, finding the Indian
+boy, Carlos, at his own tent door, the three of them mounted and rode
+away.
+
+Now riding with Jacqueline Ralston over their great thousand-acre
+Wyoming ranch to seek for cattle or horses that had gone astray was apt
+to be fairly strenuous, and no one unaccustomed to riding should ever
+have thought of attempting it. Yet Olive had done the same thing dozens
+of times in the years when she had first came to live at Rainbow Ranch,
+and on starting out this morning had no idea of growing tired before her
+friend did.
+
+The first part of their trip was easy enough, for although Jack cantered
+along fairly rapidly she made no detours, only keeping a careful lookout
+in all possible directions. For she had no thought of finding the lost
+mares and their young colts anywhere within the immediate neighborhood
+of that part of the ranch which was apt to be ridden over oftener than
+the more distant fields. And Carlos had been asked to make the few
+necessary excursions whenever a rise in the landscape or a group of
+trees or rocks made a possible hiding place.
+
+But a short time before midday the three riders came to a distant part
+of Rainbow Creek, where the character of the ranch land changed and
+where there were frequent hummocks and sand hills and great boulders
+split into natural caves and canyons. This part of the creek had no
+connection with the Rainbow Mine but was sometimes used in an emergency
+as a drinking place for the stock, although the stock was not supposed
+to wander here without guidance, as there were many ravines and
+dangerous places where especially the young cattle or colts were apt to
+be injured.
+
+Here the riding under Jacqueline's guidance became more difficult and
+fatiguing. For not only did she leave the ordinary beaten trail, but she
+made her horse pick his way along what appeared an utterly impossible
+track over rocks, in the deep loose sand, now following a partly dry
+creek bed and occasionally splashing through water so deep that it
+reached almost to her riding boots. For another hour Olive followed,
+not realizing her own exhaustion, but wondering why her breath should be
+coming in such short gasps and why her back should ache in such an
+unaccountable fashion.
+
+Curiously enough it was Carlos who first discovered Olive's predicament.
+For the past ten minutes he had been riding as close by her side as was
+possible under the conditions, not speaking a single word, but examining
+her closely with his small, burning black eyes. And when Olive, without
+being conscious of it, turned a shade whiter, even then he did not speak
+to her but instead rode silently forward until he was opposite Jack.
+
+"All women have not the strength of men!" he began sullenly. The girl
+stared at him in amazement, not guessing what he meant.
+
+Then Carlos grew angry and his words came faster than usual. "If you
+think more of lost animals than of her whom you call friend, it is well
+that you should go on until she falls. Have I not often heard and now
+see with my own eyes that there are squaws who care nothing for their
+own sex."
+
+Half rising in her saddle Jacqueline Ralston lifted her riding whip, and
+almost before realizing what she was doing she had struck the Indian boy
+sharply across his lean shoulders.
+
+"You are not to speak of American women as squaws, Carlos. How often
+have Mr. Colter and I told you that you were never to do it? And,
+moreover, you are to understand that I will not endure your
+impertinence. What has happened to put you in so evil a mood?" Jack
+asked more quietly now, sorry for her own loss of temper. For she
+realized in a small measure just how keenly an Indian feels the
+degradation of a blow from an enemy, unless he is able to return it with
+increased vengeance. And Jack had no illusion about Carlos' attitude
+toward her. He had turned a kind of ashy white under his bronze skin and
+his body had quivered once and then become perfectly tense, not from the
+force of the blow, which had not cut deeply, but from his own passion.
+
+However, before either the boy or Jack could speak again, Olive had
+ridden up between them, grieved and frightened over her friend's action
+and wondering what could have occurred between them in so short a time.
+
+"Jack dear, what has Carlos done or said?" she demanded quickly. "It
+was not fair of you to strike him, knowing that he could make no
+defense."
+
+Instantly Jacqueline Ralston felt her face flushing with a swift rushing
+of hot blood to her cheeks until her temples pounded and her eyes
+flashed. Never before in their entire acquaintance had she remembered
+being really angry with Olive. Yet had she not borne a good deal already
+that day and for several weeks beforehand in Olive's indifference and
+critical air toward her? Now in this trouble she had just had with
+Carlos, Olive was immediately taking the Indian boy's part without even
+asking her for an explanation. Nevertheless a second glance at her
+friend's face made her instantly control her own emotion, appreciating
+at the same time what Carlos' impertinent speech to her had meant.
+
+"You are tired, Olive. I am so sorry," she replied at once, instead of
+answering the other girl's question. "I did not realize how hard we had
+been riding, or that you are out of practice after a year in New York
+while the rest of us were here at the ranch. We'll have luncheon and
+rest and then maybe you'll feel better."
+
+Jack nodded curtly to Carlos to assist Olive in dismounting while she
+slid off her own horse without help. Then she put her arm about the
+other girl, leaving the boy to lead the three horses. In a little while
+she and Olive had found a flat rock shadowed by a cliff from the sun.
+Here Olive sat down while Jack opened up their luncheon boxes and made
+the necessary preparations. But all the time she was reflecting upon
+what she had best do or say to the Indian boy. She was sorry that she
+had struck him, although still extremely angry at his manner and speech
+to her. If Carlos had felt worried over Olive's exhaustion it would have
+been simple enough to have told her in a more polite fashion. The truth
+was that she and Jim were both getting extremely tired of the Indian
+boy's presence on Rainbow Ranch. She would talk over this incident today
+with her guardian and ask him if he felt that she owed Carlos an
+apology. If he did she would make whatever reparation she could and
+after that they would try and find another home for him. But at present
+she was still too annoyed to wish to have the boy near her.
+
+"You can find water for our horses and tie them somewhere not far away,
+Carlos," Jack ordered, leaving Olive and walking a few yards across the
+sand to where the boy stood, still sullen and resentful in his manner.
+"Then ride on for another half hour and see if you can find any of the
+lost mares or colts. When you return we will have lunch saved for you."
+
+And so Jack Ralston temporarily dismissed the difficulty confronting
+her. For in any case it was disagreeable to have Carlos staring at them
+while she and Olive ate, and she did not wish him as a companion at
+their luncheon.
+
+Carlos' society could hardly have increased the discomfort of their
+meal. For Olive was either too weary or too vexed to wish to talk, and
+Jack in too strange a tumult of feeling.
+
+Then suddenly, as the two girls were sitting there together in the warm,
+caressing sunshine, hardly more than a few feet apart and yet sundered
+by leagues of misunderstanding, it seemed to Jacqueline that she could
+no longer endure all that she was suffering for her friend, unless Olive
+made some sign that her sacrifice was worth while. For Jack made no
+effort to hide from herself, however much she concealed it from other
+people, that each day of her life she was learning to care more and more
+for Frank Kent, for his love and his complete understanding and sympathy
+with her temperament. She knew that she had many faults, but she also
+knew that Frank was aware of them and forgave them. However, there was
+one fault that she did not have and it was not fair that she should bear
+the ignominy of it. She would no longer hurt and confuse the man she
+cared for by her apparent inability to make up her mind.
+
+Jack's full red lips closed more tightly than was usual to them as she
+lifted her head, showing the firm line of her throat and chin. Then she
+took a deep breath, straightening her shoulders and glancing with her
+wide open, heavily fringed gray eyes directly into the eyes of her
+friend.
+
+Olive was more rested, was less pale, but was evidently still as much
+estranged from her. And though the conviction had come upon her
+suddenly, Jack felt convinced that this was the appointed moment when
+she must wrest the truth from the other girl. She hated herself for her
+own stupidity in not finding out by more subtle means and scarcely knew
+now what she intended to do or say. It was as if she stood on the bank
+of an icy stream with the shore of truth on the other side, a shore
+which by some method she must reach. Therefore, with Jacqueline
+Ralston's disposition, there appeared but one means. Boldly she must
+plunge in, no matter what the result.
+
+"Olive dear," Jack began abruptly, not looking at her friend, but at a
+small smoke-colored cloud over in the western sky, "I know you are angry
+with me about Carlos and I am sorry. He was impertinent, but I don't
+suppose you would think that justifies what I did. But it is not about
+what happened just now that I want to talk. You have not felt like you
+once did for me for several weeks--not since Frank Kent came to the
+Lodge. Would you mind telling me why?"
+
+To Jack's directness of thought and speech her friend by this time
+should have grown accustomed. And indeed until now Olive had always
+loved and admired Jack for it. But today she was tired and her head
+ached and this unexpected question had taken her completely by surprise.
+The girl's dark cheeks flushed richly and her ordinarily gentle
+expression changed.
+
+"Jack, you are absurd!" she answered irritably. "What right have you
+anyhow to consider that my feeling for you has any connection with Frank
+Kent? What does Frank mean to me?"
+
+Now if only Jack had been content with this answer or had possessed some
+of Jean Bruce's tact and resourcefulness! She had neither. So her gray
+eyes darkened and her face grew white and unhappy.
+
+"Forgive me, Olive," she murmured, humbly enough for proud,
+high-tempered Jack, "but that is what I, oh, so much want you to tell
+me. For sometimes I have thought that perhaps you do like Frank just a
+little bit more than an ordinary friend. And if it is true, dear, don't
+you feel that we have been close enough to each other to have you make
+me your confidant?"
+
+It was very gently put, after all, and therefore Olive should not have
+been so wounded or so angry. However, and perhaps because there was so
+much of truth in the other girl's suggestion, Olive was both hurt and
+embittered.
+
+"You have not the shadow of a right, Jacqueline Ralston, to say a thing
+like that to me," she returned with the passion and protest of a too
+sensitive nature. "How dare you sit there and calmly suggest to me that
+I am in love with Frank Kent when you know perfectly well that he cares
+for no one in this world but you. Do you suppose that I have no pride
+and no self-respect?"
+
+And then, dropping her head in her hands, Olive began crying, hardly
+understanding her own tears, so much were they a combination of pain and
+of petulance. For the questions she had just put to Jack were the very
+ones that she had so often asked herself. And if she had found no answer
+to them, how could any one else?
+
+But Jack did not attempt making a reply. For a moment she was silent,
+feeling miserably conscious of the failure she had just made. For had
+she not merely succeeded in mortifying her friend without arriving one
+bit nearer the truth which she sought?
+
+But by and by Jack laid her hand caressingly on the other girl's dark
+hair. "Don't cry, Olive please," she begged. "You know what a stupid
+person I am and how often Jean and Frieda think I do and say the wrong
+thing. Here comes Carlos and when he has eaten his lunch you must let
+him take you back to the Lodge. You are too tired to ride any farther
+and I can manage very well by myself, or else you can send one of the
+stable boys this way to find me."
+
+Without making a reply Olive continued to sob, only now a little more
+quietly, and in the meanwhile allowing Jack to make all the arrangements
+for her return home. It was unfortunate perhaps that she also paid so
+little attention to the Indian boy, who was sitting within a few yards
+of her, pretending to eat. In reality he was either keeping his eyes
+fixed moodily upon her, or else turning them upon Jacqueline Ralston
+with such an intensity of dislike that had she been aware of it, she
+must have been vaguely disturbed.
+
+A little later Olive and Carlos started home together. In farewell Olive
+simply nodded her head to Jack, showing no other sign of forgiveness or
+affection; but she had only ridden for a comparatively short distance
+when she was as bitterly sorry and as ashamed of herself as Jack had
+previously been, and at the moment would have liked to turn back. She
+realized that she had been both unreasonable and unkind. What could
+have been the matter with her? Surely her fatigue must have had
+something to do with it, for people were rarely sensible when
+over-tired. Jack had not intended breaking down the barrier of her
+reserve for no reason but idle curiosity.
+
+Then suddenly Olive's hands tightened on her bridle reins and her black
+eyes softened. How unutterably blind she had been for so long! For was
+not Jack's recent question to her the keynote of the whole puzzling
+situation? Jack certainly must fear that she cared more for Frank than
+she should. Would this not perfectly explain her attitude toward him
+since the beginning of his love-making? Olive quickly recalled the final
+weeks of their visit in England, then Jack's repeated efforts to thrust
+her into Frank's society and so to evade him herself! Then since Jack
+Ralston's return to the ranch had she not resolutely refused to let
+Frank Kent come to see her until Olive was also at the Lodge?
+
+Sudden and relieving tears rolled down the girl's hot cheeks, which she
+did not for the moment attempt wiping away. How like her quixotic Jack
+to refuse to accept her own happiness at the price of her friend's! And
+how near she, Olive, had come to permitting Jack to sacrifice all three
+of them to her mistaken sense of loyalty and love!
+
+Well, tonight Olive intended straightening everything out by answering
+the inquiry to which she had refused to reply to before. For in the
+light of her present revelation had she not at last felt a weight
+lifting itself from her own heart and a clear vision come to her mind?
+Let her measure her affection for Frank Kent by that which she felt for
+Jacqueline. Why she loved Jack a hundred times better than she ever
+could Frank! Jack had been her first friend: all that she was she really
+owed to her. If only she did not have to wait an hour longer before
+making three persons happier than they had been in many weeks!
+
+Half-way around Olive turned her pony's head. But no, she was too tired
+to go back to Jack and besides they could have no intimate conversation
+under the present circumstances. Moreover, it had been growing much
+warmer in this last half hour, in spite of the fact that every once and
+a while there were unexpected gusts of wind blowing the sand into her
+own eyes and her mare's. The truth was that she should never have
+consented to leaving Jack. She should have insisted on her going home at
+the same time with them. Ruth and Jim Colter would both be annoyed at
+the idea of Jack's riding about the ranch alone, and any one of the men
+whom she might send back to look for her would probably be several hours
+in searching and perhaps never discover her at all.
+
+For the first time in half an hour Olive Van Mater glanced across at the
+boy, Carlos. He had not spoken a dozen words to her in the course of
+their trip, so how could she dream that all this while he had been
+turning over and over in his mind the bitterness of Jack's insult? Then
+not only was his animosity a personal one, but on coming back from the
+needless errand upon which he had been driven away, had he not found his
+one time Princess in tears and such sorrow that she had not yet ceased
+from grieving? Her trouble could have but one source. Perhaps Miss
+Ralston had even dared wound her in the same way that she had him! And
+then Carlos had clenched his teeth, continuing more rigid and doggedly
+quiet than before. For of course he should soon be revenged for both of
+them! The only thing was to wait until his opportunity came.
+
+"Carlos," Olive said unexpectedly. "I am almost back at the Lodge now
+and will have no difficulty in going the rest of the way alone. But I
+wish you would go and find Miss Ralston. Tell her please to come home at
+once, that I want to speak to her about something most important. And I
+think you had better hurry, for I am a little bit afraid that a storm is
+coming up."
+
+Possibly Olive had expected a demur. If so she was mistaken, for without
+replying the boy wheeled his horse and started back in the direction
+from which they had just come.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A DESERT STORM
+
+
+PERHAPS no one except an Indian could have found Jack so swiftly, and
+yet Carlos was engaged in the search for her over an hour. For the girl
+had gone some distance beyond the place of their last meeting and still
+had found no trace of their lost stock.
+
+She was vexed for a moment at Carlos' reappearance, but gave no sign.
+Indeed she managed to say "Thank you" when he briefly explained that he
+had taken Olive near enough home to have her make the rest of the
+journey without an escort and then that she had sent him back to
+continue the hunt. Not a suggestion did he give of Olive's real message
+for Jack to return home immediately.
+
+A girl with Jacqueline Ralston's knowledge and experience of western
+life should have required no such message had she taken her usual normal
+interest in her surroundings. For there was a sufficient forewarning of
+what was approaching for her to have understood. Nevertheless, for once
+in her life Jack was almost completely oblivious of the landscape and of
+the conditions of the sky and atmosphere. For her conversation with
+Olive had made her more unhappy and puzzled than she had previously
+been, since she had surely succeeded only in making the tangle harder
+for any one of them to unravel.
+
+Now and then, as she continued her ride beyond the end of the Rainbow
+Creek and into the broader sweep of their prairie lands, the girl almost
+forgot the original object of her day's excursion, only feeling that
+more than anything she desired to be outdoors and alone. So that instead
+of leading the way as she had done in the morning she now allowed the
+boy Carlos to take his own trail, following without much thought close
+behind.
+
+By far the larger portion of the broad area of the Ralston ranch was
+cultivated land, to the extent that the fields beyond the Lodge were
+most of them planted with alfalfa grass and other grains according to
+their fertility. Occasionally there were barren spaces of land where the
+sands from the desert had settled too deeply for any growing thing, and
+as these were at the outermost edges of the ranch Jim Colter had left
+them undisturbed, waiting for a time when there should be less work
+nearer home.
+
+Therefore when Jack suddenly discovered her horse ploughing heavily
+through one of these sandy stretches she realized that they were farther
+away from Rainbow Lodge than she had appreciated. And certainly it was
+now time to turn back. She was afraid that she could hardly manage to
+arrive at home before dinner time and that would mean a scolding from
+Jim, who would hardly consider the rescue of a few lost mares and colts
+a sufficient excuse for making the rest of them uncomfortable and
+uneasy.
+
+Jack smiled a little ruefully, checking her horse and allowing him a few
+moments of rest. She had not even that good excuse to take home with
+her, for she had not seen a trace of the stray stock and had really
+scarcely looked for them since luncheon. But then Carlos must have been
+more attentive--she was really surprised at the boy's apparent interest
+since he rejoined her. He had taken the entire initiative. Even now he
+was some distance ahead and going too fast for his horse's strength in
+such difficult ground.
+
+"Carlos, Carlos," the girl called as loudly as possible. Then she
+patted Romeo's neck with swift penitence. Ordinarily she was quick to
+remember the comfort of her own mount, but today she had been most
+extraordinarily selfish. However, it was odd that in spite of his long
+day's travel her horse did not seem to wish to stand still even for a
+moment. He kept pawing the earth, sniffing and turning half way round in
+his eagerness to start for home.
+
+The mystery needed only a little time for solving. All afternoon in a
+subconscious fashion Jack had realized that the air was unpleasantly hot
+and stifling and that the sun had not been shining since luncheon. The
+little cloud which she had first noticed in the west, a queer
+funnel-shaped cloud, had been constantly growing larger. Of course it
+meant a storm, but it was still far enough away not to be immediately
+alarming. However, they must get home as soon as possible, and Carlos
+evidently had not heard her cry.
+
+Twice again Jack shouted his name, but as he did not turn his head she
+touched her pony lightly with her riding whip and rode after him. She
+regretted now that she had allowed the boy to get so far ahead of her,
+for her own few minutes' delay had naturally increased the distance
+between them. Yet Jack did not feel that it would be fair for her to
+turn back without informing her companion. It seemed almost cruel to
+force her jaded horse at such a pace through the loose sands; yet how
+else could she ever hope to catch up with her escort? Carlos did not
+usually show such poor judgment with his own steed.
+
+Then finally it occurred to the girl that the Indian boy was refusing
+deliberately to answer her as a punishment for their trouble earlier in
+the day. If this were true she was foolish to waste any more time and
+energy in pursuit of him. She could get back home alone long before
+bedtime by allowing her horse to walk for a part of the way. Then if the
+storm should overtake her, she would not be far enough from the Lodge to
+have it make any serious difference. As for her scolding, well, Jack
+felt that she would have to accept that as philosophically as possible
+under the circumstances. For Jim would have a double grievance, since he
+did not like any one of them to ride for any distance with only Carlos
+as a companion.
+
+Shrugging her shoulders, too tired really to be angry again that day,
+Jack called once more. This time, to her surprise, Carlos actually rose
+in his saddle, pointing with evident excitement toward some
+indeterminate objects at a little distance off. Jack could not see what
+they were, although she guessed at once. After all, their hard day's
+work had not been in vain! Carlos had assuredly discovered the lost
+stock. True they must have wandered beyond the confines of the Rainbow
+ranch, since Jack was familiar enough with their own boundary line to
+know that Carlos was even at this instant passing beyond the wire fence
+which circumscribed it.
+
+Their stock oftentimes got outside the ranch by mysterious methods of
+their own. Therefore if Carlos believed that he saw the mares they had
+been searching for the entire day, it would be foolish to turn back
+without them. It was unfortunate that the heavy cloud in the west seemed
+to be driving toward them with so much greater speed in these last
+fifteen minutes. Still if it should reach their vicinity before they
+could get the lost mares and colts into some kind of shelter the animals
+must perish. For the mares would never desert their young and the colts
+could never endure the force of the wind and the great blankets of sand
+that would probably sweep over and cover them.
+
+Jack was not mistaken in one point of view. She knew, as only a
+Westerner could, that the storm approaching was not rain, but wind, and
+that it might mean a sand storm in the desert.
+
+A saner judgment however would have suggested that Jacqueline Ralston
+start back home at once, leaving Carlos to follow her. But she
+appreciated the tremendous difficulty that the boy would have in
+rounding up the frightened animals alone and forcing them into some
+place of refuge. Really, it never occurred to Jack not to help. She had
+been so accustomed to just such work on the ranch from the time she was
+a small girl.
+
+So on she rode now, straight after the Indian boy, perhaps for an eighth
+of a mile or more beyond their boundary, yet still the loose thick sands
+which were whirling and eddying in gusts at her horse's feet.
+
+And always Carlos kept as far as possible ahead.
+
+Jack finally came to a position where she found out the mistake which
+she believed both she and the Indian boy had innocently made. The dark
+objects ahead of them had been only a group of close growing sage bushes
+that they had mistaken for the lost stock. Crying out once more to the
+boy to turn back, Jack now made no pretense of waiting to discover
+whether or not he heeded her. For the wind was blowing more fiercely,
+bringing with it the heat of a sirocco, and the sand was pouring into
+her eyes and ears, almost blinding and choking her. Beyond her there
+were small sand hills and ravines where a few moments before the earth
+had lain smooth as a carpet.
+
+Jack perfectly understood that the full fury of the storm had not yet
+reached her vicinity. Her effort must be to get beyond the sand plains,
+back if possible to the neighborhood of Rainbow Creek, where behind one
+of its great rocks she might find partial shelter.
+
+But her heart was pounding uncomfortably and her fair skin felt as
+though it were being pricked by innumerable needles. Moreover, Jack was
+frightened. She knew just what a sandstorm meant on the western
+prairies. She was not far from the edge of a portion of barren lands
+that formed a kind of miniature desert, and the worst of the situation
+was that she herself was very tired and that through her own selfish
+forgetfulness her horse was even more so. Every foot of the way the girl
+strove to encourage the exhausted animal. Yet it was impossible to make
+real headway in such a soil while buffeted by such a gale.
+
+Then Jacqueline Ralston heard a strange noise and, as she had heard it
+once before in her life, she must have recognized it had not her other
+senses also added their warning.
+
+The roar and rush behind her were seldom equalled by any other kind of
+tempest.
+
+For half an instant rising in her saddle the girl glanced back. Carlos
+was not far off now and spurring his horse remorselessly.
+
+For beyond the boy at no great distance and driving rapidly forward was
+an immense dark yellow cloud. The peculiarity of this cloud was not
+merely in its color, size and shape, but that instead of being overhead
+it almost touched the surface of the land.
+
+The girl slid off her horse.
+
+"Down, down," she said quietly, pulling hard on her bridle. And then as
+her horse's knees touched the ground before him, Jack flung herself face
+downward, clutching at the loose earth for endurance and strength.
+
+The cloud would be upon them in another moment with terrible
+destructive force. For not alone did it represent the fury of the wind,
+but was formed of a mountain of sand driven before it.
+
+A sound, which the girl guessed must have come from Carlos, suggested
+that he was following her example. Yet she dared not look back to see.
+Now the sand storm was upon them.
+
+The thunder and terror of it are past understanding.
+
+One chance only Jack believed they had for their lives. If the sand
+cloud was sufficiently high above the earth not to touch them they would
+be safe. Otherwise they would be driven before it like chips of straw.
+But of any actual, conscious sensation which she suffered as the cloud
+passed over her, Jack was not aware. She knew that she was praying the
+instant before, but at the time itself she only clung the closer and
+sank deeper down into the earth, which is the final refuge of us all.
+
+The moment following, however, the girl felt as if she had been bruised
+and beaten by a thousand furies. Her body ached with fatigue, her tongue
+felt scorched and swollen and her eyes smarted with intense pain. There
+was no further danger; storms of this character come with one terrible
+driving blast of wind and then go straight on in their course.
+
+Jack blinked and stirred sufficiently to turn over and see that her
+horse was safe. As well as its master a western broncho understands how
+to meet strange weather conditions that would bring destruction to any
+other animal.
+
+With a sigh of thankfulness the girl then stretched herself more
+comfortably along the ground, resting one elbow in the sand and leaning
+her head upon it. For Carlos and his pony were equally safe and
+evidently not so frightened as she was, for the boy was already
+staggering toward her dragging his horse by the bridle.
+
+The girl was not yet able to speak. Yet she watched Carlos with
+indifference and entirely without suspicion as he came to within a few
+feet of her and reaching downward pulled her horse on to his feet again.
+
+The horse staggered and Jack had half an inclination to ask the boy to
+wait a little while before forcing him to stand. However she did not
+seem to have strength enough even to make this protest. Nor did she
+speak at first when she saw Carlos leading the two horses away from the
+place where she was resting.
+
+What on earth did the boy have in mind to do? It was useless to try to
+brush the sand from the horse's coats and there was no water near enough
+to give them each a drink.
+
+Jack frowned, then she not only sat up but rose quickly on her feet. For
+Carlos had mounted his own pony and without a word to her was riding
+away, taking her horse with him. The girl called, but again the Indian
+boy was afflicted with the curious deafness that had affected him all
+afternoon. Then Jack ran after him, stumbling and crying as she ran. But
+she was far too exhausted to make much headway and still Carlos would
+not glance around. He was not even going in the direction of the Rainbow
+Ranch.
+
+Just how long her futile chase actually continued Jacqueline Ralston did
+not realize. So long as she could manage to keep the boy in sight she
+followed him, floundering in the sands and uncertain of her direction.
+However, when he was so far away that she could no longer see him, Jack
+sat down again. What annoying freak had possessed Carlos to ride off
+with her horse without offering any explanation? Well, he would
+doubtless return within a short time, so there was nothing to do except
+wait.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+OLIVE'S REMORSE
+
+
+BACK at the Lodge Olive undressed and lay down upon the bed for a short
+rest. Afterwards, when she felt that Jack must surely have received her
+message she rose and put on the lavender frock that was the other girl's
+especial favorite.
+
+Olive was by this time no longer tired, but in better spirits than she
+had been for several weeks. For in less than an hour, perhaps, things
+would be entirely cleared up between herself and her best friend.
+
+"Dear old Jack, was there ever anyone else in the world quite so
+generous or so absurd? Did Jack really think that she had the privilege
+of bestowing her lover upon her friend, simply because she was under the
+impression that the friend desired him? What would Frank have had to say
+in the matter?"
+
+Then Olive blushed. Possibly after all she had been more absurd in
+allowing herself even for an hour or a day to think that she cared for
+a man as far beyond her reach as the moon. Let her be honest with
+herself at least! Had she not actually shed tears in secret? And this
+when from the very beginning of their acquaintance, Frank Kent had
+always been her only loyal and devoted friend and nothing else. Well,
+matters would soon be sensibly adjusted.
+
+In the living room Olive found Ruth and Jean sewing, but in reality
+devoting by far the greater portion of their time to admiring the baby,
+who from inside his crib was placidly surveying the world with the
+dignity of a philosopher.
+
+"Where is Jack, Olive?" Ruth inquired at once, frowning and glancing
+toward an open window. "It is so hot I am afraid we are going to have a
+storm and I have been reproaching myself all day for letting you girls
+start out on such a wild goose chase this morning. Why on earth did Jack
+not send the men after the stock?"
+
+Jean looked up from her work. "Oh, don't worry about Jack, she has been
+doing this kind of thing ever since she could walk or ride and she began
+both at about the same time. I believe Jack did send one of the cowboys
+off in one direction while she and Olive and Carlos took the other. But
+you know most of the men have gone with Jim and Frank to a round-up a
+good many miles off. I wonder if they will be back in time for dinner?"
+
+During this speech the door of the living room had slowly opened and
+Frieda in a white muslin frock with a big book under her arm had quietly
+entered. Her cheeks were flushed and her expression so uncommonly
+serious, that remembering Jack's story of her younger sister's devotion
+to the Professor, Olive smiled.
+
+However, Frieda's first remark was an odd one.
+
+"I am sorry if you have left Jack and Carlos together, Olive," she
+began, puckering her white brow. "I don't believe any one in this family
+realizes how Carlos hates Jack. I think if he could he would like to do
+her an injury. You see she tries to boss him and he perfectly loathes
+having any one dare interfere with him. Then Carlos is so lazy and Jack
+has no use for any one who is lazy, except me. I wish she would come
+home. If I had not promised Mr. Russell to go on reading to him I should
+go out and look for her."
+
+Frieda walked over to the front window and the next moment Ruth had
+joined her. They both stood staring ahead of them hoping for a sight of
+the familiar brown figure on horseback. For Jack usually rode up to the
+house with such a splendid rush toward the end that even under ordinary
+circumstances a vision of her was worth while.
+
+"Don't be tiresome, Baby, and frighten Ruth," Jean expostulated.
+
+Olive said nothing, but slipped out of the room and hall into the
+garden. It would not be worth while to trouble the others with the story
+of the difficulty between Jack and Carlos that morning. Nevertheless it
+was not pleasant to recall the expression on the Indian boy's face
+during their ride home, nor his long silence. Of course he rarely spoke
+to other persons, but ordinarily he engaged in long confidences with
+her, talking of the birds, wild flowers, any outside thing which he saw
+and loved.
+
+Surely in ten or fifteen minutes more the two wayfarers must return. In
+the meantime Olive would not go back to join the others as it would not
+be wise to communicate her own nervousness to them. So for the next
+quarter of an hour she walked up and down outside the Lodge, making
+several trips to the stables to see if the stable men had any
+suggestions to make and to inquire what they thought concerning the
+possibility of a storm. For there was little use in trying to argue the
+truth away. The atmospheric conditions were strange and depressing.
+Unless the wind changed, driving the single black cloud in an opposite
+direction, something out of the common was sure to occur. If only Frank
+Kent or Jim Colter or even the cowboys belonging to the ranch were at
+home, in order that they might go out and look up the wanderers!
+
+Finally Olive sent the two men who took care of the private stables to
+reconnoiter. Then on her way back to the Lodge she found Jean hurrying
+in the direction of the Ranch house.
+
+"I want to find Ralph Merrit and ask his advice as soon as possible,"
+Jean explained. "It is so late now he is sure to have quit work at the
+mine. Ruth is convinced that we are going to have a cyclone and is
+nearly frantic over Jack and Jim and Frank, all away from home. Yet I
+hate having Ralph start out alone--he does not understand what the
+weather out here means so well as the rest of us, even if he has been
+here a good many years now. But I must confess I wish that Frieda had
+not made that uncomfortable speech about Carlos' disliking Jack so much.
+I am afraid it is true. Oh, Olive, what a pity it is that you happened
+to leave them!"
+
+This was the only word of reproach that any member of the Rainbow ranch
+family made to Olive Van Mater during all the excitement and distress
+that came afterwards. And of course Jean did not mean her words to carry
+a sting--they were only an obvious exclamation.
+
+Nevertheless Olive did not require outside censure to make her suffer as
+keen remorse as was possible to her sensitive and devoted nature. For
+she knew herself to be far more responsible for the day's catastrophe
+than any one would ever dream.
+
+Only the edge of the sand storm swept the neighborhood of the Rainbow
+Lodge. Half a mile from the house it veered in its unaccountable way,
+carrying its destructive force straight across the adjoining ranch,
+wrecking half a dozen valuable buildings and killing a large number of
+cattle. Yet it came sufficiently near the Lodge for everybody inside the
+house to understand what was happening, even if Jim Colter and Frank
+Kent and a dozen of the cowboys had not ridden home furiously only five
+or ten minutes before, having raced the wind storm across the prairies
+and come off victorious. Both looked fairly worn out, as they came
+clanking into the living room, still in their riding clothes and boots
+and covered with a fine coating of yellow sand.
+
+"Jehoshaphat, but it is good to be indoors!" Jim exclaimed at once,
+putting his arm about his wife and gazing around him. "It is a good
+thing Frank isn't a tenderfoot, even if he is an Englishman. For if that
+sand storm had struck us--well, I am not going to put on airs. I have
+been a ranchman now for a good many years, but I never feel very hopeful
+that anybody such a gale hits is going to come out alive." Then perhaps
+in answer to the thought in the mind of every person in the room Jim
+ended abruptly: "Where's Jack? Hasn't she manners enough to say 'howdy'
+to two fellows who have nearly ridden themselves to death?"
+
+Following his speech, Jim was not immediately aware of the peculiar
+strained silence in the room, although Frank knew instantly that
+something had occurred in which Jack had a part. Under the western tan
+of the past few weeks his face whitened. But he set his teeth and
+straightened his broad shoulders. For his was a strength of will and of
+character worthy to match with Jack and capable of longer endurance.
+
+For a moment no one seemed to dare to answer Jim's question. And then it
+was not Ruth or any one of the three Ranch girls who replied, but Henry
+Russell, who had hobbled into the living room on his crutches,
+forgetting his terror and dislike of girls in his effort to offer his
+friendly sympathy, and incidentally, though he himself was not aware of
+it, to keep the lovely blond doll of his first acquaintance from making
+herself more miserable than necessary.
+
+"I, I am afraid Mrs. Colter and--and the others are feeling a little
+uneasy about Miss Ralston," he murmured. "She went out this morning with
+the Indian boy, Carlos, to ride over the ranch and she has not come in
+just yet. I have told them that she certainly must have taken refuge
+with a neighbor or else that the storm has not come within her vicinity.
+They tell me that these western siroccos are very freakish."
+
+But neither Jim Colter nor Frank had heard anything except the first
+part of their visitor's speech.
+
+Afterwards Jim paid no attention to any one in the room except to lean
+over and kiss Ruth. "We will find her in a little while, don't worry.
+Jack is always getting into scrapes and being grown up seems to make
+little difference," he remarked grimly as he marched off.
+
+But Olive clung desperately to Frank Kent's arm as he tried to follow
+him.
+
+"Please let me speak to you a minute alone before you go," she pleaded.
+Then when they were out in the yard and away from the others she put her
+hand on Frank's arm and looked at him with an earnestness which he did
+not in the least understand.
+
+"When you find Jack will you please give her this message from me," she
+asked. "Tell her that she has been making a dreadful mistake all along
+and that there is nothing in the world that will make me so happy as to
+hear of her engagement to you. Please tell her this when you first find
+her, don't wait until you are at home again."
+
+With a rather unusual show of emotion Frank pressed both of Olive's
+hands in his. "You believe that Jack really cares for me?" he demanded.
+
+And then as Olive bowed her head without replying he mounted a fresh
+horse, riding away in the direction that Olive had indicated.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+JACK SURRENDERS AT LAST
+
+
+IT was almost dawn when Frank Kent believed that he heard a faint answer
+to his last shouting. He was several miles from the outskirts of the
+Rainbow Ranch and in a neighborhood where he might least expect to find
+the girl he sought. But every acre of the ranch had been thoroughly gone
+over during the night, and still the men under Jim Colter's leadership
+were continuing the search along the track swept by the storm, but
+without finding a trace of Jack or the Indian boy or of the two horses
+which they were known to have been riding.
+
+[Illustration: "THE STARS HAD DISAPPEARED AND BEYOND THE UNIVERSAL
+GRAYNESS THERE WAS NOW A FAINT ROSE LIGHT"]
+
+So, independently of the others, Frank had recently decided to try a new
+neighborhood, not because he had any faith in its being the right one,
+but because he felt that he must work alone. It was unendurable to
+continue longer hearing the other men declare that there was little
+chance of finding Jack or Carlos alive. For had they not been within
+the track of the sand storm they must certainly have returned home
+before this. Now Frank plunged on in the direction of the recent sound,
+although he had heard nothing a second time in reply to his continued
+calling.
+
+Deep in his heart he was devoutly grateful that the dawn was finally
+breaking. The stars had disappeared, and beyond the universal grayness
+there was now a faint rose light. A moment before a western lark had
+risen before his aching eyes, poising, fluttering and then sailing
+straight overhead, singing its song of praise at the approach of the
+sun.
+
+So Frank in a measure could behold the objects ahead of him, though
+among them he saw nothing to suggest Jacqueline Ralston. He was riding
+over flat country with little before him but sand and low scrub plants.
+And there were no signs of a horse's hoofs having lately struggled
+through it. Finally, however, Frank got down off his own horse and,
+stooping low, examined some faint tracings in the sands. He had not been
+trained to making observations of this sort and even with the best of
+scouts it is difficult to find footprints, in so fine and shifting a
+soil. Nevertheless when Frank straightened up again his face was less
+haggard and discouraged. For he had found a suggestion of a girl's
+riding boot printed in the sand and now and then in curious circles
+there were other such impressions.
+
+With her head resting on a sand dune as though it were nature's pillow
+Frank at length came upon the girl. And even when within a few feet of
+Jack it was impossible to tell whether she was asleep or had fainted--or
+whether her silence and rigidity meant something worse. Yet the girl's
+expression was too worn and exhausted for the last great mystery; it had
+not the ineffable peace that comes after nature's final surrender. Even
+before he could touch her Frank had recognized this.
+
+Quietly he began bathing her face with water poured upon his
+handkerchief from the water flask which he had carried all night in his
+pocket. Jack's own little water jug told its own story, since it was
+lying empty at her side, drained to the last drop. Then, when the girl's
+heavy lids fluttered slightly, Frank poured water between her scorched
+lips. Her first sign of consciousness was when she put up her hands to
+try and cling to his flask that she might have more. Yet the man drew it
+away, telling her to keep quiet and close her eyes for a few moments
+longer. Afterwards he allowed her another drink of water and then a few
+drops of beef tea from a smaller bottle, which Ruth Colter had given
+him.
+
+Finally, with Frank's arm about her, Jack managed to sit up.
+
+"I am so glad it was you who found me, Frank," she said a moment later.
+"All night I have thought you would come." She did not even try to walk
+or to explain what had happened, but let Frank lift her up on his horse,
+where she leaned against him in utter weakness and dependence, while the
+horse started slowly toward home.
+
+The ride needs must be a long and fatiguing one even though aid reach
+them before their arrival at the Lodge. And Jack's pulse was still too
+faint to have her suffer further exhaustion. But after a while Frank
+leaned over, pressing his lips against the girl's heavy gold brown hair
+which had become unloosened from her long wandering and hung in two
+curled braids down her back.
+
+"Are you glad I found you because you care for me, Jack?" he whispered,
+feeling that it was not altogether fair of him to ask such a question at
+such a time, and yet too impatient to wait.
+
+The girl answered, "Yes" quite simply. A little later she added like a
+child: "Besides I knew you wouldn't scold, Frank. And of course I have
+been foolish and headstrong. I don't seem to know how to grow up. You'll
+ask Ruth and Jim not to make me explain to them until I have rested."
+
+Frank smiled, but felt a curious lump in his throat--this new humility
+and dependence were so unlike Jack. Unconsciously the arm that had been
+holding her up closed more firmly about the girl's figure.
+
+"Jack, Jack," he murmured, leaning low down until his lips were not far
+from her ear. "I have waited so long, I can wait no longer. You have
+just said that you cared for me, and for the second time I have believed
+you. Then you mean, you must mean that you are willing to be my wife."
+
+For just an instant the girl's body quivered as though with a weakness
+beyond her power of control. The next moment she was shaking her head
+quietly and firmly, and although her companion could not see her face he
+heard her whisper, "No," with a measure of her old decision.
+
+"Very well then," Frank returned just as firmly, "you shall never be
+troubled by my asking you that question again. As soon as possible I
+shall go home to England."
+
+Once more the girl's shoulders trembled as if she had been struck an
+unexpected blow, but she made no reply. Frank realized that he was not
+playing fair and that she should not be troubled further.
+
+For five or ten minutes more they rode on in complete silence, while
+Jack felt herself growing weaker and weaker. She was ashamed to be such
+a burden and yet only her own will power and Frank's arm were sustaining
+her.
+
+A little later and Jack had again to be put down on the ground in a half
+fainting condition. By this time they had passed beyond the stretches of
+sandy desert and were in one of the outlying meadows of the Rainbow
+Ranch, not far from a branch of their creek. As Jack was almost
+unconscious Frank was able to bathe her face more comfortably, pushing
+back the tangled hair out of her eyes, that she might look more like the
+girl he loved. Then he shut his lips close together and his chin became
+squarer and his jaw firmer than ever Jacqueline's had been in her most
+obstinate days.
+
+"I have just told a lie," he said to himself and yet rather grimly.
+"For of course I shall go on asking Jack to marry me until she finally
+consents. If she did not care for me that would be another matter and I
+should be a cad to annoy her. But there can't be any other barrier real
+or fancied that is big enough to come between us permanently."
+
+Then, as Jack opened her eyes for the second time, and sat straight up
+as though vexed with her own weakness, Frank had a sudden recollection
+of Olive's strange message to him when he had first started on his
+search.
+
+"Tell her it has all been a dreadful mistake and that there is nothing
+in the whole world that will make me so happy as her engagement to you."
+
+"What could Olive's words mean? Who had made a mistake? Had Jack been
+under some cruelly false impression?" Frank was utterly mystified. Yet
+he held out his hand. "Come, dear, we will walk for a few minutes," he
+said gently, "and I will lead the horse. You will feel less stiff and
+tired with a little exercise. See, the daylight has come. How beautiful
+and fragrant the world is!"
+
+Some change in Frank's voice, or in his manner--the girl did not know or
+care to think what the change might mean--made her take the hand held
+out so quietly toward her and hold it close in her own cold fingers. How
+exquisitely she could always be at peace with Frank, how perfectly he
+understood things without having them explained to him! After all, he
+was not going to be angry with her because of her unreasonable and
+unkind behavior. She had felt his anger a little more than she was
+willing to endure in her present state of exhaustion.
+
+So Jack looked overhead with more of her accustomed sparkle and
+animation than she had yet showed. The sky was a radiant rose color, so
+deeply pink that it cast its reflection on the ground at her feet. They
+were near a group of trees and the birds were beginning to waken one
+another with mild reproaches and then sudden bursts of eloquent song.
+
+"Frank," Jack began pensively enough, "I never saw a more wonderful
+dawn. But do you happen to have anything in your pocket more substantial
+than beef tea? I have not had anything to eat since yesterday at noon
+and I think perhaps I am dying of hunger."
+
+With a laugh her companion let go her hand, drawing a package from his
+pocket. "Ruth gave me this at midnight along with the beef tea, but I
+have not been interested enough to see what was in it," he explained.
+
+Greedily Jack tore open the bundle and had devoured a large chicken
+sandwich before good manners even suggested her sharing the luncheon
+with its owner. Afterwards Frank also confessed to being hungry, and so
+they walked on toward the Lodge like happy, runaway children, almost
+safe at home again.
+
+Yet while he talked and laughed and ate Frank Kent was not forgetting
+Olive's words nor her final injunction to him. "Please tell her what I
+say when you first find her. Don't wait too long," she had begged.
+
+"Jack, dear," Frank began casually in the midst of something else they
+had been discussing, "there is something I want to ask your forgiveness
+for before another five minutes have passed. Because I don't think I can
+hold out much longer. Back there on horseback when you were nearly dead
+with fatigue I was angry with you and told you that I never meant to ask
+you to marry me again. That was the most untruthful speech a man ever
+made! Because if you are too tired to listen I may have to wait until
+you have rested a little while, but not any longer. You know you care
+for me, dear. You are not the kind of a girl who would deceive a man by
+your words or your manner after all these years of friendship! There is
+some mystery that is keeping you from showing me your real feelings. I
+can't guess what it is. Yet Olive must think so too, for she told me to
+tell you that you had been making a dreadful mistake about something or
+other, heaven only knows what! And that our engagement would make her
+happier than anything in the world."
+
+Jacqueline Ralston stood ankle deep in the rose-touched meadow grass
+with her straight-forward, honest gray eyes looking into the blue eyes
+of her companion.
+
+"Did Olive tell you to say that to me? Did she really and truly seem to
+mean it?" she asked wonderingly.
+
+Frank Kent nodded, not trusting himself to speak, nor wishing to lose an
+instant's vision of the girl's face, or an inflection of her voice.
+
+Jack had been pale before; but now her face had flushed with such a look
+of exquisite gentleness and surrender, that in spite of all she had
+recently endured she had never been so beautiful.
+
+Then it was like her to say with self-evident sincerity: "Of course you
+are right, Frank dear, I could not hide how much I cared for you even
+though I have done my best. It will be hard for me to leave the ranch
+and the people I love, but it would be harder to stay on here--without
+you!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+RAINBOW CASTLE
+
+
+SOME weeks had passed, and it was now early fall at the ranch. But
+another change had taken place besides that of the seasons, for Jim and
+Ruth and the Ranch girls had moved away from the old Lodge into their
+splendid new home.
+
+To everybody's satisfaction, however, the Lodge was not deserted; for
+Ralph Merrit had changed into it from his old quarters, and his friend,
+Henry Tilford Russell, was still with him--not that the young professor
+had become an invalid owing to his accident at the Rainbow Mine, for his
+broken leg was completely healed. But as he had come west for his
+general health somehow the Rainbow Ranch seemed to hold more curative
+properties than any other place. And Ralph was delighted to have his
+society. The youthful professor of ancient languages appeared to have
+recovered in a measure from his previous prejudice against girls, or at
+least he was able to find the companionship of the four Ranch girls
+endurable.
+
+The move to the big house had been somewhat hastened for several
+reasons, the most important being that Jacqueline Ralston and Frank Kent
+were to be married during the first part of October. Frank would not
+consent to returning to England without Jack. He insisted that she was
+far too uncertain a quantity to be left alone in her beloved western
+lands, since her prairies were his most dangerous rival. Moreover, as he
+had promised his father to stand for a Liberal seat in Parliament that
+same winter, Jack was needed at Kent House to aid him in winning his
+election.
+
+Now it seemed that all of the intimate friends that the girls had
+acquired in their two years away from home, had suddenly decided to pay
+visits to the Rainbow Ranch. Among them were the Princess Colonna and
+her nephew, Giovanni, who, because of the death of her husband without
+heir, had inherited the Prince's ancient title.
+
+Miss Katherine Winthrop had finally arrived, and her presence seemed to
+compensate Olive for the loss of a good deal of Jack's companionship;
+yet when the two friends were able to be together without any one else,
+they were as intimate and as devoted as at any time in their lives. And
+though Jack never referred to the subject of their unfortunate
+conversation, she could find no trace in Olive of unhappiness or regret.
+
+It is true that Miss Winthrop and the girl, who was like a peculiarly
+devoted and sympathetic daughter, spent numbers of afternoons in the
+nearby Indian village discussing Olive's desire to become a teacher to
+the Indians when she was old enough and sufficiently well trained for
+the task. For the older woman was wise enough not to oppose the girl's
+present fancy as Jack had done, only insisting that she wait until she
+felt sure of her own fitness.
+
+But although Olive had frequent talks with old Laska, who never could
+entirely connect the charming young American lady with the child she had
+persecuted, there was a new member of the village community with whom
+Olive would have no conversation. And this was her once devoted friend
+and admirer, the Indian boy, Carlos.
+
+After Jacqueline Ralston's home-coming, when she had the opportunity to
+explain her unaccountable disappearance, it was Jim Colter who at once
+armed himself with a short whip and demanded that the business of
+punishing Carlos be left entirely to him. Yet, notwithstanding her long
+night of wandering about in the sand, too weary and too stupefied to
+find her way home or to believe that the boy would not eventually return
+with her horse, Jack immediately became Carlos' defender, finally
+persuading her guardian to punish the boy no further than by not
+permitting him again to set foot on Rainbow Ranch. She also confessed
+her own share in the day's difficulties, taking a part of the blame upon
+herself by insisting that if she had not struck the boy he would never
+have attempted so ugly and dangerous a revenge.
+
+Jim and Frank, though at last agreeing to Jack's wish, did have one
+interview with Carlos. But though they came away leaving the boy
+frightened and submissive, he never was brought to confess just what he
+had intended in riding off with Jack's horse. Perhaps during the long
+afternoon he had vainly been trying to think of some form of vengeance
+and then at the last moment the idea of stealing Jack's horse and
+deserting her had come like a sudden inspiration. Or perhaps the boy
+had meant to return--no one ever knew. He had gone on with the two
+horses to the nearest Indian village and never again left it for any
+other home. For the effort to civilize Carlos had been a vain one and he
+cheerfully reverted to the habits and companionship of his own race.
+
+Nevertheless, he did not go unpunished, although no one ever knew in
+what his punishment consisted. But the refusal of Olive's further
+friendship was a sorrow which the Indian lad endured in silence to the
+end of his days. For he never married and was that very rare figure
+among his people--an old bachelor, looked after by old women and the
+squaws of other men. And this when half a dozen Indian maidens would
+gladly have mated with Carlos. For he was unusually handsome and was
+always admired and reverenced by his own nation.
+
+At the time they moved into the new house Ruth and Jim and the girls
+were feeling particularly happy and prosperous, because, not long after
+the announcement of Jack's and Frank's engagement, Ralph Merrit had made
+discoveries of fresh supplies of gold in Rainbow Mine. Also, he had
+devised the long-sought-for method by which the gold could be extracted
+without too great danger and expense. He had not trusted entirely to his
+own judgment and experience, for three of the greatest mining experts in
+the West had been sent for, who were open in their praises of Ralph's
+idea and plan, predicting a big future for him and offering him
+opportunities with them should he ever care to leave the Rainbow Mine.
+
+But this new "pot of gold at the end of the rainbow," Ralph had
+straightway announced was to be his particular wedding gift to Jack and
+Frank. Certainly he had no idea of deserting his old friends, now that
+he was again able to prove his usefulness. So he was working on in
+apparent contentment when the Princess and the young Prince appeared.
+Then once more his dream faded and it was hard for Ralph not to think of
+his work as mere drudgery in which the labor was almost all his and the
+large rewards for others.
+
+For like lightning out of a clear sky, soon after the Princess Colonna's
+installation in their new home, even before Ruth or the girls had become
+accustomed to her presence, with entire formality she asked Jim Colter's
+consent to Jean Bruce's marriage to her nephew, Giovanni, the young
+Prince Colonna. When Jim was only barely able to express his surprise
+and consternation at such a suggestion, she explained to him a complete
+understanding of his feelings, that this method of procedure in a
+question of marriage was the custom in Italy, her nephew's country.
+Therefore the young Prince would never dream of speaking to Jean without
+first obtaining her guardian's approval. Nevertheless, Mr. Colter must
+not believe that there was any lack of affection on the Prince Colonna's
+part, for he had never ceased thinking and talking of Jean from that
+first hour of their meeting in the Pincio Gardens in Rome.
+
+In reply to the Princess, Jim could only flush and stammer, saying that
+he would prefer first talking the matter over with Mrs. Colter before
+giving his answer. For the truth was that Jim really wished to shout
+aloud his refusal to consider such a proposition even for five minutes.
+Jean to marry a wretched little Italian youth, no taller than she was
+herself, when she might have almost any clean, hard working American
+fellow! It was bad enough for his adored Jack to be going away with an
+_Englishman_, but then Frank Kent was different!
+
+Nevertheless, Jim understood that the reply which he really wished to
+make was not altogether fair and certainly not courteous to their
+guests. Ruth must at once find some way of clearing up the situation.
+
+So soon as her husband had explained the matter to her Ruth was under
+the impression that she did see a way. With the Princess' and the Prince
+Colonna's consent she herself would first speak to Jean, letting them
+hear later whether Miss Bruce was willing to listen to the Prince's
+suit.
+
+Of course this was the best way out! Jim sighed with relief at his
+wife's suggestion, for neither he nor Ruth had the faintest idea that
+Jean would do anything but refuse even for a moment to consider the
+Prince or his offer. Ruth believed that she had always understood Jean
+better than any one of the four Ranch girls.
+
+Without comment the girl heard of the young nobleman's proposal, and
+instead of declining, she asked to be allowed to consider it. In the
+meantime the Prince and his aunt were to remain at the Rainbow Ranch in
+order that Jean and the young man might learn to know each other better.
+
+They were frequently together and very soon the state of affairs was no
+secret to any member of the family, or to their closest friends. And
+although a number of persons were puzzled, no one said a word to Jean.
+Could it be possible that she was going to marry solely for position? No
+one believed that she could have come to care so deeply for the young
+Italian prince in so brief a time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+A PARTY AT THE NEW HOUSE
+
+
+THE society people in that part of Wyoming within the radius of the
+Rainbow Ranch were deeply interested and some of them a good deal
+excited over the fact that an American-Italian Princess and an Italian
+Prince were being entertained in their midst.
+
+For some time previous to the coming of their guests Ruth and the girls
+had planned giving a large evening party. Originally the idea had been
+to make it a kind of house-warming as well as a formal announcement of
+Jack's engagement. But as Jack begged not to be made specially
+conspicuous in regard to the invitations, they were finally issued by
+Mr. and Mrs. Colter asking that their friends do them the honor of
+meeting Miss Katherine Winthrop, the Princess Colonna and her nephew,
+the Prince Giovanni Colonna, on a certain September evening. According
+to the desires of the Ranch girls the entertainment was to be both a
+reception and dance, for the new home was large enough for both. For
+while the older guests were talking to one another in the music room and
+library, the big living room could be used for dancing.
+
+It was about six o'clock on the afternoon before the ball when the four
+girls in dressing gowns of various shades slipped through the wide
+colonial hall and entered the big parlor. Frieda dropped into a chair
+set close against the wall and sighed deeply. Her yellow hair had been
+washed only a few hours before and was now in a big loose knot on top of
+her head, though it kept breaking forth into delicious curls about her
+white forehead and neck.
+
+In answer to the sigh Jack sat down on the floor at her younger sister's
+feet. "Isn't everything all right, Baby? Isn't the room as lovely as you
+expected?" she asked anxiously. For although Jack had always been
+unusually tender and devoted to Frieda, she was even more in these days,
+with the thought of leaving her so close at hand.
+
+Again Frieda sighed, but this time she explained herself. "It is more
+than all right. It is more beautiful than I ever expected any place
+belonging to us could be. Not that I did not love the dear old Lodge,
+but this house is, well--different. Isn't it dreadful that you are going
+away so soon, Jack, dearest, after all our work and planning? It will
+never seem just like home without you."
+
+With a sudden movement Jean crossed the room, placing her fingers
+lightly upon Frieda's lips.
+
+"We have promised Jack not to say anything like that, Frieda dear," she
+protested, "at least not tonight. We must all have the happiest evening
+of our lives, one that none of us shall forget."
+
+The younger girl glanced up at her cousin wistfully with a question on
+her lips, but instead of asking it she clapped her hands softly
+together.
+
+"See that lovely light coming through our stained-glass window! Isn't it
+like a rainbow! Oh, I hope it means good luck just as it always has in
+the past! And somehow it makes this room more beautiful. I did not dream
+anything could!"
+
+Naturally Frieda was prejudiced and an enthusiast, and yet she had ample
+reason for her point of view. For a moment there was an unusual silence
+as the four girls looked around them. Consciously or unconsciously they
+realized that these next few weeks were to mark important changes in
+their lives. For after they had slipped by things could never be exactly
+the same. Jack would be married and that would represent the first
+important break, and after that--well, they were not little girls any
+longer, for even Frieda had lately shown unmistakable signs of being
+grown-up.
+
+The walls of the long room were hung with western smilax and since the
+party was to be a typical American one, the girls had been wildly
+extravagant and used American Beauty roses for the decoration. Now the
+air was fragrant with their rich and penetrating perfume. The old
+colonial mantel was banked with them, and garlands of green swinging
+from one white column to another had big baskets filled with roses
+suspended between the posts. The room itself was fifty feet long and
+three-fourths as broad. All the woodwork and the walls were a warm gray.
+The greater part of the furniture had of course been removed and a white
+tarpaulin covered the hardwood floor, but in the bay window there were
+palms and vases of roses and an old-fashioned colonial sofa, besides
+several chairs. Also there were occasional chairs along the walls for
+the older persons who might care to watch the dancing. The music was to
+be concealed in the hall behind a bank of evergreens just beneath the
+wide mahogany stairs.
+
+"Well, if there is anything more that can be done to make this place
+more attractive, I am sure I don't know what it is," Jean insisted at
+last. "And I am especially glad that we asked Mr. Parker to come
+tonight. Because of course he may have built more expensive houses than
+ours, yet I am quite sure he has never made one more attractive.
+Besides, he is awfully nice. Gracious, girls, who is that knocking? Ruth
+thinks we are being nice and obedient and lying down until seven."
+
+But Olive had walked over to the closed door and opened it half-way.
+
+"Don't be alarmed," she laughed back. "It is only the flowers Frank is
+sending us for tonight. Let's open them now and see what choice he has
+made. Ruth told him about our dresses, so that he could not make any
+serious mistake."
+
+Almost concealed by four great boxes reaching as high as her head,
+Olive came back to where Jack was sitting and placed them in a great
+pile before her.
+
+"You give them to us, Jack dear, since they are from Frank," she urged.
+
+The first was marked with Frieda's name, but as she took the top off the
+box and lifted out a card her cheeks turned suddenly crimson.
+
+"These are not from Frank after all," Frieda remarked with a pretense of
+unconcern, "Mr. Russell says that I was so kind about reading to him
+when his leg was broken that he asked Frank as a special favor to let
+him send me my bouquet for tonight." Her fingers fumbled nervously at
+the tissue paper and her eyes were downcast, since she did not specially
+care to have any one staring at her at this moment. She could imagine
+Jack's puzzled and slightly worried expression and Jean's and Olive's
+teasing looks. For the absurd friendship that had developed between the
+solemn young Professor and Frieda was one of the ill-concealed jokes in
+the family.
+
+"What do you suppose that a man who dabbles in Egyptology for an
+amusement would send as a bouquet to a baby?" Jean inquired mockingly.
+"Possibly a lotus flower, for there are learned persons who declare that
+Cleopatra was a bewildering blond lady," and Jean pulled at Frieda's
+yellow curls.
+
+The next moment along with the other girls she gave a cry of admiration.
+Who would ever have suspected the Professor of such exquisite taste? For
+in some way he had managed to make his bouquet suggest the girl to whom
+it was offered. For it was formed of hundreds of tiny forget-me-nots set
+close together and encircled with small white star-like flowers.
+
+Jean's roses were the deep pink color that she always loved and Olive's
+were a wonderful golden yellow. But Jack hesitated a moment before
+opening her box, which was the largest of the four and curiously heavy.
+
+Half guessing how she felt Olive laid her hand lovingly on her friend's.
+
+"Take your flowers up to your own room and look at them first by
+yourself if you would rather," she suggested. However, Jean and Frieda
+both raised a storm of protest.
+
+And Jack laughed. "It isn't that I am such a bashful person that I don't
+want you to see even the flowers Frank has given me--I would not be so
+absurd," she confessed. "But I have an idea that perhaps Frank has put
+something more than flowers in my box. And I don't think I shall ever,
+ever be able to wear them. Oh, children, what made me fall in love with
+an Englishman and one who may inherit a title? Certainly I shall never
+be able to live up to it!" Doing her best to hide her nervousness Jack
+buried her hot cheeks in a great bunch of white jasmine flowers; but
+Frieda's fingers were pointing inexorably to a white velvet jewel case
+which still remained in the flower box half buried in evergreens.
+
+With a smile Jack picked it up, touching the spring. On the satin shone
+a miniature crown of diamonds and pearls and an exquisite necklace of
+the same jewels.
+
+"Gracious," Frieda gasped, "I didn't know Frank Kent was a millionaire!
+Why he always has declared that he was a great deal poorer than lots of
+American fellows! I wonder if he has been deceiving you all this time,
+Jack, to keep you from marrying him for his money."
+
+"Goose!" Jack laughed; but Frieda's absurdity relieved the situation.
+"Don't you know that these jewels are heirlooms in the Kent family,
+that they always belong to the wife of the eldest son? I told Frank to
+wait until our wedding day; but he seemed to wish me to wear them
+tonight. I don't believe I possibly can, they are too lovely--and
+somehow they don't seem to suit me."
+
+Olive placed the tiara on Jack's gold-brown head. The girl's gray eyes
+were shining softly, her head was tilted back the least bit and a rich
+color flooded her cheeks and lips.
+
+"I don't think Frank need be exactly ashamed of you, Lady Kent," Jean
+murmured with teasing affectation. And then: "You funny Jack! Is there
+any other girl in America who would not care more than you do for
+Frank's splendid position and all the rest of it? Not for a single
+instant do I believe that you gave it a thought! Dear me, I wish your
+own sweet cousin were so high-minded!"
+
+"Girls," said a reproachful voice suddenly, "is this the way you keep
+your sacred promise to me to rest until dinner time? Go back to your
+rooms instantly," Ruth Colter scolded. Yet she was hardly an impressive
+figure with her hair rolled up in a tight knot and a light shawl thrown
+over her kimono. "I heard such a terrible chattering in here that I was
+afraid a collection of magpies had gotten in an open window and thought
+they had come upon an enchanted garden." Here Ruth ceased talking
+suddenly, having caught sight of the beautiful ornament on Jack's hair.
+
+"Gracious, dear, what a wonderful possession! Do let me see it more
+closely," she asked. "But take it off first and then come here and kiss
+me. A diamond tiara is hardly appropriate with a dressing gown and I
+can't bear to see you looking so regal and so far away from the rest of
+us."
+
+And with a break in her voice, Ruth put her arm around Jack and then led
+the small procession forth from the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+MAIDS AND MEN
+
+
+"I WOULD give a great deal to have my people see you tonight, Jack,"
+Frank Kent whispered several hours later.
+
+[Illustration: "YOU WOULD HAVE MARRIED ME ANYHOW"]
+
+True to her promise Jacqueline had dressed before the others and come
+down for a few moments alone with Frank. And it was small wonder that
+the young man was proud of her. She had on a pure white tulle dress made
+over silk and no ornament except the string of pearls and diamonds about
+her throat. For she had persuaded Frank to let her wait until after
+their marriage before wearing the more conspicuous jewels. Somehow she
+felt that the tiara would look out of taste and inappropriate among her
+old friends and neighbors. The bouquet of jasmine flowers with their
+darkly shining green leaves were resting in her lap.
+
+"Your people will see enough of me, Frank, before very long," she
+answered. "How glad I am that they already know me and that they do
+not object very seriously to our marriage! Of course they must have
+preferred your caring for one of your own countrywomen, but----"
+
+"You would have married me anyhow, wouldn't you, dear, even if they
+_had_ objected?" Frank asked and then laughed at himself. "That's a
+dreadfully unfilial speech, but I expect every man likes to feel that
+the girl he cares for would have stuck to him through every kind of
+obstacle--poverty, obscurity, the world's misunderstanding. Not that I
+have much doubt of you, Jack. You are giving up more than most people
+realize in turning your back on the dear old ranch and your beloved
+family. But we'll come back as often as possible and have them come to
+us, and after a while Ruth must let Frieda be with you for a year or so.
+She is my little sister, and honestly I don't quite like her intimacy
+with this fellow, Russell--he is much too cranky and old." Frank had
+taken Jack's hand and was touching it to his lips when she made a quick
+though silent signal. She and Frank were sitting in the bay window
+almost hidden by evergreens and at this moment Ruth and Jim, the other
+three girls and their guests were entering the ball room.
+
+Olive wore a yellow crępe dress and carried the yellow roses. Jean was
+in deep pink, her costume of shimmering satin and lace, and had one of
+Frank's flowers in her dark brown hair. Her bouquet was not the same
+that it had been two hours before, when she had first removed it from
+its wrappings; for now encircled by Frank's roses were a dozen purple
+orchids.
+
+"Do you think, Frank, that Jean intends--" Jack whispered softly,
+inclining her head toward her cousin to indicate what she meant to say.
+Then when her companion made no reply, fearing to be overheard, she
+continued. "It is Jean I am most worried about. How can she make up her
+mind to marry a foreigner instead of an American? Just look at the
+Prince and then at Jim or Ralph Merrit. He is so little and so dark and
+so kind of different. Even that scar on his face from a duel he once
+fought makes me have almost a dislike for him, though I know it is
+foolish of me."
+
+"But Jean isn't really going to marry him!" Frank protested.
+
+This time Jack nodded uneasily. "I am afraid so; indeed she almost told
+me that she intended to accept him; and I suppose she means to do it
+this evening. I wish I could have said something to influence her, but I
+did not dare. Besides, it would have done no good. You know Jean might
+have said that I too was marrying a foreigner and had no right to say
+anything to her. Only the difference is that Jean does not love
+Giovanni--and then an Englishman isn't the same and--"
+
+Frank was now smiling over Jack's effort at an apology and explanation.
+She had slipped her hand into his and was holding it fast. At this
+moment a splendidly handsome figure marched across the floor with
+surprising swiftness and now stood looking down upon the girl and man
+with an expression that was a combination of wrath, sympathy and
+devotion.
+
+"Jacqueline Ralston," Jim began so unexpectedly that to save her life
+Jack could not restrain a guilty start, "have I not told you and Frank
+Kent at least a dozen times that I would not have any stealing off by
+yourselves or any spooning until you were safely away from the Rainbow
+Ranch? It is bad enough, Kent, when I think of your taking my 'partner'
+from me and leaving me to look after this great place without her. But I
+tell you I can't stand _looking_ at you doing it."
+
+And Jim gave a mournful sigh that was part pretense and part reality.
+
+Its effect was to make Jack at once jump to her feet and throw her arms
+about him, regardless of his immaculate shirt. Then she ran for
+protection to Ruth.
+
+Happiness had made Ruth grow a year younger each month, her husband had
+stoutly declared, and though this statement was not strictly true, she
+did look very little older than the four Ranch girls as she stood
+waiting to receive their guests tonight. For the girls and Jim had
+insisted that she discard her nun-like fondness for gray and drab colors
+at least for this one evening and wear white. So Ruth's costume of heavy
+white corded silk with silver trimming was both youthful and becoming.
+
+On one side of the hostess stood Miss Katherine Winthrop, looking
+singularly handsome and imposing in a gray satin evening gown trimmed
+with duchess lace and with a bunch of Frieda's violets at her waist.
+Olive was next in line, and then Jean, while on Ruth's other side the
+Princess Colonna was made more radiantly fair by a wonderful black gown
+and a diamond star in her hair. Jack stood beside her, and then Frieda.
+
+The Princess seemed far more at ease and better able to appreciate and
+make herself popular with the hundred or more visitors than Miss
+Winthrop. For the Princess appeared almost to have forgotten, for the
+time at least, the years spent in the formal society of Rome and to be
+remembering only her own early girlhood in this same western country. A
+large number of the guests were traveled and cultured persons, the
+owners of large ranches and estates; but Jim had asked that all of their
+old acquaintances be invited regardless of wealth and position, so that
+there were many interesting figures who appeared as "western types" to
+Miss Winthrop, but whom the Princess immediately understood and enjoyed.
+
+Indeed during the evening Jim Colter, who had never liked the Princess
+Colonna nor felt entirely comfortable in her presence, confided to Ralph
+Merrit that maybe a Princess could after all be a real live woman,
+though he hoped to the Lord that Jean Bruce was not going to undertake
+the job. Ralph had little comfort to offer either to Jim or to himself
+in return for this confidence. For everybody in the ball room who had
+heard the gossip concerning Jean and the young Prince had no doubt of
+its ultimate outcome. And naturally they marveled over two of the
+Rainbow Ranch girls making such distinguished marriages.
+
+Perhaps Jean was not altogether displeased with this gossip, for she
+certainly danced with the young Prince most of the earlier part of the
+evening. The exact number of her dances Ralph Merrit could have told,
+although he was not conscious of having counted them. For except for
+dancing once with each one of the four Ranch girls and once with Ruth,
+he had spent the rest of the evening watching the dancers from a safe
+corner. For some reason or other he seemed not to feel sufficient energy
+for anything else.
+
+It was a few moments after eleven o'clock that same evening when the
+Princess Colonna, feeling a hand laid lightly on her arm and turning,
+discovered Jean Bruce alone. The girl seemed to have grown suddenly
+tired and pale.
+
+Fortunately the older woman's companion suggested at this moment that
+she might like him to get her an ice, so that she and Jean were
+uninterrupted for a moment.
+
+"I wonder if you could come somewhere with me for a little while, where
+we could talk without any one else seeing us?" Jean pleaded. "I know you
+will think it strange of me, Princess, but all of a sudden it seemed to
+me that you were the only person in the world whom I could ask a certain
+question. And I must ask it of you before another hour has passed."
+
+Jean spoke quietly and with entire self-possession; yet there was no
+doubting the girl's earnestness or her necessity.
+
+Instantly the Princess slipped her arm through Jean's with the
+affectionate intimacy which she had always felt for her and the woman
+and girl together left the room. Providentially for their opportunity to
+be alone, the greater number of guests were now in the supper room. So
+without much effort Jean found two chairs at the end of a long veranda
+which had been enclosed for the evening's use and made into a kind of
+conservatory. There they appeared to be quite free from interruption.
+
+The older woman sat in the shadow, but could see the girl's face
+plainly. And though she could hardly guess what question Jean might
+wish to ask her, she was not altogether uncertain of the subject
+uppermost in the girl's thoughts, so thoroughly had her nephew taken her
+into his confidence.
+
+"Princess," Jean began, but she was not looking at her friend. Her eyes
+were seeing nothing, she was so deeply engrossed. "I wonder if you will
+tell me if you were happy in your married life? Oh, yes, I know that
+sounds like an impertinence; but I do not believe that you will think of
+it in that light. You understand I would ask you for no such reason. The
+Prince was a great deal older than you, but then you were very good
+friends and you had a splendid title and people everywhere looked up to
+you and were proud to meet you. I remember how dreadfully impressed we
+girls were when we first saw you on board the steamship. It did not seem
+to us then that a Princess could be like other people. And none of us
+ever dreamed of knowing you as an intimate friend. Those days when I was
+visiting you in Rome it seemed so wonderful to me that you, an American
+woman and a western girl like me, could be a leader in European
+society!" Jean drew a long breath. "Of course it never occurred to me
+then that any such chance could ever come to me. It sounds like a fairy
+tale and yet my own family don't understand how I can care so much for
+position and a title and all that it must mean."
+
+"I _understand_," the Princess finally replied when Jean had given her
+opportunity to speak, "but there is one thing or at least one person
+whom you have not mentioned, my nephew, Giovanni. Do you care for him,
+Jean?"
+
+In answer the girl, whose clear pallor was one of her noticeable
+characteristics, flushed hotly. "I like him very much, he is most kind,
+he----"
+
+"You mean that Giovanni is entirely devoted to you and that you regard
+him as a friend. I see," the Princess finished softly. "And you think
+that after you marry him you will learn to care more for him because you
+would most enjoy his title and all it could do for you. I wonder just
+what Giovanni would receive in exchange for all he has to give?"
+
+For a moment the older woman took the girl's cold fingers in her own.
+
+"I don't mean to hurt your feelings, dear, or to seem unkind. But you
+have asked me to talk to you tonight because you believe that better
+than any one else I can understand and appreciate your ambition and your
+emotions. And you are entirely right. I know just what you are thinking,
+just what you have been saying to yourself over and over ever since I
+asked your guardian to permit you to marry my nephew. I know because I
+have passed through almost exactly the same experience. So I am going to
+talk frankly about my marriage to you tonight, Jean, though I never have
+and probably never will again to any one else as long as I live. You
+see, I, too, was a Western girl, only I was a great deal poorer in the
+beginning of my life than you have ever been. And then my father and
+mother were plainer people. But one day when I was about twelve years
+old my father began making a great fortune, and when I was fourteen, as
+is the way in this western country, he was many times a millionaire. In
+those days the West was not what it is now, so as my mother was
+ambitious for me and believed I was going to be a pretty woman I was
+sent East to school. Later on I went to Paris and studied there, and
+then to Italy, so that I might learn several languages. Now and then I
+used to see my father and mother, but not often. They did not enjoy
+Europe and I seemed to have so much to learn there was little time to
+stay at home. One or two wonderful summers I spent here in the West with
+them, loving this country and its people almost as your cousin Jack
+does. But by and by, when I was traveling in Italy with some rich
+American friends, I met the Prince Colonna. He asked me to marry him and
+I--well, I thought about things pretty much as you are doing, dear. I
+wanted to be a Princess; I thought it the most romantic, wonderful fate
+possible for a plain American girl with nothing but some prettiness and
+her money to exchange for fairyland. True, my Prince was old, but I
+liked him and I thought we would be better friends after we married. I
+believe we were. But, dear, I was not happy. I have missed the most
+wonderful thing that can come into one's life, for by and by I found
+that the people with titles were nothing but ordinary human beings. The
+people who count most, or at least who count most to me, are the people
+who do things for themselves, who have made their own way and their own
+positions, like so many of our big American men. Often I was very lonely
+and sad and often sorry for a decision I made years ago when I was even
+younger than you are tonight."
+
+The Princess let go Jean's hand which she had been holding.
+
+"Isn't there any one here in your own country, Jean, whom you like
+better than you do Giovanni, whom you would a great deal rather marry if
+he had the same position to offer?" she inquired.
+
+For a moment the girl made no answer. Then she said faintly: "Yes,
+Princess, there is, though I have never confessed it to anybody in the
+world except you, and scarcely to myself. For you see it is not only the
+other man's lack of money and position that comes between us, but Ralph
+does not even care for me. Some time ago he did, I think, but I was not
+very kind to him then, and now for months and months he has been nothing
+more to me than a friend. So I can see that his feelings have changed
+entirely. I thought if I went away with Giovanni I too would forget. It
+is hard to be right here on the ranch and have to pretend and pretend
+all the time that I feel toward him just as I used to when I was a
+little girl."
+
+"Jean," the older woman's voice had quite changed and was now both cold
+and stern, "I wonder what kind of a partnership you think marriage is?
+Do you think that when men go into business together that one brings
+everything to the firm and the other nothing? For that is what you wish
+to do with Giovanni. You must play fair, child. Why do you consider that
+an Italian is different from other men? Giovanni is young; he is not
+unattractive. Unless you loved him, you would soon learn to hate each
+other. For his sake if not for yours I could never approve of your
+marriage."
+
+But before Jean could reply the Princess had laid a restraining touch
+upon her. "Some one is coming toward us--a stranger, I think. We had
+best talk of this another time."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+OLD FRIENDS AND SOMETHING MORE
+
+
+JEAN did not recognize the newcomer at once. Then she held out her hand,
+trying to speak naturally.
+
+"Mr. Parker, I am so glad to see you. I was afraid you were not coming
+back at all. Princess, Mr. Parker built our new house. Mr. Parker, this
+is our friend and guest, the Princess Colonna."
+
+The tall man bowed politely. "I was told to bring you and the Princess
+Colonna back to the ball room if you would consent to come," he
+returned.
+
+From out of the shadow the slender, blond woman rose quietly, taking a
+few steps forward. "I shall be most happy to go back with you, Mr.
+Parker," she replied. And then standing within a few feet of her new
+acquaintance she stared at him curiously.
+
+"Theodore Parker, it isn't fair of you after all these years to have me
+recognize you when you have forgotten me. It makes me think that I must
+look a great deal the older!"
+
+But with a laugh the woman held out both hands, and now standing in the
+light that fell from a yellow shaded lantern the Princess' face and
+figure were in plain view.
+
+"Beatrice, the Princess Colonna! Why of course I have known your name
+always. How stupid of me not to have thought! But I could never have
+dreamed of meeting you out here in Wyoming. The Prince, your husband?"
+
+"He is dead," the woman answered. And then turning to Jean: "It is odd,
+dear, but Mr. Parker and I have known each other a very long time. It
+gives me great happiness to see him again and makes me think of that
+girl I have been telling you about. Won't you come back to Mrs. Colter
+with us?"
+
+But Jean shook her head and the man and woman moved away, leaving her
+alone.
+
+It was in this same place that Ralph Merrit, also trying to steal away
+from the guests, found her ten minutes later.
+
+Left to herself, Jean had been crying softly, although she could not
+exactly have explained the cause. Life was such a jumble--one wanted so
+much and had so little! Then often the very thing that had seemed fair
+and desirable turned to bitterness and regret! Well, to one thing she
+had at least made up her mind--she would not marry Giovanni. Yet she had
+promised to give him an answer within the hour.
+
+Hearing Ralph's step she started nervously. And then with the
+familiarity of old acquaintance she frowned upon him.
+
+"I thought you were the Prince Colonna," she began crossly.
+
+Ralph stiffened. "I am sorry that I am not. I had no idea of disturbing
+you. But I'll go and find your Prince if you like."
+
+"He is not my Prince; don't be stupid, Ralph, and do please sit down. I
+don't see why you feel it so necessary to avoid me recently."
+
+"Don't you?" Ralph answered. Then for several moments he said nothing
+more. However, though he did not appear to be looking, he had a clear
+enough vision of Jean's face, her dark eyes swimming in unshed tears,
+her heavy lids and the pallor of her cheeks.
+
+"Jean," Ralph swung himself around swiftly and Jean saw the firmness of
+his lips, the decisive outline of his jaw and his high, almost noble
+forehead, "if there is any one in this world, I don't care who or what
+he is, who has done anything or said anything to make you unhappy, why
+if I can, won't you let me help to straighten things out. You said just
+now that the Prince Colonna was not your Prince. Perhaps you were only
+angry at my tactless way of expressing things, but if there is any
+trouble between you--" the young man hesitated.
+
+"But there isn't--not the slightest," Jean replied with the familiar
+shrug of her shoulders and that demure expression about the corners of
+her mouth and in her brown eyes that her old friend remembered so well.
+"The truth is, Ralph, that I am tired of your and of other people's
+pretending that you believe the Prince Colonna and I are engaged to each
+other. Because we are not, and never will be." This was as unreasonable
+and inconsistent a speech as any girl could well manage to make.
+
+"Thank the Lord!" Ralph replied, so unconsciously and so sincerely that,
+as he was not looking toward her at the moment, the girl allowed herself
+to smile.
+
+"I don't see why you should be so glad, Ralph?" she murmured.
+
+"Oh, don't you?" Ralph answered between his teeth. "Then to the best of
+my ability I'll tell you, Jean Bruce. I love you, I always have loved
+you from the hour I saw you drying your hair by that brook in the
+wilderness, say a thousand years ago! So now if you are not going to
+marry this Italian youth, why it gives me a longer chance to keep on
+working and working until I have something to offer you that you wish,
+money, position."
+
+Swiftly the girl rose, laying her fingers gently against the young man's
+lips.
+
+"Don't say those last words to me again, Ralph. I feel tonight that I
+never, never wish to hear them again. You have the thing already I want
+most in the world if you are willing to give it to me. Why haven't you
+understood in these last few months? I couldn't exactly propose to you,
+could I, dear?" Jean questioned demurely.
+
+Ten minutes afterwards Jean, with a rose-colored shawl wrapped about her
+shoulders, arm in arm with Ralph, was walking about outdoors, forgetful
+of the autumn coldness, of the guests who were asking for her, of
+everything in the whole world except her own happiness. Finally she was
+surprised by seeing two other figures approaching them who were equally
+oblivious.
+
+With a low laugh Jean drew herself and her companion into the shadow.
+
+"Jack and Frank!" she whispered. Then, as the other girl and man were
+nearly opposite them, "I thought you both promised Jim not to do this
+sort of thing, at least not tonight, Jack Ralston," Jean began
+unexpectedly. "Yet I am glad to have found you alone, because I want to
+tell you first that I am very happy. I don't want other people to know
+it just yet, but I too am going to be married."
+
+There was a note in Jacqueline Ralston's voice as she replied that to
+save her life she could not conceal.
+
+"I am very glad for your sake, Jean darling," Jack answered. "You know
+how much I shall hope for your and Giovanni's happiness."
+
+"Giovanni's?" Jean's manner now suggested unutterable reproach. Ralph
+Merrit stepped forward and stood close beside Jean.
+
+"Hasn't any member of my beloved family sense enough to guess that I
+have always cared for Ralph, or at least I have always cared for him in
+the past six months," Jean protested. "It is only that I have had to do
+desperate deeds to make him care for me."
+
+But the girl's next words were smothered in Jack's embrace, while Frank
+was giving Ralph's hand such a squeeze that though it was considerably
+hardened from labor, it was difficult for him not to wince.
+
+Then the four young people were so interested in one another that they
+paid no attention to two other persons who were seen coming toward them,
+until they finally discovered one of them to be Frieda. She was looking
+more ethereal than ever in a long pale blue silk coat with a chiffon
+scarf about her blond head, and was accompanied by the Professor.
+
+"Whatever are you doing out here? It seems very rude to our guests,"
+Frieda murmured reproachfully. "I am sure Jim and Ruth will think it
+very rude of you."
+
+"But, Frieda, baby," Jack protested, "aren't you and Professor Russell
+also out here, as you call it? I can't see that we are much more to
+blame than you."
+
+Frieda gazed upward at the serious young man, who returned her glance
+with such solemn gravity that Jack felt a shiver of apprehension, while
+Jean stared at the new-comers closely, as if trying to solve a puzzle.
+
+"Oh, no, it is not the same with us," Frieda answered serenely. "You see
+Ralph and Jean are not engaged at all, and you and Frank have been
+engaged such a long time, Jack, so you ought to be used to it by now.
+But Henry and I, why we just become engaged half an hour ago, so of
+course we like to be out in the moonlight together," Frieda ended
+conclusively.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Five years have passed away and Jacqueline Ralston is now "Lady Kent"
+with a small son of her own to inherit the title, while Frank is a
+well-known Liberal member of Parliament. But they still make frequent
+trips back to the old Rainbow Ranch, which Jack, in spite of her
+affection for her new home, has never ceased to love better than any
+other place on earth.
+
+And these home-comings of Lord and Lady Kent and the small "James Colter
+Kent" are usually the signal for a foregathering of all the four Ranch
+girls with their husbands and families under the great sheltering roof
+of "Rainbow Castle."
+
+For no one of the girls now lives continuously at the Ranch, which is
+still left to Jim's devoted management. As much as possible of their
+time Jean and Ralph and their small daughter, Jacqueline, spend with
+them--partly in order that Ralph may continue to supervise the working
+of the Rainbow Mine which has not yet failed in its output of gold.
+Ralph Merrit has recently become one of the best known mining experts in
+the United States, so that his advice is constantly being asked both in
+this country and abroad. And wherever he travels Jean and her little
+girl accompany him, for Jean has become one of the most devoted and
+absorbed of wives.
+
+After the entirely surprising announcement of Frieda Ralston's
+engagement to Professor Russell on the night of their ball at the ranch,
+Jack, Ruth and Jim Colter seriously opposed her marriage. In the first
+place, Frieda was too young to know her own mind; Professor Russell was
+more than ten years her senior and they had not a single taste in
+common. So by and by Frieda was brought to consent to having her
+engagement postponed. Afterwards she spent one whole year in England
+with Jack, seeing as much of society and young men as her sister could
+arrange for her. Nevertheless, to everybody's surprise, Frieda stuck to
+her original choice and two years after her engagement became Mrs.
+Russell. She is exceedingly happy.
+
+So far Frieda has no children, but lives with her husband's parents, and
+as he is an only child, they continue to spoil and adore her. Also the
+grave young professor, who has never outgrown his first impression of
+Frieda as a glorified doll, still treats her as if the least harshness
+would utterly destroy her.
+
+Olive Van Mater is unmarried and already insists upon calling herself an
+old maid. She is not devoting her life to teaching the Indians, although
+she has partly fulfilled her old dream. At the close of the year, when
+her grandmother's final will was read, to the immense surprise of every
+one, Olive inherited one-half her large fortune, the other half being
+divided among the Harmon family. For the will announced that if any girl
+was able to show such self-will and such disregard of wealth as Olive
+had shown, should she fail in the interim to marry Donald, that
+therefore she alone deserved her grandmother's inheritance. As this
+money was far more than Olive wanted or needed, she was thus enabled to
+found an agricultural school among the Indians, which was to teach them
+to combine their old knowledge with the new discoveries of science and
+so to make life happier, if possible, for a misunderstood race.
+
+Yet Olive was to marry in the end an artist whom she finally met while
+visiting Jack and Frank at Kent House. The young man was poor and
+unknown then, but his first success was won with a painting of the head
+of his beautiful wife and daughter.
+
+Possibly Jim and Ruth might have been lonely now and then at the old
+ranch, except for the fact that in the course of time they had four
+daughters of their own besides Jimmikins and each one bore the name of
+one of the former Ranch girls.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
+
+Page 26, "contenance" changed to "countenance" (and gentle countenance)
+
+Page 31, "one" added to text (no one else was)
+
+Page 73, "frienship" changed to "friendship" (old friendship was)
+
+Page 80, "you'r" changed to "you're" (way you're running)
+
+Page 82, "he" added to text (he had recently)
+
+Page 106, "to day" changed to "today" (today hunting for)
+
+Page 166, "dreadully" changed to "dreadfully" (you so dreadfully)
+
+Page 181, "petulence" changed to "petulance" (and of petulance)
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ranch Girls at Home Again, by
+Margaret Vandercook
+
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+
+Project Gutenberg's The Ranch Girls at Home Again, by Margaret Vandercook
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Ranch Girls at Home Again
+
+Author: Margaret Vandercook
+
+Release Date: January 12, 2011 [EBook #34928]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RANCH GIRLS AT HOME AGAIN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Emmy and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 334px;">
+<img src="images/coverpage.jpg" width="334" height="500" alt="Cover" title="" />
+</div>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h3>THE RANCH GIRLS SERIES</h3>
+
+<h1>The Ranch Girls at Home Again</h1>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='bbox'>
+<h2>BOOKS BY MARGARET VANDERCOOK</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Vandercook books">
+<tr><td align='center'>THE RANCH GIRLS SERIES</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Ranch Girls at Rainbow Lodge</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Ranch Girls' Pot of Gold</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Ranch Girls at Boarding School</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Ranch Girls in Europe</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Ranch Girls at Home Again</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Ranch Girls and their Great Adventure</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Ranch Girls and their Heart's Desire</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Ranch Girls and the Silver Arrow</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Ranch Girls and the Mystery of the Three Roads</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><br />STORIES ABOUT CAMP FIRE GIRLS</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls at Sunrise Hill</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls Amid the Snows</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls in the Outside World</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls Across the Sea</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls' Careers</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls in After Years</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls on the Edge of the Desert</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls at the End of the Trail</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls Behind the Lines</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls on the Field of Honor</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls in Glorious France</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls in Merrie England</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls at Half Moon Lake</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Camp Fire Girls by the Blue Lagoon</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><br />THE GIRL SCOUTS SERIES</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Girl Scouts of the Eagle's Wing</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Girl Scouts in Beechwood Forest</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Girl Scouts of the Round Table</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Girl Scouts in Mystery Valley</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>The Girl Scouts and the Open Road</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+</div>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 312px;"><a name="frontis" id="frontis"></a>
+<img src="images/illus01.jpg" width="312" height="500" alt="&quot;What Are You Talking About, Ralph Merritt?&quot; She Demanded" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;What Are You Talking About, Ralph Merritt?&quot; She Demanded</span>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
+<div class='bbox'>
+<h3>THE RANCH GIRLS SERIES</h3></div>
+<div class='bbox'>
+
+<h1>The Ranch Girls<br />
+at Home Again</h1>
+
+<div class='center'>&mdash;BY&mdash;<br />
+
+<span class='author'>MARGARET VANDERCOOK</span><br />
+<br /><br /><br />
+
+ILLUSTRATED BY<br />
+
+RALPH P. COLEMAN<br /><br /><br />
+</div></div>
+<div class='bbox'><div class='center'>
+THE JOHN C. WINSTON COMPANY<br />
+<span class='small'>PHILADELPHIA</span><br /></div>
+</div>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='copyright'>
+Copyright, 1915, by<br />
+<span class="smcap">The John C. Winston Co.</span><br />
+<br />
+PRINTED IN U. S. A.<br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Book spine and contents">
+<tr><td align='left'><img src="images/spine.jpg" width="104" height="500" alt="Book Spine" title="" />
+</td><td align='left'><div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td align='left' colspan='2'><span class='small'>CHAPTER</span></td><td align='right'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>I.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Race</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_9">9</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>II.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">An Unanswered Question</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>III.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Engineer of the Rainbow Mine</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_30">30</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>IV.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Olive Comes Home</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_40">40</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>V.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Their Ride Together</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>VI.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">That Same Afternoon</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_66">66</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>VII.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">"Courage Makes the Man"</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>VIII.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Midnight Conference</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>IX.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Dilemma and a Visitor</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>X.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Cross Purposes</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>XI.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Dinner Party</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>XII.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Two Conversations</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>XIII.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Visit to Rainbow Mine</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_146">146</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>XIV.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Explosion</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_155">155</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>XV.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">An Unfortunate Discussion</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_165">165</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>XVI.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Desert Storm</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_187">187</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>XVII.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Olive's Remorse</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_200">200</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>XVIII.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Jack Surrenders at Last</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_210">210</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>XIX.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Rainbow Castle</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_221">221</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>XX.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Party at the New House</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_230">230</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>XXI.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Maids and Men</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_240">240</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>XXII.&nbsp;</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Old Friends and Something More</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_254">254</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
+<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Illustrations">
+<tr><td align='left'>"<span class="smcap">What Are You Talking About, Ralph Merritt?" She Demanded</span></td><td align='right'><i><a href="#frontis">Frontispiece</a></i></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>"<span class="smcap">She Had Heard That Masterful Tone Before</span>"</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_84">84</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>"<span class="smcap">The Stars Had Disappeared and Beyond the Universal Grayness There Was Now a Faint Rose Light</span>"</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_211">211</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>"<span class="smcap">You Would Have Married Me Anyhow</span>"</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_241">241</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
+<h2>The Ranch Girls at Home Again</h2>
+
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>THE RACE<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>AN hour before sunset a number of
+persons were standing in a small
+group facing the western horizon. But
+although the prairie was covered with a crop
+of young grass, a pale green mirror to reflect
+the colors of the sun, they were not looking
+at the landscape but toward two figures on
+horseback, a girl and a boy who were riding
+across country as rapidly as their horses
+could carry them.</div>
+
+<p>"Will Jack Ralston ever learn to be less
+reckless about her riding, Jim?" Ruth Colter
+inquired. "Since we returned from Europe
+it seems to me that she has grown more
+attached to the Rainbow ranch than ever<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+before. Yet at about the time we were married,
+dear, do you know I had a fancy that
+Jack and Frank Kent were going to care for
+each other seriously. Of course, I was mistaken
+since he has never been to see her in
+almost a year."</p>
+
+<p>Then with both hands held out invitingly,
+Ruth received a small pink and white bundle
+which Jim deposited in them with infinite
+care. For the bundle consisted of an absurdly
+tiny person measuring its early existence
+by weeks instead of months or years.
+And its face, though as delicately shell pink
+as the blanket enveloping it, yet bore a
+ridiculous resemblance to the tall man's in
+whose arms it had lately been borne.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later and Jim Colter strode
+forward with a blond girl at his side. For
+by this time the two riders were almost within
+hailing distance, the girl's horse scarcely a
+neck in advance of her companion's.</p>
+
+<p>"Carlos don't like Jack," Frieda Ralston
+remarked unexpectedly to her guardian, "so
+I do wish that she would not keep on doing
+things to irritate him. He perfectly hates
+to think that a girl can beat him at any outdoor
+sport and yet he rarely gets ahead of
+Jack. Indians are so strange and silent that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+sometimes I feel afraid he may try and revenge
+himself upon her for some fancied wrong.
+See, he is furious now at her having won their
+race!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I expect Miss Ralston will be able
+to manage him;" Jim returned. "Nevertheless,
+the boy has not turned out as I had
+hoped; he is lazy and proud and extremely
+ungrateful. Sometimes I have half an idea
+of turning him off the ranch, and I came
+very near doing it the other day, only Jack
+pleaded for him. Because he is Olive's friend
+she seems sentimental about keeping him
+on here, at least, until Olive joins us. Bravo,
+Jack! Be careful, you hoyden, don't you
+know you are a grown woman!" he cried.</p>
+
+<p>And with his tone divided between admiration
+and anger, Jim caught at the flying
+figure of a girl as she landed lightly on the
+ground at his feet. She had jumped from
+her pony while it was still going at full speed
+and then run along beside it until she was
+able to stop without losing her balance.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you would not behave like a
+circus rider, Jack," Frieda scolded. For at
+eighteen Frieda Ralston had become a far
+more dignified and reposeful character than
+her older sister, who was now past twenty.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless Jack only made a slight
+grimace, calling back over her shoulder carelessly,
+"Carlos, see to my horse, will you,
+when it gets to the stable?" And then in
+a kinder tone, "Oh, never mind, I had forgotten;
+some one else can look after him.
+Of course you will be interested to hear the
+news from Olive&mdash;Miss Van Mater," she
+corrected herself. "I am going to tell the
+family at once." Then she walked on between
+Jim and Frieda, with an arm laid
+lightly across her sister's shoulder. And
+without replying Carlos followed the little
+party.</p>
+
+<p>He was a beautiful slender Indian boy
+of about fifteen or sixteen, with skin the
+color of bronze, with straight dark hair and
+moody, unsatisfied black eyes&mdash;the same
+Indian boy who had formerly helped Olive
+to return to the ranch after her enforced capture
+by old Laska, and had afterwards sought
+refuge there himself. As a small lad, in
+spite of his pride and difficult disposition,
+the Ranch girls and Ruth had been fond of
+him, but since their return from Europe they
+had found Carlos a problem. He was unwilling
+to work like the other men, either on the
+ranch or at the mine, and was equally determined<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+not to go to school except when forced
+into it. Indeed, so far as possible, the boy
+had insisted upon living in the midst of civilization
+like one of his chieftain ancestors.
+Oftentimes he chose to sit idly in the sun
+doing nothing, save perhaps to clean his
+gun or else gaze for hours at the sky overhead.
+Then again he might without warning
+disappear on a hunting expedition, taking
+any horse from the stables that he wished
+for his purpose, and usually returning with
+game or furs, which he sometimes bestowed
+on Jean or Frieda or Ruth, but never on
+Jack.</p>
+
+<p>At the present moment his manner was
+absurdly dignified and haughty, since he
+particularly objected to being treated at any
+time as though he were a servant, and considered
+Jack's request in that light. However,
+as no one was paying the slightest
+attention to him, it was self-evident that he
+was longing to hear Jacqueline Ralston's
+news.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you heaps of letters, Jack? Do
+please hurry and give them to us." Jean
+Bruce called out, walking away from the
+two young men with whom she had been
+recently talking. One of them was Ralph<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+Merritt, the engineer in charge of the Rainbow
+mine, and the other a visitor from one
+of the neighboring ranches. For as Jack
+had always insisted, wherever Jean was to
+be found there also was a masculine admirer,
+even in a wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>Over her shoulder Jack carried a small
+leather mail bag, which she now opened; but
+before drawing forth her letters she leaned
+over and glanced anxiously into the face
+of the small baby snuggled in Ruth's arms.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing has happened to Jimmikins since
+I have been away? He has not cut a tooth
+or anything, has he, Ruth?" she queried.
+And as the others laughed, the baby being
+at the present hour only about seven weeks
+old, Jack drew forth more than a dozen
+letters and began passing them around to the
+different members of her family.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, Jean, of course there are more for
+you than for any of the rest of us, and in so
+many handwritings that it looks as if you
+kept a correspondence school for young men.
+And, Frieda, I am sorry I had to discover
+this was from Tom. But the youth does
+send you so many boxes of candy, I can't
+help recognizing the address. Ruth, won't
+you ask everybody please to wait here a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+moment for I have something really important
+to tell you." Then Jack's radiant face
+grew graver.</p>
+
+<p>"I have at last had a long letter from
+Olive," she explained. "And a week after
+her grandmother's death the will was read."
+The girl glanced about her. Ralph Merrit
+and their visitor had walked off several
+yards, so that only the few persons interested
+were standing near.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course old Madame Van Mater has
+made the curious will that we might have
+expected. For it seems that she has given
+Olive one more year to make up her mind
+whether or not she will marry Donald Harmon.
+If she does, of course they will then
+inherit the greater portion of the estate with
+only a few legacies to be paid outside. But
+if she does not decide to marry him&mdash;and
+here is the strange thing&mdash;at the end of the
+year another will is to be read, which will
+divide the property differently. And no one
+knows just how, for this second will is sealed
+and in the possession of her executors. So
+Olive may finally be left penniless or she may
+receive everything, or else Donald may suffer
+the same fate. It is a queer and interesting
+state of things, isn't it?" Jack concluded.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and pretty well calculated to make
+everybody that had anything to do with
+the old lady uncomfortable for another twelve
+months longer anyhow," Jim Colter replied
+frowning. "Funny how the old woman arranged
+to make her relatives and friends as
+miserable after her death as she had before
+it. It is pretty hard on both Olive and
+Donald. In the end I have an idea that
+the money will go to some charity."</p>
+
+<p>In reply Jean slowly shook her head, turning
+over the envelopes in her hand with pretended
+interest, but with her thoughts plainly
+not centered upon them.</p>
+
+<p>"Olive is very foolish," she remarked at
+length. "Really I can't see why she does
+not make up her mind to do as her grandmother
+wished. Don is a charming fellow
+and it is ridiculous not to appreciate the
+value of so much money. Why the longer
+I live the more important it seems to me!"</p>
+
+<p>Too displeased with Jean's unexpected
+burst of worldliness to discuss the question
+with her, Jim marched a few steps away.
+Ruth was distressed, but being a woman
+she was not so unmindful of what lay behind
+the girl's apparently careless speech, while
+Frieda became immediately influenced by her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+cousin's point of view, just as she always
+had been since they were small girls. So it
+was Jack who was the one person in the
+group to take Jean's statement lightly, for
+she merely laughed, saying:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, of course we know that Jean is the
+really worldly person in our family, so we
+must watch and see how she lives up to her
+sentiments! Still you have not yet heard
+my most important piece of news. Olive
+has also written that she is completely worn
+out with all the business and worry of these
+last weeks and so she is coming to us at
+once. She asks if she may bring Miss Winthrop
+along with her for a visit?" Jack
+paused for a moment, looking inquiringly
+about at the faces of the others. "Of course
+she may," she ended. "It will be a pleasure
+to have Miss Winthrop, and besides I don't
+see how we possibly could refuse."</p>
+
+<p>Frieda held up two white hands protestingly.
+She was not an industrious person
+and so devoted a great deal of her valuable
+time to her toilet instead of to more serious
+labors. "Oh, dear," she began, "it will be
+just like going back to Primrose Hall again
+to have Miss Winthrop staying in our house.
+Goodness, how she will disapprove of me for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+having no ambition to improve myself as
+Olive does. I shall have to lead a changed
+life!"</p>
+
+<p>"Thank Providence, then. Do ask Miss
+Winthrop to come on the next train," Jim
+chuckled, returning at this instant, while
+Ruth shook her head thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Naturally it will be an opportunity for all
+of us to have a woman like Miss Winthrop
+for our guest," she declared, in a slightly
+worried tone. "But has it ever occurred
+to any one of you where we are to put her?
+The poor old Lodge is so crowded now with
+babies and girls and Jim Colter that we
+have not a single spare room. Oh, of course
+Olive can be tucked in anywhere, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Jim, do take your son and let us walk
+over and look at our new house," Jack at
+once suggested. "Surely there will be enough
+bedrooms finished by the time Olive and
+Miss Winthrop arrive, for some of the family,
+so that we may give ours to our guests.
+Funny how we cling to the dear old Rainbow
+Lodge in spite of our new grandeur."</p>
+
+<p>Then Jack moved on ahead, leading the
+way through the grove of cottonwood trees
+almost up to the old house. She turned to
+the left and about an eighth of a mile farther<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+along came to a slight elevation, recently
+planted with shrubs and evergreens. There,
+facing the little party, was a splendid pile
+of stone and wood that was evidently growing
+into an old-time colonial house.</p>
+
+<p>For of course now that the girls were older
+and wealthier, and Jim and Ruth married,
+Rainbow Lodge was no longer suited to their
+needs. And as the Rainbow Mine still continued
+to yield a handsome income, the new
+house had occupied a great deal of the
+family's time and attention since their return
+from Europe. For it had been both Jim's
+and Jack's desire to build a wonderful colonial
+mansion here in their own beautiful Western
+country, where in times past men and women
+had been content with rude cabins. Since
+a colonial house meant to Jim Colter the
+beauty and dignity of the old Virginia homes
+that he remembered in his boyhood and
+since Jacqueline had long cherished a photograph
+of the place owned by her Southern
+grandfather who had been killed in the Confederate
+army, the new house was to be as
+nearly as possible a replica of the latter.</p>
+
+<p>In the interest of discussing what the
+workmen had accomplished since their last
+visit to the new building, no one noticed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
+that the Indian boy, Carlos, who had followed
+the others up to this time, listening
+intently to every word of their conversation,
+had stalked silently away as soon as Olive's
+name ceased to be mentioned. His face
+wore a more pleasing expression, and unlike
+his usual habit he afterwards joined old
+Aunt Ellen in the kitchen, who was still
+the ranch girls' cook and devoted friend.
+To her he at once imparted the information
+concerning the expected visitors; then he
+retired to his own tent in the yard. For
+Carlos had absolutely refused to live in the
+ranch house with the other employees about
+the estate and had erected for himself an
+Indian tepee at some distance.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>AN UNANSWERED QUESTION<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>ON a pile of boards in a great unfinished
+room Frieda Ralston stood facing&mdash;the
+unknown future.</div>
+
+<p>In the family it was sometimes said that
+though on occasions the younger Miss Ralston
+could assume the airs of a social queen, at
+very many other times she was more of a
+baby than ever. For of course Frieda had
+not yet been touched by any of life's hard
+realities, and since her sister's recovery from
+her accident her way had been fairly plain
+sailing. For did she not have health, youth,
+plenty of money and an adoring family?
+What else was there to wish for? Thus far
+she had never taken any of her mild love
+affairs with the least seriousness and had no
+idea of "settling down," as she expressed it,
+for at least ten years to come. So what was
+there for Frieda to do but each day to grow
+fairer and more charming, like a lovely wax
+doll that had come to life and taken upon<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+itself the airs and graces of a really grown-up
+person. Because Jack objected, Frieda some
+time ago had given up her former fashion of
+wearing her heavy yellow hair in a Psyche
+knot, and in these months at the ranch when
+no strangers were about had returned to her
+old childish custom of two long braids. On
+dress occasions, however, her coiffure, copied
+after a Paris model, could again be made
+bewilderingly lovely.</p>
+
+<p>On this particular occasion Frieda had
+unfortunately neglected to attire herself for
+the r&ocirc;le which she was about to play, as she
+happened to be wearing an old blue and white
+middy blouse and a short duck skirt with one
+long plait hanging over each shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," she began at this moment,
+though no one chanced to be looking toward
+her, "which one of us will finally fall heir to
+this grand new house we are building? I
+have just been thinking, houses are not like
+clothes, meant for one person and to last
+through one or two seasons: they may last
+through many generations and no telling what
+changes in a family."</p>
+
+<p>"Hear! Hear!" cried Jean, straightway
+whirling around to regard her cousin with
+astonishment and then striking an attitude<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+of mock admiration. "Listen, everybody,
+please, Frieda is making a speech! She
+wants to know which of us shall become the
+royal family of Rainbow Castle. It is an
+interesting question, dear; I never should
+have thought it of you!"</p>
+
+<p>Frieda hesitated, but the next instant went
+on quite seriously. "Of course it won't be
+you though, Jean, because of all of us, Ruth,
+Olive, Jim, and Jack and me, why I think
+you love the Rainbow ranch the least. You
+will never want to stay on in the West once
+you are married; that visit you made the
+Princess Colonna in Rome has completely
+spoiled you."</p>
+
+<p>And now it was Jean's turn to endure the
+family laughter, and though she made no
+reply, she showed more annoyance than the
+accusation merited.</p>
+
+<p>Still surprisingly thoughtful, Frieda continued:
+"I suppose that either Jim or Jack
+and their children ought to inherit the new
+house, for of course I am the youngest and
+have done nothing toward making the ranch
+a success as Jim and Jack have. Ruth, you
+and Jim would want Jack to have the place
+after she marries and has children, wouldn't
+you? And yet not long ago, do you know, I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+believed that in spite of loving the ranch best,
+Jack would be the first one of us to leave it
+for good. I don't think so now," she added
+hastily, catching an expression on her sister's
+face that she could not altogether understand.</p>
+
+<p>But by this time Jack had marched across
+the room and was gently but firmly pulling
+Frieda down from her exalted position.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose hearing the news of old
+Madame Van Mater's will has gone to your
+head, Frieda darling," Jack protested. "But
+really no one of us wants to hear you arranging
+our futures and talking about our descendants,
+as if fifty years might suddenly pass
+away before tea time. Of course 'Rainbow
+Castle,' as Jean calls our new home, shall
+belong to the one of us who wishes it and
+needs it the most. But which of us that may
+be&mdash;well, in the words of Mr. William Shakespeare,
+'that is the question.'"</p>
+
+<p>Jack now turned to her cousin, Jean, who
+was standing before one of the unfinished
+windows looking out at the beautiful view.
+For the prospect from the new house was
+far lovelier than any outlook from Rainbow
+Lodge, since it stood on a higher incline and
+showed a wider sweep of the prairies.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Jean," Jack asked, "I wonder if you
+happen to know where Ralph Merrit is?
+There is something Jim and I want particularly
+to talk over with him. I happened to
+notice he was with you last. Did he say
+whether he was going to have dinner with us
+tonight or with the men at the Ranch
+House?"</p>
+
+<p>The other girl shrugged her shoulders
+impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"Really, Jack, I don't see why I should be
+expected to know Ralph Merrit's plans
+because I was talking to him for ten minutes.
+But what is all this mystery about anyway?
+What is going on down at the mine? Ralph
+looks either as if he were working himself
+to death or as if he had the weight of the
+world on his shoulders. To tell you the
+truth, I believe he did ask me to tell you
+that he was going away for several days
+perhaps. He preferred to talk over matters
+with you on his return. But do come on
+home, Ruth," Jean finished crossly, "it is
+much too cold for the baby to be outdoors
+now the sun is down. And Jim and Jack
+always prefer to have their business secrets
+alone. I suppose we have no right to be
+interested. But of course there can't be any<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
+serious trouble at the Rainbow Mine while
+Ralph is managing things." Then Ruth,
+Jean, the baby and Frieda walked on ahead,
+leaving Jim and Jack to follow slowly behind.
+For in spite of the accusation in Jean's
+speech, her cousin had made no denial.</p>
+
+<p>With her hand inside his, after the fashion
+she had as a little girl when anything about
+the big ranch troubled her, Jack gazed earnestly
+up into her old friend and guardian's
+strong and gentle <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'contenance'">countenance</ins>.</p>
+
+<p>"I am right not to speak of this trouble
+Ralph Merrit is having with the men at
+Rainbow Mine, don't you think so, Jim?"
+she queried. "You see I don't understand
+the situation anyhow, and it all may come to
+nothing in the end. So any discussion does
+not seem to me fair to Ralph. Surely the
+men are only grumbling! Why next to you
+I feel that we owe our fortune to the splendid
+way Ralph Merrit has managed the mine.
+And you know you have always liked him
+better than any other young man we have
+ever known, better even than Frank Kent."</p>
+
+<p>Jim cleared his throat. "Have I said
+that I had changed my mind about Merrit?"
+he demanded. "You are right, Jack; you
+just lie low and say nothing even to the men<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+who may come to you with their complaints.
+In my opinion the trouble is this: The fellows
+at work on Rainbow Mine are most of them
+middle-aged men, kind of down-and-out
+miners and a hard lot, who have either given
+up the hope of discovering gold for themselves
+or postponed searching for it for a while so
+as to first make a good living out of us.
+Well, you see, compared to them Ralph Merrit
+is a kid. And of course his being a real
+mining engineer graduated out of a college
+and placed as the boss over them makes the
+older men kind of sore. Then, besides paying
+our miners their regular wages we have
+been giving them a percentage also of the
+amount of gold that is taken out of the mine
+each month. There is still enough pay dirt
+for us to live pretty comfortable, but the men
+say we ought to be getting a whole lot more.
+Merrit isn't certain yet, he wants to make
+some more investigations. The gold that is
+a whole lot deeper down under the earth
+may prove either too dangerous or too expensive
+to get out. So at bottom I believe that
+is what the real grievance is, they want Ralph
+to hurry up. It is nothing to them to have us
+sink, say a hundred thousand dollars, in new
+mining machinery and maybe get nothing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+back. So they have been spreading ugly
+stories, say Merrit does not know his job and
+that he is too busy speculating and trying
+to earn a fortune that way for himself to care
+what becomes of the mine."</p>
+
+<p>After this speech Jack kept silent for several
+moments and they were almost at the
+Lodge before she replied:</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, Jim, don't be angry with me
+if I say something. Of course I know Ralph
+is doing the best he can for us at the mine.
+But about that other story&mdash;really you ought
+to try and find out if it is true. John Raines,
+one of the miners, said he wanted to tell me
+something; do let him tell you instead. Because,
+Jim dear, if once you believe in a person
+you know you believe in him forever,
+and yet maybe Ralph may have gotten into
+mischief. You see I should not wish to be
+prying into his private affairs, but it is as
+plain as the nose on your face to everybody
+but you that Ralph is in love with Jean and
+always has been for that matter, though I
+must confess he has been paying her a good
+deal less attention lately. And as for Jean,
+well I don't believe she will marry any one
+who cannot give her wealth and position;
+yet just the same it would be wiser to know<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
+the truth about Ralph. Couldn't you ask
+him to tell you? I believe he would. Oh
+dear me, I do hope we won't have a strike
+at the mine or any other kind of trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"You sound pretty sensible, partner," Jim
+agreed, "maybe I had better look into things
+a little more. It never hurts any fellow to
+keep his eyes open. But let me tell you that
+I have never heard of a gold mine yet, whether
+it was a good one or a poor one, that did not
+keep on piling up trouble."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>THE ENGINEER OF THE RAINBOW MINE<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>READERS of the Ranch Girls' Series
+probably remember that the first meeting
+between the members of the Rainbow
+Ranch family and Ralph Merrit occurred
+several years before, while they were making
+a caravan journey to the Yellowstone Park.</div>
+
+<p>And Jean Bruce had been Ralph's original
+acquaintance. How many times since had
+they not laughed at the vision of the girl
+idly washing her hair in an outdoor stream
+with no thought of a stranger in many miles.
+Then there was the story of their first luncheon
+together with only Frieda as chaperon and
+Ruth and Olive's return, the storm, and Jim
+and Jack's disaster by the deserted mine.
+Within less than a week Ralph Merrit had
+appeared like an old and tried friend. And
+from the hour of his arrival to advise and
+assist Jim Colter in regard to the Rainbow
+Mine he had seemed almost like one of the
+family. Only twice had he left his work for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
+any length of time&mdash;once to visit his mother
+and sister in Chicago, and the second time to
+say farewell to the Ranch girls when they
+sailed for Europe. His friends understood
+that a large part of his generous salary went
+each month to the support of his people, and
+that in his present position Ralph was not
+making his fortune so quickly in the West
+as he had hoped. But was that the reason
+why he had been taking so many short trips
+away from the ranch in the past few months
+and why <ins title="Transcriber's Note: this word not present in original text">he</ins> had recently changed so decidedly
+in his appearance and manner?</p>
+
+<p>Though Jean may have had her own special
+reasons for observing these changes most,
+no <ins title="Transcriber's Note: this word added to text">one</ins> else was wholly blind. Could it be possible
+that Ralph Merrit's difficulties were graver
+than they suspected?</p>
+
+<p>There is a possibility that Jack Ralston's
+and even Jim's faith might have been shaken
+had they been able to follow the young man's
+proceedings on the afternoon of their conversation
+about him.</p>
+
+<p>He and the neighbor, who had simply been
+a visitor at the ranch for afternoon tea, walked
+along without much conversation until they
+came to within the neighborhood of Rainbow
+Creek&mdash;that portion of the creek where important<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+mining machinery had been set up and
+near which a shaft had been sunk, forming a
+narrow entrance into the Rainbow Mine.</p>
+
+<p>As the hour for work had passed some time
+before, the place was now deserted and Ralph
+Merrit showed no interest in lingering in its
+vicinity. Yet the discovery of the surprising
+wealth contained in the Rainbow Mine had
+never ceased being a subject of interest, of
+speculation and oftentimes of acute envy to
+many of the ranch owners in that end of
+Wyoming, and the young man, Hugo Manning,
+who was Ralph's present companion,
+had only recently purchased a cattle ranch
+about ten miles away. He had come from the
+western part of New York State and this was
+his first sight of a gold mine.</p>
+
+<p>Plainly Ralph was at first simply bored
+by the stupid questions that his neighbor
+asked of him. Then unexpectedly the young
+engineer's expression changed and his face
+flushed angrily.</p>
+
+<p>"I hear that your famous Rainbow gold
+mine is panning out," the young man had
+remarked carelessly. "They tell me around
+here that you have already taken out all
+the gold that lies near enough to the surface
+to be of value. They insist that it is going<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+to cost you more to buy new machinery
+and try out new methods of mining than
+the gold is worth. Better advise your friends
+to sell out while selling is good and before
+their mine loses its reputation."</p>
+
+<p>Ralph made a queer noise in his throat
+that was half anger, and yet he did not
+positively deny the suggestion. "Oh, they
+say that, do they?" he exclaimed. "It's
+funny how much sooner strangers find out
+about your affairs than you do yourself!
+I don't believe Mr. Colter or Miss Ralston
+have yet had to complain of any lack of
+money. When that time comes then we
+shall decide what is best to do."</p>
+
+<p>And Ralph started to move along, but
+his companion waited, hesitating for half a
+moment. "I say, Merrit," he continued,
+"if the Rainbow Mine owners should make
+up their minds that they want to get out,
+I wish you would let me hear the news first.
+Isn't it possible that they might be willing
+to take a lump sum down and not run the
+risk of losing what they have already got
+by investing in new machinery? I believe
+it mostly belongs just to the two Ralston
+girls. But a company of men, say in New
+York City, might look at the proposition differently.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+They could afford to sink a few
+hundred thousands easier."</p>
+
+<p>Ralph nodded dryly and this time walked
+on so resolutely that his companion was
+obliged to hurry in order to keep alongside
+and to hear the answer to his request.</p>
+
+<p>All the reply he received was: "Thank you;
+it is kind of surprising to meet a fellow who
+knows people who are willing to lose money."</p>
+
+<p>But when at the edge of the ranch the two
+men finally separated, Ralph Merrit went
+on alone to the nearest railroad station. It
+was several miles away and few persons
+from the Rainbow Ranch ever attempted
+walking so great a distance. But Ralph
+had not ordered a horse for one reason because
+he did not wish to have a boy accompany
+him to bring the animal home again
+and also because he preferred not having
+any one know just where he was going.
+That there was discussion and ill feeling
+concerning him among the men at work on
+the Rainbow Mine he understood, although
+Ralph was not yet aware how unkind the
+criticism was, nor just what was being said.</p>
+
+<p>By midnight he had finally arrived at his
+destination, Laramie, the largest city in
+Wyoming. He had then gone directly to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+a small, out-of-the-way hotel. But after his
+arrival, instead of getting immediately into
+bed as any tired, healthy fellow should, the
+young man dropped into a chair before his
+open window, sitting there most of the night.
+Now and then he dozed a few moments
+from sheer exhaustion, but the greater part
+of the time he stared out into the lighted
+streets below him, moody and restless and
+totally unlike the Ralph Merrit of former
+days.</p>
+
+<p>If one trait of character had previously
+distinguished Ralph from the Ranch girls'
+other young men friends, it had been his
+practical common sense. Unlike Frank Kent
+and Donald Harmon, Ralph Merrit was a
+self-made boy, who had earned his own
+way through college and had afterwards
+suffered many disappointments and disillusions
+on coming West to seek his fortune.
+Upon taking charge of the Rainbow Mine
+and making the success of it, which he certainly
+had, for a time Ralph felt happy and
+satisfied. He was doing work which many
+an older man might have envied him. Then
+why had he recently become so disheartened
+and dissatisfied? It was true that the Rainbow
+Mine was not yielding so much gold as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+it formerly had and that he was beginning
+to feel fearful that the veins near the surface,
+which had held valuable ore, were now
+nearly worked out. Yet Ralph did not even
+try to pretend to himself that his nervousness
+and discontent were due to conditions
+at Rainbow Mine. No, his anxiety and
+despondency were entirely personal.</p>
+
+<p>For in the past six months Ralph had
+been overtaken by an ambition that makes
+for more unhappiness and destroys the careers
+of more young men than almost any other
+vice. He had developed an overpowering
+desire to make a large fortune quickly, not
+by hard work or economy or any of the
+ordinary, slow methods for gaining wealth,
+but by some single, brilliant stroke of good
+luck that should make him a rich man at
+once.</p>
+
+<p>Yet this represented such a curious change
+in Ralph Merrit's former nature, in his
+good sense and sound judgment, that surely
+some outside influence must have been at
+work to render him so unlike himself. What
+that influence really was Ralph Merrit alone
+knew perfectly well.</p>
+
+<p>Now it is idle to deny that while under
+most circumstances a refined girl is an ennobling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+influence in a young fellow's life,
+now and then there may be exceptions to
+this fact as to all others. At the very beginning
+of their acquaintance Ralph Merrit
+had understood that he was falling hopelessly
+in love with Jean Bruce. But in the
+two years of her absence at school and in
+Europe he had fought the matter out with
+himself and decided that he had mastered
+his impossible fancy. During her short
+visits at the ranch they had remained especial
+friends as at the start, but nothing more.
+Now, however, since Jean's return to live at
+the Rainbow Lodge, Ralph had not only
+felt a return of his first affection, but an
+emotion that was very much stronger and
+more serious.</p>
+
+<p>And he felt this in spite of recognizing
+that Jean herself had greatly changed. No
+longer was she the fascinating unspoiled
+girl of his early acquaintance; she was a far
+more worldly-minded and ambitious Jean
+than he could have imagined. She was
+also far prettier and more alluring from her
+experiences and opportunities, and there was
+no doubt but that she was constantly yearning
+for the companionship of distinguished
+people, for more society, broader social opportunities<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
+of every kind. During the past
+year at the ranch she had not been altogether
+contented. Their former life now seemed
+too simple and uneventful to her, she no
+longer had Jack's intense interest in outdoor
+amusements. Yet to Ruth's and her cousin's
+suggestions that she make a visit in the
+east to her friends, Margaret and Cecil
+Belknap, Jean would not listen. Of course
+she was happy at home, and whatever her
+family might say to the contrary they would
+be absurdly lonely without her. Moreover,
+did they believe that she would miss Olive's
+home-coming? But any other influence that
+may have been at work in the back of the
+girl's heart or mind she did not mention.
+And assuredly Ralph Merrit did not dream
+that his presence on the ranch could be in
+any possible sense an added influence.</p>
+
+<p>For whatever Ralph's present weaknesses,
+he did not put the blame upon a woman.
+Jean had given him no false encouragement,
+had shown him no special favor. The fault
+was his, that moved by what he believed her
+attitude toward wealth, he had used the
+wrong method for obtaining it. He had
+not even given Jean the chance to say that
+his struggle was unwise or unnecessary, since<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+he had been paying her far less attention
+recently.</p>
+
+<p>At ten o'clock the next morning Ralph
+learned from his stock broker that instead
+of being nearer the fortune he so much
+desired, he was several thousand dollars
+farther away. And this loss represented
+almost the last dollar he had in the world.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>OLIVE COMES HOME<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>SOON after dinner Ruth and Jim Colter
+and of course the small son had retired
+to their rooms in Rainbow Lodge,
+leaving Jack, Jean and Frieda to amuse
+themselves in the living room until bedtime.
+A week had passed since their visit to their
+new house and tonight Frieda and Jack were
+busily studying over their original plans
+and discussing various alterations which they
+felt were absolutely necessary, while Jean,
+without seeming to regard them, was playing
+idly upon the piano.</div>
+
+<p>It was not cold, and one of the front windows
+was partly raised with the blind drawn
+down; but a small fire was burning in the
+old fireplace, since the Rainbow Lodge living
+room was never exactly the same delightful
+abode without it.</p>
+
+<p>Except for a few handsome, additional
+pieces of furniture and some odd pictures
+and china which the girls had brought home<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
+from abroad, there was no material change
+in the beloved room. For Ruth and the
+girls had the good taste to know that its
+primitive character with its decorations of
+bright Indian rugs and simple furnishings
+was far more suitable and beautiful than
+any alteration their money could bring. So
+the newer and more splendid furnishings
+which they had purchased in New York
+and in Europe had been safely stored away
+for the finishing of their new house. And this
+evening in their former familiar surroundings
+Jack, Jean and Frieda looked not unlike they
+had on that first evening years ago when Jack
+had returned from her original meeting with
+Frank Kent and before either Ruth or Olive
+had ever been seen at the Rainbow Lodge.</p>
+
+<p>"But, Frieda dear, it will be far too expensive
+to make such a change as you suggest,"
+Jack protested. "You know that we agreed
+to have the four big bedrooms and two
+baths on one side of the house and just one
+upstairs sitting room. Now if we try to
+arrange a private sitting room off from your
+room, it will either make your bedroom too
+small or else rob the rest of us. And another
+big bay window would cost hundreds of
+dollars more."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Well, why not?" Frieda returned petulantly.
+"Here we have all been living quietly
+at the ranch for nearly a year and spending
+no outside money except on the house. It
+is only because you are suddenly growing
+stingy, Jack. I heard you tell Ruth that
+we had better not order as many new oriental
+rugs as we planned to have. Mr. Parker
+says that he can add the extra space to my
+apartment without spoiling the effect of the
+house in the least. Do let me have him
+do it, Jack darling, please? You know you
+and Jean and Olive will often be talking
+about things in our big sitting room that
+you won't wish me to hear and I do want
+a tiny den all to myself."</p>
+
+<p>Because Jack did not agree at once to
+her sister's pleading the girl at the piano
+ceased playing for an instant to glance at
+her cousin, and, surprised by her expression,
+did not look immediately away.</p>
+
+<p>Jack was frowning and was a little pale.
+But she had been out all day riding over
+the ranch and talking to the men at the
+mine, and naturally might be expected to
+be tired. She had gone to her own room
+and undressed almost immediately after dinner,
+and as there was no possibility of any<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
+visitors arriving unexpectedly at the ranch,
+she was now wearing a lovely old Chinese
+blue silk kimono and had her gold brown
+hair in a loose knot on top of her head.
+Leaning over she suddenly kissed Frieda,
+who sat on the other side of their small
+table puzzling over the drawings for their
+new place.</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't fair to say that I am stingy,
+baby," Jack declared, "when you know
+that our house is costing thousands of dollars
+more than we first expected. People
+say that is just what all houses do, yet just
+the same we have to set a limit somewhere.
+And of course I don't want you or Jean to
+worry, but there is a possibility that we
+may not get as much money out of Rainbow
+Mine in the future as we have for the
+past few years. And you know we have
+not a large fortune stowed away in bank.
+Besides, we have gotten into the habit of
+living pretty expensively and spending an
+awful lot of money thinking that our mine
+would hold out forever. Today Jim told
+me that frequently there were gold mines
+that ceased to yield almost altogether when
+certain veins had been worked out. I don't
+think he meant that this was going to happen<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+to ours&mdash;only that our income might
+be cut down."</p>
+
+<p>As Jack finished speaking Jean Bruce got
+up from her piano stool and came across
+the room to face her cousin.</p>
+
+<p>"It's funny, Jack, that you let Jim give
+you all this information about affairs at the
+mine, instead of Ralph Merrit. It seems
+to me that Ralph must know more than
+Jim. And as he is head engineer you know
+you ought to get your information from
+him," she protested.</p>
+
+<p>Rather wearily Jack leaned back in her
+chair; yet she answered without any show
+of temper. "I thought you knew, Jean,
+that Ralph has not yet come back to the
+ranch. Five or six days ago he wrote Jim
+not to expect him for some little time as
+he had important business to look after.
+So you see I could not very well discuss
+business with him while he is away."</p>
+
+<p>With a little shrug Jean turned to stare into
+the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but you could have waited until
+Ralph's return and then have had the conversation
+with him. Besides, it isn't only Jim
+who has been telling you that the gold in our
+mine will give out unless some new method for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
+mining it is employed. No, it is the other
+miners who have been grumbling to both of
+you. I wonder if they can be dissatisfied
+with Ralph's management? But, Frieda, for
+goodness sake don't be a baby and don't
+worry Jack about spending more money on
+our new house than we can afford. Dear me,
+I wonder how we shall behave if suddenly
+we should become poor as church mice again.
+It would be my duty then, I suppose, Jack, to
+let you get rid of supporting such an expensive
+cousin by some means or other."</p>
+
+<p>Already won over by her sister's argument,
+since Jack's judgment was almost always hers
+in the end, Frieda had left her chair and was
+sitting on the arm of her sister's, pulling
+softly at the loose coils of her hair and trying
+to rearrange them.</p>
+
+<p>She and Jack both stared at Jean in surprise
+and consternation. What was the matter
+with her? Why should she talk in this
+absurd fashion? Had they ever felt or shown
+any difference between her and themselves
+in the right to everything they possessed?
+Something was making Jean unlike herself
+tonight.</p>
+
+<p>Seeing the hurt and surprise in the other
+two faces Jean at once changed the subject.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Jack, have you heard anything more
+about when Miss Winthrop and Olive are
+planning to come for their visit to us?" she
+demanded. "Just think, we have not seen
+Olive since our return from England! Won't
+it be splendid for you to have her with you
+again, Jack dear? Frieda and I are so dreadfully
+spoiled and lazy, we never do anything
+to help you about the ranch and only complain
+if things go wrong and we haven't more money
+to spend. I do wish somebody would show
+me how to be useful. I haven't even the beds
+to make now we have another girl to help
+Aunt Ellen."</p>
+
+<p>Jack shook her head. "I am sorry you are
+bored. I wish I could think of something
+to interest you. You seemed to like the ranch
+when we first came back and the work at
+the mine. The only word I have heard from
+Olive since her other letter was a short note
+in answer to my telegram that begged her to
+come at once. She said that she and Miss
+Winthrop had a lot of business matters to
+look after, but meant to run away as soon as
+possible. What in the world was that?"
+And Jack, who seemed unusually tired and
+nervous tonight, startled the other two girls
+by jumping up unexpectedly.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Jean had also heard the noise and turned
+in the direction from which it came.</p>
+
+<p>"It is only that tiresome boy, Carlos,"
+she explained. "I mean to tell Jim that I
+don't like his sneaking up here and peering into
+our window in that spooky fashion. Carlos
+can move more like a spirit than a human
+being anyway! But what has become of him
+recently, for now I think of it I have not seen
+him before for several days?"</p>
+
+<p>"He has been away from the ranch most
+of the time," Frieda answered sleepily, "for
+I wanted him to do an errand for me the other
+day and could not find him. But Aunt Ellen
+says he has come to her for food several times
+and then has gone off with as much as she
+would give him. Somehow I'm fond of
+Carlos&mdash;he was such a queer, handsome little
+boy when he first came to us. I hope Olive
+will understand him better than the rest of
+us do. But dear me, what does he mean by
+coming in at the front door without knocking?"
+And Frieda also jumped up hurriedly.
+"I hope he is not bringing us bad news!"</p>
+
+<p>Not only had the front door opened, which
+had not yet been locked for the night, but
+the door of the living room was mysteriously
+unclosing just half an inch at a time.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The three girls were seriously annoyed
+and Jack spoke sharply:</p>
+
+<p>"Carlos, what do you mean by entering
+our room without asking permission? Unless
+you have something important to say I should
+prefer your waiting to speak to us until
+tomorrow."</p>
+
+<p>A soft voice, which was not that of the
+Indian boy, replied: "But I can't wait till
+morning or not another moment, Jack dearest,
+when I have traveled across a whole continent
+to see you. And please forgive Carlos for
+my sake, because he and I have been planning
+this surprise together ever since I left Primrose
+Hall."</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards Olive Van Mater could only get
+a few steps further inside the old Lodge
+living room, because Frieda, Jean and Jack
+at once flung themselves upon her. And the
+tears were gathering fast in the girl's big
+star-like black eyes as she tried her best to
+explain the mystery of her arrival and to
+embrace her three friends at the same instant.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, Miss Winthrop found that she
+could not leave home for some time yet and
+I was so tired and so nearly dead to see you
+that she would not let me wait until she could
+come. So I thought that I would rather<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+surprise you than anything else I could
+imagine. I wrote Carlos when to expect me
+and to have a horse and carriage at the train.
+But the poor lad has been at the station
+apparently for several days, fearing he might
+make some mistake and that I should arrive
+without his knowing. But you brought me
+home safely after all, didn't you, Carlos?"
+And Olive disengaged her hand for a moment
+from the girls' hold to extend it to the Indian
+boy.</p>
+
+<p>"Goodness, how you have grown, I haven't
+had a good look at you until this moment,"
+she ended admiringly.</p>
+
+<p>And surely Carlos made a handsome picture.
+In honor of Olive's home-coming he wore a
+soft shirt of some yellow material and a pair
+of clean khaki trousers with a bright sash
+knotted about his waist and a crimson tie
+at his throat. All the surliness had disappeared
+from his expression, his skin was like
+polished bronze and his eyes like shining coals,
+as he took his old friend's hand and for a
+moment pressed it reverently to his lips.</p>
+
+<p>Then Jack removed Olive's traveling hat
+and long broadcloth coat, with every movement
+of her hands a caress.</p>
+
+<p>"But please, Carlos and Olive," she demanded,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
+"I don't pretend to be able to
+hear outdoor sounds as you can; yet I have
+fairly well trained ears of my own. Would
+you mind telling me how you managed to
+drive a rickety old hired carriage up to the
+very door of Rainbow Lodge with us in the
+living room and yet never a sound heard we?"</p>
+
+<p>Olive laughed. "That is our secret, but
+if you must know, we did no such thing.
+Half a mile away I sent the driver back to the
+station and Carlos and I ran on tiptoes under
+the stars all the way home." The girl ended
+her sentence with a slight catch in her breath.
+"Then please to remember that we are both
+Indians, or at least I am almost one. And
+now won't somebody go and find Ruth and
+Jim, for I just must see the baby this minute
+even if he cries his eyes out the rest of the
+night."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>THEIR RIDE TOGETHER<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>OLIVE and Jack had scarcely been
+alone for more than a half hour at
+a time since Olive's arrival almost a
+week before. But before ten o'clock this
+morning they had both started off on horseback
+with their lunch boxes packed, leaving
+word at home that they were not to be
+expected back until sundown.</div>
+
+<p>First of all they yearned for a long, uninterrupted
+gallop together over the sweet-smelling,
+wild, rose-strewn prairies. For not since the
+very first year of Olive's life at Rainbow
+Ranch had they enjoyed this formerly well-loved
+entertainment. Soon after then had
+come Jack's accident, and until this year she
+had not been in entirely good health during
+any of their days at the ranch.</p>
+
+<p>And the beauty of this special windswept,
+sunlit day was nature's gift to the two friends'
+reunion.</p>
+
+<p>Jack rode a little ahead on her own horse,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+Romeo, which she had bought immediately
+after their return from abroad and christened
+"Romeo" in a kind of joking recollection
+of their visit in Rome. Of course, he was
+the fastest riding horse on Rainbow Ranch,
+but not a beautiful animal, since he had been
+chosen for speed and endurance rather than
+appearance. And in truth he was only a
+rough Western pony with sagacity and knowledge
+of the country, dignified by the name of
+horse simply because of his slightly greater
+size and length of limb.</p>
+
+<p>Following close behind, her pretty nose
+almost able to touch the other animal's
+rough coat, came Olive's smaller mare, which
+Jean had named "Juliet" by reason of following
+Jack's horse about whenever they
+were permitted to graze in the open fields.</p>
+
+<p>Juliet had been no one's special property,
+since she had been born on the place and no
+one had chosen her for personal use. So
+shortly after Olive's return the other three
+girls had escorted her to the stables and
+there solemnly presented her with "Juliet,"
+avowing that no one else should have the
+privilege of using the mare except with
+Olive's consent.</p>
+
+<p>The two friends rode for more than an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
+hour after leaving the neighborhood of the
+Lodge without speaking, except now and
+then to call attention to some particularly
+beautiful effect in the landscape. First they
+galloped to the farthest outskirts of the great
+thousand-acre ranch, which was still as carefully
+and scientifically managed as during the
+time when the Rainbow Mine was an undiscovered
+quantity and when the girls and
+Jim's living depended entirely upon its success.
+There were groups of cattle scattered
+here and there wherever the alfalfa grass
+was ripe for eating, and mares with young
+colts were allowed free pasture. But by and
+by when a far-off rim of hills could be seen,
+with their summits glistening with caps of
+snow and the sky above them so scattered
+with fleece-like clouds that snow and cloud
+seemed to touch and melt into each other,
+Jack slowed down for a moment, waiting for
+her friend to come up alongside her.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it because I am a Western girl and all
+this means childhood and home to me that
+the country seems more beautiful and inspiring
+than anything we saw in Europe, Olive
+dear?" Jack asked.</p>
+
+<p>And Olive looked into the other girl's face
+searchingly for an instant before replying.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+She had been wondering for a good many
+months why Frank Kent had never come to
+America to see Jack when on leaving England
+she had believed that he and Jacqueline were
+almost on the point of being engaged. Several
+times recently she had actually written
+and asked Jack why on earth Frank had
+not made his promised visit to Rainbow
+Lodge. Without really answering, Jack had
+always arranged to evade her questioning.
+"Frank was too busy, he was thinking of
+running for Parliament, he preferred waiting
+until Olive was also able to be at home, so
+that they might be there together once
+again." None of these replies had made a
+very profound impression upon the questioner.
+So today Olive had planned in her own mind
+to get at the real truth. Jack would not
+dare to refuse to answer her direct inquiry
+if once she had the courage to demand it of
+her. Positively she must know whether
+Frank's apparent indifference was due to a
+change in his own feeling or to an unreasonable
+request on Jack's part for postponing
+her decision.</p>
+
+<p>Now at Jack's question, studying her
+friend's face, Olive feared that this last idea
+must be the true one. Love of her old home,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
+the grip which the western country and
+atmosphere always had on the girl's character
+and affections&mdash;these must have been
+waging a winning battle against her former
+affection for Frank Kent.</p>
+
+<p>Must she ask Jack if this were true? No,
+Olive decided that she had best refrain until
+later in the day. For Jack was not at the
+present moment in the mood for confidences.
+She was just gloriously alive and filled with
+the physical beauty and splendor of the
+morning. Later on, when there had been
+opportunity for more conversation, Olive
+would make her query. For there were
+dozens of intimate personal things which
+she and her best beloved friend must get at
+the heart of before this ride of theirs together
+was over. So now Olive only laughed,
+and leaning over lightly stroked the neck of
+the other horse.</p>
+
+<p>"It is only because you are such a pagan,
+Jack, that Europe seems too crowded for
+you," she answered. "Besides you know
+how dearly you finally learned to love the
+English country, although it was the direct
+opposite of all this! Doesn't its wonderful
+greenness, the splendid old trees and the
+flowers and cultivated beauty of the fields<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+make up to you for the great wide spaces and
+the colors in your prairies?"</p>
+
+<p>Slowly Jack shook her head, in reply, at
+the same instant taking off her soft brown
+felt hat and hanging it on the pommel of her
+saddle. "I don't know," she answered, drawing
+in a deep, quiet breath.</p>
+
+<p>The past year of outdoor work and amusement
+on the ranch had brought back to
+Jacqueline Ralston the glow and brilliant,
+healthy color of her childhood. Her complexion
+was several shades darker than it had
+been the summer before, her cheeks more
+vividly rose and her hair lighter from exposure
+to the sun. Then Jack had again grown
+dreadfully indifferent to clothes since their
+return home, much to Jean's and Frieda's
+disgust and to Jim Colter's secret amusement.
+For quite forgetting their fortune and the
+fact that she was now almost ready to cast
+her first vote in Wyoming, Jack had returned
+to wearing the old brown corduroys or faded
+khakis of her youth, together with almost any
+soft hat which she happened to find convenient
+for her outdoor jaunts. And only when
+the other girls insisted, or Ruth pleaded, or
+guests were expected to dinner at the Lodge,
+would Jack return to wearing the pretty<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+toilets which she had brought home from
+Europe. For not one single dress had she
+given time or thought to purchasing since then,
+although Jean and Frieda frequently amused
+themselves by sending east for hats and gowns.</p>
+
+<p>So today, although Jack was actually the
+older and in times past had looked it, Olive
+would have been considered her senior. For
+one reason she was still weary from the
+shock and strain of her grandmother's death
+and from the business difficulties resulting
+from her strange will. Then there was a
+last and final interview with Donald Harmon
+which even yet the girl did not like to recall.
+She was sorry not to be able to return his
+affection. Moreover, Olive's new riding-habit
+was of black cloth, which Miss Winthrop had
+ordered from a well-known New York tailor,
+adding to her appearance of age and dignity.
+Yet in spite of the elegance and decorum of
+her own riding attire, Olive did not feel the
+objection to her friend's as Jean and Frieda
+undoubtedly would have. For Jack's costume
+was eminently characteristic. Moreover,
+the old corduroy skirt and leather
+leggings and slouch hat were not unbecoming
+now that her coat was open showing the
+curve of her strong white throat.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was equally characteristic of Jack when
+they finally reached the clump of trees where
+they were to have luncheon to jump first
+from her horse and then lift Olive as carefully
+down as though she had been her masculine
+escort. Afterwards it was she who led the
+horses to water, fed them and then tied them.</p>
+
+<p>Coming back, she flung herself down on the
+ground by her friend and taking one of the
+girl's hands in hers kissed it, saying carelessly:</p>
+
+<p>"Olive, child, did you hear any one or anything
+while I was away? I thought we were
+going to have a perfectly peaceful and
+uninterrupted day, but I have an idea that
+while I was looking after the horses I heard
+some one stirring about not so very far off.
+Still I may have been mistaken or it may
+have been a deer or a wildcat. This woods
+gets so much denser as one goes further into
+it. This is near the same place where I
+managed to break my poor little pony's legs
+several years ago. It was when we were
+making that horrid visit at the Norton's
+before it was finally decided that you were to
+come and live with us. I never have been
+able to think of having to shoot 'Hotspur'
+without its giving me the shivers." And<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+Jack now took a small pistol out of a leather
+holster fastened about her waist. "I never
+go on a long ride with either of the girls without
+carrying this," she remarked carelessly,
+"but I don't believe I am ever going to like
+hunting again as I did when I was younger.
+That was one of the lessons I learned when
+I was ill so long&mdash;a greater respect for life,
+anybody's or anything's." Then the girl's
+voice grew suddenly hushed.</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't you hear a slight noise then?" she
+whispered.</p>
+
+<p>After a moment of enforced silence Olive
+shook her head. "No, or at least nothing of
+importance," she replied. "Of course these
+woods must have wild game in them, since it
+is the only place with running water nearer
+than Rainbow Creek. But it is odd your
+having this impression now. Several times
+I meant to tell you and forgot&mdash;that while we
+were riding I kept having the idea that some
+one was following after us. Half a dozen
+times I looked around thinking that it might
+possibly be either Jean or Frieda. But I
+saw no one, so of course it must have been
+only a fancy."</p>
+
+<p>"Well it certainly was neither Jean nor
+Frieda," Jack replied laughingly. "They<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
+have both grown too lazy for such a journey
+as we are taking. But come along, because
+if we are ever to get to your old Indian village
+and back again this afternoon, we must
+hurry."</p>
+
+<p>For this had been the supposed object of
+Jack's and Olive's free day together. Soon
+after her arrival at the Lodge Olive had suggested
+that she would very much like to go
+back to the little Indian village where she
+had lived as a child with old Laska, and see
+if the woman and her son were yet alive.
+She desired also to pay a visit to her former
+teacher and first friend, who was still at work
+among the Indian children at the little
+Indian reservation school.</p>
+
+<p>Before the two girls had finally arrived at
+their destination, it was Olive who discovered
+the ghost stealthily pursuing them. And it
+was he whom Jack must have heard in the
+woods.</p>
+
+<p>Olive at once turned apologetically to her
+friend. "Don't be cross, Jack, and don't
+scold if I tell you something," she began
+unexpectedly. "But just now I saw at some
+distance behind us a brown shadow on a
+brown horse. So I'm afraid it is Carlos who
+has been trailing after us. But really it is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+my fault for having told him where we
+intended going. Probably he won't trouble
+us if we don't wish to notice him."</p>
+
+<p>Frowning, Jacqueline returned: "I'm sorry
+to confess it to you, Olive dear, but really,
+Carlos is getting to be rather a nuisance to
+Jim and me. I do hope you may be able to
+influence him to settle down to some kind
+of work or study&mdash;to anything he likes.
+Neither Jim nor I care so much what except
+that his idleness is a bad influence among the
+men on the place. There is no use in my
+trying to do anything with him, for he has
+taken such a violent dislike to me. Frieda
+says that I am too much of a boss and it
+has offended the boy's dignity. But I shan't
+scold today since Carlos is only following us
+because he does not entirely trust me to look
+after you and adores you so that he does not
+wish you out of his sight."</p>
+
+<p>Just as though four or five years had not
+passed with its crowded and ever changing
+experiences, walking up to old Indian Laska's
+dirty hut alone Olive Van Mater found the
+Indian woman still sitting in her same open
+doorway, smoking the apparently identical
+pipe and clothed in the same old nondescript
+rags of former days with a brilliant Indian<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+blanket across her shoulders. But at the
+sight of her beautifully dressed visitor the
+Indian woman showed not the slightest sign
+of recognition. Nor did she do anything
+further than nod and grunt several times in
+succession when Olive assured her that she
+had once been the girl "Olilie," who had lived
+with her from the time she was a baby.</p>
+
+<p>Possibly Laska could neither understand
+nor believe what this charming American
+girl was trying to explain to her, but certain
+it was that she never once invited Olive inside
+her former home, nor showed the slightest
+interest in her, except to smile at the handful
+of small change that was bestowed upon her
+in parting. For of course Olive had long
+since ceased to feel any bitterness against
+the old woman, whose ignorance and greed
+had not been nearly so responsible for her
+past unhappiness as her own grandmother's
+careless neglect of her.</p>
+
+<p>Olive's interview with her first teacher was
+such a great pleasure and satisfaction to them
+both, that except for Jack's insistence that
+it was already past time to go back to the
+ranch and that Olive and her old friend could
+now meet each other frequently, the two girls
+would never have started for home until<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+nearly sundown. And as it was they were an
+hour later than they should have been in
+leaving.</p>
+
+<p>They were not able to ride as rapidly as in
+the morning because neither of the horses
+was so fresh. So that by and by, just as
+both girls had wished, they fell into the first
+long, confidential talk they had enjoyed in
+nearly a year.</p>
+
+<p>And there was so much to say! Olive had
+to repeat the strange terms of her grandmother's
+will and her own positive intention
+not to marry Donald Harmon, no matter
+what the second will might insist upon&mdash;even
+if it left her penniless.</p>
+
+<p>Then Jack confided the present trouble
+at the Rainbow Mine. For during Ralph's
+continued and unexplained absence the miners
+had grown uglier, threatening that unless
+a new engineer was secured at once they
+would go upon a strike. Moreover, they
+would see that no other men be allowed to
+take their places. Already they insisted that
+there was not enough gold in the former
+veins to make Rainbow Mine worth working.
+A new manager and new machinery must be
+procured at once.</p>
+
+<p>Just how to quell the disturbance and set<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
+things right neither Jim Colter nor Jacqueline
+could decide at present. Of course they were
+awaiting with impatience Ralph Merrit's
+return in order to have a talk with him.
+But afterwards what should they do? Would
+Ralph be forced by the miners into advising
+them to buy more machinery before he knew
+just what should be done? This might sink
+all their capital and make them poor
+again.</p>
+
+<p>"Really it is Jean and Frieda about whom
+I am worrying the most if we do lose our
+money," Jack frankly acknowledged. "For
+Ruth and Jim and I can be happy living as we
+used to do. But then of course the building
+of our new house must be completed, since
+the contract is already given for finishing
+it."</p>
+
+<p>So the two friends talked on, and it was
+small wonder that the sun was sinking as,
+followed by the ever watchful Carlos, they
+finally rode up to the Lodge. But Olive
+had not yet satisfied herself in regard to the
+state of affairs now existing between Jack and
+Frank Kent.</p>
+
+<p>In answer to a point-blank question Jack
+had simply replied that she and Frank had
+not been engaged to be married. Also that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+she had too much upon her mind at present
+to ask him to make them a visit. However,
+now that Olive had arrived, perhaps Frank
+would wish to come in a short time.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>THAT SAME AFTERNOON<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>SINCE a short time after lunch Jean
+Bruce had been alone at the Rainbow
+Lodge, except for the presence of Aunt
+Ellen and the housemaid. For at about two
+o'clock Jim and Ruth, Frieda and the baby
+had driven off to pay a long visit to some old-time
+friends. For Ruth had not entirely
+recovered her strength since the baby's birth
+and therefore Jim was unwilling to have her
+far away from him.</div>
+
+<p>But Jean was not lonely, or at least not for
+the first few hours. She had letters to write&mdash;one
+to her New York friend, Margaret Belknap,
+and another to her adored Princess,
+who had never wavered in her interest and
+affection for the American girl since Jean's
+visit to her in Rome.</p>
+
+<p>Then, at about four o'clock, Jean strolled
+over to look at their new house, which seemed
+to have been making tremendous strides in
+the last few days, now that the outside had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
+been entirely completed. She had one or
+two suggestions that she wished to make to
+the architect about her own room and this
+was the best hour for having a talk with him,
+as she happened to know that he had been
+spending most of the day with his men.
+The architect did not superintend their house
+building more than two or three times a week.
+Determined to have their new home as beautiful
+and as harmonious as possible, the girls,
+Jim and Ruth had decided upon employing the
+most distinguished architect in that part of
+the country. Theodore Parker was a Wyoming
+man with his central office in Laramie,
+and yet his work on public buildings and his
+creation of certain types of houses for western
+millionaires had given him a reputation
+throughout the country. So it was scarcely
+possible to expect him to devote a large
+portion of his valuable time even to the
+construction of "Rainbow Castle." For
+Jean's laughing title for their new home had
+somehow clung to it.</p>
+
+<p>The place would probably be almost, if
+not quite, as beautiful as many a palace,
+Jean thought, as she slowly approached the
+front entrance. This was to have a flight
+of broad, low stone steps leading up to it,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+while the base of the house would be banked
+with low, close-growing evergreen shrubs.</p>
+
+<p>For the outdoor work on their estate the
+girls had not consulted a landscape gardener,
+but they had studied many books and pictures
+of beautiful gardens and had then developed
+certain ideas of their own. In order to keep
+the view of the rolling prairies to the distant
+line of hills several miles beyond, the slope
+before the house was to be left unchanged.
+Here and there were flower beds in the carefully
+planted and tended blue grass lawn,
+which with constant watering and top soil
+might be persuaded to grow. But on either
+side and toward the back of the modified
+colonial mansion were to be the real gardens.
+Although the flowers had not yet been planted,
+bushes had been set out that were later to
+form green and blossoming aisles. In the
+preceding autumn a dozen or more large
+evergreen trees had been transplanted from
+the nearby forests, and zealously tended all
+through the winter, so that already they
+showed signs of growth.</p>
+
+<p>Jean's interview with Mr. Parker was
+entirely satisfactory and the girl would have
+liked to linger and talk at greater length with
+the big, purposeful man, who seemed to bring<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
+to one of the noblest of all the professions the
+spirit of the artist, and the executive ability
+of the business man. But Mr. Parker was
+plainly too busy to give her more than a few
+minutes of his attention, although in their
+conversation they did wander from her errand
+far enough to permit their discussing a few
+of their impressions of Europe. And, oddly
+enough, the architect who had studied in
+Paris and traveled a great deal, had never been
+to Italy, the mother of much that is most
+beautiful in modern architecture.</p>
+
+<p>A man of about thirty-five or six, Jean
+imagined he must be as she returned to the
+Lodge, and assuredly extremely good-looking,
+with his iron-gray hair, dark eyes and smooth
+face. One could hardly help wondering why
+he had never married.</p>
+
+<p>At home once more, Jean suddenly had a
+sensation of feeling deserted and forlorn.
+What could she do to amuse herself?
+Although she insisted upon denying it to her
+family, certainly there were occasions lately
+when their former life did seem dull and
+uninteresting to her. Yet perhaps Jack was
+right in thinking that this was due to her
+paying no special regard to the things that
+were happening on the ranch itself. Should<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+she take a walk now, or go down to Rainbow
+Mine to see if anything was going on? Ralph
+Merrit was still away, certainly for an unaccountably
+great length of time! And undoubtedly
+there was some kind of trouble brewing
+among the workers in the mine, though what
+it was Jean had not the remotest idea. Yet
+Jack and Jim had been plainly annoyed and
+concerned over some disturbance, otherwise
+so many consultations between them and their
+workmen would have been unnecessary.</p>
+
+<p>But at the present moment Jean did not
+find the subject of the mine of sufficient
+interest to persuade her to walk down to it
+in an effort to make her own investigations.
+Things would clear up soon enough without
+her troubling. For there had to be friction
+every once and a while where so many people
+were employed.</p>
+
+<p>Yawning several times, Jean finally dropped
+into a hammock that had been swung for
+Ruth on the porch at Rainbow Lodge. She
+was holding a magazine in her hand and reading
+it fitfully.</p>
+
+<p>Probably Jean would have assured you that
+she was wearing the oldest and simplest dress
+in her entire wardrobe and that she really
+had not made any kind of toilet for the afternoon.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+Yet with Jean Bruce pretty clothes
+and a graceful and pleasing fashion of wearing
+them were second nature. It is true her pale
+pink cashmere frock was not new and was
+made in a straight piece with no trimming
+save a round lace collar and a girdle of broad
+pink silk ribbon. Yet Jean had wound a
+ribbon of the same color about her dark brown
+hair, until her usual pallor seemed to be
+warmed by its glow.</p>
+
+<p>For a half moment she must have fallen
+asleep, for she was awakened by thinking she
+heard some one coming toward the Lodge.
+The next moment Ralph Merrit stood beside
+her.</p>
+
+<p>He looked entirely unlike himself; his
+clothes were untidy; he seemed not to have
+slept for a number of nights; his face was
+worn and drawn. Jean was startled into
+sudden pity and interest. For Ralph had
+always seemed so capable and so efficient and
+if things worried him, he had always kept
+them to himself.</p>
+
+<p>Now as Jean struggled to her feet he only
+said: "How do you do, Jean. Will you tell
+me, please, whether Mr. Colter is at home or
+whether I may be apt to find him anywhere
+about the ranch?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But Jean's eyes questioned, although her
+lips as yet said nothing, and the young man
+flushed.</p>
+
+<p>"I must beg your pardon for my appearance,"
+he began awkwardly, "but I have been
+doing some rather hard traveling and I have
+not yet been to my own quarters to fix up.
+I had no idea of running across you." Ralph
+stared hard for a moment at the dainty girl
+slowly rising out of the hammock and then
+at himself. She was like the inside of a sea
+shell in her pink costume with her white skin
+and the pretty detached air she so often
+wore.</p>
+
+<p>Ralph laughed uncomfortably and not very
+mirthfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Won't you wait a minute, please?" Jean
+asked quietly. "Jim is not here and won't
+be for some little time perhaps. But I have
+an idea that you are hungry as well as tired
+and I have been longing for some one to
+drink afternoon tea with me." And before
+her companion could reply the girl disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>Ralph Merrit fingered his hat uncertainly.
+He did not wish to remain and yet it would
+seem singularly ungracious to have Jean return
+and find him vanished. And since he had a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
+confession to make, why not begin with her
+to whom it would be hardest to say it?</p>
+
+<p>Ralph dropped into a chair on one side of
+a small rustic table and Jean and the tea
+party had both arrived before he lifted his
+eyes again. Under the influence of the tea,
+strawberries and cream and Aunt Ellen's
+hot scones, with Jean making herself as
+charming as she knew how to be, Ralph could
+not help forgetting for a few moments the
+things that were weighing upon him, while
+he enjoyed the gifts that the fates provided.</p>
+
+<p>And Jean was truly kind, for she was
+shocked as well as a little bit frightened by
+Ralph's appearance. Naturally she was not
+unaware that he had once cared for her, even
+though he had not recently revealed it in
+any open fashion. And of course Jean felt
+that she had always regarded Ralph with the
+sincerest friendship.</p>
+
+<p>She was hoping now that he would tell her
+what was worrying him as a sign that their
+old <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'frienship'">friendship</ins> was yet alive, when Ralph spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Jean, I might as well tell you now as a
+little later," he began, "it can't be delayed for
+any length of time at best. I am going to
+have to say good-bye to you all pretty soon."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Jean's hand shook a little, so that she
+first set down her teacup.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that you are having to go
+home for a visit. I hope nothing has happened
+to your mother or sister; I was afraid
+you were feeling troubled," the girl answered.</p>
+
+<p>With the old decision that she remembered
+the young man shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>"No, it is not that," he returned, "but
+simply that I am going to resign my position
+as engineer of Rainbow Mine. Fact
+of the matter is, I am not making good.
+The men don't like me, don't want to work
+under me, and things are in a muddle anyhow.
+My staying on would only embarrass
+Jim and Miss Ralston." (Ralph only called
+Jack by her grown-up title when he was
+considering her as his employer.)</p>
+
+<p>"So you are going to quit just because
+things at the mine are no longer plain sailing.
+Is it because you have had a better position
+offered you? Then of course I am sure, even
+though it makes everything much harder
+for them, Jack and Jim would neither of
+them wish to stand in your way," Jean answered
+with intentional cruelty.</p>
+
+<p>And the young man understood her. "That
+is not fair, Jean; you know those are not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
+my reasons," he declared. "I am leaving
+to <i>save</i> Jim and Jack the trouble, not to
+make things more difficult. If I clear out
+the men will quiet down and perhaps they
+will get hold of some other engineer who
+will understand the present situation better.
+The truth is our old gold supply is giving out
+and we have got to find a different method
+of getting at the gold deeper down. I have
+been away studying how this might be done
+for the past ten days, but I have not yet
+made up my mind."</p>
+
+<p>"Then stay on until you can decide,
+Ralph," Jean replied quietly, "or at least
+until you are certain that you don't know
+what to do. Surely you must know the
+situation at the Rainbow Mine better than
+any one else. I have been guessing that
+both Jim and Jack were worried, but you
+know they won't go back on you until the
+very last minute and not then unless you say
+the word. So I don't think I would let the
+other miners frighten me away. It seems
+to me that a man will never be able to
+manage other men if he turns and runs
+at the first approach of a storm. I should
+never have believed this of you, Ralph,
+of all people!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>With a little, quickly suppressed sound that
+was almost a groan Ralph suddenly dropped
+his head. "But a man isn't fit to govern
+other men if he can't govern himself, Jean,"
+he answered.</p>
+
+<p>Even the color of her pink gown did not
+now hide the pallor of the girl's cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you talking about, Ralph Merrit?"
+she demanded a little unsteadily. "You
+behave as though you had robbed a bank
+or taken more than your share of gold out of
+the mine. I wish you would not be so absurd&mdash;I
+do hate uncomfortable people."</p>
+
+<p>The man got up. "I am sorry, Jean,
+and I did not mean to trouble you with my
+personal confession," he went on, "though
+I thought it only fair that I should tell Jim
+Colter. No, I have not been robbing anyone
+except myself and my own family, though
+the men may be saying even that of me soon,"
+he added bitterly. "But the truth is that I
+have been speculating until I have lost every
+red cent that I have earned and I don't think
+a man who has been as big a fool as I have has
+the right to try and hold down a job the
+size of mine."</p>
+
+<p>"You have been speculating!" The girl
+repeated the words almost foolishly, as though<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
+not understanding at first what they meant.
+Then she flushed angrily. "Ralph, what a
+perfect goose you have been! For goodness
+sake tell me what ever induced a sensible,
+level-headed fellow like we all believed you
+were to do such a stupid thing?" Jean demanded.</p>
+
+<p>But this was the one question which of all
+the questions in the world Ralph Merrit
+could never answer Jean truthfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, never mind!" Jean interrupted
+hurriedly, for she could see what her companion
+had evidently not yet observed and
+that was that another man was at this moment
+approaching the house. His face had looked
+ugly and forbidding, but at the sight of Jean
+he raised his hat.</p>
+
+<p>The girl recognized him as John Raines,
+a man of about fifty years of age and a kind
+of leader and spokesman among the other
+miners.</p>
+
+<p>"Beg your pardon, Miss," he began stiffly,
+"but having just heard that Mr. Merrit has
+returned to the ranch, I want to ask him if
+he will come and have a little talk with some
+of us men. We've been waiting for this talk
+for a considerable time."</p>
+
+<p>Ralph stepped down from the porch at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
+once. "Certainly, I will come along with
+you now," he answered quietly. And then
+turning to Jean and with a gesture asking
+that she excuse him, the young man followed
+the older one. And Jean could not but
+notice how slender and boyish and, yes, how
+spent he looked as he walked behind the big,
+heavy miner, with arms and chest so powerful
+that he seemed able actually to have
+crushed the slighter man like a great bear, had
+he so desired.</p>
+
+<p>What could the miners be wishing with
+Ralph that they must see him at once, now
+when they knew that Jim Colter was not on
+the ranch?</p>
+
+<p>Without trying to answer the question
+herself and only lingering long enough to
+fasten a dark coat over her light frock Jean
+hurried after the two figures, taking care,
+however, that neither of them became conscious
+of her presence.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>"COURAGE MAKES THE MAN"<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>THERE were as many as twenty men
+waiting to talk to Ralph Merrit
+within the vicinity of the Rainbow
+Mine. And they chanced to be standing
+close together near one of the big rocks that
+rose like a miniature fortress beside Rainbow
+Creek. After Ralph had entered the group,
+Jean managed without being observed to
+slip behind this rock where she was in safe
+hiding.</div>
+
+<p>But just why she had followed the two
+men and what her motive was for concealing
+herself she did not try to explain to herself.
+Simply she had yielded to an impulse of
+fear, of curiosity and perhaps to some other
+instinct that was partly protective. One
+young fellow among so many older, rougher
+and more lawless characters! What might
+not happen to him?</p>
+
+<p>And yet Jean Bruce had not her cousin
+Jacqueline's physical bravery nor determination<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+of purpose, and moreover she had an
+openly expressed dislike of mixing herself
+up in the things which she did not consider
+essentially feminine. However, she had no
+idea now of letting anyone guess her nearness,
+not even Ralph Merrit himself.</p>
+
+<p>Sitting down on the ground in a kind of
+scooped-out cave in a rock she could occasionally
+manage to get a glimpse of the miners,
+although at present while they were talking
+quietly she could only rarely catch a word
+or so of what they were saying, and not a
+sound from Ralph, who seemed the calmest
+and most self-controlled of them all. After
+a while she realized that John Raines, the
+man who had been sent to summon her companion,
+must now have been chosen as spokesman
+for the lot and was evidently making
+his voice sufficiently loud for them all to
+hear distinctly. And this of course included
+the unknown listener.</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Mr. Merrit," John Raines
+began quietly, "us men have been talking
+things over among ourselves for some time
+past and we have done come to the pretty
+positive conclusion that we don't like the
+way <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'you'r'">you're</ins> running things at Rainbow Mine.
+And we thought it might be fairer to you,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
+all told, just to mention this little fact and
+to let you quit without any kind of rumpus
+or trouble for nobody."</p>
+
+<p>Jean could not see Ralph Merrit's face or
+even his figure, he was so closely surrounded,
+but because he too was speaking so that his
+entire audience might hear, Jean understood
+every word.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the trouble with me, Raines, as a
+boss?" he asked with such self-control and
+apparent lack of anger that Jean was both
+amazed and pleased.</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a kind of low muttering
+among the other men and finally their spokesman
+went on:</p>
+
+<p>"I guess you know most of our complaints
+pretty well by this time&mdash;we've been tellin'
+'em to you long enough and hard enough. If
+this is a profit-sharing business, as you and
+Jim Colter and Miss Ralston said it was
+goin' to be, then you ain't gettin' gold enough
+out of the Rainbow Mine to suit us."</p>
+
+<p>"But we are getting all we can, aren't
+we? You men aren't loafing with the work?"
+Ralph interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>John Raines scowled. "That's senseless
+talk! You know what the trouble is; we
+have already gotten out most all the gold<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+there is near the surface of the earth around
+here. Now what we have got to do to make
+it pay big again is to get more machinery and
+try different ways of working. And we want
+a boss to tell Miss Ralston and Jim Colter
+to get busy buying the new machinery and
+then to show us how to run it. We are not
+going to waste any more time around here
+on a few dollars pay a day."</p>
+
+<p>From her hiding place Jean did her best
+to hear Ralph. Here of course was the time
+and place for him to make the same confession
+to the miners that he had recently made
+to her. For he did intend to do just what
+the men had demanded of him, resign his
+work and give way for a better man. Nevertheless,
+he evidently intended delaying a
+bit longer before making the confession.</p>
+
+<p>"But I have explained to you men before
+this why I have not done what you ask,"
+he went on, still in a reasonable tone of voice.
+"I told you that I did not feel certain that it
+was the <i>best</i> thing to do. We are by no
+means sure that there is enough gold below the
+present mine to make it worth while to go
+deeper. You men know what a lot of money
+the machinery for certain kinds of gold digging
+takes. It would probably eat up pretty<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+much all the capital that the owners of the
+Rainbow Mine have. And I don't want to
+tell them to buy this machinery until I am
+a lot surer that the gold is down there waiting
+to be hauled out."</p>
+
+<p>John Raines glanced about at the faces
+surrounding him. It was easy enough to
+take his tone from their expressions.</p>
+
+<p>"Then there is no use wasting any more
+of our time and yours in talk, Merrit," the
+older man announced in a rougher manner
+than he had before employed. "Your sentiments
+was pretty well known to us before
+you spouted them forth. And that's just
+the point! You don't know what ought to
+be done about things and we do. And we
+want a man to boss us that knows same as
+we. Now, young man, you just get out
+pleasant and the quicker the better."</p>
+
+<p>All over her body, to the very tips of her
+ears, Jean felt herself tingling with sudden,
+overpowering anger. Why had Ralph Merrit
+not said what he intended saying before now?
+To resign at this moment in the face of this
+other man's insolence, which represented
+the same feeling in his companions, was to
+behave like a small boy at school who had
+been stood up in a corner and soundly thrashed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
+by his schoolmaster and then made to apologize
+for his pains. Jean felt that she would
+never care to look Ralph in the face again.
+But he was speaking now for the third time.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 315px;">
+<img src="images/illus02.jpg" width="315" height="500" alt="&quot;She Had Heard That Masterful Tone Before&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;She Had Heard That Masterful Tone Before&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Have Miss Ralston and Mr. Colter told
+you that they wanted me to quit?" he inquired.
+"It seems like they would have
+mentioned the matter to me first. I have
+usually taken my orders from them and not
+from the men <i>under</i> me."</p>
+
+<p>There was quite a different ring in Ralph
+Merrit's voice during this speech that made
+the girl behind the rock unexpectedly put
+up her cold hands to cool her hot cheeks.
+She had heard that masterful tone before,
+but not in some time.</p>
+
+<p>"No, they ain't said nothing yet," Raines
+admitted. "But it don't matter; you got
+to quit just the same. You can't run a
+gold mine by yourself with all your 'book
+larnin,' and it's either you or us that gets
+out."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it'll be you," Ralph replied in such
+a matter-of-fact and undisturbed fashion
+that Jean could hardly believe she had heard
+him aright, or else she must have been dreaming
+less than an hour before.</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, fellows, don't be fools," Ralph<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+went on, still showing no loss of temper.
+"The hour Mr. Colter and Miss Ralston
+tell me they want me to give up my job at
+the Rainbow Mine, that hour I go. And
+the minute I am really convinced that another
+man is able to do my work better than I can,
+that man gets my position, if I can persuade
+the Rainbow Mine owners to try him. But
+I've got to study things out here a little
+longer, I've got to make some new experiments
+and maybe kind of feel my way slowly
+toward deciding what had best be done. I
+have been away for the past ten days studying
+conditions at other mines and trying
+to find out some of the latest ideas in mining
+machinery."</p>
+
+<p>But the other men were making no pretense
+of listening and were muttering and
+talking among themselves as a direct and
+intentional insult to the speaker. Ralph
+waited in silence, and Jean had an intuition
+that the end of the discussion was about to
+take place. The noises that the miners
+were making were ugly, vicious sounds entirely
+unfamiliar to the girl's ears and she had no
+conception of what they might portend. She
+had a sudden fear that they might mean some
+bodily injury to the younger man. Then<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+would she have the courage to rush out to
+his defense as Jack undoubtedly would have,
+no matter what overtook her?</p>
+
+<p>But she was mistaken in the form of her
+present uneasiness.</p>
+
+<p>"You can talk that way here, if it makes
+you feel better, young fellow," one of the
+other miners announced contemptuously, "but
+it ain't goin' to make a mite of difference in
+the way things has to go. We give you thirty-six
+hours' notice to get clear of Rainbow Mine,
+and if you don't, why you can stay around
+here and play by yourself as long as you like
+provided your bosses are willing to give up
+the gold-mining business. Because if you
+stay, we git out and that means there is not
+another miner going to be allowed down a
+shaft in this here mine."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean," said Ralph, "that you are
+going to strike and make the other men
+boycott us. I don't believe your union will
+stand for it. You haven't got a kick coming
+to you about your hours of work, or your
+pay, or any of the conditions about the
+mine. And just because you don't think I've
+got brains enough for my job is no reason why
+you should strike. I want you to know,
+you fellows," and here Ralph's voice was no<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
+longer in the least conciliatory, but as firm
+and decisive as a judge's sentence, "I am
+a union man myself, but you must understand
+once and for all that if the Rainbow
+Mine owners agree to stand by me I am going
+to keep on with the job of bossing this mine.
+And I am going to keep on digging out the
+gold we can get with our old tools until there's
+a way of knowing what ought to be done next.
+But I think in the future it is going to suit
+me better to have another lot of men to work
+with me and I think I'll be able to get hold
+of them. You may go to your quarters now.
+I'll let you hear in the morning what Miss
+Ralston and Mr. Colter want to do."</p>
+
+<p>And to Jean Bruce's immense amazement,
+though some of the men laughed rudely and
+others muttered threats and curses, the entire
+number after some delay and further discussion
+among themselves, walked off, leaving
+Ralph Merrit entirely alone. Notwithstanding,
+the miners were evidently unanimous
+in their intention.</p>
+
+<p>Jean snuggled closer than before in her
+rocky alcove, scarcely daring to breathe for
+fear of their discovering her and so creating
+further ill feeling. Then after they had
+gone, and the last man of them was entirely<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
+out of sight, she still did not move. For
+Ralph Merrit had never stirred from his
+position and she did not know whether she
+even wished him to learn of her eavesdropping.</p>
+
+<p>Ralph did not move and Jean was growing
+bored with her cramped position, now that
+events were no longer sufficiently exciting
+to make her forget herself. Besides, did
+she not really wish to let Ralph know just
+how she felt about him?</p>
+
+<p>Curiously he did not turn around until she
+was within a few feet of him. Yet when he
+did, Jean laughed and clapped her hands
+childishly at the change in his expression since
+their interview on the veranda.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Jean, where have you come from?
+You did not see anybody, did you, on your
+way from the house? This is not a place
+where you should be."</p>
+
+<p>Jean nodded. "Yes, I did see everybody
+and heard everything. Please forgive me for
+being a horrid spy," she confessed, "but I
+was hiding behind that rock the whole blessed
+time. And oh, Ralph, I am so pleased and
+proud of you! Of course Jack and Jim will
+stand by you to the bitter end&mdash;I should dare
+them not to; but then nobody need ever<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
+accuse Jim and Jack of not enjoying a good,
+clean fight."</p>
+
+<p>Jean put her hand through the young man's
+arm. "Do come on back to the Lodge with
+me. It is almost time for the others to be
+coming home. You must rest a while first
+and have dinner and then tell them what you
+intend to do."</p>
+
+<p>A little dazed by the girl's unexpected
+appearance and by her sudden flow of words,
+and still deeply engrossed on what had just
+taken place, Ralph Merrit allowed himself to
+be led along for a few steps in silence.</p>
+
+<p>"You must think I am a good deal of a
+turncoat, Jean, and don't know my own
+mind for half an hour," he said finally.
+"Maybe I haven't the right after all to get
+you people into trouble."</p>
+
+<p>Jean gave the young man's arm a vehement
+shake. "You haven't got the right to be
+anything but&mdash;a man, Ralph Merrit!" she
+announced. "Goodness, you don't know how
+ashamed I was of you and for you a while
+ago! I suppose it is because I am such a
+coward myself, because I am so afraid of
+rough things and rough places, that I love
+courage more than anything else in the
+world."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Do you, Jean?" Ralph murmured almost
+to himself. "Well, I have been a coward in
+more ways than one in these past six
+months."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>THE MIDNIGHT CONFERENCE<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>FOR hours after dinner the family at the
+Rainbow Lodge sat in their big living
+room talking over matters with Ralph
+Merrit. Better than he had been able to
+explain to Jean he now made the present
+situation clear to his listeners. And by his
+frankness in acknowledging that he had not
+yet been able to make up his mind as to what
+was best to be done for the future of Rainbow
+Mine he restored Jim's and Jack's full
+confidence.</div>
+
+<p>The discussion was absorbing; only Frieda,
+after an hour or so of what seemed to her a
+repetition of the same conversation, grew
+sleepy and now and then dozed for a few
+moments with her yellow head nodding uncomfortably.</p>
+
+<p>Why stay awake longer when she understood
+the state of things perfectly? Ralph
+had said that they would probably have much
+less money out of the Rainbow Mine for a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
+time. Later, if he saw his way clear by
+spending their capital and buying new
+machinery, they might become a great deal
+wealthier. And while naturally the first of
+this information was discouraging, the second
+idea had kept Frieda quite wide awake until
+ten o'clock. Earlier in the evening she had
+felt frightened at the thought of the miners
+striking and the trouble that they might be
+going to have on the ranch for the next few
+days; but Jim and Jack did not appear
+alarmed, so after a time her nervousness was
+partly allayed.</p>
+
+<p>They both had declared that Ralph must
+not for a moment consider surrendering to
+the men; for apparently they intended not
+only to dismiss him but thereafter to run the
+Rainbow Mine with no consideration for its
+owners. It might take a few days for Ralph
+to get together another group of capable
+miners, but the delay was the only annoyance.
+For no one appeared to believe that the old
+men would make trouble. They were merely
+trying to bluff and threaten Ralph.</p>
+
+<p>Jean, having seen with her own eyes the
+bitterness and dissatisfaction among the workers,
+was not so completely convinced. Nevertheless
+she said nothing of her own doubt, not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
+regarding her opinion in the matter as of
+special value. Moreover, she enjoyed seeing
+Ralph Merrit so sure of himself once more
+and so determined to swing things to a successful
+issue. It recalled the days when he had
+first been summoned to help them with his
+judgment as to whether or not Rainbow
+Mine contained sufficient gold to make it
+of importance. And what a change in their
+lives their wealth had created for them! At
+least Jean had previously believed this to be
+true, but studying the faces in the little group
+about her tonight she was not so sure of the
+others. Assuredly Ruth and Jim, who were
+sitting on a sofa with Ruth's hand slipped
+quietly and quite unconsciously inside Jim's,
+were not dependent for their happiness on the
+possession of a great deal of money. And
+there was Jack leaning both elbows on a
+small table nearby with her face in her
+hands, listening intently to every word Ralph
+was saying. Had she ever seen her cousin
+more animated or more interested? Well, she
+had always known that the mere spending of
+money had never given Jack the same degree
+of pleasure that it had her. It was "making
+things happen" that Jack cared most for,
+and now that difficulties were presenting<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
+themselves in regard to the Rainbow Mine,
+actually Jack seemed almost to be enjoying
+the prospect. Frieda was nodding, so that
+even she could not be very deeply concerned
+at the prospect of poverty, and Olive could
+certainly not be accused of being mercenary,
+since she was calmly turning her back on a
+large fortune rather than fulfil the conditions
+of her grandmother's will.</p>
+
+<p>Jean smiled and sighed almost in the same
+breath. She could not pretend to any such
+highmindedness, she was afraid that she was
+the kind of girl whom she had heard people
+describe as "loving luxury like a cat." Certainly
+she did care more than she should for
+beautiful clothes, handsome houses, travel,
+society and everything that money alone
+could buy. And yet, after all, the wealth of
+Rainbow Mine was not hers: it belonged to
+Jack and Frieda, though they had always
+shared their income with her as though she
+had been their sister instead of their cousin.
+Whether their gold mine had now ceased to
+be of value or whether deeper down under
+the earth it should hold a larger fortune, was
+it not still her place to make her own future?
+With a start Jean came to herself. The clock
+had just struck midnight and Ralph had risen.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"As soon as things straighten out, Mr.
+Colter, I am going to ask you to let me send
+for two or three of the big mining experts.
+For of course you would want their opinion
+as well as mine. I will tell the men your
+decision in the morning. Thank all of you
+for your faith in me and good-night."</p>
+
+<p>But Ralph's movement must have awakened
+Frieda, for she sat up suddenly and
+yawned. "Who is it you are going to send
+for to come to the ranch?" she demanded
+unexpectedly. "Oh, I do hope some one who
+isn't a hundred years old. Why can't you
+ever ask a young man's advice, Ralph Merrit&mdash;you
+are young yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>And then as everybody laughed, Jack
+pinched her sister's inviting pink cheek.</p>
+
+<p>"What a foolish baby you are, Frieda
+Ralston," she declared, "I hardly think that
+Ralph's mining experts will be of the slightest
+interest to you."</p>
+
+<p>After Jim and Ralph had gone out in the
+hall together and were talking quietly Jean
+slipped out after them.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you think, Jim," she asked, "that
+Ralph had better not go down to his old
+quarters to sleep tonight? You know his
+room is in the same house with half a dozen<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
+of the miners and of course nothing will
+happen, but I don't believe the men are
+exactly devoted to him and&mdash;" Jean put her
+hand coaxingly on the young man's coat
+sleeve. "Sleep on the divan in the living
+room tonight, won't you? We haven't a
+spare room, but I assure you it is most
+comfortable."</p>
+
+<p>Jim nodded. "That isn't a bad idea,
+Ralph."</p>
+
+<p>But the younger man shook his head,
+although his eyes thanked the girl for her
+interest.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Jim," he said, "you and Jean are
+both awfully kind, but the one thing that the
+fellows I disagreed with today must not
+think is that I am in the least afraid of them.
+Oh, I realize I am up against a pretty tough
+proposition&mdash;they are not the kind to back
+down easily and are accustomed to getting
+their own way, but your faith and belief in
+me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Ralph stopped, his voice a little husky.
+"Good-night, Jean, and thank you." Then
+he turned to Jim Colter. "I wonder if you
+would mind walking a short distance with me.
+There is something else I must tell you that
+I could not mention in there tonight."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And as the two men disappeared Jean had
+a sudden feeling of thankfulness. How
+curiously things turned out. If she had not
+chanced to be on the porch at Rainbow
+Lodge that afternoon she might never have
+heard Ralph Merrit's confession. If the men
+had not summoned him for their talk just
+when they did, Ralph would have gone away
+from Rainbow Mine feeling that he had made
+a failure of his life and of his work.</p>
+
+<p>And Jean's pretty brown eyes filled with
+tears. They had all been fond of Ralph for
+several years and would have been sorry to
+have him vanish out of their lives. She was
+glad too that he had recovered from the idea
+that he once had of caring for her more than
+the other girls. Or at least Jean believed
+that she was glad, for it is a very rare woman
+who can honestly rejoice at the loss of a
+lover, even though he continues to be her
+friend.</p>
+
+<p>Out in the dark together Jim Colter put
+his great arm across the younger man's
+shoulder. "Yes, I know it is more serious,
+boy, than we pretended in there, but I'm
+with you to the uttermost and things will
+turn out all right. It may not hurt my girls
+to have less money for a while, though of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
+course it would come pretty hard on them
+now to be poor, after we have taught them
+such extravagant tastes. But in any case,
+old fellow, the fault will not be yours and you
+must not take the result too seriously."</p>
+
+<p>Ralph had not spoken, but he now braced
+himself and drew a slow breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, Jim, I didn't say all I ought to
+have said in there with your wife and the
+girls&mdash;somehow I couldn't. For I let you say
+you would stand by me and have faith in
+me when all the time I knew I wasn't worth
+it."</p>
+
+<p>Then Ralph made the same confession to
+his man friend and employer as he had to
+Jean earlier in the day. He told him that he
+had been speculating steadily for the past
+six months. To Jim's question as to why he
+felt he had to grow rich in such a hurry,
+again Ralph made no reply. When the
+older man put out his hand to say good-night,
+Ralph Merrit held it for a moment
+longer than usual.</p>
+
+<p>"Jim," he asked, "may I make a promise
+to you? This has been one of the biggest
+days in my life. I came home this afternoon
+pretty well down-and-out, intending to give
+up my work and pretty much everything I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
+want to attain in the world. Then&mdash;well,
+wonderful, unexpected things began to happen.
+Now I hope I am a man again. So I
+want to promise, not so much you as myself,
+that I am going to cut this speculating
+business out absolutely and that I am going
+to keep on being a man if I can manage it,
+no matter what happens."</p>
+
+<p>There was something in Ralph's words and
+in his manner that made Jim's blue eyes
+shine and gave the extra warmth and heartiness
+to the farewell clasp of his hand. Moreover,
+he had suddenly recalled a confidence
+that Jack had made to him in regard to
+Ralph Merrit's feeling for Jean. And if ever
+there was a man who knew how to offer
+sympathy and understanding to a discouraged
+lover, that man was Jim Colter.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>A DILEMMA AND A VISITOR<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>"GREAT SCOTT," muttered Jim
+Colter at the breakfast table some
+days later, "if there was only another
+man around this place to take care of you
+women, I would not let Ralph Merrit carry
+so much of this burden alone. It's getting
+past a one-man's game to manage our present
+affairs."</div>
+
+<p>In return Jack shook her fist at him with
+what was not all a pretense of indignation.
+"Ruth, you may not object to hearing your
+husband speak of you as a burden," she
+protested, "but I can't say I ever like hearing
+that I am not able to look after myself. Oh,
+yes, I know what the family thinks of my
+vanity! But seriously, Jim, there isn't any
+danger, no matter what goes on down at the
+mine, of anybody's annoying us. You need
+not worry over leaving us alone. I am quite
+sure we don't need 'another man.' The
+ranch is too full of them already!" And<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+Jack shrugged her shoulders in the face of
+her guardian.</p>
+
+<p>But from her place at the head of the table
+behind a big silver coffee urn, Ruth looked at
+the girl in the seat next her who had just
+finished speaking.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to hear you say that, Jack,"
+she began quietly, "because pretty soon we
+are going to have what you and Jim are
+pleased to call 'another man' as our guest
+at the Rainbow Lodge and one whom of all
+others I most wish to see."</p>
+
+<p>Jack was puzzled, but Olive Van Mater,
+with a swift glance at the older woman,
+felt the blood leaving her face and her hands
+turning cold. Her lids drooped swiftly over
+her dark eyes and immediately she devoted
+herself to eating her breakfast, though all
+the while she was studying Jack's expression.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment a diversion was created
+by the entrance of a very fluffy, blue-eyed
+person in a pale blue breakfast toilet, who
+after kissing Ruth slipped into a place next
+her sister.</p>
+
+<p>"Sorry I'm late," she said, without any
+suggestion of real contrition, "but since Jim
+makes us stay in the house so much lately
+there isn't any reason for getting up."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Frieda darling, for the pleasure
+you take in our society," Jean murmured,
+setting down her coffee cup in mock indignation.
+"I am sure that each and every
+member of your family feels grateful to you
+for your flattering suggestion. But since
+we are of no interest to you, perhaps you
+would like to hear that Ruth has just said
+we are to have an unexpected visitor&mdash;a
+man!"</p>
+
+<p>Frieda first helped herself to the entire
+pile of griddle cakes. "I suppose everyone
+else has nearly finished," she remarked by
+way of explanation. And then: "Oh, I
+suppose the visitor is one of those tiresome
+men who is coming to help Ralph about the
+mine. I do wish things would quiet down,
+because as soon as our new house is finished
+Jean and I are dying to have a houseparty.
+Ralph said himself that his mining engineers
+were too old to be any fun&mdash;the youngest
+one is past thirty!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yet I am still able to get about at that
+age, Frieda Ralston," Jim Colter protested.</p>
+
+<p>At this instant Jack shook her head.
+"We are being very impolite to Ruth by
+talking so much," she declared. "Ruth
+was going to tell us about a new visitor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
+and of course we are desperately anxious to
+hear. Who is he, Ruth, a stranger or an
+old friend? And where are you going to
+find a place for any one else at Rainbow
+Lodge?"</p>
+
+<p>Purposely Ruth waited a moment in the
+silence that followed.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll give you three guesses," she said
+finally.</p>
+
+<p>"Peter Drummond and Jessica! Wouldn't
+it be splendid if they came to us on their
+wedding trip?" Jack answered immediately.</p>
+
+<p>"No," Ruth answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Tom, the chocolate-drop boy!" Jean exclaimed,
+laughing at Frieda's sudden blush.</p>
+
+<p>But Olive Van Mater had put down her
+knife and fork and was looking quietly at
+Ruth. "May I have a turn at guessing,
+please?" she asked in her usual gentle fashion.
+"Isn't our visitor to be Frank Kent?"</p>
+
+<p>And then as Ruth nodded with a smile
+of pleasure every pair of eyes at the table
+immediately turned upon Jacqueline Ralston.</p>
+
+<p>And Jack's cheeks grew suddenly a deeper
+pink, like the heart of a pink rose, for she
+was too surprised for the present to be self-conscious.</p>
+
+<p>"You must be mistaken, Ruth dear," she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
+insisted. "Frank hasn't written me; I
+haven't said that he could come." And
+then seeing what her words suggested, she
+went on in greater confusion, "I thought he
+was to wait until our house was finished
+or until later in the summer or until some
+time," she ended lamely. "I don't understand."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps Frank will explain to you, dear,"
+Ruth replied carelessly. And then turning
+toward the other girls:</p>
+
+<p>"You see Frank has been writing me
+about his visit for several weeks. But he
+and I both wanted his coming to be a surprise.
+He has said that he could not endure
+waiting longer to see his dearest friends.
+So a week ago when he arrived in New York
+he telegraphed me to know when he could
+come to the Rainbow Ranch and of course
+I said 'at once.' I rather think he may
+be here some time this afternoon. You
+won't have to worry now, Jim, about taking
+care of your wife and family, for Frank
+will&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But Frieda was clapping her hands together
+with much more pleasure than that
+slightly selfish young person usually showed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I am so glad, Jack. We do like<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+Frank better than any one we know, don't
+we? And if you don't, I am sure Olive
+does," she persisted.</p>
+
+<p>Jim got up from his place. "I don't like
+this fashion you have, Mrs. Colter, of corresponding
+with gentlemen and not informing
+your husband, but just the same I am delighted
+that Kent is coming to us. It's
+amazing what a fine fellow he is for an
+Englishman, and certainly we owe him a lot.
+When a man marries at another's house&mdash;and
+such a wedding&mdash;it's hard work getting
+even with him!"</p>
+
+<p>Out to the door Ruth followed her husband.</p>
+
+<p>"I am dreadfully uneasy about this trouble
+at the mine. I did not dare show how much
+I am worried before the girls. But you
+must tell me just what the conditions are,
+Jim. You know we don't believe in marriages
+where the woman is shut out from facts,"
+Ruth insisted.</p>
+
+<p>For half a moment the man hesitated.
+Then he kissed the little woman who had
+to stand on her tip-toes to be on a level
+with his chin.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't tell you the facts, Ruthie dear,
+because I don't know them," he answered.
+"How can I tell what a lot of crazy, obstinate<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+men are going to do? But evidently
+the miners who deserted us have managed
+to intimidate the other mine workers in
+this neighborhood. Ralph has not been able
+to get hold of any men who want to work
+for us, and things at the mine have been
+idle for some time, as you know. So far,
+all we have been able to do is to have the
+cowboys do picket duty down at the mine
+so as to keep the other fellows from wrecking
+our machinery or blowing us up. There,
+don't turn white as a sheet, Ruth! I don't
+believe that the old miners are that anxious
+to injure us; yet we have to be on the
+look-out. Merrit has got to be away all
+day <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'to day'">today</ins> hunting for men, so I must be
+on the job. Sorry I can't meet Kent, but
+you'll see that he is looked after all right
+and I'll be with you at dinner tonight. I'll
+bring Merrit with me if I can persuade
+him&mdash;he is apt to be pretty well fagged."</p>
+
+<p>The greater part of the day the four girls
+spent together in the garden near the Lodge.
+It was a lovely June day, with the air full
+of the scents of innumerable wild flowers.
+And everything within the immediate neighborhood
+of the Lodge was as peaceful and
+undisturbed as though the mine were a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
+hundred miles away. Jean and Jack at
+least half a dozen times confessed to the
+desire to walk over to the mine and see what
+was taking place; but since Jim had given strict
+orders against it they did not quite dare.</p>
+
+<p>A part of the time they spent helping
+Frieda gather great bunches of violets from
+her old violet beds, which had never been
+allowed to die out, until the Lodge was
+finally filled with them and the big living room
+was fair and fragrant enough for any festival.</p>
+
+<p>Then, when other amusements failed, there
+was always the new house to be investigated.
+It was now so nearly completed that when
+things quieted down at the mine again, if
+they were still to have a sufficient income to
+meet expenses, the moving into the new
+home was to take place.</p>
+
+<p>While the other three girls were rummaging
+about making suggestions Jack managed
+to slip quietly away. She went directly
+to Ruth, who was in the nursery with her
+little son. And as Jack was never used
+to evasions or to trying to get her own way
+by indirect methods, she asked immediately:</p>
+
+<p>"Ruth dear, may Olive and I drive to the
+station and meet Frank Kent this afternoon?
+I have a special reason for wishing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+to be there. You see, dear, I don't want
+Frank to think that I am not delighted to
+see him or that I have put off his coming
+to us because I had forgotten him. You
+knew he had been wanting to come for a
+long time, didn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>Ruth nodded. "I had guessed it, Jack,
+though I did not know positively until Frank's
+letter to me. Nor do I know now why you
+put off his visit. I am not asking you to
+tell me," she added quickly. For, observing
+the sudden look of reserve on the girl's face,
+she appreciated that it must be respected.
+"Frank merely said that he wanted to see
+us so much, and I did not see how his coming
+could fail to give pleasure. You don't mind,
+do you, dear?" Ruth concluded, wondering
+if this might be the moment for confidence.</p>
+
+<p>Although still keeping her clear, almost
+transparently honest gray eyes on her friend,
+Jack flushed.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes dear, I do want Frank, now that
+Olive is here," she replied. "I meant to
+write him and ask him just as soon as things
+were quiet at the mine again. Now may
+we go to meet him?"</p>
+
+<p>Ruth looked worried. "I have been wondering
+what we ought to do about going to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+the station all morning," she returned. "Of
+course some of the family must meet Frank
+or he will feel deeply wounded, but I can't
+leave the baby and yet there seems no man
+about the place to go with you girls. Jim
+has taken possession of everybody."</p>
+
+<p>Jack kissed Ruth on the hair and then
+bent over and looked at the baby with a
+new expression of wonder and reverence.
+She had always been much more afraid of
+the "little Jimmikins" than the other girls.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't trouble over things a minute,
+Ruth. You know the danger that Jim is
+fearful of for us is what may happen here
+on the ranch. But we shall be leaving the
+ranch as soon as we drive through the gate.
+Moreover, we can take Carlos with us for
+an escort; he is only a boy, but he will do
+perfectly well. And if we don't take him,
+it won't make much difference since he
+would be more than likely to follow us.
+As far as I can see he trails constantly after
+Olive like a faithful dog. It would annoy
+me, but I don't believe she has even noticed
+how much he does it. I wonder what
+the boy's exact reason is? Nevertheless, as
+it gives Carlos a regular occupation, I suppose
+we should be grateful."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>CROSS PURPOSES<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>OLIVE was not so unconscious of the
+Indian boy's attitude toward her as
+Jack believed. Indeed she could
+not well be. And now as the three of them
+drove together to the station she was pondering
+on whether or not she should confide
+her experience to Jack. But Jack was not
+sympathetic toward Carlos, for with her
+intense and forceful nature it was hard for
+her to understand the boy's idleness and
+dreaming. Therefore to tell her what had
+recently occurred would doubtless make her
+prejudice the deeper. For she was almost
+sure to regard the boy's behavior as impertinence
+and to wish to send him at once
+away from the ranch.</div>
+
+<p>Yet though Olive herself was annoyed,
+she did not wish matters to go so far as
+that. For she had a peculiar appreciation
+and pity for the Indian boy's difficulties
+which no one else could so readily have.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
+Had she not been raised among the Indian
+people and did she not comprehend their
+shy, proud natures? For white people to
+realize that the Indian, even in the midst
+of his overthrow and degradation, still considers
+himself their superior is an almost
+impossible conception. Nevertheless Olive
+knew this to be true. The white man's
+religion is to the Indian less full of visions
+and of dreams. An educated Indian writes:</p>
+
+<p>"When we plant our plumes where the
+shrines are, our first prayer is for good
+thoughts&mdash;that our children may be wise
+and strong, and that the God of the sky
+may be glad of us. I have listened to the
+mission talk many days, and nothing in
+the words of the missionary is more white
+than the thought which we plant with the
+prayer plumes on our shrines."</p>
+
+<p>Neither does the Indian, though of course
+there are exceptions in his race as in all
+other things, have the respect that we feel
+he should have for the advantages of our
+education. What more does it teach him
+of the woods and the fields, of the beauty
+and imagery of nature, of all that he cares
+to know? Of a boy who had been to a
+government school an Indian says:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"He comes back to his people and knows
+that if he lives there it must be as his father
+lived&mdash;except that now he has more cultivated
+tastes to satisfy, and no further means
+or methods of earning the price of them. To
+plant the corn, herd the sheep, hunt the
+rabbits, take care of his share of his own
+village&mdash;these are the life-work of the Indian.
+The schools teach him to do that no better
+than his fathers did it before him. He is
+taught to read and write, and he asks 'for what?'</p>
+
+<p>"The cities of the mesa have no books,
+and have never felt the need of them. Why
+should he read of the American life he lives
+apart from?"</p>
+
+<p>Therefore Olive understood that though
+the boy Carlos might not be able to express
+himself in this fashion, in his heart of hearts
+this was exactly the way that he felt. Why
+should he study what Jim Colter and the
+girls wished him to learn? Books and figures
+had no possible interest for him or
+relation to the life which he meant to lead.
+His world was the outdoor one, among the
+animals and birds, under the new moons
+of each succeeding month, and lifting up
+his eyes and his heart to the sun when he
+wished to be glad.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>To work like the other men did about the
+ranch, digging under the earth or plowing
+in the fields! This was not for the son and
+the grandson of many chieftains! It was
+not merely laziness on Carlos' part that
+kept him from making himself useful, but
+the feeling that any such labor as he might
+be expected to do was beneath his dignity.
+Therefore the boy could never really get
+into his mind the idea that the white people
+were his masters, although in a vague way
+he knew that they felt themselves to be.
+It was this thought that was always the foundation
+of Carlos' sullenness and lack of gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>So Olive realized that the Indian boy's
+letter to her, which she had found at her
+door one day hidden among a bunch of
+prairie roses, had not been written in any
+spirit of presumption or audacity. Had she
+not at one time seemed to be an Indian like
+himself? Had she not lived among them,
+eaten their food and spoken their speech?
+And was it not for her sake that Carlos
+had left his own tribe and taken upon himself
+many of the ways of the white man?
+The boy had cared for his "Princess Olilie"
+always, but in years past he had been a
+boy and felt as one. Now he was a man!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All this and more Carlos had put into his
+note. Olive remembered it at the present
+moment almost word for word, for it had
+touched and hurt her at the same time.
+Although Carlos was too young to mean all
+that he had said, she knew that with his
+queer nature he must suffer from her reply.</p>
+
+<p>For he had written:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><span class="smcap">My Lady of the Lone Trail</span>:
+
+<p>Are you not weary of the life and the ways of the
+white women and men? Are you not tired of having
+your soul shut up between four walls of wood with
+no vision for your eyes by day and no night wind to
+touch your cheek as you lay asleep? You and I have
+grown older now; there is no one in any Indian tribe
+to hurt us. Have I not stayed quietly here waiting
+and watching for you, learning many things which I
+have hated, that we might not fail to understand
+each other? For my love for you is as the Tu-wa-ni-ne-ma,
+the sand of the desert.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore will you not come away with me back
+to the wonderful, free outdoor world, where we lived
+together for a little while when both of us were children.
+Under a tree in a dim forest I shall build for
+you such a nest as only a man shall build for his mate.
+Then in the day time I shall plant corn while you weave
+the beautiful Indian blanket, which the Indian Laska
+taught you to make. And in the night we shall listen
+to the little night bird of the desert, the Hoetska.
+But both day and night we shall be alone and away<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+from these people who do not understand me as you
+do and who will never love you as I do.</p>
+
+<p>Whenever you will come with me, I shall have two
+horses waiting.</p></div>
+
+<p>Olive stole a glimpse at Jacqueline's face.
+For a quarter of an hour they had been sitting
+beside each other, and yet neither one
+of them had uttered a word. But certainly
+she should not tell Jack of Carlos' unhappy
+and impossible letter. For Jack might be
+amused, she might be angry, and certainly
+she would be resentful.</p>
+
+<p>No, Olive decided that she must keep the
+boy's secret inviolate. Some day she would
+have a chance to see him alone. Then she
+might be able to explain how far she herself
+had traveled from the old Indian days&mdash;how
+she could never again love the things
+that the boy did, nor endure the life which
+he wished to lead. Besides, Carlos was only
+a boy, while she was almost a woman&mdash;at
+least a good many years his senior! Perhaps
+she might even tell Carlos that it would be
+best for him to go away from Rainbow
+Ranch, back to his own people where he
+could live with Indian boys and girls of
+his own age. There was the Indian village<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
+not far off to which she herself might return
+after a few years. For one of these days
+the Indians were to have a teacher who
+<i>could</i> understand their point of view as
+well as that of the white people. Perhaps
+Carlos might by that time be married to
+a girl of his own race and be able to help
+her with her chosen work.</p>
+
+<p>But she must not speak of this idea to
+Jacqueline either, for the suggestion always
+made her friend unhappy. It was odd how
+utterly devoted she and Jack were and how
+intimate; yet they did not often speak of
+the deepest desires of their hearts to each
+other. Not once had Jack voluntarily mentioned
+Frank Kent's name since their return
+from the visit to Lord and Lady Kent the
+year before.</p>
+
+<p>Was Jack in love with Frank? Olive
+could not make up her mind. Because if
+she were, what was standing in the way
+of their engagement? Of course Jack could
+never have dreamed of her foolish, impossible
+affection for Frank, who had never
+been anything except her good friend. Olive
+was quite certain that she had never by any
+sign betrayed herself. She believed that she
+had entirely recovered from her former feeling,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+and was hoping with all her heart that
+Jack and Frank would now find out that
+they truly loved each other.</p>
+
+<p>But what was making Jacqueline so unusually
+quiet? Olive's slender hand slipped
+into her friend's larger and firmer one, and
+Jack's fingers closed over it lovingly.</p>
+
+<p>They were now almost at the depot and
+Frank Kent's train would be due in another
+quarter of an hour. If only Jack would
+not look so pale and reserved&mdash;she was not
+nearly so pretty as usual! Her face was
+white and her eyes had dark shadows under
+them. Jean and Frieda had insisted that
+Jack wear a new silk suit that had recently
+been made for her, but it was not half so
+becoming as her old brown corduroys or
+faded khaki; neither was her cream-colored
+straw hat with its single brown rose so
+picturesque as the ranch hat in which Frank
+had first seen her.</p>
+
+<p>Olive sighed, and the sigh attracted the
+other girl's attention.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been a dreadfully stupid companion,
+Olive dear. Forgive me," Jack
+murmured penitently. And then: "How
+pretty you are looking! Frank will be so
+glad to see you, I know!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At this moment Carlos stopped the carriage
+and pair of horses before the station platform,
+where both girls got out without time for
+further speech. Yet all this while Jacqueline
+had been thinking: "If Olive still cares for
+Frank after this year of absence I am sure
+that her feeling will never change. So if
+this be true I shall tell Frank that I do not
+care for him enough to marry him. Olive
+has had too unhappy a life for me to add to her
+unhappiness. Surely when Frank believes
+that I do not love him, he will find out what
+Olive means to him and how immeasurably
+she is my superior, in beauty, brains, sweetness
+and everything that counts. Then he will
+know that he has liked her best all along!"</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless and in spite of all her excellent
+reasoning as the whistle blew announcing the
+approaching train, Jack caught her breath.
+She hoped that Frank would not be angry
+with her for having refused to let him come
+to Rainbow Ranch for almost a year. Could
+she dare to pretend that she had forgotten
+the conversation which they had had in that
+last ride together between the hawthorn hedges
+of an English lane?</p>
+
+<p>When Frank Kent came down the steps
+of the train with his grave, handsome face<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
+flushed with eagerness&mdash;and something else&mdash;it
+was Olive Van Mater whom he found waiting
+for him alone on the platform. With all
+his old delightful friendliness and charm of
+manner he greeted her, dropping his luggage
+to hold both her hands close for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>Yet Olive to save her life could not at once
+be equally friendly and natural. For what
+in heaven's name had become of Jacqueline
+Ralston at this critical moment? As the
+train drew in, she had been standing close by
+her side. Here she was approaching them
+at last, holding out her hand stiffly, with a
+frozen smile on her face.</p>
+
+<p>"Awfully glad to see you, Frank; you are
+looking very fit after a trip across the continent.
+Sorry not to be here when your train
+got in, but I had to attend to something
+about the horses. Give me your check and let
+me see after your trunk. Everybody at the
+ranch is well and tremendously anxious to
+see you."</p>
+
+<p>Frank smiled. Holding on to his trunk
+check he followed the girl a few yards to the
+spot where his trunk had been thrown out.
+Olive waited alone to watch his bags.</p>
+
+<p>"Hope you will be more enthusiastic over
+seeing me yourself, dear, when I have a chance<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
+to talk to you," Frank remarked in the quiet
+fashion that always had its effect on the girl's
+ardent nature. "You are glad, aren't you?"</p>
+
+<p>And while Jack nodded, not entirely trusting
+herself to speak, Frank laughed, saying:
+"Here comes a porter. I'll have him carry
+my stuff to the carriage. It is like you, Miss
+America, to wish to start out by taking care
+of me. But if I am an Englishman and too
+much accustomed to being waited upon,
+at least I won't endure that!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>A DINNER PARTY<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>DINNER at Rainbow Lodge on the
+evening of Frank Kent's arrival was
+sufficiently gay and delightful to
+make up for many preceding weeks of
+quietness.</div>
+
+<p>For not only was Frank's appearance an
+unexpected pleasure to the entire family,
+but a few hours before sundown Ralph
+Merrit had returned home with an old friend
+of his, whom quite by accident he had met
+in a nearby town and persuaded to come with
+him for a short visit at the ranch. Henry
+Tilford Russell was to be a new experience
+to the four girls, since never in their wandering
+either at home or abroad had they met any
+other young man in the least like him.</p>
+
+<p>Before bringing his guest up to the Lodge
+for dinner Ralph had managed to escape from
+him for a few moments in order to see Ruth
+privately and to explain to her a few of his
+friend's peculiarities, so that no member of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
+the family need be unnecessarily surprised.
+For one thing, the stranger was inordinately
+shy, disliking girls more than anything in
+the whole world. In fact Ralph was at last
+obliged to confess that had his friend guessed
+how many maidens he would be obliged
+to face at dinner, gladly would he have
+preferred starvation to joining them. But
+since Russell had asked no uncomfortable
+questions, Ralph had not felt in duty bound
+to forewarn him. Then, as his guest was about
+thirty years old, according to Frieda Ralston's
+calculations he was much too elderly anyhow
+for the Ranch girls' consideration.</p>
+
+<p>Yet notwithstanding all these drawbacks
+Ralph Merrit had been exceedingly anxious
+to bring his friend to the Rainbow Ranch.
+For in spite of the young man's shyness and
+social awkwardness, he was exceptionally
+brilliant, and was regarded almost a genius
+in his chosen line of work. Henry Tilford
+Russell was the assistant professor of ancient
+languages in the University of Chicago and
+Ralph had known him there in his own
+student days. However, he had recently
+suffered a breakdown from overwork and was
+now in the West on a trip for his health.
+But the fact about his former friend over<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
+which Ralph Merrit was particularly enthusiastic
+and desired to have Ruth impart to
+the girls, was that of his own free will Professor
+Russell had chosen the life of a student.
+His father was a wealthy and prominent
+Chicago lawyer, at one time the American
+Ambassador to Greece, so had the son desired
+he might have followed the idle existence of
+most other rich young men.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of seeing that the baby was
+safely stored away in his silk-lined crib and
+that the table was set for extra guests, and
+that Aunt Ellen prepare a specially good
+dinner, Ruth had no time for extended conversation
+with the girls. She did manage to
+mention to Jean and Frieda that Ralph had
+brought home a stranger to whom they were
+to try to be agreeable. But this bit of information
+was almost swallowed up in the more
+important news that Ralph had at last succeeded
+in getting hold of a new set of men and
+that work on Rainbow Mine was to begin
+again within the next day or so.</p>
+
+<p>Then, soon after, Frank appeared, and
+everything else was forgotten in the welcome
+to him.</p>
+
+<p>Just as though he had been her older brother
+and Frieda a little girl, Frank kissed her,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
+insisting that she had grown, although at
+eighteen Frieda certainly considered herself
+quite past the growing stage.</p>
+
+<p>Introduced to the new baby, Frank did not
+seem in the least nervous or abashed as most
+men are by such very tiny persons. Indeed,
+he apparently had overcome all his old reserve
+and shyness and without this was simple
+and charming, as persons of high birth and
+breeding are most apt to be.</p>
+
+<p>Fifteen minutes before dinner Ruth had
+positively to force the four girls to dress.
+Then, as Jim was getting ready at the same
+time, she had a few moments alone with
+Frank Kent.</p>
+
+<p>"You know what I have come for, don't
+you, Mrs. Colter&mdash;Ruth?" Frank began with
+the directness that the woman had always
+admired in him.</p>
+
+<p>Ruth made no pretense of not understanding.
+"It would be hard for all of us, and I
+don't see how Jim would be able to get along
+on the ranch without Jack," she replied.
+"For you see he and Jack really are like
+'partners,' their old name for each other.
+But if it is for Jack's happiness you know
+how we should all feel. But, Frank, I feel
+I must warn you that Jack won't be easy to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+win, and it is because I care for you so much
+that I hope you will not be discouraged.
+She is not just like most girls, and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Frank nodded. "I have understood that
+all along," he interrupted. "Still there is one
+thing, Ruth, that you do not know. Last
+summer I persuaded Jack to confess that she
+did care for me. Yet she insisted that there
+was something, she could not explain to me
+what it was, that stood in our way&mdash;some
+barrier that had to be broken down before
+she could consent to marry me. What it
+was I don't know and that is one of the things
+I have come half way across the world to find
+out. Can you guess of any possible obstacle
+to Jack's feeling for me?"</p>
+
+<p>In a puzzled fashion Ruth Colter drew her
+delicate brows together. Frank's remark
+had startled and surprised her. "No, not
+unless it is her affection for us and the ranch,"
+she replied.</p>
+
+<p>Before another confidence could be exchanged,
+Jim had stamped into the living
+room, looking bigger and more splendid than
+ever, suggesting the strong wind from his
+own beloved prairies. A few moments later
+Ralph Merrit and his guest followed, and
+afterwards Olive, Jean and Jack.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Perhaps because she remembered that
+Frank had always liked her best in white,
+Jack wore a plain white silk dress cut square
+in the neck and with no trimming but the
+girdle and little ruffle of lace. It was a dress
+which she had owned for over a year, and
+Frieda was annoyed with her for wearing it
+on the evening of Frank's arrival. Notwithstanding,
+as there was no time to change
+after her sister's protest, Frieda finally conceded
+as Jack left the room that she did look
+fairly well. For the truth was that no one
+of the older girl's more elaborate toilets
+could have suited her half so well.</p>
+
+<p>Jack was pale and not altogether sure
+whether she was the more happy or unhappy
+over Frank's presence, yet somehow her
+unusual pallor was not unattractive, with
+her burnished brown and gold hair and the
+healthy scarlet of her lips. Then in some
+indefinable fashion Jack's expression had
+recently grown gentler, indeed tonight her
+manner held a certain timidity, giving her
+one of the charms that she sometimes
+lacked.</p>
+
+<p>Both Olive and Jean were also simply
+dressed, since their dinner party was an
+impromptu one and entirely informal. Olive<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
+had on a lavender muslin with a bunch of
+Frieda's violets at her waist, while Jean was
+dressed in a pale yellow voile frock with
+primroses embroidered upon it.</p>
+
+<p>Ralph Merrit frowned and then tried to
+smile as Jean came forward to shake hands,
+congratulate him and meet his guest, "What
+right had a poor fellow even to dream of a
+girl so fitted by beauty and grace to every
+high position? Suppose by some miracle
+Jean should in time learn to care for him,
+what would he have to offer her? Here was
+Frank Kent (and Ralph was perfectly aware
+of Frank's intention), and if Jack cared for
+him she would have all the things of this
+world that Jean so frankly loved, wealth,
+a high social position and one day an old
+English title."</p>
+
+<p>But while Ralph Merrit was continuing to
+pursue this wholly futile train of thought,
+Jean was every now and then glancing
+toward him demurely from under her heavy
+shaded brown eyes with a look which he
+perfectly understood.</p>
+
+<p>"What in the world is the matter with your
+friend, Mr. Russell?" the look said plain
+as any words. For Jean was doing her level
+best to talk to the stranger and in return<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
+for her efforts he would not even turn towards
+her.</p>
+
+<p>On first being introduced to Jacqueline
+the Professor had turned crimson to the
+tips of his large ears, though in a measure he
+had been prepared for one girl, since Ralph
+had mentioned a "Miss Ralston" in connection
+with the ownership of the Rainbow
+Mine. Later the meeting with Olive had
+added resentment to his confusion. Why had
+Merrit not warned him of what he would
+have to endure? Jean was an impossible
+third. Why, no such misfortune as meeting
+with three girls had overtaken him since he
+reached the great womanless West! For
+though the West did have its tiresome quota
+of females, so far he had managed to escape
+speaking to any of them except on strictly
+business matters.</p>
+
+<p>Well, he was in for it now, and would have
+to endure the evening as best he could;
+yet already he had made up his mind to escape
+as soon as daylight came in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>Jean's well-meant efforts to make herself
+agreeable to Ralph's friend were entirely
+wasted; yet after dinner was announced
+the young Professor found himself more at
+ease. For fortunately he had been placed on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
+Mrs. Colter's left and next him was an empty
+chair&mdash;evidently for some member of the
+family not at home he thought with a suppressed
+sigh of relief.</p>
+
+<p>Overhearing Frank Kent ask some question
+of interest in regard to the mine, Professor
+Russell forgot his embarrassment sufficiently
+to add several questions and comments of his
+own. And it happened to be during one of
+his own speeches that an unexpected movement
+near him made him glance toward the
+empty chair.</p>
+
+<p>"Great Scott! Was this a big wax doll
+about to take her place next him?"</p>
+
+<p>Yet, though the doll was struggling with
+the chair and evidently trying to draw it
+out from under the table, it never occurred
+to Henry Tilford Russell to render her the
+slightest assistance, in spite of the fact that
+she was smiling at him appealingly out of the
+very largest and bluest eyes he had ever seen.</p>
+
+<p>The lateness of Frieda Ralston's entrance
+did not appear to have surprised her family,
+who were entirely accustomed to it; however,
+the magnificence of her dinner toilet plainly
+did. For whatever had inspired Frieda to
+dress up as she had? It was small wonder
+that she was late.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Even in the midst of her duties as hostess
+Ruth Colter's gray eyes widened and it was
+on the tip of her tongue to scold Frieda for
+her foolishness. Yet, recovering herself in
+time and recalling the presence of their guests,
+she said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>With a faint suggestion of reproach Jack
+shook her head at her sister, while Jean
+and Olive openly smiled at each other. So
+the situation would have passed off without
+any unpleasantness if it had not been for
+Jim Colter. When would Ruth teach Jim
+that he was not to tease the Ranch girls
+before strangers just as if they were tiny
+children?</p>
+
+<p>With real astonishment and some mock
+admiration Jim stared at the latest comer,
+at the same time giving a characteristic
+chuckle and low whistle. Then, in spite of
+the fact that Jack, who was sitting near,
+gave his foot a warning pressure, he exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"What in heaven's name, Baby, does all
+that finery mean? You aren't going to a
+ball later on this evening, are you, and forgotten
+to mention it?"</p>
+
+<p>Then, with everybody at the table staring
+at her, Frieda felt her lips beginning to
+tremble and her eyes fill with tears, as at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
+last she slipped into her place. Why should
+her appearance create so much comment?
+She had dressed up because she wished to and
+for no other special reason.</p>
+
+<p>Often in the past year when things at the
+Lodge had been dull for a long time she had
+amused herself in trying on her pretty clothes.
+No one had ever objected before, but now,
+just because there were strangers, or at least
+one stranger, present, she had to be made the
+object of family criticism and ridicule. If
+only they were alone Frieda felt that she
+would like to tell Jim and everybody just how
+hateful they were. For of course there had
+been no thought in her mind of Ralph's
+guest when she had put on her blue <i>cr&ecirc;pe
+de ch&icirc;ne</i> dress with its low neck and elbow
+sleeves and floating chiffon draperies. The
+costume had been a present from her sister,
+Jack, who always could save more of her
+income than she or Jean. She had only
+wished to find out whether it was becoming
+to her and that was why she had also taken
+so much time and care in fixing her hair.
+Certainly she knew that Ralph's guest would
+be as old as the hills&mdash;Ralph had plainly
+stated that he would be.</p>
+
+<p>Frieda gave a little start, which she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
+promptly repressed so that no one should
+notice it, when she heard a pleasant voice
+whispering unexpectedly close to her ear:</p>
+
+<p>"Don't mind their teasing you; I think
+you look&mdash;just jolly."</p>
+
+<p>And in reply Frieda smiled tremulously
+upon the newcomer.</p>
+
+<p>He was old, just as she had expected&mdash;his
+hair was already beginning to grow thin upon
+the top of his head. He was slender and
+delicate looking and of only medium height,
+yet his eyes were certainly the brownest and
+almost the kindest that she had ever seen,
+in spite of the fact that they had a kind of
+absent, far-away expression even while they
+seemed to be fastened upon her.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," Frieda returned a second
+later, having by this time regained both her
+lost dignity and self-possession. But this
+time the younger Miss Ralston found their
+latest visitor displaying a curious eccentricity.
+Now he was plainly laughing at her. Naturally
+Frieda could not have dreamed that
+Professor Russell, whom Ruth had finally
+concluded to introduce to her, considered her
+a little girl of about fourteen. Otherwise, not
+for anything in the world, would he have made
+the speech which he first addressed to her.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The truth was that this old-young Professor
+was extremely fond of children and only
+objected to girls after they had grown up.
+Then because he was so shy himself he had a
+keen sympathy for embarrassment in other
+people. So it was to these two causes that
+Frieda owed his friendliness.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, as she was entirely unconscious
+of this fact, Frieda continued to talk
+to him very calmly and comfortably during
+the entire meal. He did appear surprised
+over an occasional remark of hers, but as he
+hardly ever answered, Frieda guessed that this
+might be his method of revealing his appreciation
+of her attentions. Actually the two of
+them were out on the porch with every one
+else vanished from sight for the moment
+before Professor Russell entirely awoke to the
+fact that, though his companion was still
+extremely young, she could not exactly be
+regarded as a baby.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>TWO CONVERSATIONS<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>"JACK, you have not played fair with
+me; what is it that has happened?"
+Frank Kent asked quietly.</div>
+
+<p>It was an hour since dinner time at the
+Lodge and Frank had so insisted upon Jack's
+taking a walk with him that without rudeness
+she had not been able to refuse. It was an
+enchanting June night, warmer than usual
+in that part of the western country, and with
+a moon that shines perhaps nowhere on this
+earth with exactly the same wide radiance.</p>
+
+<p>Jack and Frank had walked down the tall
+aisles of cottonwood trees near the house and
+were now standing a few yards on the farther
+side of them in a clear and revealing light.
+At Frank's words the girl flinched as he had
+known that she would. For just that reason
+he had chosen them, since nothing could hurt
+Jacqueline so much or make her come so
+immediately to her own defence as any
+suggestion that she had not played fair.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
+Other girls might not suffer so greatly from
+this accusation; but honesty, candor and a
+kind of straightforwardness, which some persons
+are pleased to think as masculine traits,
+had always been Jack's leading characteristics.
+Now, however, though her companion waited
+impatiently for her reproach or her denial,
+for a moment he heard neither.</p>
+
+<p>"I am so sorry, Frank, that you feel in that
+way about me," Jack began finally. Then,
+almost in a whisper: "I have not intended
+to be unfair to you. I&mdash;I had not promised
+you anything."</p>
+
+<p>Jack was not looking into Frank's face
+as she spoke, but at the silvery whiteness of
+the ground beneath her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"But nothing has happened, if you mean
+that I have become either angry or disappointed
+in you," she added timidly.</p>
+
+<p>Difficult as the girl had anticipated this
+conversation might be, it was more trying
+than she had expected.</p>
+
+<p>What could she say? How could she
+truthfully present the situation to Frank,
+as it appeared to her, without putting Olive
+in an impossible position? Because in spite
+of Olive's denial through the message to Jean
+at the close of the last Ranch Girls' book,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
+Jacqueline was still firmly convinced that her
+friend felt so great an affection for Frank
+Kent that it was influencing her whole life.
+Did it not explain why she absolutely refused
+to consider Donald Harmon's proposal of
+marriage, in spite of Don's devotion and her
+grandmother's expressed desire? Moreover,
+even if Olive did not like Donald sufficiently
+well to consider marrying him, why should
+she insist that she intended devoting her
+future to teaching the Indian children?</p>
+
+<p>To Jack Ralston such a career suggested
+pure martyrdom. Olive might do anything
+else in the world that she liked, even if her
+grandmother left her no inheritance. For
+there was Miss Winthrop, who regarded Olive
+almost as a daughter and who would do everything
+possible for her. She might have
+almost any happiness and yet Olive actually
+talked as if she meant to do what she had so
+long said she intended as soon as she was a
+few years older and the proper arrangements
+could be made.</p>
+
+<p>Jack bit her lips until they positively hurt.
+Actually she felt a shiver of repugnance at
+the idea of going away with Frank to every
+happiness if her going involved leaving her
+dearest friend to such a fate. Could she ever<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
+really be happy with this thought in the back
+of her mind?</p>
+
+<p>No, Jack decided once again that she was
+far stronger than Olive and better able to look
+after herself and to bear, if need be, both loss
+and loneliness. Besides, had she not had
+many joys in the past and Olive for many
+years so few? Surely if Olive still cared for
+Frank, as she believed, in a little while there
+need be no further doubt of it. In that event
+it must be her duty to tell Frank that she did
+not love him and would never consent to
+leave the ranch for his sake. After that
+Frank would undoubtedly turn at once to
+Olive, who had always been his friend and
+upon whose sympathy he could surely count.
+Olive, too, was so much prettier, her nature
+so much gentler and sweeter, she would make
+a far better wife. Frank might be angry with
+her at first, Jack acknowledged to herself
+at this moment, but he would be more than
+grateful in the end.</p>
+
+<p>Jack laid her hand pleadingly on the young
+man's coat sleeve.</p>
+
+<p>"Frank," she asked more wistfully than she
+herself realized, "won't you promise not to
+talk about your feeling for me for a time?
+Won't you just stay on here with us at the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
+Rainbow Ranch as you used to do and let us
+have a happy time together? I am worried
+about such a number of things. Perhaps
+the money in Rainbow Mine is going to give
+out and we may have no further income from
+it. Then there is this strike of our miners.
+Jim and I don't say a great deal about it to
+the others, but we are so afraid the old men
+may resort to violence when we try to get
+things to running smoothly again and that
+Ralph or some one else may be seriously hurt.
+Don't you see that I just can't think about
+anything else now?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Jack dear, I can't honestly see why
+your having all these worries and annoyances
+can affect your knowing whether or not you
+return my love. It is not as though I had
+never spoken of it&mdash;you have had a whole
+year to decide. But if you wish me to wait
+longer, of course I shall do as you ask. Only
+please don't let it be too long."</p>
+
+<p>Then before the girl could reply she and her
+companion had both started, and instinctively
+Jack clutched at the young man's arm.</p>
+
+<p>The next moment she gave a relieved laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see why I should jump in that
+fashion just because we heard a slight noise
+behind us," she apologized. "I suppose other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
+people have just the same right that we have
+to be outdoors enjoying the moonlight."</p>
+
+<p>Jack then turned around, looking back into
+the grove of cottonwood trees. "Jean, Olive,
+Frieda," she called lightly, but when no one
+responded, thinking no more of the incident
+she moved on a few steps.</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Frank, let us have a real walk,
+it is too lovely to go back to the Lodge so
+soon. I want to ask you such a lot of questions
+and about your mother and father and Kent
+Place," she pleaded.</p>
+
+<p>Frank's attention was not to be so easily
+diverted. For several moments he continued
+staring at the spot where undoubtedly he had
+heard the noise of light footsteps only a few
+seconds before. The sound had come from
+the neighborhood of the trees nearest them;
+but why did no figure emerge into the light
+or move off again in the opposite direction?
+The night was so bright and the air so clear
+that no one could have escaped without being
+either seen or heard. But Frank was too
+interested in the prospect of a longer time
+in the moonlight alone with Jacqueline to
+waste a great deal more thought upon a
+possible intruder. Once again he glanced
+back, but as no one was in sight, he and Jack<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
+were soon deep in an intimate and happy
+conversation.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding, neither the girl nor the
+man were mistaken in their original impression
+that some one had been in their neighborhood
+during at least a part of their conversation.
+For when they were both safely out of sight
+a slender figure stole from behind one of the
+largest cottonwood trees and ran off with the
+fleetness and noiselessness of a wild creature.
+There was an ugly expression on the face&mdash;one
+of resentment and suspicion and yet of so
+great unhappiness that the other emotions
+might have been forgiven.</p>
+
+<p>For the Indian boy, Carlos, fifteen minutes
+before had just concluded a conversation with
+the only person in the world for whom he felt
+any real affection. And foolish and mistaken
+as his dream had been, it hurt no less to find
+it shattered.</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes after dinner, when all the
+family were together on the veranda at Rainbow
+Lodge, Olive had several times noticed
+Carlos hovering about in their vicinity, now
+on a pretence of bringing a message to Jim
+Colter which might as easily have waited until
+morning, then asking some perfectly unnecessary
+question of her. And finally with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
+persistence and stoicism of his race he had
+planted himself like a slender and upright
+column against a side of the house, deliberately
+to wait until he could have his way.</p>
+
+<p>There was not the slightest use of pretending
+that Olive did not understand what his
+intention was. Carlos wished to talk with
+her, wished to have an immediate answer to
+the letter which he had lately written her.
+Moreover, she feared that unless she gave in
+to him he might show some trace of his feeling
+before the assembled company.</p>
+
+<p>Quietly Olive slipped over to Ruth Colter.</p>
+
+<p>"Ruth," she whispered, when no one was
+paying any especial attention to either of
+them, "I have something rather important
+that I must say to Carlos. He is here now
+waiting. Do you think it would make any
+difference if I go and talk to him for a few
+moments? We won't go any distance from
+the house, just to some place where no one
+may be disturbed by us."</p>
+
+<p>And Ruth agreed to the girl's request
+without considering it seriously. To the older
+woman Carlos was only a child, sometimes
+rather a difficult one it was true, but at any
+rate only an idle, mischievous boy, whom the
+Ranch girls in their usual impulsive generosity<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
+had befriended and in a measure adopted.
+But that Carlos should think of himself as a
+man and actually have the impertinence to
+consider himself in love with Olive, Ruth
+simply could not have believed had she been
+told the truth at this moment.</p>
+
+<p>So Olive, pretending to go to her own room
+for a scarf, had afterwards stolen out of a
+side door and come close up to where the
+Indian boy was standing.</p>
+
+<p>"Carlos," she said kindly, "I would rather
+you did not linger about the veranda because
+you wish to speak to me. If you will come
+away with me for a little distance we can talk.
+I received your letter and you want to know
+what I think of it?"</p>
+
+<p>Without a word the boy nodded, but he
+followed the girl for a few yards until they
+were standing ankle deep in the shimmering
+green foliage of Frieda's violet beds which
+were not far from the Lodge. And although
+in the path a few feet away there was a small
+bench where the girls often rested after their
+work among the flowers, Olive would not
+consent to sitting down.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly and patiently as she could, she
+explained to Carlos the utter impossibility
+of his feeling for her. In the first place, he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
+was a boy while she was a number of years
+his senior. Then he was completely mistaken
+in his idea that because she had been raised
+among Indian people she cared for their life
+or habits. Not for anything on earth would
+she return to their simple and primitive
+existence. Because Olive was essentially
+gentle and because her sympathy and understanding
+of the Indian boy's nature was a
+matter of experience as well as kindness of
+heart, she did try to take the sting away from
+the present situation so far as she could;
+yet she felt obliged to be firm, for there must
+be no repetition of Carlos' foolish letter to
+her. He must appreciate that she was fond
+of him because he had once befriended her
+in a difficulty, and that she was grateful and
+would always be interested in his welfare.
+But to care for him in any other fashion was
+absolutely out of the question. Never again
+must he even dare to refer to the subject.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding her resolute attitude and
+the arguments which she had used so forcibly,
+at the end of their conversation Olive did not
+feel sure that Carlos was as entirely convinced
+of the absurdity of his desire as he should have
+been. For she had spared him the one course
+open to her that might have brought him to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
+his senses&mdash;sheer ridicule. Therefore when
+Olive was back in her own room alone and
+undressing for the night, since she had not
+felt in the mood for rejoining her friends, she
+wondered if she had been altogether wise.
+Certainly she had not liked Carlos' manner,
+and two remarks of his near the conclusion
+of their talk had left her very angry.</p>
+
+<p>"It is Miss Ralston who has turned you
+against me," he had muttered sullenly. "She
+don't like me, she don't understand. She
+thinks I am no more than a servant about her
+place. If it had not been for her you might
+have stayed always in the wilderness with me
+when both of us were children. Then you
+would never have known of your people nor
+learned to love the stupid white man's world.
+Miss Ralston is my enemy; therefore I hate
+her." And with these words Carlos had
+drawn up his lean, boyish frame with the
+majesty of a deposed king.</p>
+
+<p>Olive's sudden wrath had humbled him for
+the moment at least; yet just before she
+turned to go he had said again with equal
+passion, although his manner was quieter
+and more subdued.</p>
+
+<p>"Then if it is not Miss Ralston who has
+come between us, there is some one you care<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
+for. I wonder if it can be the far-away guest
+and friend, who arrived this afternoon by the
+iron trail of the prairies?"</p>
+
+<p>When Olive did not answer but walked
+quietly back to the Lodge, Carlos stood for a
+time like a bronze statue, silent and unmoving;
+then swift as a shadow he threaded his way
+between the cottonwood trees, actually observing
+Jack and Frank from the beginning to
+the end of their conversation, although hearing
+little of what they said.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>A VISIT TO RAINBOW MINE<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>TWO days later, as things were once
+more in working order at the Rainbow
+Mine, Ralph Merrit suggested that
+Jim Colter bring Ruth and the girls and
+Frank Kent down to see how things were
+going. And soon after luncheon the little
+party started.</div>
+
+<p>A trip to the mine was actually like an
+expedition to a foreign place, so long a time
+had passed since the family had been allowed
+in its vicinity, and so of course everybody was
+in especially fine spirits. It was well to have
+Rainbow Mine running again and a relief to
+find that the striking miners had yielded to
+circumstances so much more readily and
+peaceably than their first threats suggested.
+They had influenced the mine workers near at
+home to have nothing to do with Ralph
+Merrit's management; nevertheless since the
+arrival of his new force the atmosphere about
+Rainbow Ranch had remained serene and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
+untroubled, so that evidently the strikers were
+not to be heard from.</p>
+
+<p>True, a single ugly letter had mysteriously
+appeared at daylight this morning left before
+the door of the new foreman, but except for
+mentioning it to Ralph, the man had paid
+no further attention to it. And Ralph, in the
+interest and excitement of getting things into
+working order at the mine, had given it less
+consideration than it deserved. For the
+annoyance was not so much in the threat of
+trouble that the letter contained, as in the
+puzzle of its being found at the quarters
+built for the Rainbow Mine workers, which
+were not far from the old Ranch house. No
+outsider had been seen anywhere about the
+great ranch either on the preceding day or
+night.</p>
+
+<p>Jim and Frank and Jack walked on ahead
+in order that they might have a few moments'
+conversation with the new miners; for no
+one had yet gone down the shaft into the mine.
+Before lunch they had been going over the
+machinery and seeing that the elevators for
+the men and for the ore were in good working
+order.</p>
+
+<p>Now Ralph Merrit was insisting that he
+be lowered first into the mining pit and that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
+his new men with their hammers and chisels
+and other mining paraphernalia follow after
+him. However, observing that Ruth and the
+other girls were coming nearer he went forward
+to speak to them. Not since the evening
+when he and his friend had taken dinner at
+the Rainbow Lodge had he seen any one of
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"We are awfully pleased, Ralph, that
+affairs are straightening out so comfortably,"
+Ruth began. "I think we owe you a vote of
+thanks." She had not known what had been
+making Ralph Merrit so unlike himself for the
+past few months, since neither Jim nor Jean
+had seen fit to confide Ralph's weakness to
+any one else; but she did recognize the change
+for the better in him today. She had never
+before thought of Ralph as specially handsome,
+yet he looked so fine and capable; his
+expression was so full of energy and ability
+that instinctively Ruth held out her hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Go in and win, Ralph," she added, half
+laughing and half serious. "I don't just know
+what it is that you are fighting for, except
+to make more money for the girls who don't
+deserve it. But whatever it is I am going to
+put my money on you, even though betting
+is against my Puritan traditions; for you'll<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
+win in the end. Why, Ralph, you look like
+the famous statue of 'The Minute Man'
+near Boston, except that you have not his
+gun or knapsack. You're just as typical an
+American fighter and just as ready for action."</p>
+
+<p>Crimsoning like a small boy at unexpected
+praise, Ralph crushed Ruth's hand in reply
+until she had to repress a cry of pain.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not worth the powder to blow me up
+if you really knew the truth about me, Mrs.
+Colter; but just the same any kind of fellow
+likes a compliment now and then, and I don't
+remember when I have had one," he returned.</p>
+
+<p>A movement of Jean's graceful shoulders
+and a single glance from her demure dark eyes
+made the young man swing half-way around
+to face her.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not disputing that statement,
+are you?" he demanded. "Why shouldn't
+a fellow like a compliment as well as a girl?"</p>
+
+<p>Jean slipped off the big pink straw hat she
+had been wearing and with the velvet ribbon
+about it, swung it on her arm like a basket.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I am not disputing <i>that</i> part of your
+statement if you please, sir," she answered.
+"I am only regretting that you have forgotten
+all the other compliments which you have
+received in the past. For when I remember<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
+how many I have bestowed upon you lately,
+it is discouraging to think what a failure I have
+been in trying to make myself agreeable."</p>
+
+<p>Just why recently, indeed ever since their
+conversation together that afternoon on the
+veranda at the Lodge and later here in the
+shadow of one of the great rocks, Jean Bruce
+had been trying to make herself particularly
+agreeable to Ralph Merrit and to win back
+his former attention and friendship, the girl
+herself did not know. On her return from
+Europe, after a few months at home, she had
+certainly discouraged Ralph's devotion, feeling
+instinctively that his affection for her had now
+become more serious than in the past when he
+had looked upon her as only a half-grown
+girl. For Jean did not wish to be unkind or
+unfair, and assuredly Ralph had none of the
+things to offer her which she desired. Perhaps
+because of this she had talked more of wealth
+and of worldly ambitions than she might
+otherwise have done. And Ralph had either
+understood her intention or else had recovered
+from his former affection, for in the past few
+months, during his foolish and futile struggle
+for money through speculations, he had
+entirely ceased making love to her or treating
+her in any way differently from the other girls.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At heart Jean was essentially a coquette,
+one of those girls and women who, having
+once gained a man's admiration, cannot bear
+to find themselves losing it. And surely Jack
+and Frieda and Olive had often accused her
+of this vice.</p>
+
+<p>Now, knowing that Ralph cared at present
+more for the successful working of the Rainbow
+Mine than for anything else, Jean pointed
+with apparently the deepest concern toward
+the group of new men.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell us about the new miners, won't you
+please, Ralph," she asked, "their names and
+where some of them came from&mdash;anything
+you know? They are a splendid-looking lot
+of fellows!"</p>
+
+<p>But at this moment Frieda interrupted the
+conversation to ask a question. "Who is
+that thin man over there all by himself in the
+blue overalls and old hat? Why isn't he
+with the others who are being introduced to
+Jim and Frank and Jack? I wonder if Jim
+knows him?"</p>
+
+<p>Then, quite unaccountably, Ralph Merrit
+appeared extremely uncomfortable.</p>
+
+<p>"See here, Frieda, I might as well tell you,
+for you would be sure to find out anyhow if I
+didn't. That fellow isn't one of the new<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+miners. He is Russell, the friend I brought
+up to the Lodge with me to dinner the other
+night. You see&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But Frieda's eyes were widening and in
+truth the other three women seemed almost
+equally surprised.</p>
+
+<p>"But I thought Professor Russell had gone
+away from Rainbow Ranch," Frieda protested,
+"why he told us good-by the night he left
+and said that he would have to be off so early
+the next morning that he could not see any
+of us again."</p>
+
+<p>Ralph nodded. "I know," he conceded
+in some embarrassment. "And you're still
+to think he has gone if you please. Don't
+any one of you go near enough to Russell
+to speak to him or he will probably die of
+confusion before your eyes. I am afraid I
+forgot he was around and he is under the
+impression that he is safely disguised. You
+see the truth of the matter is this. When
+Russell got me away from the Lodge the other
+night there is nothing he did not say to me
+for having taken him unprepared to a place
+where he had to meet four girls. He declared
+it nearly killed him and he had every intention
+of sneaking away from the Ranch house the
+next morning on foot rather than suffer the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
+chance of meeting any one of you again. He
+is an awful ass, but just the same he is a
+tremendously clever fellow and I was awfully
+anxious to show him the mine and he wanted
+to see it almost as much. So I persuaded him
+that he could just stay on at the Ranch house
+with me for a few days, letting you believe
+he had disappeared until he saw how things
+down here looked and worked. I assured him
+no one of you ever came near the men's
+quarters, but now he is hanging around the
+mine waiting for me as I promised to take him
+down into the pit as soon as we start work.
+Don't scare him to death beforehand."</p>
+
+<p>Ruth and Jean and Olive laughed, and
+Olive said sympathetically:</p>
+
+<p>"Poor fellow, I can feel for him. I used
+to feel so shy that nearly all strangers made
+me wretched. But I don't see just why he
+should be so specially severe upon girls?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because he is a goose," Frieda returned
+so sententiously that every one else laughed.
+So plainly was she offended at her own failure
+to charm their strange guest a night or
+so before.</p>
+
+<p>It was time for Ralph to say good-by.
+Arrangements at the pit shaft had been made
+so that the first elevator could be lowered<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
+into it. He then waved his hand in farewell
+to his friends, as he and the new foreman of
+the mine and the odd-looking figure of Henry
+Russell climbed on to the elevator.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall go away before they come up
+again, so that foolish fellow won't even have
+to look at me," Frieda remarked scornfully,
+as without any hitch or delay the car slowly
+disappeared into the bowels of the earth.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>THE EXPLOSION<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>THE new crowd of miners were anxiously
+waiting about the mouth of the
+pit shaft, which led down into the
+deepest excavation that had yet been dug
+in the neighborhood of the Rainbow Creek.</div>
+
+<p>There were other openings, but because
+this was the largest, Ralph Merrit had desired
+that his workmen begin their labor
+here. For by extending and deepening the
+passages in the lower part of this shaft he
+hoped to make important discoveries of
+new veins of ore. And once convinced that
+a quantity of new gold was actually to be
+found under this ground the young engineer
+had no idea of giving up before he had devised
+some intelligent and not too expensive method
+of bringing more wealth to the surface of the
+earth.</p>
+
+<p>Not many feet from the company of men
+Jack Ralston and Frank Kent were standing
+together talking of some detail in connection<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
+with the work, while Jim Colter was
+hanging over the pit opening in company
+with the men who had charge of the lowering
+and raising of the mine elevator.</p>
+
+<p>Evidently Ralph Merrit and his two companions
+had made a safe landing below, for
+shortly after their disappearance there was a
+signal, and slowly the lift traveled up into
+the daylight again, now ready to take on
+another lot of passengers.</p>
+
+<p>"Steady, no crowding," Jim Colter called
+out as the next relay stepped hastily forward.
+"Merrit will want to start things going in
+the tunnel before you descend."</p>
+
+<p>One man had already gotten aboard, while
+another had one foot extended toward the
+platform, when suddenly from underneath
+them there came a tearing, splitting noise
+and then a muffled roar like the instantaneous
+explosion of a thousand guns.</p>
+
+<p>The passengers in the elevator fell on their
+knees and all around the opening of the pit
+there was powder and blackness and a fall
+of stones like a swift rain of meteors.</p>
+
+<p>By accident Ruth Colter's back happened
+to be turned away from the scene at the
+mine, so that the first sound she remembered
+hearing was her husband's hoarse shout of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
+horror and then as she turned the sight of
+his great form lying prostrate on the ground
+with Jack and Frank trying to drag him
+away from danger.</p>
+
+<p>But when Ruth would have rushed toward
+him, Olive and Frieda held her fast, and
+the next instant a wave of weakness and
+darkness so overwhelmed her that she had
+no strength to move.</p>
+
+<p>When she opened her eyes she could see
+Jean's face, white as a sheet, dancing before
+her and hear her saying:</p>
+
+<p>"Jim isn't hurt, dear; only stunned by
+his fall. See, he is on his feet again giving
+orders. And Jack and Frank must be all
+right, they were not so near. But what
+could have happened, what caused the explosion?
+It's the men down inside the mine
+who must be horribly hurt. Ralph&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But Jean shook with such nervous terror
+that Frieda's arm encircled her, and the next
+moment the four women moved nearer the
+place of the disaster.</p>
+
+<p>They were just in time, for at the moment
+of their approach, although Jim Colter's
+face was so black that you could hardly
+distinguish him, with his forehead bleeding
+from an ugly wound and his clothes torn and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
+burnt, he was giving orders like the general
+of an army and like trained soldiers the
+miners were obeying him.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll take four of you men who will volunteer
+to go down inside the mine with me.
+I don't know what has happened, but we are
+pretty apt to find things serious. It sounded
+like a dynamite explosion and there may be
+another. Fortunately for us the elevator is
+above ground and we can lower it. Some of
+you see that stretchers are brought here. Jack,
+keep your head and get hold of a doctor at
+once. I hope we may need him," the man
+added grimly, as he swung his great length
+aboard the small car, his companions crowding
+close against him.</p>
+
+<p>Unmindful of the awed silence that had
+followed the noise of the explosion, unmindful
+of the two score of rough strange men,
+Ruth breaking away from the girls now ran
+forward crying:</p>
+
+<p>"Jim, you can't go down into the mine first.
+I can't let you. There is the baby and me,
+you must think of us and of the girls. You
+may be horribly hurt."</p>
+
+<p>She was near enough now so that she could
+look straight into her husband's blue eyes
+and something in Jim's expression calmed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
+her instantly. Then for the time he too
+seemed conscious of the presence of no one
+else.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be frightened, Ruth, I shall be all
+right, dear, and back again with you in ten
+minutes perhaps. But in any case, girl,
+don't you see I have got to go down before
+the others? This is our mine and two of the
+men down there are almost boys."</p>
+
+<p>Some quiet order Jim then gave and
+slowly for the second time the lift sank down
+toward the dark abyss under the earth.
+For Ruth had made no other sound or protest,
+only keeping tight hold on Frieda's
+and Jean's hands. Olive had gone with
+Jack and Frank Kent in the direction of
+the Rainbow Lodge.</p>
+
+<p>To the watchers at the pit opening after
+the elevator had landed the second time
+there was a moment when they believed that
+they could hear voices below. Then the
+waiting seemed interminable. In point of
+fact only a few moments more had passed
+before the signal indicated that the car must
+be drawn up again.</p>
+
+<p>And this time it was Jean Bruce who covered
+her eyes with her hands.</p>
+
+<p>There was a grinding of the cables and then<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+an unmistakable groan, so it was not only the
+faces of the women that blanched whiter.
+Many of these miners were middle-aged
+men who had been in mining disasters where
+many hundreds of lives were at stake. Now,
+since no further disturbance had followed
+the first brief explosion, they realized that
+only the three men who had first gone down
+into the pit had been injured. Yet it was
+nerve-racking not to be able to foretell
+whether these three men would be brought
+up alive or dead.</p>
+
+<p>Jim Colter and one of his helpers were
+standing upright in the car and Jim held in
+his arms a limp, crumpled figure, unconscious,
+his blue overalls charred and blackened,
+his absurd old hat quite gone. Indeed, the
+grave and learned professor of ancient languages
+looked like a broken slip of a boy
+in the big man's keeping.</p>
+
+<p>There on the floor of the car another figure
+was resting. The face was upturned to the
+light and though the eyes were closed the
+expression of the mouth showed that the man
+had not fainted but was suffering great pain.</p>
+
+<p>Frieda touched Jean Bruce on the arm.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not Ralph, but the new foreman who
+seems to be very badly hurt," she whispered.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
+"Look, the other men are carrying him off.
+I can't tell about Ralph's friend, Mr. Russell.
+But where is Ralph? Why hasn't he come
+up with the others?"</p>
+
+<p>And this last question of Frieda's was
+being echoed in the minds of the waiting
+woman and girl.</p>
+
+<p>Why had Jim brought up two of the
+wounded men and left the third, their oldest
+friend, still in the depth of Rainbow Mine?
+It was impossible not to believe that Jim had
+done this because these men were not too
+badly injured to be helped.</p>
+
+<p>For he had now placed his burden on the
+ground and was examining the young man
+with the skill and care of a surgeon, while
+some one else bathed the face. A stretcher
+had been secured for the foreman who was
+now being taken to his own quarters to
+await the coming of a surgeon.</p>
+
+<p>"Jim," Ruth Colter put her hand on her
+husband's shoulder and her face was almost
+as white and strained as it had been during
+her last speech with him, "the elevator is
+going down again and you are not going
+with it. Tell us, please, what has happened
+to Ralph?"</p>
+
+<p>Without waiting to hear her guardian's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
+answer Frieda suddenly burst into tears.
+Of course she had been dreadfully unnerved
+by the recent accident and now this uncertainty
+about their friend, besides the sight
+of their new acquaintance stretched out there
+at her feet as though he were dead when the
+last time she had seen him he had been eating
+his dinner, was more than she could bear.</p>
+
+<p>"Ralph? Great Scott, I am a brute,
+Ruth, Jean, Frieda!" Jim Colter exclaimed.
+"Why didn't I tell you at once? Ralph isn't
+badly hurt at all; he is bruised and burnt and
+shaken up, but nothing more, so far as I could
+tell. So of course he insisted that we bring
+up the two other fellows first. It's a plain
+miracle that there's anything left of the
+three of them. So far as I could understand
+somebody had fixed a bomb down at the
+end of the pit shaft, but the thing was clumsily
+made and only half went off. Ralph
+said they were blown about a good deal and
+the atmosphere was pretty thick, but unless
+the new foreman has been injured internally
+there was no great harm done. I think this
+young man has nothing more serious the
+matter with him than a broken leg. And I
+expect we shall be able to mend that for him
+at Rainbow Lodge."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At these words Henry Russell opened his
+eyes, but whether because of Jim's suggestion
+or the pain he was enduring, or whether because
+the sight of the girls, he groaned aloud
+and then closed his lips again.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think he wants to be taken to
+the Lodge," Frieda suggested mournfully.
+"You see he wants us to think he has gone
+away."</p>
+
+<p>Then possibly because Ruth's and Jim's
+nerves had both been strained almost past
+endurance for the past half hour they laughed
+aloud at Frieda's speech.</p>
+
+<p>Jean had slipped away and it was her
+white and yet happy face that Ralph Merrit
+saw first as he came back into the world of
+daylight again. There, though he was staggering
+and nearly blind and covered with
+blood and grime from the shock he had just
+received, he found Jean's hands before any
+others and held them close for a moment
+while she murmured:</p>
+
+<p>"I am so glad, so glad; it is because you
+have some big work to do in the world that
+you have been saved, I am sure, Ralph."</p>
+
+<p>A moment later Ralph was quietly accepting
+the congratulations of his workmen, while
+he tried to explain to them just how the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
+explosion had taken place. That the bomb
+had been placed down the shaft by one of
+the former miners there could be no shadow
+of doubt.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>AN UNFORTUNATE DISCUSSION<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>"BUT why won't either Jean or Frieda
+come with us?" Olive asked a week
+after the unfortunate accident at
+the Rainbow Mine. With a surprise that she
+did not pretend to hide Jack Ralston turned
+to look at her friend.</div>
+
+<p>"I thought I had explained to you, dear,"
+she protested, "that Jean said she felt it
+her duty to write a long letter of sympathy
+to the Princess Colonna. You see she only
+heard yesterday of the death of the old
+Prince and though she does not feel that the
+Princess will be exactly inconsolable (he was
+so much older and they thought so differently
+about many things), yet of course
+Jean has to say that she is dreadfully sorry
+and is there anything she can do and all that.
+It would not surprise me in the least if the
+Princess came west and made us a visit. I
+told Jean to invite her. She was born in
+this part of the country and I rather think<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
+she will be glad to get away from Rome while
+she is in heavy mourning. It is a pity she
+did not have a son, isn't it? The title will
+have to go to her husband's nephew, Giovanni
+Colonna. You remember he and Jean were
+such good friends."</p>
+
+<p>But although the two girls were walking
+along side by side toward the stables back of
+the Rainbow Lodge, it was plain that Olive
+Van Mater was not listening with any real
+interest to what her companion was saying.</p>
+
+<p>"Then why won't Frieda ride with us?"
+she expostulated. "I am sure it has been
+ages since we four girls had a long ride together
+and it is a wonderfully beautiful morning.
+What has become of Frieda lately anyhow&mdash;I
+almost never see her except at meal
+times?"</p>
+
+<p>With a laugh Jack Ralston laid her arm
+lightly across her friend's shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Olive, to have only my poor society!
+But, dear, we have not had but one other
+ride together, the one that we took to the
+Indian village soon after your arrival. Does
+it bore you so <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'dreadully'">dreadfully</ins> to have only me as
+a companion? You must not come with me
+then, simply because I asked you. I can
+get one of the boys to ride over the ranch<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
+with me; perhaps Carlos would be willing to
+do that much! I don't know what has
+happened to Frieda, but the child is making
+a perfect martyr of herself. That poor young
+Professor seems not to wish anyone to do
+things for him except Frieda or Ruth. You
+know he perfectly hates the sight of the rest
+of us. And as Ruth is so busy with Jimmikins
+and the house she can't nurse him a
+great deal. So he just lies in his room, which
+is Frieda's by the way, and moans and groans
+until Frieda comes to amuse him. What do
+you think I beheld our baby doing the other
+day? Reading him some dreadful article
+on Egyptian Hieroglyphics from a learned
+magazine. She hadn't the faintest idea what
+it was all about and she looked like a big
+yellow butterfly imprisoned in a dark place.
+I am sure I am awfully sorry the erudite
+young professor had to break his right leg
+in the depth of Rainbow Mine and that we
+have him on our hands for six weeks or more&mdash;almost
+as sorry as he is I expect. Still I
+am not going to have Frieda sacrificing herself
+to him much longer. I mean to tell her
+tomorrow that it is quite unnecessary. He
+is a dreadfully spoiled person."</p>
+
+<p>"But wouldn't Frank have enjoyed this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
+long ride with you this morning, Jack?"
+Olive repeated, still refusing to take any
+interest in what Jack was saying, but instead
+clinging obstinately to her own train of
+thought. "I am sure Jim would have let
+Frank off from the trip with him if he had
+known that you had to take this long ride to
+hunt up the lost mares and colts."</p>
+
+<p>Jack nodded, but her expression was hurt
+and puzzled. "Of course Jim would have
+let Frank come with me or would have come
+himself if he had known of the trouble. But
+both Jim and Frank were away before I
+heard of the loss. Besides, it does not make
+any difference, for I am sure I have ridden
+over Rainbow Ranch looking up our lost
+horses and cattle ever since I was fourteen or
+fifteen years old. But if you think the ride
+may be too long for you, please don't come,
+Olive. I shan't be in the least hurt if you
+don't feel like it. Kiss me good-by and go
+back to the Lodge. Ruth will be overjoyed
+at your return and I'll be perfectly all right
+with Carlos."</p>
+
+<p>But although Jack Ralston spoke so cheerfully
+and in such good temper she was not
+truthful in pretending that Olive's present
+attitude was not hurting her feelings. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
+truth is that she felt that Olive had not been
+exactly the same toward her since Frank
+Kent's arrival. And if Jack had needed any
+further proof to add to her past conviction
+this was sufficient. Always before, Olive had
+loved her better than any one else, even more
+than she did her friend, Miss Winthrop.
+And Jack was certain that she had done
+nothing to make Olive angry or to wound her&mdash;she
+herself was so utterly unchanged in her
+own affection.</p>
+
+<p>What a hopeless, horrid puzzle it all was
+and of all persons was not Jacqueline Ralston
+the most inadequate for straightening it out?
+She had no methods but those of frankness.
+If only she dared ask Olive how she actually
+felt.</p>
+
+<p>But Olive would hardly have been able to
+explain to her, because in these last few
+weeks the girl had not understood herself.
+Before Frank Kent's coming to the Rainbow
+Lodge she had been sure of having entirely
+recovered from her past fancy for him. Had
+she not fought it all out in those final weeks
+in England when she had realized the extent
+of Frank's devotion to Jack and the impossibility
+of her own position? And now&mdash;well,
+whatever turn events might take, Olive felt<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
+the fault would be largely Jacqueline's. For
+why did Jack fail to return Frank's affection?
+Why did she continue to treat him with such
+disregard and yet keep him lingering on at
+the ranch? Really Olive wondered if her own
+emotion was not now one more of sympathy
+for Frank and impatience with Jack. Surely
+Frank was too fine a fellow from every point
+of view to be trifled with. And no one
+would ever have suspected Jack of being a
+girl of such a character.</p>
+
+<p>Olive again looked closely into her friend's
+face and what she saw there for the moment
+disarmed her. Of course she was more angry
+with Jack than she had ever dreamed it
+possible that she could be and yet she had
+not meant to wound her over this small question
+of their having another ride together to
+search for lost stock. Perhaps this very
+morning Jack might be in a humor to confide
+in her the cause of her mysterious conduct.
+She must have some vital reason, it was so
+unlike her to be cruel or not to know her own
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I won't go back to the Lodge,"
+Olive finally protested. "For I do wish the
+ride immensely; it was only that I thought
+it might be a pleasure for the others too."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And to this half-hearted apology the other
+girl made no reply.</p>
+
+<p>A few moments later, having arrived at the
+beautiful new stables built within the past
+year at the Rainbow Ranch, Jack and Olive
+found their two horses already saddled. And
+a little while after, finding the Indian boy,
+Carlos, at his own tent door, the three of
+them mounted and rode away.</p>
+
+<p>Now riding with Jacqueline Ralston over
+their great thousand-acre Wyoming ranch
+to seek for cattle or horses that had gone
+astray was apt to be fairly strenuous, and no
+one unaccustomed to riding should ever have
+thought of attempting it. Yet Olive had
+done the same thing dozens of times in the
+years when she had first came to live at
+Rainbow Ranch, and on starting out this
+morning had no idea of growing tired before
+her friend did.</p>
+
+<p>The first part of their trip was easy enough,
+for although Jack cantered along fairly rapidly
+she made no detours, only keeping a careful
+lookout in all possible directions. For she
+had no thought of finding the lost mares and
+their young colts anywhere within the immediate
+neighborhood of that part of the ranch
+which was apt to be ridden over oftener than<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
+the more distant fields. And Carlos had
+been asked to make the few necessary excursions
+whenever a rise in the landscape or a
+group of trees or rocks made a possible hiding
+place.</p>
+
+<p>But a short time before midday the three
+riders came to a distant part of Rainbow
+Creek, where the character of the ranch land
+changed and where there were frequent hummocks
+and sand hills and great boulders split
+into natural caves and canyons. This part
+of the creek had no connection with the
+Rainbow Mine but was sometimes used in an
+emergency as a drinking place for the stock,
+although the stock was not supposed to wander
+here without guidance, as there were
+many ravines and dangerous places where
+especially the young cattle or colts were apt
+to be injured.</p>
+
+<p>Here the riding under Jacqueline's guidance
+became more difficult and fatiguing. For
+not only did she leave the ordinary beaten
+trail, but she made her horse pick his way
+along what appeared an utterly impossible
+track over rocks, in the deep loose sand,
+now following a partly dry creek bed and
+occasionally splashing through water so deep
+that it reached almost to her riding boots.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
+For another hour Olive followed, not realizing
+her own exhaustion, but wondering why
+her breath should be coming in such short
+gasps and why her back should ache in
+such an unaccountable fashion.</p>
+
+<p>Curiously enough it was Carlos who first
+discovered Olive's predicament. For the
+past ten minutes he had been riding as close
+by her side as was possible under the conditions,
+not speaking a single word, but
+examining her closely with his small, burning
+black eyes. And when Olive, without
+being conscious of it, turned a shade whiter,
+even then he did not speak to her but instead
+rode silently forward until he was opposite
+Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"All women have not the strength of
+men!" he began sullenly. The girl stared
+at him in amazement, not guessing what
+he meant.</p>
+
+<p>Then Carlos grew angry and his words
+came faster than usual. "If you think
+more of lost animals than of her whom you
+call friend, it is well that you should go on
+until she falls. Have I not often heard
+and now see with my own eyes that there
+are squaws who care nothing for their own
+sex."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Half rising in her saddle Jacqueline Ralston
+lifted her riding whip, and almost before
+realizing what she was doing she had struck the
+Indian boy sharply across his lean shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not to speak of American women
+as squaws, Carlos. How often have Mr.
+Colter and I told you that you were never
+to do it? And, moreover, you are to understand
+that I will not endure your impertinence.
+What has happened to put you in
+so evil a mood?" Jack asked more quietly
+now, sorry for her own loss of temper. For
+she realized in a small measure just how
+keenly an Indian feels the degradation of
+a blow from an enemy, unless he is able
+to return it with increased vengeance. And
+Jack had no illusion about Carlos' attitude
+toward her. He had turned a kind of ashy
+white under his bronze skin and his body
+had quivered once and then become perfectly
+tense, not from the force of the blow, which
+had not cut deeply, but from his own passion.</p>
+
+<p>However, before either the boy or Jack
+could speak again, Olive had ridden up
+between them, grieved and frightened over
+her friend's action and wondering what could
+have occurred between them in so short a time.</p>
+
+<p>"Jack dear, what has Carlos done or<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
+said?" she demanded quickly. "It was not
+fair of you to strike him, knowing that he
+could make no defense."</p>
+
+<p>Instantly Jacqueline Ralston felt her face
+flushing with a swift rushing of hot blood
+to her cheeks until her temples pounded and
+her eyes flashed. Never before in their
+entire acquaintance had she remembered
+being really angry with Olive. Yet had she
+not borne a good deal already that day and
+for several weeks beforehand in Olive's indifference
+and critical air toward her? Now
+in this trouble she had just had with Carlos,
+Olive was immediately taking the Indian
+boy's part without even asking her for an
+explanation. Nevertheless a second glance
+at her friend's face made her instantly control
+her own emotion, appreciating at the
+same time what Carlos' impertinent speech
+to her had meant.</p>
+
+<p>"You are tired, Olive. I am so sorry,"
+she replied at once, instead of answering the
+other girl's question. "I did not realize
+how hard we had been riding, or that you
+are out of practice after a year in New York
+while the rest of us were here at the ranch.
+We'll have luncheon and rest and then maybe
+you'll feel better."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Jack nodded curtly to Carlos to assist
+Olive in dismounting while she slid off her
+own horse without help. Then she put her
+arm about the other girl, leaving the boy
+to lead the three horses. In a little while
+she and Olive had found a flat rock shadowed
+by a cliff from the sun. Here Olive sat
+down while Jack opened up their luncheon
+boxes and made the necessary preparations.
+But all the time she was reflecting upon
+what she had best do or say to the Indian
+boy. She was sorry that she had struck
+him, although still extremely angry at his
+manner and speech to her. If Carlos had
+felt worried over Olive's exhaustion it would
+have been simple enough to have told her
+in a more polite fashion. The truth was
+that she and Jim were both getting extremely
+tired of the Indian boy's presence on Rainbow
+Ranch. She would talk over this incident
+today with her guardian and ask him
+if he felt that she owed Carlos an apology.
+If he did she would make whatever reparation
+she could and after that they would
+try and find another home for him. But
+at present she was still too annoyed to wish
+to have the boy near her.</p>
+
+<p>"You can find water for our horses and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
+tie them somewhere not far away, Carlos,"
+Jack ordered, leaving Olive and walking a
+few yards across the sand to where the boy
+stood, still sullen and resentful in his manner.
+"Then ride on for another half hour and see
+if you can find any of the lost mares or
+colts. When you return we will have lunch
+saved for you."</p>
+
+<p>And so Jack Ralston temporarily dismissed
+the difficulty confronting her. For in any
+case it was disagreeable to have Carlos
+staring at them while she and Olive ate,
+and she did not wish him as a companion
+at their luncheon.</p>
+
+<p>Carlos' society could hardly have increased
+the discomfort of their meal. For
+Olive was either too weary or too vexed to
+wish to talk, and Jack in too strange a
+tumult of feeling.</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly, as the two girls were sitting
+there together in the warm, caressing
+sunshine, hardly more than a few feet apart
+and yet sundered by leagues of misunderstanding,
+it seemed to Jacqueline that she
+could no longer endure all that she was
+suffering for her friend, unless Olive made
+some sign that her sacrifice was worth while.
+For Jack made no effort to hide from herself,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
+however much she concealed it from
+other people, that each day of her life she
+was learning to care more and more for
+Frank Kent, for his love and his complete
+understanding and sympathy with her temperament.
+She knew that she had many
+faults, but she also knew that Frank was
+aware of them and forgave them. However,
+there was one fault that she did not
+have and it was not fair that she should
+bear the ignominy of it. She would no
+longer hurt and confuse the man she cared
+for by her apparent inability to make up
+her mind.</p>
+
+<p>Jack's full red lips closed more tightly
+than was usual to them as she lifted her
+head, showing the firm line of her throat
+and chin. Then she took a deep breath,
+straightening her shoulders and glancing with
+her wide open, heavily fringed gray eyes
+directly into the eyes of her friend.</p>
+
+<p>Olive was more rested, was less pale, but
+was evidently still as much estranged from
+her. And though the conviction had come
+upon her suddenly, Jack felt convinced that
+this was the appointed moment when she
+must wrest the truth from the other girl.
+She hated herself for her own stupidity in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
+not finding out by more subtle means and
+scarcely knew now what she intended to
+do or say. It was as if she stood on the
+bank of an icy stream with the shore of
+truth on the other side, a shore which by
+some method she must reach. Therefore,
+with Jacqueline Ralston's disposition, there
+appeared but one means. Boldly she must
+plunge in, no matter what the result.</p>
+
+<p>"Olive dear," Jack began abruptly, not
+looking at her friend, but at a small smoke-colored
+cloud over in the western sky, "I
+know you are angry with me about Carlos
+and I am sorry. He was impertinent, but
+I don't suppose you would think that justifies
+what I did. But it is not about what
+happened just now that I want to talk.
+You have not felt like you once did for me
+for several weeks&mdash;not since Frank Kent
+came to the Lodge. Would you mind telling
+me why?"</p>
+
+<p>To Jack's directness of thought and speech
+her friend by this time should have grown
+accustomed. And indeed until now Olive
+had always loved and admired Jack for it.
+But today she was tired and her head ached
+and this unexpected question had taken her
+completely by surprise. The girl's dark<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+cheeks flushed richly and her ordinarily
+gentle expression changed.</p>
+
+<p>"Jack, you are absurd!" she answered
+irritably. "What right have you anyhow
+to consider that my feeling for you has any
+connection with Frank Kent? What does
+Frank mean to me?"</p>
+
+<p>Now if only Jack had been content with
+this answer or had possessed some of Jean
+Bruce's tact and resourcefulness! She had
+neither. So her gray eyes darkened and
+her face grew white and unhappy.</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive me, Olive," she murmured, humbly
+enough for proud, high-tempered Jack,
+"but that is what I, oh, so much want you
+to tell me. For sometimes I have thought
+that perhaps you do like Frank just a little
+bit more than an ordinary friend. And if
+it is true, dear, don't you feel that we have
+been close enough to each other to have
+you make me your confidant?"</p>
+
+<p>It was very gently put, after all, and therefore
+Olive should not have been so wounded
+or so angry. However, and perhaps because
+there was so much of truth in the other
+girl's suggestion, Olive was both hurt and
+embittered.</p>
+
+<p>"You have not the shadow of a right,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
+Jacqueline Ralston, to say a thing like that
+to me," she returned with the passion and
+protest of a too sensitive nature. "How
+dare you sit there and calmly suggest to me
+that I am in love with Frank Kent when
+you know perfectly well that he cares for
+no one in this world but you. Do you suppose
+that I have no pride and no self-respect?"</p>
+
+<p>And then, dropping her head in her hands,
+Olive began crying, hardly understanding
+her own tears, so much were they a combination
+of pain and of <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'petulence'">petulance</ins>. For the
+questions she had just put to Jack were
+the very ones that she had so often asked
+herself. And if she had found no answer
+to them, how could any one else?</p>
+
+<p>But Jack did not attempt making a reply.
+For a moment she was silent, feeling miserably
+conscious of the failure she had just
+made. For had she not merely succeeded in
+mortifying her friend without arriving one
+bit nearer the truth which she sought?</p>
+
+<p>But by and by Jack laid her hand caressingly
+on the other girl's dark hair. "Don't
+cry, Olive please," she begged. "You know
+what a stupid person I am and how often
+Jean and Frieda think I do and say the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
+wrong thing. Here comes Carlos and when
+he has eaten his lunch you must let him
+take you back to the Lodge. You are too
+tired to ride any farther and I can manage
+very well by myself, or else you can send
+one of the stable boys this way to find me."</p>
+
+<p>Without making a reply Olive continued
+to sob, only now a little more quietly, and
+in the meanwhile allowing Jack to make all
+the arrangements for her return home. It
+was unfortunate perhaps that she also paid
+so little attention to the Indian boy, who
+was sitting within a few yards of her, pretending
+to eat. In reality he was either
+keeping his eyes fixed moodily upon her,
+or else turning them upon Jacqueline Ralston
+with such an intensity of dislike that had
+she been aware of it, she must have been
+vaguely disturbed.</p>
+
+<p>A little later Olive and Carlos started
+home together. In farewell Olive simply
+nodded her head to Jack, showing no other
+sign of forgiveness or affection; but she had
+only ridden for a comparatively short distance
+when she was as bitterly sorry and
+as ashamed of herself as Jack had previously
+been, and at the moment would have
+liked to turn back. She realized that she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+had been both unreasonable and unkind.
+What could have been the matter with her?
+Surely her fatigue must have had something
+to do with it, for people were rarely sensible
+when over-tired. Jack had not intended
+breaking down the barrier of her reserve
+for no reason but idle curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly Olive's hands tightened on
+her bridle reins and her black eyes softened.
+How unutterably blind she had been for so
+long! For was not Jack's recent question
+to her the keynote of the whole puzzling
+situation? Jack certainly must fear that
+she cared more for Frank than she should.
+Would this not perfectly explain her attitude
+toward him since the beginning of his
+love-making? Olive quickly recalled the
+final weeks of their visit in England, then
+Jack's repeated efforts to thrust her into
+Frank's society and so to evade him herself!
+Then since Jack Ralston's return to the
+ranch had she not resolutely refused to let
+Frank Kent come to see her until Olive
+was also at the Lodge?</p>
+
+<p>Sudden and relieving tears rolled down
+the girl's hot cheeks, which she did not
+for the moment attempt wiping away. How
+like her quixotic Jack to refuse to accept<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+her own happiness at the price of her friend's!
+And how near she, Olive, had come to permitting
+Jack to sacrifice all three of them
+to her mistaken sense of loyalty and love!</p>
+
+<p>Well, tonight Olive intended straightening
+everything out by answering the inquiry to
+which she had refused to reply to before.
+For in the light of her present revelation
+had she not at last felt a weight lifting itself
+from her own heart and a clear vision
+come to her mind? Let her measure her
+affection for Frank Kent by that which she
+felt for Jacqueline. Why she loved Jack a
+hundred times better than she ever could
+Frank! Jack had been her first friend: all
+that she was she really owed to her. If
+only she did not have to wait an hour longer
+before making three persons happier than
+they had been in many weeks!</p>
+
+<p>Half-way around Olive turned her pony's
+head. But no, she was too tired to go
+back to Jack and besides they could have
+no intimate conversation under the present
+circumstances. Moreover, it had been growing
+much warmer in this last half hour, in
+spite of the fact that every once and a
+while there were unexpected gusts of wind
+blowing the sand into her own eyes and her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+mare's. The truth was that she should
+never have consented to leaving Jack. She
+should have insisted on her going home
+at the same time with them. Ruth and
+Jim Colter would both be annoyed at the
+idea of Jack's riding about the ranch alone,
+and any one of the men whom she might
+send back to look for her would probably
+be several hours in searching and perhaps
+never discover her at all.</p>
+
+<p>For the first time in half an hour Olive
+Van Mater glanced across at the boy, Carlos.
+He had not spoken a dozen words to her in
+the course of their trip, so how could she
+dream that all this while he had been turning
+over and over in his mind the bitterness of
+Jack's insult? Then not only was his animosity
+a personal one, but on coming back
+from the needless errand upon which he had
+been driven away, had he not found his one
+time Princess in tears and such sorrow that
+she had not yet ceased from grieving? Her
+trouble could have but one source. Perhaps
+Miss Ralston had even dared wound her in
+the same way that she had him! And then
+Carlos had clenched his teeth, continuing
+more rigid and doggedly quiet than before.
+For of course he should soon be revenged<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+for both of them! The only thing was to
+wait until his opportunity came.</p>
+
+<p>"Carlos," Olive said unexpectedly. "I
+am almost back at the Lodge now and will
+have no difficulty in going the rest of the way
+alone. But I wish you would go and find
+Miss Ralston. Tell her please to come home
+at once, that I want to speak to her about
+something most important. And I think
+you had better hurry, for I am a little bit
+afraid that a storm is coming up."</p>
+
+<p>Possibly Olive had expected a demur.
+If so she was mistaken, for without replying
+the boy wheeled his horse and started back
+in the direction from which they had just come.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>A DESERT STORM<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>PERHAPS no one except an Indian could
+have found Jack so swiftly, and yet
+Carlos was engaged in the search for
+her over an hour. For the girl had gone some
+distance beyond the place of their last meeting
+and still had found no trace of their lost
+stock.</div>
+
+<p>She was vexed for a moment at Carlos'
+reappearance, but gave no sign. Indeed she
+managed to say "Thank you" when he
+briefly explained that he had taken Olive near
+enough home to have her make the rest of the
+journey without an escort and then that she
+had sent him back to continue the hunt.
+Not a suggestion did he give of Olive's real
+message for Jack to return home immediately.</p>
+
+<p>A girl with Jacqueline Ralston's knowledge
+and experience of western life should have
+required no such message had she taken her
+usual normal interest in her surroundings.
+For there was a sufficient forewarning of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+what was approaching for her to have understood.
+Nevertheless, for once in her life Jack
+was almost completely oblivious of the landscape
+and of the conditions of the sky and
+atmosphere. For her conversation with Olive
+had made her more unhappy and puzzled
+than she had previously been, since she had
+surely succeeded only in making the tangle
+harder for any one of them to unravel.</p>
+
+<p>Now and then, as she continued her ride
+beyond the end of the Rainbow Creek and
+into the broader sweep of their prairie lands,
+the girl almost forgot the original object of
+her day's excursion, only feeling that more
+than anything she desired to be outdoors and
+alone. So that instead of leading the way
+as she had done in the morning she now
+allowed the boy Carlos to take his own trail,
+following without much thought close behind.</p>
+
+<p>By far the larger portion of the broad area
+of the Ralston ranch was cultivated land,
+to the extent that the fields beyond the Lodge
+were most of them planted with alfalfa grass
+and other grains according to their fertility.
+Occasionally there were barren spaces of land
+where the sands from the desert had settled
+too deeply for any growing thing, and as these
+were at the outermost edges of the ranch<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
+Jim Colter had left them undisturbed, waiting
+for a time when there should be less work
+nearer home.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore when Jack suddenly discovered
+her horse ploughing heavily through one of
+these sandy stretches she realized that they
+were farther away from Rainbow Lodge than
+she had appreciated. And certainly it was
+now time to turn back. She was afraid that
+she could hardly manage to arrive at home
+before dinner time and that would mean a
+scolding from Jim, who would hardly consider
+the rescue of a few lost mares and colts a
+sufficient excuse for making the rest of them
+uncomfortable and uneasy.</p>
+
+<p>Jack smiled a little ruefully, checking her
+horse and allowing him a few moments of
+rest. She had not even that good excuse
+to take home with her, for she had not seen
+a trace of the stray stock and had really
+scarcely looked for them since luncheon.
+But then Carlos must have been more attentive&mdash;she
+was really surprised at the boy's
+apparent interest since he rejoined her. He
+had taken the entire initiative. Even now he
+was some distance ahead and going too fast
+for his horse's strength in such difficult ground.</p>
+
+<p>"Carlos, Carlos," the girl called as loudly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
+as possible. Then she patted Romeo's neck
+with swift penitence. Ordinarily she was
+quick to remember the comfort of her own
+mount, but today she had been most extraordinarily
+selfish. However, it was odd that
+in spite of his long day's travel her horse did
+not seem to wish to stand still even for a
+moment. He kept pawing the earth, sniffing
+and turning half way round in his eagerness
+to start for home.</p>
+
+<p>The mystery needed only a little time for
+solving. All afternoon in a subconscious
+fashion Jack had realized that the air was
+unpleasantly hot and stifling and that the
+sun had not been shining since luncheon.
+The little cloud which she had first noticed
+in the west, a queer funnel-shaped cloud,
+had been constantly growing larger. Of
+course it meant a storm, but it was still far
+enough away not to be immediately alarming.
+However, they must get home as soon as
+possible, and Carlos evidently had not heard
+her cry.</p>
+
+<p>Twice again Jack shouted his name, but
+as he did not turn his head she touched her
+pony lightly with her riding whip and rode
+after him. She regretted now that she had
+allowed the boy to get so far ahead of her, for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
+her own few minutes' delay had naturally
+increased the distance between them. Yet
+Jack did not feel that it would be fair for her
+to turn back without informing her companion.
+It seemed almost cruel to force her
+jaded horse at such a pace through the loose
+sands; yet how else could she ever hope to
+catch up with her escort? Carlos did not usually
+show such poor judgment with his own
+steed.</p>
+
+<p>Then finally it occurred to the girl that the
+Indian boy was refusing deliberately to answer
+her as a punishment for their trouble
+earlier in the day. If this were true she was
+foolish to waste any more time and energy
+in pursuit of him. She could get back home
+alone long before bedtime by allowing her
+horse to walk for a part of the way. Then
+if the storm should overtake her, she would
+not be far enough from the Lodge to have it
+make any serious difference. As for her
+scolding, well, Jack felt that she would have
+to accept that as philosophically as possible
+under the circumstances. For Jim would
+have a double grievance, since he did not like
+any one of them to ride for any distance with
+only Carlos as a companion.</p>
+
+<p>Shrugging her shoulders, too tired really<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
+to be angry again that day, Jack called once
+more. This time, to her surprise, Carlos
+actually rose in his saddle, pointing with
+evident excitement toward some indeterminate
+objects at a little distance off. Jack
+could not see what they were, although she
+guessed at once. After all, their hard day's
+work had not been in vain! Carlos had
+assuredly discovered the lost stock. True
+they must have wandered beyond the confines
+of the Rainbow ranch, since Jack was
+familiar enough with their own boundary
+line to know that Carlos was even at this
+instant passing beyond the wire fence which
+circumscribed it.</p>
+
+<p>Their stock oftentimes got outside the
+ranch by mysterious methods of their own.
+Therefore if Carlos believed that he saw the
+mares they had been searching for the entire
+day, it would be foolish to turn back without
+them. It was unfortunate that the heavy
+cloud in the west seemed to be driving toward
+them with so much greater speed in these
+last fifteen minutes. Still if it should reach
+their vicinity before they could get the lost
+mares and colts into some kind of shelter
+the animals must perish. For the mares would
+never desert their young and the colts could<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+never endure the force of the wind and the
+great blankets of sand that would probably
+sweep over and cover them.</p>
+
+<p>Jack was not mistaken in one point of view.
+She knew, as only a Westerner could, that the
+storm approaching was not rain, but wind,
+and that it might mean a sand storm in the
+desert.</p>
+
+<p>A saner judgment however would have
+suggested that Jacqueline Ralston start back
+home at once, leaving Carlos to follow her.
+But she appreciated the tremendous difficulty
+that the boy would have in rounding
+up the frightened animals alone and forcing
+them into some place of refuge. Really, it
+never occurred to Jack not to help. She had
+been so accustomed to just such work on the
+ranch from the time she was a small girl.</p>
+
+<p>So on she rode now, straight after the
+Indian boy, perhaps for an eighth of a mile
+or more beyond their boundary, yet still
+the loose thick sands which were whirling
+and eddying in gusts at her horse's feet.</p>
+
+<p>And always Carlos kept as far as possible
+ahead.</p>
+
+<p>Jack finally came to a position where she
+found out the mistake which she believed
+both she and the Indian boy had innocently<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
+made. The dark objects ahead of them had
+been only a group of close growing sage
+bushes that they had mistaken for the lost
+stock. Crying out once more to the boy
+to turn back, Jack now made no pretense of
+waiting to discover whether or not he heeded
+her. For the wind was blowing more fiercely,
+bringing with it the heat of a sirocco, and the
+sand was pouring into her eyes and ears,
+almost blinding and choking her. Beyond
+her there were small sand hills and ravines
+where a few moments before the earth had
+lain smooth as a carpet.</p>
+
+<p>Jack perfectly understood that the full
+fury of the storm had not yet reached her
+vicinity. Her effort must be to get beyond
+the sand plains, back if possible to the neighborhood
+of Rainbow Creek, where behind
+one of its great rocks she might find partial
+shelter.</p>
+
+<p>But her heart was pounding uncomfortably
+and her fair skin felt as though it were being
+pricked by innumerable needles. Moreover,
+Jack was frightened. She knew just what a
+sandstorm meant on the western prairies.
+She was not far from the edge of a portion of
+barren lands that formed a kind of miniature
+desert, and the worst of the situation was that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
+she herself was very tired and that through
+her own selfish forgetfulness her horse was
+even more so. Every foot of the way the
+girl strove to encourage the exhausted animal.
+Yet it was impossible to make real headway
+in such a soil while buffeted by such a gale.</p>
+
+<p>Then Jacqueline Ralston heard a strange
+noise and, as she had heard it once before
+in her life, she must have recognized it had not
+her other senses also added their warning.</p>
+
+<p>The roar and rush behind her were seldom
+equalled by any other kind of tempest.</p>
+
+<p>For half an instant rising in her saddle the
+girl glanced back. Carlos was not far off
+now and spurring his horse remorselessly.</p>
+
+<p>For beyond the boy at no great distance
+and driving rapidly forward was an immense
+dark yellow cloud. The peculiarity of this
+cloud was not merely in its color, size and
+shape, but that instead of being overhead
+it almost touched the surface of the land.</p>
+
+<p>The girl slid off her horse.</p>
+
+<p>"Down, down," she said quietly, pulling
+hard on her bridle. And then as her horse's
+knees touched the ground before him, Jack
+flung herself face downward, clutching at the
+loose earth for endurance and strength.</p>
+
+<p>The cloud would be upon them in another<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
+moment with terrible destructive force. For
+not alone did it represent the fury of the wind,
+but was formed of a mountain of sand driven
+before it.</p>
+
+<p>A sound, which the girl guessed must have
+come from Carlos, suggested that he was
+following her example. Yet she dared not
+look back to see. Now the sand storm was
+upon them.</p>
+
+<p>The thunder and terror of it are past
+understanding.</p>
+
+<p>One chance only Jack believed they had
+for their lives. If the sand cloud was sufficiently
+high above the earth not to touch them
+they would be safe. Otherwise they would be
+driven before it like chips of straw. But
+of any actual, conscious sensation which she
+suffered as the cloud passed over her, Jack
+was not aware. She knew that she was praying
+the instant before, but at the time itself
+she only clung the closer and sank deeper
+down into the earth, which is the final refuge
+of us all.</p>
+
+<p>The moment following, however, the girl
+felt as if she had been bruised and beaten
+by a thousand furies. Her body ached with
+fatigue, her tongue felt scorched and swollen
+and her eyes smarted with intense pain.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
+There was no further danger; storms of this
+character come with one terrible driving
+blast of wind and then go straight on in their
+course.</p>
+
+<p>Jack blinked and stirred sufficiently to
+turn over and see that her horse was safe.
+As well as its master a western broncho understands
+how to meet strange weather conditions
+that would bring destruction to any other
+animal.</p>
+
+<p>With a sigh of thankfulness the girl then
+stretched herself more comfortably along the
+ground, resting one elbow in the sand and
+leaning her head upon it. For Carlos and
+his pony were equally safe and evidently
+not so frightened as she was, for the boy was
+already staggering toward her dragging his
+horse by the bridle.</p>
+
+<p>The girl was not yet able to speak. Yet
+she watched Carlos with indifference and
+entirely without suspicion as he came to within
+a few feet of her and reaching downward
+pulled her horse on to his feet again.</p>
+
+<p>The horse staggered and Jack had half an
+inclination to ask the boy to wait a little
+while before forcing him to stand. However
+she did not seem to have strength enough even
+to make this protest. Nor did she speak<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
+at first when she saw Carlos leading the two
+horses away from the place where she was
+resting.</p>
+
+<p>What on earth did the boy have in mind
+to do? It was useless to try to brush the
+sand from the horse's coats and there was no
+water near enough to give them each a
+drink.</p>
+
+<p>Jack frowned, then she not only sat up
+but rose quickly on her feet. For Carlos
+had mounted his own pony and without a
+word to her was riding away, taking her
+horse with him. The girl called, but again
+the Indian boy was afflicted with the curious
+deafness that had affected him all afternoon.
+Then Jack ran after him, stumbling and crying
+as she ran. But she was far too exhausted
+to make much headway and still Carlos
+would not glance around. He was not even
+going in the direction of the Rainbow Ranch.</p>
+
+<p>Just how long her futile chase actually
+continued Jacqueline Ralston did not realize.
+So long as she could manage to keep the boy
+in sight she followed him, floundering in the
+sands and uncertain of her direction. However,
+when he was so far away that she could
+no longer see him, Jack sat down again.
+What annoying freak had possessed Carlos<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
+to ride off with her horse without offering
+any explanation? Well, he would doubtless
+return within a short time, so there was
+nothing to do except wait.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>OLIVE'S REMORSE<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>BACK at the Lodge Olive undressed and
+lay down upon the bed for a short
+rest. Afterwards, when she felt that
+Jack must surely have received her message
+she rose and put on the lavender frock that
+was the other girl's especial favorite.</div>
+
+<p>Olive was by this time no longer tired, but
+in better spirits than she had been for several
+weeks. For in less than an hour, perhaps,
+things would be entirely cleared up between
+herself and her best friend.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear old Jack, was there ever anyone else
+in the world quite so generous or so absurd?
+Did Jack really think that she had the
+privilege of bestowing her lover upon her
+friend, simply because she was under the
+impression that the friend desired him? What
+would Frank have had to say in the matter?"</p>
+
+<p>Then Olive blushed. Possibly after all
+she had been more absurd in allowing herself
+even for an hour or a day to think that she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+cared for a man as far beyond her reach as
+the moon. Let her be honest with herself
+at least! Had she not actually shed tears in
+secret? And this when from the very beginning
+of their acquaintance, Frank Kent had
+always been her only loyal and devoted
+friend and nothing else. Well, matters would
+soon be sensibly adjusted.</p>
+
+<p>In the living room Olive found Ruth and
+Jean sewing, but in reality devoting by far
+the greater portion of their time to admiring
+the baby, who from inside his crib was
+placidly surveying the world with the dignity
+of a philosopher.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Jack, Olive?" Ruth inquired
+at once, frowning and glancing toward an
+open window. "It is so hot I am afraid we
+are going to have a storm and I have been
+reproaching myself all day for letting you
+girls start out on such a wild goose chase
+this morning. Why on earth did Jack not
+send the men after the stock?"</p>
+
+<p>Jean looked up from her work. "Oh,
+don't worry about Jack, she has been doing
+this kind of thing ever since she could walk
+or ride and she began both at about the same
+time. I believe Jack did send one of the
+cowboys off in one direction while she and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+Olive and Carlos took the other. But you
+know most of the men have gone with Jim
+and Frank to a round-up a good many miles
+off. I wonder if they will be back in time for
+dinner?"</p>
+
+<p>During this speech the door of the living
+room had slowly opened and Frieda in a white
+muslin frock with a big book under her arm
+had quietly entered. Her cheeks were flushed
+and her expression so uncommonly serious,
+that remembering Jack's story of her younger
+sister's devotion to the Professor, Olive
+smiled.</p>
+
+<p>However, Frieda's first remark was an odd
+one.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry if you have left Jack and
+Carlos together, Olive," she began, puckering
+her white brow. "I don't believe any one
+in this family realizes how Carlos hates
+Jack. I think if he could he would like to
+do her an injury. You see she tries to boss
+him and he perfectly loathes having any one
+dare interfere with him. Then Carlos is
+so lazy and Jack has no use for any one who
+is lazy, except me. I wish she would come
+home. If I had not promised Mr. Russell
+to go on reading to him I should go out and
+look for her."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Frieda walked over to the front window and
+the next moment Ruth had joined her.
+They both stood staring ahead of them hoping
+for a sight of the familiar brown figure on
+horseback. For Jack usually rode up to the
+house with such a splendid rush toward the
+end that even under ordinary circumstances
+a vision of her was worth while.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be tiresome, Baby, and frighten
+Ruth," Jean expostulated.</p>
+
+<p>Olive said nothing, but slipped out of the
+room and hall into the garden. It would not
+be worth while to trouble the others with the
+story of the difficulty between Jack and Carlos
+that morning. Nevertheless it was not pleasant
+to recall the expression on the Indian
+boy's face during their ride home, nor his
+long silence. Of course he rarely spoke to
+other persons, but ordinarily he engaged in
+long confidences with her, talking of the birds,
+wild flowers, any outside thing which he saw
+and loved.</p>
+
+<p>Surely in ten or fifteen minutes more the
+two wayfarers must return. In the meantime
+Olive would not go back to join the others
+as it would not be wise to communicate her
+own nervousness to them. So for the next
+quarter of an hour she walked up and down<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
+outside the Lodge, making several trips to
+the stables to see if the stable men had any
+suggestions to make and to inquire what they
+thought concerning the possibility of a storm.
+For there was little use in trying to argue the
+truth away. The atmospheric conditions
+were strange and depressing. Unless the
+wind changed, driving the single black cloud
+in an opposite direction, something out of
+the common was sure to occur. If only
+Frank Kent or Jim Colter or even the cowboys
+belonging to the ranch were at home, in order
+that they might go out and look up the
+wanderers!</p>
+
+<p>Finally Olive sent the two men who took
+care of the private stables to reconnoiter.
+Then on her way back to the Lodge she found
+Jean hurrying in the direction of the Ranch
+house.</p>
+
+<p>"I want to find Ralph Merrit and ask his
+advice as soon as possible," Jean explained.
+"It is so late now he is sure to have quit
+work at the mine. Ruth is convinced that
+we are going to have a cyclone and is nearly
+frantic over Jack and Jim and Frank, all
+away from home. Yet I hate having Ralph
+start out alone&mdash;he does not understand
+what the weather out here means so well as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
+the rest of us, even if he has been here a good
+many years now. But I must confess I wish
+that Frieda had not made that uncomfortable
+speech about Carlos' disliking Jack so much.
+I am afraid it is true. Oh, Olive, what a
+pity it is that you happened to leave them!"</p>
+
+<p>This was the only word of reproach that any
+member of the Rainbow ranch family made
+to Olive Van Mater during all the excitement
+and distress that came afterwards. And
+of course Jean did not mean her words to
+carry a sting&mdash;they were only an obvious
+exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless Olive did not require outside
+censure to make her suffer as keen remorse
+as was possible to her sensitive and devoted
+nature. For she knew herself to be far more
+responsible for the day's catastrophe than
+any one would ever dream.</p>
+
+<p>Only the edge of the sand storm swept the
+neighborhood of the Rainbow Lodge. Half
+a mile from the house it veered in its unaccountable
+way, carrying its destructive force
+straight across the adjoining ranch, wrecking
+half a dozen valuable buildings and killing a
+large number of cattle. Yet it came sufficiently
+near the Lodge for everybody inside
+the house to understand what was happening,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+even if Jim Colter and Frank Kent and a
+dozen of the cowboys had not ridden home
+furiously only five or ten minutes before,
+having raced the wind storm across the prairies
+and come off victorious. Both looked fairly
+worn out, as they came clanking into the
+living room, still in their riding clothes and
+boots and covered with a fine coating of
+yellow sand.</p>
+
+<p>"Jehoshaphat, but it is good to be indoors!"
+Jim exclaimed at once, putting his arm about
+his wife and gazing around him. "It is a good
+thing Frank isn't a tenderfoot, even if he is
+an Englishman. For if that sand storm had
+struck us&mdash;well, I am not going to put on
+airs. I have been a ranchman now for a
+good many years, but I never feel very hopeful
+that anybody such a gale hits is going to come
+out alive." Then perhaps in answer to the
+thought in the mind of every person in the
+room Jim ended abruptly: "Where's Jack?
+Hasn't she manners enough to say 'howdy'
+to two fellows who have nearly ridden themselves
+to death?"</p>
+
+<p>Following his speech, Jim was not immediately
+aware of the peculiar strained silence
+in the room, although Frank knew instantly
+that something had occurred in which Jack<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
+had a part. Under the western tan of the
+past few weeks his face whitened. But
+he set his teeth and straightened his broad
+shoulders. For his was a strength of will
+and of character worthy to match with Jack
+and capable of longer endurance.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment no one seemed to dare to
+answer Jim's question. And then it was not
+Ruth or any one of the three Ranch girls who
+replied, but Henry Russell, who had hobbled
+into the living room on his crutches, forgetting
+his terror and dislike of girls in his effort to
+offer his friendly sympathy, and incidentally,
+though he himself was not aware of it, to
+keep the lovely blond doll of his first acquaintance
+from making herself more miserable than
+necessary.</p>
+
+<p>"I, I am afraid Mrs. Colter and&mdash;and the
+others are feeling a little uneasy about Miss
+Ralston," he murmured. "She went out this
+morning with the Indian boy, Carlos, to ride
+over the ranch and she has not come in just
+yet. I have told them that she certainly must
+have taken refuge with a neighbor or else
+that the storm has not come within her
+vicinity. They tell me that these western
+siroccos are very freakish."</p>
+
+<p>But neither Jim Colter nor Frank had heard<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
+anything except the first part of their visitor's
+speech.</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards Jim paid no attention to any
+one in the room except to lean over and kiss
+Ruth. "We will find her in a little while,
+don't worry. Jack is always getting into
+scrapes and being grown up seems to make
+little difference," he remarked grimly as he
+marched off.</p>
+
+<p>But Olive clung desperately to Frank Kent's
+arm as he tried to follow him.</p>
+
+<p>"Please let me speak to you a minute
+alone before you go," she pleaded. Then
+when they were out in the yard and away
+from the others she put her hand on Frank's
+arm and looked at him with an earnestness
+which he did not in the least understand.</p>
+
+<p>"When you find Jack will you please give
+her this message from me," she asked. "Tell
+her that she has been making a dreadful
+mistake all along and that there is nothing
+in the world that will make me so happy as
+to hear of her engagement to you. Please
+tell her this when you first find her, don't
+wait until you are at home again."</p>
+
+<p>With a rather unusual show of emotion
+Frank pressed both of Olive's hands in his.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
+"You believe that Jack really cares for me?"
+he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>And then as Olive bowed her head without
+replying he mounted a fresh horse, riding
+away in the direction that Olive had indicated.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>JACK SURRENDERS AT LAST<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 316px;">
+<img src="images/illus03.jpg" width="316" height="500" alt="&quot;The Stars Had Disappeared and Beyond the Universal Grayness There Was Now a Faint Rose Light&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;The Stars Had Disappeared and Beyond the Universal Grayness There Was Now a Faint Rose Light&quot;</span>
+</div>
+<div class='cap'>IT was almost dawn when Frank Kent
+believed that he heard a faint answer to
+his last shouting. He was several miles
+from the outskirts of the Rainbow Ranch and
+in a neighborhood where he might least
+expect to find the girl he sought. But every
+acre of the ranch had been thoroughly gone
+over during the night, and still the men under
+Jim Colter's leadership were continuing the
+search along the track swept by the storm,
+but without finding a trace of Jack or the
+Indian boy or of the two horses which they
+were known to have been riding.</div>
+
+
+
+<p>So, independently of the others, Frank had
+recently decided to try a new neighborhood,
+not because he had any faith in its being the
+right one, but because he felt that he must
+work alone. It was unendurable to continue
+longer hearing the other men declare that
+there was little chance of finding Jack or
+Carlos alive. For had they not been within<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
+the track of the sand storm they must certainly
+have returned home before this. Now
+Frank plunged on in the direction of the
+recent sound, although he had heard nothing a
+second time in reply to his continued calling.</p>
+
+<p>Deep in his heart he was devoutly grateful
+that the dawn was finally breaking. The
+stars had disappeared, and beyond the universal
+grayness there was now a faint rose light.
+A moment before a western lark had risen
+before his aching eyes, poising, fluttering and
+then sailing straight overhead, singing its
+song of praise at the approach of the sun.</p>
+
+<p>So Frank in a measure could behold the
+objects ahead of him, though among them he
+saw nothing to suggest Jacqueline Ralston.
+He was riding over flat country with little
+before him but sand and low scrub plants.
+And there were no signs of a horse's hoofs
+having lately struggled through it. Finally,
+however, Frank got down off his own horse
+and, stooping low, examined some faint tracings
+in the sands. He had not been trained
+to making observations of this sort and even
+with the best of scouts it is difficult to find
+footprints, in so fine and shifting a soil.
+Nevertheless when Frank straightened up
+again his face was less haggard and discouraged.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
+For he had found a suggestion of
+a girl's riding boot printed in the sand and
+now and then in curious circles there were
+other such impressions.</p>
+
+<p>With her head resting on a sand dune as
+though it were nature's pillow Frank at
+length came upon the girl. And even when
+within a few feet of Jack it was impossible
+to tell whether she was asleep or had fainted&mdash;or
+whether her silence and rigidity meant
+something worse. Yet the girl's expression
+was too worn and exhausted for the last
+great mystery; it had not the ineffable
+peace that comes after nature's final surrender.
+Even before he could touch her
+Frank had recognized this.</p>
+
+<p>Quietly he began bathing her face with
+water poured upon his handkerchief from the
+water flask which he had carried all night in
+his pocket. Jack's own little water jug told
+its own story, since it was lying empty at her
+side, drained to the last drop. Then, when
+the girl's heavy lids fluttered slightly, Frank
+poured water between her scorched lips. Her
+first sign of consciousness was when she put
+up her hands to try and cling to his flask that
+she might have more. Yet the man drew it
+away, telling her to keep quiet and close her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
+eyes for a few moments longer. Afterwards
+he allowed her another drink of water and
+then a few drops of beef tea from a smaller
+bottle, which Ruth Colter had given him.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, with Frank's arm about her, Jack
+managed to sit up.</p>
+
+<p>"I am so glad it was you who found me,
+Frank," she said a moment later. "All
+night I have thought you would come." She
+did not even try to walk or to explain what
+had happened, but let Frank lift her up on
+his horse, where she leaned against him in
+utter weakness and dependence, while the
+horse started slowly toward home.</p>
+
+<p>The ride needs must be a long and fatiguing
+one even though aid reach them before their
+arrival at the Lodge. And Jack's pulse was
+still too faint to have her suffer further
+exhaustion. But after a while Frank leaned
+over, pressing his lips against the girl's heavy
+gold brown hair which had become unloosened
+from her long wandering and hung in
+two curled braids down her back.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you glad I found you because you
+care for me, Jack?" he whispered, feeling that
+it was not altogether fair of him to ask such
+a question at such a time, and yet too
+impatient to wait.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The girl answered, "Yes" quite simply. A
+little later she added like a child: "Besides
+I knew you wouldn't scold, Frank. And of
+course I have been foolish and headstrong. I
+don't seem to know how to grow up. You'll
+ask Ruth and Jim not to make me explain to
+them until I have rested."</p>
+
+<p>Frank smiled, but felt a curious lump in
+his throat&mdash;this new humility and dependence
+were so unlike Jack. Unconsciously the
+arm that had been holding her up closed more
+firmly about the girl's figure.</p>
+
+<p>"Jack, Jack," he murmured, leaning low
+down until his lips were not far from her ear.
+"I have waited so long, I can wait no longer.
+You have just said that you cared for me,
+and for the second time I have believed you.
+Then you mean, you must mean that you are
+willing to be my wife."</p>
+
+<p>For just an instant the girl's body quivered
+as though with a weakness beyond her power
+of control. The next moment she was
+shaking her head quietly and firmly, and
+although her companion could not see her
+face he heard her whisper, "No," with a
+measure of her old decision.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well then," Frank returned just as
+firmly, "you shall never be troubled by my<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
+asking you that question again. As soon as
+possible I shall go home to England."</p>
+
+<p>Once more the girl's shoulders trembled as
+if she had been struck an unexpected blow,
+but she made no reply. Frank realized that
+he was not playing fair and that she should
+not be troubled further.</p>
+
+<p>For five or ten minutes more they rode on
+in complete silence, while Jack felt herself
+growing weaker and weaker. She was
+ashamed to be such a burden and yet only
+her own will power and Frank's arm were
+sustaining her.</p>
+
+<p>A little later and Jack had again to be put
+down on the ground in a half fainting condition.
+By this time they had passed beyond
+the stretches of sandy desert and were in one
+of the outlying meadows of the Rainbow
+Ranch, not far from a branch of their creek.
+As Jack was almost unconscious Frank was
+able to bathe her face more comfortably,
+pushing back the tangled hair out of her eyes,
+that she might look more like the girl he
+loved. Then he shut his lips close together
+and his chin became squarer and his jaw
+firmer than ever Jacqueline's had been in her
+most obstinate days.</p>
+
+<p>"I have just told a lie," he said to himself<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
+and yet rather grimly. "For of course I
+shall go on asking Jack to marry me until she
+finally consents. If she did not care for me
+that would be another matter and I should be
+a cad to annoy her. But there can't be any
+other barrier real or fancied that is big enough
+to come between us permanently."</p>
+
+<p>Then, as Jack opened her eyes for the
+second time, and sat straight up as though
+vexed with her own weakness, Frank had a
+sudden recollection of Olive's strange message
+to him when he had first started on his
+search.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell her it has all been a dreadful mistake
+and that there is nothing in the whole world
+that will make me so happy as her engagement
+to you."</p>
+
+<p>"What could Olive's words mean? Who
+had made a mistake? Had Jack been under
+some cruelly false impression?" Frank was
+utterly mystified. Yet he held out his hand.
+"Come, dear, we will walk for a few minutes,"
+he said gently, "and I will lead the horse.
+You will feel less stiff and tired with a little
+exercise. See, the daylight has come. How
+beautiful and fragrant the world is!"</p>
+
+<p>Some change in Frank's voice, or in his
+manner&mdash;the girl did not know or care to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
+think what the change might mean&mdash;made
+her take the hand held out so quietly toward
+her and hold it close in her own cold fingers.
+How exquisitely she could always be at peace
+with Frank, how perfectly he understood
+things without having them explained to him!
+After all, he was not going to be angry with
+her because of her unreasonable and unkind
+behavior. She had felt his anger a little more
+than she was willing to endure in her present
+state of exhaustion.</p>
+
+<p>So Jack looked overhead with more of her
+accustomed sparkle and animation than she
+had yet showed. The sky was a radiant rose
+color, so deeply pink that it cast its reflection
+on the ground at her feet. They were near
+a group of trees and the birds were beginning
+to waken one another with mild reproaches
+and then sudden bursts of eloquent song.</p>
+
+<p>"Frank," Jack began pensively enough, "I
+never saw a more wonderful dawn. But do
+you happen to have anything in your pocket
+more substantial than beef tea? I have not
+had anything to eat since yesterday at noon
+and I think perhaps I am dying of hunger."</p>
+
+<p>With a laugh her companion let go her
+hand, drawing a package from his pocket.
+"Ruth gave me this at midnight along with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
+the beef tea, but I have not been interested
+enough to see what was in it," he explained.</p>
+
+<p>Greedily Jack tore open the bundle and had
+devoured a large chicken sandwich before
+good manners even suggested her sharing the
+luncheon with its owner. Afterwards Frank
+also confessed to being hungry, and so they
+walked on toward the Lodge like happy,
+runaway children, almost safe at home again.</p>
+
+<p>Yet while he talked and laughed and ate
+Frank Kent was not forgetting Olive's words
+nor her final injunction to him. "Please tell
+her what I say when you first find her.
+Don't wait too long," she had begged.</p>
+
+<p>"Jack, dear," Frank began casually in the
+midst of something else they had been discussing,
+"there is something I want to
+ask your forgiveness for before another five
+minutes have passed. Because I don't
+think I can hold out much longer. Back
+there on horseback when you were nearly
+dead with fatigue I was angry with you and
+told you that I never meant to ask you to
+marry me again. That was the most untruthful
+speech a man ever made! Because
+if you are too tired to listen I may have to
+wait until you have rested a little while, but
+not any longer. You know you care for me,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
+dear. You are not the kind of a girl who
+would deceive a man by your words or your
+manner after all these years of friendship!
+There is some mystery that is keeping you
+from showing me your real feelings. I can't
+guess what it is. Yet Olive must think so
+too, for she told me to tell you that you had
+been making a dreadful mistake about something
+or other, heaven only knows what!
+And that our engagement would make her
+happier than anything in the world."</p>
+
+<p>Jacqueline Ralston stood ankle deep in the
+rose-touched meadow grass with her straight-forward,
+honest gray eyes looking into the
+blue eyes of her companion.</p>
+
+<p>"Did Olive tell you to say that to me?
+Did she really and truly seem to mean it?"
+she asked wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>Frank Kent nodded, not trusting himself to
+speak, nor wishing to lose an instant's vision
+of the girl's face, or an inflection of her voice.</p>
+
+<p>Jack had been pale before; but now her
+face had flushed with such a look of exquisite
+gentleness and surrender, that in spite of all
+she had recently endured she had never been
+so beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>Then it was like her to say with self-evident
+sincerity: "Of course you are right,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
+Frank dear, I could not hide how much I
+cared for you even though I have done my
+best. It will be hard for me to leave the
+ranch and the people I love, but it would be
+harder to stay on here&mdash;without you!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>RAINBOW CASTLE<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>SOME weeks had passed, and it was now
+early fall at the ranch. But another
+change had taken place besides that of
+the seasons, for Jim and Ruth and the Ranch
+girls had moved away from the old Lodge
+into their splendid new home.</div>
+
+<p>To everybody's satisfaction, however, the
+Lodge was not deserted; for Ralph Merrit
+had changed into it from his old quarters, and
+his friend, Henry Tilford Russell, was still
+with him&mdash;not that the young professor had
+become an invalid owing to his accident at
+the Rainbow Mine, for his broken leg was
+completely healed. But as he had come west
+for his general health somehow the Rainbow
+Ranch seemed to hold more curative properties
+than any other place. And Ralph was
+delighted to have his society. The youthful
+professor of ancient languages appeared to
+have recovered in a measure from his previous
+prejudice against girls, or at least he was able<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
+to find the companionship of the four Ranch
+girls endurable.</p>
+
+<p>The move to the big house had been somewhat
+hastened for several reasons, the most
+important being that Jacqueline Ralston and
+Frank Kent were to be married during the
+first part of October. Frank would not consent
+to returning to England without Jack.
+He insisted that she was far too uncertain a
+quantity to be left alone in her beloved
+western lands, since her prairies were his
+most dangerous rival. Moreover, as he had
+promised his father to stand for a Liberal
+seat in Parliament that same winter, Jack
+was needed at Kent House to aid him in
+winning his election.</p>
+
+<p>Now it seemed that all of the intimate
+friends that the girls had acquired in their
+two years away from home, had suddenly
+decided to pay visits to the Rainbow Ranch.
+Among them were the Princess Colonna and
+her nephew, Giovanni, who, because of the
+death of her husband without heir, had
+inherited the Prince's ancient title.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Katherine Winthrop had finally arrived,
+and her presence seemed to compensate
+Olive for the loss of a good deal of Jack's
+companionship; yet when the two friends<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
+were able to be together without any one
+else, they were as intimate and as devoted as
+at any time in their lives. And though
+Jack never referred to the subject of their
+unfortunate conversation, she could find no
+trace in Olive of unhappiness or regret.</p>
+
+<p>It is true that Miss Winthrop and the
+girl, who was like a peculiarly devoted and
+sympathetic daughter, spent numbers of afternoons
+in the nearby Indian village discussing
+Olive's desire to become a teacher to the
+Indians when she was old enough and sufficiently
+well trained for the task. For the
+older woman was wise enough not to oppose
+the girl's present fancy as Jack had done,
+only insisting that she wait until she felt
+sure of her own fitness.</p>
+
+<p>But although Olive had frequent talks
+with old Laska, who never could entirely
+connect the charming young American lady
+with the child she had persecuted, there was
+a new member of the village community
+with whom Olive would have no conversation.
+And this was her once devoted friend
+and admirer, the Indian boy, Carlos.</p>
+
+<p>After Jacqueline Ralston's home-coming,
+when she had the opportunity to explain her
+unaccountable disappearance, it was Jim<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
+Colter who at once armed himself with a
+short whip and demanded that the business
+of punishing Carlos be left entirely to him.
+Yet, notwithstanding her long night of wandering
+about in the sand, too weary and too
+stupefied to find her way home or to believe
+that the boy would not eventually return
+with her horse, Jack immediately became
+Carlos' defender, finally persuading her guardian
+to punish the boy no further than by
+not permitting him again to set foot on
+Rainbow Ranch. She also confessed her
+own share in the day's difficulties, taking a
+part of the blame upon herself by insisting
+that if she had not struck the boy he would
+never have attempted so ugly and dangerous
+a revenge.</p>
+
+<p>Jim and Frank, though at last agreeing to
+Jack's wish, did have one interview with
+Carlos. But though they came away leaving
+the boy frightened and submissive, he never
+was brought to confess just what he had intended
+in riding off with Jack's horse. Perhaps
+during the long afternoon he had vainly
+been trying to think of some form of vengeance
+and then at the last moment the idea of stealing
+Jack's horse and deserting her had come
+like a sudden inspiration. Or perhaps the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
+boy had meant to return&mdash;no one ever knew.
+He had gone on with the two horses to the
+nearest Indian village and never again left
+it for any other home. For the effort to
+civilize Carlos had been a vain one and he
+cheerfully reverted to the habits and companionship
+of his own race.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, he did not go unpunished,
+although no one ever knew in what his punishment
+consisted. But the refusal of Olive's
+further friendship was a sorrow which the
+Indian lad endured in silence to the end of
+his days. For he never married and was that
+very rare figure among his people&mdash;an old
+bachelor, looked after by old women and the
+squaws of other men. And this when half
+a dozen Indian maidens would gladly have
+mated with Carlos. For he was unusually
+handsome and was always admired and reverenced
+by his own nation.</p>
+
+<p>At the time they moved into the new house
+Ruth and Jim and the girls were feeling particularly
+happy and prosperous, because, not
+long after the announcement of Jack's and
+Frank's engagement, Ralph Merrit had made
+discoveries of fresh supplies of gold in Rainbow
+Mine. Also, he had devised the long-sought-for
+method by which the gold could<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
+be extracted without too great danger and
+expense. He had not trusted entirely to his
+own judgment and experience, for three of the
+greatest mining experts in the West had been
+sent for, who were open in their praises of
+Ralph's idea and plan, predicting a big future
+for him and offering him opportunities with
+them should he ever care to leave the Rainbow
+Mine.</p>
+
+<p>But this new "pot of gold at the end of
+the rainbow," Ralph had straightway announced
+was to be his particular wedding
+gift to Jack and Frank. Certainly he had
+no idea of deserting his old friends, now that
+he was again able to prove his usefulness.
+So he was working on in apparent contentment
+when the Princess and the young Prince
+appeared. Then once more his dream faded
+and it was hard for Ralph not to think of
+his work as mere drudgery in which the labor
+was almost all his and the large rewards for
+others.</p>
+
+<p>For like lightning out of a clear sky, soon
+after the Princess Colonna's installation in
+their new home, even before Ruth or the
+girls had become accustomed to her presence,
+with entire formality she asked Jim Colter's
+consent to Jean Bruce's marriage to her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
+nephew, Giovanni, the young Prince Colonna.
+When Jim was only barely able to express
+his surprise and consternation at such a
+suggestion, she explained to him a complete
+understanding of his feelings, that this method
+of procedure in a question of marriage was
+the custom in Italy, her nephew's country.
+Therefore the young Prince would never dream
+of speaking to Jean without first obtaining
+her guardian's approval. Nevertheless, Mr.
+Colter must not believe that there was any
+lack of affection on the Prince Colonna's part,
+for he had never ceased thinking and talking
+of Jean from that first hour of their meeting
+in the Pincio Gardens in Rome.</p>
+
+<p>In reply to the Princess, Jim could only
+flush and stammer, saying that he would
+prefer first talking the matter over with Mrs.
+Colter before giving his answer. For the
+truth was that Jim really wished to shout
+aloud his refusal to consider such a proposition
+even for five minutes. Jean to marry a
+wretched little Italian youth, no taller than
+she was herself, when she might have almost
+any clean, hard working American fellow!
+It was bad enough for his adored Jack to be
+going away with an <i>Englishman</i>, but then
+Frank Kent was different!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, Jim understood that the reply
+which he really wished to make was not altogether
+fair and certainly not courteous to
+their guests. Ruth must at once find some
+way of clearing up the situation.</p>
+
+<p>So soon as her husband had explained the
+matter to her Ruth was under the impression
+that she did see a way. With the Princess'
+and the Prince Colonna's consent she herself
+would first speak to Jean, letting them hear
+later whether Miss Bruce was willing to
+listen to the Prince's suit.</p>
+
+<p>Of course this was the best way out! Jim
+sighed with relief at his wife's suggestion, for
+neither he nor Ruth had the faintest idea
+that Jean would do anything but refuse even
+for a moment to consider the Prince or his
+offer. Ruth believed that she had always
+understood Jean better than any one of the
+four Ranch girls.</p>
+
+<p>Without comment the girl heard of the
+young nobleman's proposal, and instead of
+declining, she asked to be allowed to consider
+it. In the meantime the Prince and his
+aunt were to remain at the Rainbow Ranch
+in order that Jean and the young man might
+learn to know each other better.</p>
+
+<p>They were frequently together and very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
+soon the state of affairs was no secret to any
+member of the family, or to their closest
+friends. And although a number of persons
+were puzzled, no one said a word to Jean.
+Could it be possible that she was going to
+marry solely for position? No one believed
+that she could have come to care so deeply
+for the young Italian prince in so brief a
+time.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>A PARTY AT THE NEW HOUSE<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>THE society people in that part of
+Wyoming within the radius of the
+Rainbow Ranch were deeply interested
+and some of them a good deal excited
+over the fact that an American-Italian Princess
+and an Italian Prince were being entertained
+in their midst.</div>
+
+<p>For some time previous to the coming of
+their guests Ruth and the girls had planned
+giving a large evening party. Originally
+the idea had been to make it a kind of house-warming
+as well as a formal announcement
+of Jack's engagement. But as Jack begged
+not to be made specially conspicuous in
+regard to the invitations, they were finally
+issued by Mr. and Mrs. Colter asking that
+their friends do them the honor of meeting
+Miss Katherine Winthrop, the Princess Colonna
+and her nephew, the Prince Giovanni
+Colonna, on a certain September evening.
+According to the desires of the Ranch girls<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
+the entertainment was to be both a reception
+and dance, for the new home was large enough
+for both. For while the older guests were
+talking to one another in the music room
+and library, the big living room could be
+used for dancing.</p>
+
+<p>It was about six o'clock on the afternoon
+before the ball when the four girls in dressing
+gowns of various shades slipped through the
+wide colonial hall and entered the big parlor.
+Frieda dropped into a chair set close against
+the wall and sighed deeply. Her yellow hair
+had been washed only a few hours before
+and was now in a big loose knot on top of
+her head, though it kept breaking forth into
+delicious curls about her white forehead and
+neck.</p>
+
+<p>In answer to the sigh Jack sat down on the
+floor at her younger sister's feet. "Isn't
+everything all right, Baby? Isn't the room
+as lovely as you expected?" she asked anxiously.
+For although Jack had always been
+unusually tender and devoted to Frieda, she
+was even more in these days, with the thought
+of leaving her so close at hand.</p>
+
+<p>Again Frieda sighed, but this time she
+explained herself. "It is more than all right.
+It is more beautiful than I ever expected<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
+any place belonging to us could be. Not that
+I did not love the dear old Lodge, but this
+house is, well&mdash;different. Isn't it dreadful
+that you are going away so soon, Jack,
+dearest, after all our work and planning?
+It will never seem just like home without
+you."</p>
+
+<p>With a sudden movement Jean crossed
+the room, placing her fingers lightly upon
+Frieda's lips.</p>
+
+<p>"We have promised Jack not to say anything
+like that, Frieda dear," she protested,
+"at least not tonight. We must all have
+the happiest evening of our lives, one that
+none of us shall forget."</p>
+
+<p>The younger girl glanced up at her cousin
+wistfully with a question on her lips, but
+instead of asking it she clapped her hands
+softly together.</p>
+
+<p>"See that lovely light coming through our
+stained-glass window! Isn't it like a rainbow!
+Oh, I hope it means good luck just
+as it always has in the past! And somehow
+it makes this room more beautiful. I did
+not dream anything could!"</p>
+
+<p>Naturally Frieda was prejudiced and an
+enthusiast, and yet she had ample reason
+for her point of view. For a moment there<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
+was an unusual silence as the four girls
+looked around them. Consciously or unconsciously
+they realized that these next few
+weeks were to mark important changes in
+their lives. For after they had slipped by
+things could never be exactly the same.
+Jack would be married and that would
+represent the first important break, and after
+that&mdash;well, they were not little girls any
+longer, for even Frieda had lately shown
+unmistakable signs of being grown-up.</p>
+
+<p>The walls of the long room were hung with
+western smilax and since the party was to be
+a typical American one, the girls had been
+wildly extravagant and used American Beauty
+roses for the decoration. Now the air was
+fragrant with their rich and penetrating
+perfume. The old colonial mantel was banked
+with them, and garlands of green swinging
+from one white column to another had big
+baskets filled with roses suspended between
+the posts. The room itself was fifty feet long
+and three-fourths as broad. All the woodwork
+and the walls were a warm gray. The
+greater part of the furniture had of course
+been removed and a white tarpaulin covered
+the hardwood floor, but in the bay window
+there were palms and vases of roses and an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
+old-fashioned colonial sofa, besides several
+chairs. Also there were occasional chairs
+along the walls for the older persons who
+might care to watch the dancing. The music
+was to be concealed in the hall behind a bank
+of evergreens just beneath the wide mahogany
+stairs.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if there is anything more that can be
+done to make this place more attractive,
+I am sure I don't know what it is," Jean
+insisted at last. "And I am especially glad
+that we asked Mr. Parker to come tonight.
+Because of course he may have built more
+expensive houses than ours, yet I am quite
+sure he has never made one more attractive.
+Besides, he is awfully nice. Gracious, girls,
+who is that knocking? Ruth thinks we are
+being nice and obedient and lying down
+until seven."</p>
+
+<p>But Olive had walked over to the closed
+door and opened it half-way.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be alarmed," she laughed back.
+"It is only the flowers Frank is sending
+us for tonight. Let's open them now and
+see what choice he has made. Ruth told
+him about our dresses, so that he could not
+make any serious mistake."</p>
+
+<p>Almost concealed by four great boxes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
+reaching as high as her head, Olive came
+back to where Jack was sitting and placed
+them in a great pile before her.</p>
+
+<p>"You give them to us, Jack dear, since
+they are from Frank," she urged.</p>
+
+<p>The first was marked with Frieda's name,
+but as she took the top off the box and lifted
+out a card her cheeks turned suddenly crimson.</p>
+
+<p>"These are not from Frank after all,"
+Frieda remarked with a pretense of unconcern,
+"Mr. Russell says that I was so kind
+about reading to him when his leg was broken
+that he asked Frank as a special favor to
+let him send me my bouquet for tonight."
+Her fingers fumbled nervously at the tissue
+paper and her eyes were downcast, since she
+did not specially care to have any one staring
+at her at this moment. She could imagine
+Jack's puzzled and slightly worried expression
+and Jean's and Olive's teasing looks.
+For the absurd friendship that had developed
+between the solemn young Professor and
+Frieda was one of the ill-concealed jokes
+in the family.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you suppose that a man who
+dabbles in Egyptology for an amusement
+would send as a bouquet to a baby?" Jean<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
+inquired mockingly. "Possibly a lotus flower,
+for there are learned persons who declare
+that Cleopatra was a bewildering blond
+lady," and Jean pulled at Frieda's yellow
+curls.</p>
+
+<p>The next moment along with the other
+girls she gave a cry of admiration. Who
+would ever have suspected the Professor of
+such exquisite taste? For in some way
+he had managed to make his bouquet suggest
+the girl to whom it was offered. For it was
+formed of hundreds of tiny forget-me-nots
+set close together and encircled with small
+white star-like flowers.</p>
+
+<p>Jean's roses were the deep pink color that
+she always loved and Olive's were a wonderful
+golden yellow. But Jack hesitated a
+moment before opening her box, which was
+the largest of the four and curiously heavy.</p>
+
+<p>Half guessing how she felt Olive laid her
+hand lovingly on her friend's.</p>
+
+<p>"Take your flowers up to your own room
+and look at them first by yourself if you
+would rather," she suggested. However, Jean
+and Frieda both raised a storm of protest.</p>
+
+<p>And Jack laughed. "It isn't that I am
+such a bashful person that I don't want you
+to see even the flowers Frank has given me&mdash;I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
+would not be so absurd," she confessed.
+"But I have an idea that perhaps Frank has
+put something more than flowers in my box.
+And I don't think I shall ever, ever be able
+to wear them. Oh, children, what made me
+fall in love with an Englishman and one who
+may inherit a title? Certainly I shall never
+be able to live up to it!" Doing her best to
+hide her nervousness Jack buried her hot
+cheeks in a great bunch of white jasmine
+flowers; but Frieda's fingers were pointing
+inexorably to a white velvet jewel case which
+still remained in the flower box half buried
+in evergreens.</p>
+
+<p>With a smile Jack picked it up, touching
+the spring. On the satin shone a miniature
+crown of diamonds and pearls and an exquisite
+necklace of the same jewels.</p>
+
+<p>"Gracious," Frieda gasped, "I didn't know
+Frank Kent was a millionaire! Why he
+always has declared that he was a great deal
+poorer than lots of American fellows! I
+wonder if he has been deceiving you all this
+time, Jack, to keep you from marrying him
+for his money."</p>
+
+<p>"Goose!" Jack laughed; but Frieda's
+absurdity relieved the situation. "Don't you
+know that these jewels are heirlooms in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
+Kent family, that they always belong to the
+wife of the eldest son? I told Frank to wait
+until our wedding day; but he seemed to wish
+me to wear them tonight. I don't believe I
+possibly can, they are too lovely&mdash;and somehow
+they don't seem to suit me."</p>
+
+<p>Olive placed the tiara on Jack's gold-brown
+head. The girl's gray eyes were shining
+softly, her head was tilted back the least bit
+and a rich color flooded her cheeks and lips.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think Frank need be exactly
+ashamed of you, Lady Kent," Jean murmured
+with teasing affectation. And then: "You
+funny Jack! Is there any other girl in
+America who would not care more than you
+do for Frank's splendid position and all the
+rest of it? Not for a single instant do I
+believe that you gave it a thought! Dear
+me, I wish your own sweet cousin were so
+high-minded!"</p>
+
+<p>"Girls," said a reproachful voice suddenly,
+"is this the way you keep your sacred promise
+to me to rest until dinner time? Go back to
+your rooms instantly," Ruth Colter scolded.
+Yet she was hardly an impressive figure with
+her hair rolled up in a tight knot and a light
+shawl thrown over her kimono. "I heard
+such a terrible chattering in here that I was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
+afraid a collection of magpies had gotten in
+an open window and thought they had come
+upon an enchanted garden." Here Ruth
+ceased talking suddenly, having caught sight
+of the beautiful ornament on Jack's hair.</p>
+
+<p>"Gracious, dear, what a wonderful possession!
+Do let me see it more closely," she
+asked. "But take it off first and then come
+here and kiss me. A diamond tiara is hardly
+appropriate with a dressing gown and I can't
+bear to see you looking so regal and so far
+away from the rest of us."</p>
+
+<p>And with a break in her voice, Ruth put
+her arm around Jack and then led the small
+procession forth from the room.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>MAIDS AND MEN<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 313px;">
+<img src="images/illus04.jpg" width="313" height="500" alt="&quot;You Would Have Married Me Anyhow&quot;" title="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;You Would Have Married Me Anyhow&quot;</span>
+</div>
+<div class='cap'>"I &nbsp; WOULD give a great deal to have
+my people see you tonight, Jack,"
+Frank Kent whispered several hours
+later.</div>
+
+
+
+<p>True to her promise Jacqueline had dressed
+before the others and come down for a few
+moments alone with Frank. And it was
+small wonder that the young man was proud
+of her. She had on a pure white tulle dress
+made over silk and no ornament except the
+string of pearls and diamonds about her
+throat. For she had persuaded Frank to
+let her wait until after their marriage before
+wearing the more conspicuous jewels. Somehow
+she felt that the tiara would look out of
+taste and inappropriate among her old friends
+and neighbors. The bouquet of jasmine
+flowers with their darkly shining green leaves
+were resting in her lap.</p>
+
+<p>"Your people will see enough of me,
+Frank, before very long," she answered.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
+"How glad I am that they already know me
+and that they do not object very seriously to
+our marriage! Of course they must have
+preferred your caring for one of your own
+countrywomen, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You would have married me anyhow,
+wouldn't you, dear, even if they <i>had</i> objected?"
+Frank asked and then laughed at
+himself. "That's a dreadfully unfilial speech,
+but I expect every man likes to feel that the
+girl he cares for would have stuck to him
+through every kind of obstacle&mdash;poverty,
+obscurity, the world's misunderstanding. Not
+that I have much doubt of you, Jack. You
+are giving up more than most people realize
+in turning your back on the dear old ranch
+and your beloved family. But we'll come
+back as often as possible and have them come
+to us, and after a while Ruth must let Frieda
+be with you for a year or so. She is my little
+sister, and honestly I don't quite like her
+intimacy with this fellow, Russell&mdash;he is
+much too cranky and old." Frank had
+taken Jack's hand and was touching it to his
+lips when she made a quick though silent
+signal. She and Frank were sitting in the
+bay window almost hidden by evergreens and
+at this moment Ruth and Jim, the other three<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
+girls and their guests were entering the ball
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Olive wore a yellow cr&ecirc;pe dress and carried
+the yellow roses. Jean was in deep pink, her
+costume of shimmering satin and lace, and
+had one of Frank's flowers in her dark brown
+hair. Her bouquet was not the same that it
+had been two hours before, when she had
+first removed it from its wrappings; for now
+encircled by Frank's roses were a dozen
+purple orchids.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think, Frank, that Jean intends&mdash;"
+Jack whispered softly, inclining her head
+toward her cousin to indicate what she meant
+to say. Then when her companion made no
+reply, fearing to be overheard, she continued.
+"It is Jean I am most worried about. How
+can she make up her mind to marry a
+foreigner instead of an American? Just look
+at the Prince and then at Jim or Ralph
+Merrit. He is so little and so dark and so
+kind of different. Even that scar on his
+face from a duel he once fought makes me
+have almost a dislike for him, though I know
+it is foolish of me."</p>
+
+<p>"But Jean isn't really going to marry him!"
+Frank protested.</p>
+
+<p>This time Jack nodded uneasily. "I am<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
+afraid so; indeed she almost told me that she
+intended to accept him; and I suppose she
+means to do it this evening. I wish I could
+have said something to influence her, but I
+did not dare. Besides, it would have done
+no good. You know Jean might have said
+that I too was marrying a foreigner and had
+no right to say anything to her. Only the
+difference is that Jean does not love Giovanni&mdash;and
+then an Englishman isn't the same
+and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Frank was now smiling over Jack's effort
+at an apology and explanation. She had
+slipped her hand into his and was holding it
+fast. At this moment a splendidly handsome
+figure marched across the floor with surprising
+swiftness and now stood looking down
+upon the girl and man with an expression
+that was a combination of wrath, sympathy
+and devotion.</p>
+
+<p>"Jacqueline Ralston," Jim began so unexpectedly
+that to save her life Jack could not
+restrain a guilty start, "have I not told you
+and Frank Kent at least a dozen times that
+I would not have any stealing off by yourselves
+or any spooning until you were safely away
+from the Rainbow Ranch? It is bad enough,
+Kent, when I think of your taking my 'partner'<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
+from me and leaving me to look after
+this great place without her. But I tell you
+I can't stand <i>looking</i> at you doing it."</p>
+
+<p>And Jim gave a mournful sigh that was
+part pretense and part reality.</p>
+
+<p>Its effect was to make Jack at once jump
+to her feet and throw her arms about him,
+regardless of his immaculate shirt. Then she
+ran for protection to Ruth.</p>
+
+<p>Happiness had made Ruth grow a year
+younger each month, her husband had stoutly
+declared, and though this statement was not
+strictly true, she did look very little older
+than the four Ranch girls as she stood waiting
+to receive their guests tonight. For the girls
+and Jim had insisted that she discard her
+nun-like fondness for gray and drab colors at
+least for this one evening and wear white.
+So Ruth's costume of heavy white corded
+silk with silver trimming was both youthful
+and becoming.</p>
+
+<p>On one side of the hostess stood Miss
+Katherine Winthrop, looking singularly handsome
+and imposing in a gray satin evening
+gown trimmed with duchess lace and with a
+bunch of Frieda's violets at her waist. Olive
+was next in line, and then Jean, while on
+Ruth's other side the Princess Colonna was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
+made more radiantly fair by a wonderful
+black gown and a diamond star in her hair.
+Jack stood beside her, and then Frieda.</p>
+
+<p>The Princess seemed far more at ease and
+better able to appreciate and make herself
+popular with the hundred or more visitors
+than Miss Winthrop. For the Princess
+appeared almost to have forgotten, for the
+time at least, the years spent in the formal
+society of Rome and to be remembering only
+her own early girlhood in this same western
+country. A large number of the guests were
+traveled and cultured persons, the owners of
+large ranches and estates; but Jim had asked
+that all of their old acquaintances be invited
+regardless of wealth and position, so that
+there were many interesting figures who
+appeared as "western types" to Miss Winthrop,
+but whom the Princess immediately
+understood and enjoyed.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed during the evening Jim Colter, who
+had never liked the Princess Colonna nor felt
+entirely comfortable in her presence, confided
+to Ralph Merrit that maybe a Princess could
+after all be a real live woman, though he
+hoped to the Lord that Jean Bruce was not
+going to undertake the job. Ralph had little
+comfort to offer either to Jim or to himself in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
+return for this confidence. For everybody in
+the ball room who had heard the gossip concerning
+Jean and the young Prince had no
+doubt of its ultimate outcome. And naturally
+they marveled over two of the Rainbow
+Ranch girls making such distinguished
+marriages.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps Jean was not altogether displeased
+with this gossip, for she certainly danced with
+the young Prince most of the earlier part of
+the evening. The exact number of her
+dances Ralph Merrit could have told, although
+he was not conscious of having
+counted them. For except for dancing once
+with each one of the four Ranch girls and
+once with Ruth, he had spent the rest of the
+evening watching the dancers from a safe
+corner. For some reason or other he seemed
+not to feel sufficient energy for anything
+else.</p>
+
+<p>It was a few moments after eleven o'clock
+that same evening when the Princess Colonna,
+feeling a hand laid lightly on her arm and
+turning, discovered Jean Bruce alone. The
+girl seemed to have grown suddenly tired and
+pale.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately the older woman's companion
+suggested at this moment that she might like<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
+him to get her an ice, so that she and Jean
+were uninterrupted for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder if you could come somewhere
+with me for a little while, where we could
+talk without any one else seeing us?" Jean
+pleaded. "I know you will think it strange
+of me, Princess, but all of a sudden it seemed
+to me that you were the only person in the
+world whom I could ask a certain question.
+And I must ask it of you before another hour
+has passed."</p>
+
+<p>Jean spoke quietly and with entire self-possession;
+yet there was no doubting the
+girl's earnestness or her necessity.</p>
+
+<p>Instantly the Princess slipped her arm
+through Jean's with the affectionate intimacy
+which she had always felt for her and the
+woman and girl together left the room. Providentially
+for their opportunity to be alone,
+the greater number of guests were now in the
+supper room. So without much effort Jean
+found two chairs at the end of a long veranda
+which had been enclosed for the evening's use
+and made into a kind of conservatory. There
+they appeared to be quite free from interruption.</p>
+
+<p>The older woman sat in the shadow, but
+could see the girl's face plainly. And though<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
+she could hardly guess what question Jean
+might wish to ask her, she was not altogether
+uncertain of the subject uppermost in the
+girl's thoughts, so thoroughly had her nephew
+taken her into his confidence.</p>
+
+<p>"Princess," Jean began, but she was not
+looking at her friend. Her eyes were seeing
+nothing, she was so deeply engrossed. "I
+wonder if you will tell me if you were happy
+in your married life? Oh, yes, I know that
+sounds like an impertinence; but I do not
+believe that you will think of it in that light.
+You understand I would ask you for no such
+reason. The Prince was a great deal older
+than you, but then you were very good
+friends and you had a splendid title and
+people everywhere looked up to you and
+were proud to meet you. I remember how
+dreadfully impressed we girls were when we
+first saw you on board the steamship. It
+did not seem to us then that a Princess could
+be like other people. And none of us ever
+dreamed of knowing you as an intimate
+friend. Those days when I was visiting you
+in Rome it seemed so wonderful to me that
+you, an American woman and a western girl
+like me, could be a leader in European
+society!" Jean drew a long breath. "Of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
+course it never occurred to me then that any
+such chance could ever come to me. It
+sounds like a fairy tale and yet my own
+family don't understand how I can care so
+much for position and a title and all that it
+must mean."</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>understand</i>," the Princess finally replied
+when Jean had given her opportunity to
+speak, "but there is one thing or at least one
+person whom you have not mentioned, my
+nephew, Giovanni. Do you care for him,
+Jean?"</p>
+
+<p>In answer the girl, whose clear pallor was
+one of her noticeable characteristics, flushed
+hotly. "I like him very much, he is most
+kind, he&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that Giovanni is entirely
+devoted to you and that you regard him as a
+friend. I see," the Princess finished softly.
+"And you think that after you marry him
+you will learn to care more for him because
+you would most enjoy his title and all it
+could do for you. I wonder just what Giovanni
+would receive in exchange for all he has
+to give?"</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the older woman took the
+girl's cold fingers in her own.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't mean to hurt your feelings, dear,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
+or to seem unkind. But you have asked
+me to talk to you tonight because you believe
+that better than any one else I can understand
+and appreciate your ambition and
+your emotions. And you are entirely right.
+I know just what you are thinking, just what
+you have been saying to yourself over and
+over ever since I asked your guardian to
+permit you to marry my nephew. I know
+because I have passed through almost exactly
+the same experience. So I am going
+to talk frankly about my marriage to you
+tonight, Jean, though I never have and probably
+never will again to any one else as long
+as I live. You see, I, too, was a Western girl,
+only I was a great deal poorer in the beginning
+of my life than you have ever been.
+And then my father and mother were plainer
+people. But one day when I was about
+twelve years old my father began making
+a great fortune, and when I was fourteen,
+as is the way in this western country, he
+was many times a millionaire. In those days
+the West was not what it is now, so as my
+mother was ambitious for me and believed
+I was going to be a pretty woman I was sent
+East to school. Later on I went to Paris
+and studied there, and then to Italy, so that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
+I might learn several languages. Now and
+then I used to see my father and mother, but
+not often. They did not enjoy Europe and
+I seemed to have so much to learn there was
+little time to stay at home. One or two
+wonderful summers I spent here in the
+West with them, loving this country and its
+people almost as your cousin Jack does.
+But by and by, when I was traveling in Italy
+with some rich American friends, I met the
+Prince Colonna. He asked me to marry
+him and I&mdash;well, I thought about things
+pretty much as you are doing, dear. I
+wanted to be a Princess; I thought it the
+most romantic, wonderful fate possible for
+a plain American girl with nothing but some
+prettiness and her money to exchange for
+fairyland. True, my Prince was old, but I
+liked him and I thought we would be better
+friends after we married. I believe we were.
+But, dear, I was not happy. I have missed
+the most wonderful thing that can come into
+one's life, for by and by I found that the
+people with titles were nothing but ordinary
+human beings. The people who count
+most, or at least who count most to me, are
+the people who do things for themselves, who
+have made their own way and their own<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
+positions, like so many of our big American
+men. Often I was very lonely and sad and
+often sorry for a decision I made years ago
+when I was even younger than you are
+tonight."</p>
+
+<p>The Princess let go Jean's hand which she
+had been holding.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't there any one here in your own
+country, Jean, whom you like better than you
+do Giovanni, whom you would a great deal
+rather marry if he had the same position
+to offer?" she inquired.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the girl made no answer.
+Then she said faintly: "Yes, Princess, there
+is, though I have never confessed it to anybody
+in the world except you, and scarcely
+to myself. For you see it is not only the
+other man's lack of money and position
+that comes between us, but Ralph does not
+even care for me. Some time ago he did,
+I think, but I was not very kind to him
+then, and now for months and months he has
+been nothing more to me than a friend. So
+I can see that his feelings have changed
+entirely. I thought if I went away with
+Giovanni I too would forget. It is hard to
+be right here on the ranch and have to pretend
+and pretend all the time that I feel<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
+toward him just as I used to when I was a
+little girl."</p>
+
+<p>"Jean," the older woman's voice had
+quite changed and was now both cold and
+stern, "I wonder what kind of a partnership
+you think marriage is? Do you think that
+when men go into business together that one
+brings everything to the firm and the other
+nothing? For that is what you wish to do
+with Giovanni. You must play fair, child.
+Why do you consider that an Italian is different
+from other men? Giovanni is young;
+he is not unattractive. Unless you loved
+him, you would soon learn to hate each other.
+For his sake if not for yours I could never
+approve of your marriage."</p>
+
+<p>But before Jean could reply the Princess
+had laid a restraining touch upon her. "Some
+one is coming toward us&mdash;a stranger, I think.
+We had best talk of this another time."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+
+<div class='chaptertitle'>OLD FRIENDS AND SOMETHING MORE<br /><br /><br /></div>
+
+
+<div class='cap'>JEAN did not recognize the newcomer
+at once. Then she held out her hand,
+trying to speak naturally.</div>
+
+<p>"Mr. Parker, I am so glad to see you. I
+was afraid you were not coming back at all.
+Princess, Mr. Parker built our new house.
+Mr. Parker, this is our friend and guest, the
+Princess Colonna."</p>
+
+<p>The tall man bowed politely. "I was
+told to bring you and the Princess Colonna
+back to the ball room if you would consent
+to come," he returned.</p>
+
+<p>From out of the shadow the slender,
+blond woman rose quietly, taking a few
+steps forward. "I shall be most happy to
+go back with you, Mr. Parker," she replied.
+And then standing within a few feet of her
+new acquaintance she stared at him curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Theodore Parker, it isn't fair of you
+after all these years to have me recognize
+you when you have forgotten me. It makes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
+me think that I must look a great deal the
+older!"</p>
+
+<p>But with a laugh the woman held out
+both hands, and now standing in the light
+that fell from a yellow shaded lantern the
+Princess' face and figure were in plain view.</p>
+
+<p>"Beatrice, the Princess Colonna! Why
+of course I have known your name always.
+How stupid of me not to have thought! But
+I could never have dreamed of meeting you
+out here in Wyoming. The Prince, your
+husband?"</p>
+
+<p>"He is dead," the woman answered. And
+then turning to Jean: "It is odd, dear, but
+Mr. Parker and I have known each other a
+very long time. It gives me great happiness
+to see him again and makes me think of that
+girl I have been telling you about. Won't
+you come back to Mrs. Colter with us?"</p>
+
+<p>But Jean shook her head and the man and
+woman moved away, leaving her alone.</p>
+
+<p>It was in this same place that Ralph Merrit,
+also trying to steal away from the guests,
+found her ten minutes later.</p>
+
+<p>Left to herself, Jean had been crying
+softly, although she could not exactly have
+explained the cause. Life was such a jumble&mdash;one
+wanted so much and had so little!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
+Then often the very thing that had seemed
+fair and desirable turned to bitterness and
+regret! Well, to one thing she had at least
+made up her mind&mdash;she would not marry
+Giovanni. Yet she had promised to give him
+an answer within the hour.</p>
+
+<p>Hearing Ralph's step she started nervously.
+And then with the familiarity of old acquaintance
+she frowned upon him.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you were the Prince Colonna,"
+she began crossly.</p>
+
+<p>Ralph stiffened. "I am sorry that I am
+not. I had no idea of disturbing you. But
+I'll go and find your Prince if you like."</p>
+
+<p>"He is not my Prince; don't be stupid,
+Ralph, and do please sit down. I don't see
+why you feel it so necessary to avoid me
+recently."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you?" Ralph answered. Then
+for several moments he said nothing more.
+However, though he did not appear to be
+looking, he had a clear enough vision of
+Jean's face, her dark eyes swimming in unshed
+tears, her heavy lids and the pallor of
+her cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"Jean," Ralph swung himself around
+swiftly and Jean saw the firmness of his lips,
+the decisive outline of his jaw and his high,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
+almost noble forehead, "if there is any one
+in this world, I don't care who or what he
+is, who has done anything or said anything
+to make you unhappy, why if I can, won't
+you let me help to straighten things out.
+You said just now that the Prince Colonna
+was not your Prince. Perhaps you were
+only angry at my tactless way of expressing
+things, but if there is any trouble between
+you&mdash;" the young man hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>"But there isn't&mdash;not the slightest," Jean
+replied with the familiar shrug of her shoulders
+and that demure expression about the
+corners of her mouth and in her brown eyes
+that her old friend remembered so well.
+"The truth is, Ralph, that I am tired of your
+and of other people's pretending that you
+believe the Prince Colonna and I are engaged
+to each other. Because we are not, and
+never will be." This was as unreasonable
+and inconsistent a speech as any girl could
+well manage to make.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank the Lord!" Ralph replied, so
+unconsciously and so sincerely that, as he was
+not looking toward her at the moment, the
+girl allowed herself to smile.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see why you should be so glad,
+Ralph?" she murmured.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Oh, don't you?" Ralph answered between
+his teeth. "Then to the best of my ability
+I'll tell you, Jean Bruce. I love you, I always
+have loved you from the hour I saw you
+drying your hair by that brook in the wilderness,
+say a thousand years ago! So now
+if you are not going to marry this Italian
+youth, why it gives me a longer chance to
+keep on working and working until I have
+something to offer you that you wish, money,
+position."</p>
+
+<p>Swiftly the girl rose, laying her fingers
+gently against the young man's lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't say those last words to me again,
+Ralph. I feel tonight that I never, never
+wish to hear them again. You have the thing
+already I want most in the world if you are
+willing to give it to me. Why haven't you
+understood in these last few months? I
+couldn't exactly propose to you, could I,
+dear?" Jean questioned demurely.</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes afterwards Jean, with a rose-colored
+shawl wrapped about her shoulders,
+arm in arm with Ralph, was walking about
+outdoors, forgetful of the autumn coldness,
+of the guests who were asking for her, of
+everything in the whole world except her
+own happiness. Finally she was surprised<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
+by seeing two other figures approaching
+them who were equally oblivious.</p>
+
+<p>With a low laugh Jean drew herself and
+her companion into the shadow.</p>
+
+<p>"Jack and Frank!" she whispered. Then,
+as the other girl and man were nearly opposite
+them, "I thought you both promised
+Jim not to do this sort of thing, at least not
+tonight, Jack Ralston," Jean began unexpectedly.
+"Yet I am glad to have found you
+alone, because I want to tell you first that
+I am very happy. I don't want other people
+to know it just yet, but I too am going to
+be married."</p>
+
+<p>There was a note in Jacqueline Ralston's
+voice as she replied that to save her life she
+could not conceal.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad for your sake, Jean darling,"
+Jack answered. "You know how much
+I shall hope for your and Giovanni's happiness."</p>
+
+<p>"Giovanni's?" Jean's manner now suggested
+unutterable reproach. Ralph Merrit
+stepped forward and stood close beside Jean.</p>
+
+<p>"Hasn't any member of my beloved family
+sense enough to guess that I have always
+cared for Ralph, or at least I have always
+cared for him in the past six months," Jean<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
+protested. "It is only that I have had to
+do desperate deeds to make him care for
+me."</p>
+
+<p>But the girl's next words were smothered
+in Jack's embrace, while Frank was giving
+Ralph's hand such a squeeze that though it
+was considerably hardened from labor, it
+was difficult for him not to wince.</p>
+
+<p>Then the four young people were so interested
+in one another that they paid no attention
+to two other persons who were seen
+coming toward them, until they finally discovered
+one of them to be Frieda. She
+was looking more ethereal than ever in a
+long pale blue silk coat with a chiffon scarf
+about her blond head, and was accompanied
+by the Professor.</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever are you doing out here? It
+seems very rude to our guests," Frieda
+murmured reproachfully. "I am sure Jim
+and Ruth will think it very rude of you."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Frieda, baby," Jack protested,
+"aren't you and Professor Russell also out
+here, as you call it? I can't see that we are
+much more to blame than you."</p>
+
+<p>Frieda gazed upward at the serious young
+man, who returned her glance with such
+solemn gravity that Jack felt a shiver of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
+apprehension, while Jean stared at the new-comers
+closely, as if trying to solve a puzzle.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no, it is not the same with us," Frieda
+answered serenely. "You see Ralph and
+Jean are not engaged at all, and you and
+Frank have been engaged such a long time,
+Jack, so you ought to be used to it by now.
+But Henry and I, why we just become engaged
+half an hour ago, so of course we like
+to be out in the moonlight together," Frieda
+ended conclusively.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Five years have passed away and Jacqueline
+Ralston is now "Lady Kent" with a
+small son of her own to inherit the title,
+while Frank is a well-known Liberal member
+of Parliament. But they still make frequent
+trips back to the old Rainbow Ranch, which
+Jack, in spite of her affection for her new
+home, has never ceased to love better than
+any other place on earth.</p>
+
+<p>And these home-comings of Lord and Lady
+Kent and the small "James Colter Kent"
+are usually the signal for a foregathering of
+all the four Ranch girls with their husbands
+and families under the great sheltering roof
+of "Rainbow Castle."</p>
+
+<p>For no one of the girls now lives continuously<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
+at the Ranch, which is still left
+to Jim's devoted management. As much
+as possible of their time Jean and Ralph and
+their small daughter, Jacqueline, spend with
+them&mdash;partly in order that Ralph may continue
+to supervise the working of the Rainbow
+Mine which has not yet failed in its
+output of gold. Ralph Merrit has recently
+become one of the best known mining experts
+in the United States, so that his advice
+is constantly being asked both in this country
+and abroad. And wherever he travels Jean
+and her little girl accompany him, for Jean
+has become one of the most devoted and
+absorbed of wives.</p>
+
+<p>After the entirely surprising announcement
+of Frieda Ralston's engagement to
+Professor Russell on the night of their ball
+at the ranch, Jack, Ruth and Jim Colter
+seriously opposed her marriage. In the first
+place, Frieda was too young to know her own
+mind; Professor Russell was more than ten
+years her senior and they had not a single
+taste in common. So by and by Frieda
+was brought to consent to having her engagement
+postponed. Afterwards she spent one
+whole year in England with Jack, seeing as
+much of society and young men as her sister<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
+could arrange for her. Nevertheless, to
+everybody's surprise, Frieda stuck to her
+original choice and two years after her engagement
+became Mrs. Russell. She is exceedingly
+happy.</p>
+
+<p>So far Frieda has no children, but lives
+with her husband's parents, and as he is an
+only child, they continue to spoil and adore
+her. Also the grave young professor, who has
+never outgrown his first impression of Frieda
+as a glorified doll, still treats her as if the
+least harshness would utterly destroy her.</p>
+
+<p>Olive Van Mater is unmarried and already
+insists upon calling herself an old maid.
+She is not devoting her life to teaching the
+Indians, although she has partly fulfilled
+her old dream. At the close of the year,
+when her grandmother's final will was read,
+to the immense surprise of every one, Olive
+inherited one-half her large fortune, the other
+half being divided among the Harmon family.
+For the will announced that if any girl was
+able to show such self-will and such disregard
+of wealth as Olive had shown, should she fail
+in the interim to marry Donald, that therefore
+she alone deserved her grandmother's
+inheritance. As this money was far more
+than Olive wanted or needed, she was thus<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
+enabled to found an agricultural school among
+the Indians, which was to teach them to
+combine their old knowledge with the new
+discoveries of science and so to make life
+happier, if possible, for a misunderstood
+race.</p>
+
+<p>Yet Olive was to marry in the end an
+artist whom she finally met while visiting
+Jack and Frank at Kent House. The young
+man was poor and unknown then, but his
+first success was won with a painting of the
+head of his beautiful wife and daughter.</p>
+
+<p>Possibly Jim and Ruth might have been
+lonely now and then at the old ranch, except
+for the fact that in the course of time they
+had four daughters of their own besides
+Jimmikins and each one bore the name of
+one of the former Ranch girls.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class='tnote'><h3>Transcriber's Notes:</h3>
+<p>Obvious punctuation errors repaired.</p>
+
+<p>The remaining corrections made are indicated by dotted lines under the corrections. Scroll the mouse over the word and the original text will <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'apprear'">appear</ins>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ranch Girls at Home Again, by
+Margaret Vandercook
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+Project Gutenberg's The Ranch Girls at Home Again, by Margaret Vandercook
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Ranch Girls at Home Again
+
+Author: Margaret Vandercook
+
+Release Date: January 12, 2011 [EBook #34928]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RANCH GIRLS AT HOME AGAIN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Emmy and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE RANCH GIRLS SERIES
+
+
+
+
+The Ranch Girls at Home Again
+
+
+
+
+BOOKS BY MARGARET VANDERCOOK
+
+
+THE RANCH GIRLS SERIES
+
+ The Ranch Girls at Rainbow Lodge
+ The Ranch Girls' Pot of Gold
+ The Ranch Girls at Boarding School
+ The Ranch Girls in Europe
+ The Ranch Girls at Home Again
+ The Ranch Girls and their Great Adventure
+ The Ranch Girls and their Heart's Desire
+ The Ranch Girls and the Silver Arrow
+ The Ranch Girls and the Mystery of the Three Roads
+
+
+STORIES ABOUT CAMP FIRE GIRLS
+
+ The Camp Fire Girls at Sunrise Hill
+ The Camp Fire Girls Amid the Snows
+ The Camp Fire Girls in the Outside World
+ The Camp Fire Girls Across the Sea
+ The Camp Fire Girls' Careers
+ The Camp Fire Girls in After Years
+ The Camp Fire Girls on the Edge of the Desert
+ The Camp Fire Girls at the End of the Trail
+ The Camp Fire Girls Behind the Lines
+ The Camp Fire Girls on the Field of Honor
+ The Camp Fire Girls in Glorious France
+ The Camp Fire Girls in Merrie England
+ The Camp Fire Girls at Half Moon Lake
+ The Camp Fire Girls by the Blue Lagoon
+
+
+THE GIRL SCOUTS SERIES
+
+ The Girl Scouts of the Eagle's Wing
+ The Girl Scouts in Beechwood Forest
+ The Girl Scouts of the Round Table
+ The Girl Scouts in Mystery Valley
+ The Girl Scouts and the Open Road
+
+[Illustration: "WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT, RALPH MERRITT?" SHE
+DEMANDED]
+
+
+
+
+THE RANCH GIRLS SERIES
+
+
+The Ranch Girls at Home Again
+
+BY
+
+MARGARET VANDERCOOK
+
+
+ILLUSTRATED BY
+
+RALPH P. COLEMAN
+
+ THE JOHN C. WINSTON COMPANY
+ PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1915, by
+ THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO.
+
+ PRINTED IN U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I. THE RACE 9
+ II. AN UNANSWERED QUESTION 21
+ III. THE ENGINEER OF THE RAINBOW MINE 30
+ IV. OLIVE COMES HOME 40
+ V. THEIR RIDE TOGETHER 51
+ VI. THAT SAME AFTERNOON 66
+ VII. "COURAGE MAKES THE MAN" 79
+ VIII. THE MIDNIGHT CONFERENCE 91
+ IX. A DILEMMA AND A VISITOR 100
+ X. CROSS PURPOSES 110
+ XI. A DINNER PARTY 121
+ XII. TWO CONVERSATIONS 134
+ XIII. A VISIT TO RAINBOW MINE 146
+ XIV. THE EXPLOSION 155
+ XV. AN UNFORTUNATE DISCUSSION 165
+ XVI. A DESERT STORM 187
+ XVII. OLIVE'S REMORSE 200
+ XVIII. JACK SURRENDERS AT LAST 210
+ XIX. RAINBOW CASTLE 221
+ XX. A PARTY AT THE NEW HOUSE 230
+ XXI. MAIDS AND MEN 240
+ XXII. OLD FRIENDS AND SOMETHING MORE 254
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ "WHAT ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT, RALPH MERRITT?" SHE
+ DEMANDED _Frontispiece_
+ PAGE
+ "SHE HAD HEARD THAT MASTERFUL TONE BEFORE" 84
+ "THE STARS HAD DISAPPEARED AND BEYOND THE UNIVERSAL
+ GRAYNESS THERE WAS NOW A FAINT ROSE LIGHT" 211
+ "YOU WOULD HAVE MARRIED ME ANYHOW" 241
+
+
+
+
+The Ranch Girls at Home Again
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE RACE
+
+
+AN hour before sunset a number of persons were standing in a small group
+facing the western horizon. But although the prairie was covered with a
+crop of young grass, a pale green mirror to reflect the colors of the
+sun, they were not looking at the landscape but toward two figures on
+horseback, a girl and a boy who were riding across country as rapidly as
+their horses could carry them.
+
+"Will Jack Ralston ever learn to be less reckless about her riding,
+Jim?" Ruth Colter inquired. "Since we returned from Europe it seems to
+me that she has grown more attached to the Rainbow ranch than ever
+before. Yet at about the time we were married, dear, do you know I had a
+fancy that Jack and Frank Kent were going to care for each other
+seriously. Of course, I was mistaken since he has never been to see her
+in almost a year."
+
+Then with both hands held out invitingly, Ruth received a small pink and
+white bundle which Jim deposited in them with infinite care. For the
+bundle consisted of an absurdly tiny person measuring its early
+existence by weeks instead of months or years. And its face, though as
+delicately shell pink as the blanket enveloping it, yet bore a
+ridiculous resemblance to the tall man's in whose arms it had lately
+been borne.
+
+A moment later and Jim Colter strode forward with a blond girl at his
+side. For by this time the two riders were almost within hailing
+distance, the girl's horse scarcely a neck in advance of her
+companion's.
+
+"Carlos don't like Jack," Frieda Ralston remarked unexpectedly to her
+guardian, "so I do wish that she would not keep on doing things to
+irritate him. He perfectly hates to think that a girl can beat him at
+any outdoor sport and yet he rarely gets ahead of Jack. Indians are so
+strange and silent that sometimes I feel afraid he may try and revenge
+himself upon her for some fancied wrong. See, he is furious now at her
+having won their race!"
+
+"Well, I expect Miss Ralston will be able to manage him;" Jim returned.
+"Nevertheless, the boy has not turned out as I had hoped; he is lazy and
+proud and extremely ungrateful. Sometimes I have half an idea of turning
+him off the ranch, and I came very near doing it the other day, only
+Jack pleaded for him. Because he is Olive's friend she seems sentimental
+about keeping him on here, at least, until Olive joins us. Bravo, Jack!
+Be careful, you hoyden, don't you know you are a grown woman!" he cried.
+
+And with his tone divided between admiration and anger, Jim caught at
+the flying figure of a girl as she landed lightly on the ground at his
+feet. She had jumped from her pony while it was still going at full
+speed and then run along beside it until she was able to stop without
+losing her balance.
+
+"I wish you would not behave like a circus rider, Jack," Frieda scolded.
+For at eighteen Frieda Ralston had become a far more dignified and
+reposeful character than her older sister, who was now past twenty.
+
+Nevertheless Jack only made a slight grimace, calling back over her
+shoulder carelessly, "Carlos, see to my horse, will you, when it gets to
+the stable?" And then in a kinder tone, "Oh, never mind, I had
+forgotten; some one else can look after him. Of course you will be
+interested to hear the news from Olive--Miss Van Mater," she corrected
+herself. "I am going to tell the family at once." Then she walked on
+between Jim and Frieda, with an arm laid lightly across her sister's
+shoulder. And without replying Carlos followed the little party.
+
+He was a beautiful slender Indian boy of about fifteen or sixteen, with
+skin the color of bronze, with straight dark hair and moody, unsatisfied
+black eyes--the same Indian boy who had formerly helped Olive to return
+to the ranch after her enforced capture by old Laska, and had afterwards
+sought refuge there himself. As a small lad, in spite of his pride and
+difficult disposition, the Ranch girls and Ruth had been fond of him,
+but since their return from Europe they had found Carlos a problem. He
+was unwilling to work like the other men, either on the ranch or at the
+mine, and was equally determined not to go to school except when forced
+into it. Indeed, so far as possible, the boy had insisted upon living in
+the midst of civilization like one of his chieftain ancestors.
+Oftentimes he chose to sit idly in the sun doing nothing, save perhaps
+to clean his gun or else gaze for hours at the sky overhead. Then again
+he might without warning disappear on a hunting expedition, taking any
+horse from the stables that he wished for his purpose, and usually
+returning with game or furs, which he sometimes bestowed on Jean or
+Frieda or Ruth, but never on Jack.
+
+At the present moment his manner was absurdly dignified and haughty,
+since he particularly objected to being treated at any time as though he
+were a servant, and considered Jack's request in that light. However, as
+no one was paying the slightest attention to him, it was self-evident
+that he was longing to hear Jacqueline Ralston's news.
+
+"Have you heaps of letters, Jack? Do please hurry and give them to us."
+Jean Bruce called out, walking away from the two young men with whom she
+had been recently talking. One of them was Ralph Merritt, the engineer
+in charge of the Rainbow mine, and the other a visitor from one of the
+neighboring ranches. For as Jack had always insisted, wherever Jean was
+to be found there also was a masculine admirer, even in a wilderness.
+
+Over her shoulder Jack carried a small leather mail bag, which she now
+opened; but before drawing forth her letters she leaned over and glanced
+anxiously into the face of the small baby snuggled in Ruth's arms.
+
+"Nothing has happened to Jimmikins since I have been away? He has not
+cut a tooth or anything, has he, Ruth?" she queried. And as the others
+laughed, the baby being at the present hour only about seven weeks old,
+Jack drew forth more than a dozen letters and began passing them around
+to the different members of her family.
+
+"Here, Jean, of course there are more for you than for any of the rest
+of us, and in so many handwritings that it looks as if you kept a
+correspondence school for young men. And, Frieda, I am sorry I had to
+discover this was from Tom. But the youth does send you so many boxes of
+candy, I can't help recognizing the address. Ruth, won't you ask
+everybody please to wait here a moment for I have something really
+important to tell you." Then Jack's radiant face grew graver.
+
+"I have at last had a long letter from Olive," she explained. "And a
+week after her grandmother's death the will was read." The girl glanced
+about her. Ralph Merrit and their visitor had walked off several yards,
+so that only the few persons interested were standing near.
+
+"Of course old Madame Van Mater has made the curious will that we might
+have expected. For it seems that she has given Olive one more year to
+make up her mind whether or not she will marry Donald Harmon. If she
+does, of course they will then inherit the greater portion of the estate
+with only a few legacies to be paid outside. But if she does not decide
+to marry him--and here is the strange thing--at the end of the year
+another will is to be read, which will divide the property differently.
+And no one knows just how, for this second will is sealed and in the
+possession of her executors. So Olive may finally be left penniless or
+she may receive everything, or else Donald may suffer the same fate. It
+is a queer and interesting state of things, isn't it?" Jack concluded.
+
+"Yes, and pretty well calculated to make everybody that had anything to
+do with the old lady uncomfortable for another twelve months longer
+anyhow," Jim Colter replied frowning. "Funny how the old woman arranged
+to make her relatives and friends as miserable after her death as she
+had before it. It is pretty hard on both Olive and Donald. In the end I
+have an idea that the money will go to some charity."
+
+In reply Jean slowly shook her head, turning over the envelopes in her
+hand with pretended interest, but with her thoughts plainly not centered
+upon them.
+
+"Olive is very foolish," she remarked at length. "Really I can't see why
+she does not make up her mind to do as her grandmother wished. Don is a
+charming fellow and it is ridiculous not to appreciate the value of so
+much money. Why the longer I live the more important it seems to me!"
+
+Too displeased with Jean's unexpected burst of worldliness to discuss
+the question with her, Jim marched a few steps away. Ruth was
+distressed, but being a woman she was not so unmindful of what lay
+behind the girl's apparently careless speech, while Frieda became
+immediately influenced by her cousin's point of view, just as she
+always had been since they were small girls. So it was Jack who was the
+one person in the group to take Jean's statement lightly, for she merely
+laughed, saying:
+
+"Oh, of course we know that Jean is the really worldly person in our
+family, so we must watch and see how she lives up to her sentiments!
+Still you have not yet heard my most important piece of news. Olive has
+also written that she is completely worn out with all the business and
+worry of these last weeks and so she is coming to us at once. She asks
+if she may bring Miss Winthrop along with her for a visit?" Jack paused
+for a moment, looking inquiringly about at the faces of the others. "Of
+course she may," she ended. "It will be a pleasure to have Miss
+Winthrop, and besides I don't see how we possibly could refuse."
+
+Frieda held up two white hands protestingly. She was not an industrious
+person and so devoted a great deal of her valuable time to her toilet
+instead of to more serious labors. "Oh, dear," she began, "it will be
+just like going back to Primrose Hall again to have Miss Winthrop
+staying in our house. Goodness, how she will disapprove of me for
+having no ambition to improve myself as Olive does. I shall have to lead
+a changed life!"
+
+"Thank Providence, then. Do ask Miss Winthrop to come on the next
+train," Jim chuckled, returning at this instant, while Ruth shook her
+head thoughtfully.
+
+"Naturally it will be an opportunity for all of us to have a woman like
+Miss Winthrop for our guest," she declared, in a slightly worried tone.
+"But has it ever occurred to any one of you where we are to put her? The
+poor old Lodge is so crowded now with babies and girls and Jim Colter
+that we have not a single spare room. Oh, of course Olive can be tucked
+in anywhere, but----"
+
+"Jim, do take your son and let us walk over and look at our new house,"
+Jack at once suggested. "Surely there will be enough bedrooms finished
+by the time Olive and Miss Winthrop arrive, for some of the family, so
+that we may give ours to our guests. Funny how we cling to the dear old
+Rainbow Lodge in spite of our new grandeur."
+
+Then Jack moved on ahead, leading the way through the grove of
+cottonwood trees almost up to the old house. She turned to the left and
+about an eighth of a mile farther along came to a slight elevation,
+recently planted with shrubs and evergreens. There, facing the little
+party, was a splendid pile of stone and wood that was evidently growing
+into an old-time colonial house.
+
+For of course now that the girls were older and wealthier, and Jim and
+Ruth married, Rainbow Lodge was no longer suited to their needs. And as
+the Rainbow Mine still continued to yield a handsome income, the new
+house had occupied a great deal of the family's time and attention since
+their return from Europe. For it had been both Jim's and Jack's desire
+to build a wonderful colonial mansion here in their own beautiful
+Western country, where in times past men and women had been content with
+rude cabins. Since a colonial house meant to Jim Colter the beauty and
+dignity of the old Virginia homes that he remembered in his boyhood and
+since Jacqueline had long cherished a photograph of the place owned by
+her Southern grandfather who had been killed in the Confederate army,
+the new house was to be as nearly as possible a replica of the latter.
+
+In the interest of discussing what the workmen had accomplished since
+their last visit to the new building, no one noticed that the Indian
+boy, Carlos, who had followed the others up to this time, listening
+intently to every word of their conversation, had stalked silently away
+as soon as Olive's name ceased to be mentioned. His face wore a more
+pleasing expression, and unlike his usual habit he afterwards joined old
+Aunt Ellen in the kitchen, who was still the ranch girls' cook and
+devoted friend. To her he at once imparted the information concerning
+the expected visitors; then he retired to his own tent in the yard. For
+Carlos had absolutely refused to live in the ranch house with the other
+employees about the estate and had erected for himself an Indian tepee
+at some distance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+AN UNANSWERED QUESTION
+
+
+ON a pile of boards in a great unfinished room Frieda Ralston stood
+facing--the unknown future.
+
+In the family it was sometimes said that though on occasions the younger
+Miss Ralston could assume the airs of a social queen, at very many other
+times she was more of a baby than ever. For of course Frieda had not yet
+been touched by any of life's hard realities, and since her sister's
+recovery from her accident her way had been fairly plain sailing. For
+did she not have health, youth, plenty of money and an adoring family?
+What else was there to wish for? Thus far she had never taken any of her
+mild love affairs with the least seriousness and had no idea of
+"settling down," as she expressed it, for at least ten years to come. So
+what was there for Frieda to do but each day to grow fairer and more
+charming, like a lovely wax doll that had come to life and taken upon
+itself the airs and graces of a really grown-up person. Because Jack
+objected, Frieda some time ago had given up her former fashion of
+wearing her heavy yellow hair in a Psyche knot, and in these months at
+the ranch when no strangers were about had returned to her old childish
+custom of two long braids. On dress occasions, however, her coiffure,
+copied after a Paris model, could again be made bewilderingly lovely.
+
+On this particular occasion Frieda had unfortunately neglected to attire
+herself for the role which she was about to play, as she happened to be
+wearing an old blue and white middy blouse and a short duck skirt with
+one long plait hanging over each shoulder.
+
+"I wonder," she began at this moment, though no one chanced to be
+looking toward her, "which one of us will finally fall heir to this
+grand new house we are building? I have just been thinking, houses are
+not like clothes, meant for one person and to last through one or two
+seasons: they may last through many generations and no telling what
+changes in a family."
+
+"Hear! Hear!" cried Jean, straightway whirling around to regard her
+cousin with astonishment and then striking an attitude of mock
+admiration. "Listen, everybody, please, Frieda is making a speech! She
+wants to know which of us shall become the royal family of Rainbow
+Castle. It is an interesting question, dear; I never should have thought
+it of you!"
+
+Frieda hesitated, but the next instant went on quite seriously. "Of
+course it won't be you though, Jean, because of all of us, Ruth, Olive,
+Jim, and Jack and me, why I think you love the Rainbow ranch the least.
+You will never want to stay on in the West once you are married; that
+visit you made the Princess Colonna in Rome has completely spoiled you."
+
+And now it was Jean's turn to endure the family laughter, and though she
+made no reply, she showed more annoyance than the accusation merited.
+
+Still surprisingly thoughtful, Frieda continued: "I suppose that either
+Jim or Jack and their children ought to inherit the new house, for of
+course I am the youngest and have done nothing toward making the ranch a
+success as Jim and Jack have. Ruth, you and Jim would want Jack to have
+the place after she marries and has children, wouldn't you? And yet not
+long ago, do you know, I believed that in spite of loving the ranch
+best, Jack would be the first one of us to leave it for good. I don't
+think so now," she added hastily, catching an expression on her sister's
+face that she could not altogether understand.
+
+But by this time Jack had marched across the room and was gently but
+firmly pulling Frieda down from her exalted position.
+
+"I suppose hearing the news of old Madame Van Mater's will has gone to
+your head, Frieda darling," Jack protested. "But really no one of us
+wants to hear you arranging our futures and talking about our
+descendants, as if fifty years might suddenly pass away before tea time.
+Of course 'Rainbow Castle,' as Jean calls our new home, shall belong to
+the one of us who wishes it and needs it the most. But which of us that
+may be--well, in the words of Mr. William Shakespeare, 'that is the
+question.'"
+
+Jack now turned to her cousin, Jean, who was standing before one of the
+unfinished windows looking out at the beautiful view. For the prospect
+from the new house was far lovelier than any outlook from Rainbow Lodge,
+since it stood on a higher incline and showed a wider sweep of the
+prairies.
+
+"Jean," Jack asked, "I wonder if you happen to know where Ralph Merrit
+is? There is something Jim and I want particularly to talk over with
+him. I happened to notice he was with you last. Did he say whether he
+was going to have dinner with us tonight or with the men at the Ranch
+House?"
+
+The other girl shrugged her shoulders impatiently.
+
+"Really, Jack, I don't see why I should be expected to know Ralph
+Merrit's plans because I was talking to him for ten minutes. But what is
+all this mystery about anyway? What is going on down at the mine? Ralph
+looks either as if he were working himself to death or as if he had the
+weight of the world on his shoulders. To tell you the truth, I believe
+he did ask me to tell you that he was going away for several days
+perhaps. He preferred to talk over matters with you on his return. But
+do come on home, Ruth," Jean finished crossly, "it is much too cold for
+the baby to be outdoors now the sun is down. And Jim and Jack always
+prefer to have their business secrets alone. I suppose we have no right
+to be interested. But of course there can't be any serious trouble at
+the Rainbow Mine while Ralph is managing things." Then Ruth, Jean, the
+baby and Frieda walked on ahead, leaving Jim and Jack to follow slowly
+behind. For in spite of the accusation in Jean's speech, her cousin had
+made no denial.
+
+With her hand inside his, after the fashion she had as a little girl
+when anything about the big ranch troubled her, Jack gazed earnestly up
+into her old friend and guardian's strong and gentle countenance.
+
+"I am right not to speak of this trouble Ralph Merrit is having with the
+men at Rainbow Mine, don't you think so, Jim?" she queried. "You see I
+don't understand the situation anyhow, and it all may come to nothing in
+the end. So any discussion does not seem to me fair to Ralph. Surely the
+men are only grumbling! Why next to you I feel that we owe our fortune
+to the splendid way Ralph Merrit has managed the mine. And you know you
+have always liked him better than any other young man we have ever
+known, better even than Frank Kent."
+
+Jim cleared his throat. "Have I said that I had changed my mind about
+Merrit?" he demanded. "You are right, Jack; you just lie low and say
+nothing even to the men who may come to you with their complaints. In
+my opinion the trouble is this: The fellows at work on Rainbow Mine are
+most of them middle-aged men, kind of down-and-out miners and a hard
+lot, who have either given up the hope of discovering gold for
+themselves or postponed searching for it for a while so as to first make
+a good living out of us. Well, you see, compared to them Ralph Merrit is
+a kid. And of course his being a real mining engineer graduated out of a
+college and placed as the boss over them makes the older men kind of
+sore. Then, besides paying our miners their regular wages we have been
+giving them a percentage also of the amount of gold that is taken out of
+the mine each month. There is still enough pay dirt for us to live
+pretty comfortable, but the men say we ought to be getting a whole lot
+more. Merrit isn't certain yet, he wants to make some more
+investigations. The gold that is a whole lot deeper down under the earth
+may prove either too dangerous or too expensive to get out. So at bottom
+I believe that is what the real grievance is, they want Ralph to hurry
+up. It is nothing to them to have us sink, say a hundred thousand
+dollars, in new mining machinery and maybe get nothing back. So they
+have been spreading ugly stories, say Merrit does not know his job and
+that he is too busy speculating and trying to earn a fortune that way
+for himself to care what becomes of the mine."
+
+After this speech Jack kept silent for several moments and they were
+almost at the Lodge before she replied:
+
+"Look here, Jim, don't be angry with me if I say something. Of course I
+know Ralph is doing the best he can for us at the mine. But about that
+other story--really you ought to try and find out if it is true. John
+Raines, one of the miners, said he wanted to tell me something; do let
+him tell you instead. Because, Jim dear, if once you believe in a person
+you know you believe in him forever, and yet maybe Ralph may have gotten
+into mischief. You see I should not wish to be prying into his private
+affairs, but it is as plain as the nose on your face to everybody but
+you that Ralph is in love with Jean and always has been for that matter,
+though I must confess he has been paying her a good deal less attention
+lately. And as for Jean, well I don't believe she will marry any one who
+cannot give her wealth and position; yet just the same it would be wiser
+to know the truth about Ralph. Couldn't you ask him to tell you? I
+believe he would. Oh dear me, I do hope we won't have a strike at the
+mine or any other kind of trouble."
+
+"You sound pretty sensible, partner," Jim agreed, "maybe I had better
+look into things a little more. It never hurts any fellow to keep his
+eyes open. But let me tell you that I have never heard of a gold mine
+yet, whether it was a good one or a poor one, that did not keep on
+piling up trouble."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE ENGINEER OF THE RAINBOW MINE
+
+
+READERS of the Ranch Girls' Series probably remember that the first
+meeting between the members of the Rainbow Ranch family and Ralph Merrit
+occurred several years before, while they were making a caravan journey
+to the Yellowstone Park.
+
+And Jean Bruce had been Ralph's original acquaintance. How many times
+since had they not laughed at the vision of the girl idly washing her
+hair in an outdoor stream with no thought of a stranger in many miles.
+Then there was the story of their first luncheon together with only
+Frieda as chaperon and Ruth and Olive's return, the storm, and Jim and
+Jack's disaster by the deserted mine. Within less than a week Ralph
+Merrit had appeared like an old and tried friend. And from the hour of
+his arrival to advise and assist Jim Colter in regard to the Rainbow
+Mine he had seemed almost like one of the family. Only twice had he left
+his work for any length of time--once to visit his mother and sister in
+Chicago, and the second time to say farewell to the Ranch girls when
+they sailed for Europe. His friends understood that a large part of his
+generous salary went each month to the support of his people, and that
+in his present position Ralph was not making his fortune so quickly in
+the West as he had hoped. But was that the reason why he had been taking
+so many short trips away from the ranch in the past few months and why
+he had recently changed so decidedly in his appearance and manner?
+
+Though Jean may have had her own special reasons for observing these
+changes most, no one else was wholly blind. Could it be possible that
+Ralph Merrit's difficulties were graver than they suspected?
+
+There is a possibility that Jack Ralston's and even Jim's faith might
+have been shaken had they been able to follow the young man's
+proceedings on the afternoon of their conversation about him.
+
+He and the neighbor, who had simply been a visitor at the ranch for
+afternoon tea, walked along without much conversation until they came to
+within the neighborhood of Rainbow Creek--that portion of the creek
+where important mining machinery had been set up and near which a shaft
+had been sunk, forming a narrow entrance into the Rainbow Mine.
+
+As the hour for work had passed some time before, the place was now
+deserted and Ralph Merrit showed no interest in lingering in its
+vicinity. Yet the discovery of the surprising wealth contained in the
+Rainbow Mine had never ceased being a subject of interest, of
+speculation and oftentimes of acute envy to many of the ranch owners in
+that end of Wyoming, and the young man, Hugo Manning, who was Ralph's
+present companion, had only recently purchased a cattle ranch about ten
+miles away. He had come from the western part of New York State and this
+was his first sight of a gold mine.
+
+Plainly Ralph was at first simply bored by the stupid questions that his
+neighbor asked of him. Then unexpectedly the young engineer's expression
+changed and his face flushed angrily.
+
+"I hear that your famous Rainbow gold mine is panning out," the young
+man had remarked carelessly. "They tell me around here that you have
+already taken out all the gold that lies near enough to the surface to
+be of value. They insist that it is going to cost you more to buy new
+machinery and try out new methods of mining than the gold is worth.
+Better advise your friends to sell out while selling is good and before
+their mine loses its reputation."
+
+Ralph made a queer noise in his throat that was half anger, and yet he
+did not positively deny the suggestion. "Oh, they say that, do they?" he
+exclaimed. "It's funny how much sooner strangers find out about your
+affairs than you do yourself! I don't believe Mr. Colter or Miss Ralston
+have yet had to complain of any lack of money. When that time comes then
+we shall decide what is best to do."
+
+And Ralph started to move along, but his companion waited, hesitating
+for half a moment. "I say, Merrit," he continued, "if the Rainbow Mine
+owners should make up their minds that they want to get out, I wish you
+would let me hear the news first. Isn't it possible that they might be
+willing to take a lump sum down and not run the risk of losing what they
+have already got by investing in new machinery? I believe it mostly
+belongs just to the two Ralston girls. But a company of men, say in New
+York City, might look at the proposition differently. They could afford
+to sink a few hundred thousands easier."
+
+Ralph nodded dryly and this time walked on so resolutely that his
+companion was obliged to hurry in order to keep alongside and to hear
+the answer to his request.
+
+All the reply he received was: "Thank you; it is kind of surprising to
+meet a fellow who knows people who are willing to lose money."
+
+But when at the edge of the ranch the two men finally separated, Ralph
+Merrit went on alone to the nearest railroad station. It was several
+miles away and few persons from the Rainbow Ranch ever attempted walking
+so great a distance. But Ralph had not ordered a horse for one reason
+because he did not wish to have a boy accompany him to bring the animal
+home again and also because he preferred not having any one know just
+where he was going. That there was discussion and ill feeling concerning
+him among the men at work on the Rainbow Mine he understood, although
+Ralph was not yet aware how unkind the criticism was, nor just what was
+being said.
+
+By midnight he had finally arrived at his destination, Laramie, the
+largest city in Wyoming. He had then gone directly to a small,
+out-of-the-way hotel. But after his arrival, instead of getting
+immediately into bed as any tired, healthy fellow should, the young man
+dropped into a chair before his open window, sitting there most of the
+night. Now and then he dozed a few moments from sheer exhaustion, but
+the greater part of the time he stared out into the lighted streets
+below him, moody and restless and totally unlike the Ralph Merrit of
+former days.
+
+If one trait of character had previously distinguished Ralph from the
+Ranch girls' other young men friends, it had been his practical common
+sense. Unlike Frank Kent and Donald Harmon, Ralph Merrit was a self-made
+boy, who had earned his own way through college and had afterwards
+suffered many disappointments and disillusions on coming West to seek
+his fortune. Upon taking charge of the Rainbow Mine and making the
+success of it, which he certainly had, for a time Ralph felt happy and
+satisfied. He was doing work which many an older man might have envied
+him. Then why had he recently become so disheartened and dissatisfied?
+It was true that the Rainbow Mine was not yielding so much gold as it
+formerly had and that he was beginning to feel fearful that the veins
+near the surface, which had held valuable ore, were now nearly worked
+out. Yet Ralph did not even try to pretend to himself that his
+nervousness and discontent were due to conditions at Rainbow Mine. No,
+his anxiety and despondency were entirely personal.
+
+For in the past six months Ralph had been overtaken by an ambition that
+makes for more unhappiness and destroys the careers of more young men
+than almost any other vice. He had developed an overpowering desire to
+make a large fortune quickly, not by hard work or economy or any of the
+ordinary, slow methods for gaining wealth, but by some single, brilliant
+stroke of good luck that should make him a rich man at once.
+
+Yet this represented such a curious change in Ralph Merrit's former
+nature, in his good sense and sound judgment, that surely some outside
+influence must have been at work to render him so unlike himself. What
+that influence really was Ralph Merrit alone knew perfectly well.
+
+Now it is idle to deny that while under most circumstances a refined
+girl is an ennobling influence in a young fellow's life, now and then
+there may be exceptions to this fact as to all others. At the very
+beginning of their acquaintance Ralph Merrit had understood that he was
+falling hopelessly in love with Jean Bruce. But in the two years of her
+absence at school and in Europe he had fought the matter out with
+himself and decided that he had mastered his impossible fancy. During
+her short visits at the ranch they had remained especial friends as at
+the start, but nothing more. Now, however, since Jean's return to live
+at the Rainbow Lodge, Ralph had not only felt a return of his first
+affection, but an emotion that was very much stronger and more serious.
+
+And he felt this in spite of recognizing that Jean herself had greatly
+changed. No longer was she the fascinating unspoiled girl of his early
+acquaintance; she was a far more worldly-minded and ambitious Jean than
+he could have imagined. She was also far prettier and more alluring from
+her experiences and opportunities, and there was no doubt but that she
+was constantly yearning for the companionship of distinguished people,
+for more society, broader social opportunities of every kind. During
+the past year at the ranch she had not been altogether contented. Their
+former life now seemed too simple and uneventful to her, she no longer
+had Jack's intense interest in outdoor amusements. Yet to Ruth's and her
+cousin's suggestions that she make a visit in the east to her friends,
+Margaret and Cecil Belknap, Jean would not listen. Of course she was
+happy at home, and whatever her family might say to the contrary they
+would be absurdly lonely without her. Moreover, did they believe that
+she would miss Olive's home-coming? But any other influence that may
+have been at work in the back of the girl's heart or mind she did not
+mention. And assuredly Ralph Merrit did not dream that his presence on
+the ranch could be in any possible sense an added influence.
+
+For whatever Ralph's present weaknesses, he did not put the blame upon a
+woman. Jean had given him no false encouragement, had shown him no
+special favor. The fault was his, that moved by what he believed her
+attitude toward wealth, he had used the wrong method for obtaining it.
+He had not even given Jean the chance to say that his struggle was
+unwise or unnecessary, since he had been paying her far less attention
+recently.
+
+At ten o'clock the next morning Ralph learned from his stock broker that
+instead of being nearer the fortune he so much desired, he was several
+thousand dollars farther away. And this loss represented almost the last
+dollar he had in the world.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+OLIVE COMES HOME
+
+
+SOON after dinner Ruth and Jim Colter and of course the small son had
+retired to their rooms in Rainbow Lodge, leaving Jack, Jean and Frieda
+to amuse themselves in the living room until bedtime. A week had passed
+since their visit to their new house and tonight Frieda and Jack were
+busily studying over their original plans and discussing various
+alterations which they felt were absolutely necessary, while Jean,
+without seeming to regard them, was playing idly upon the piano.
+
+It was not cold, and one of the front windows was partly raised with the
+blind drawn down; but a small fire was burning in the old fireplace,
+since the Rainbow Lodge living room was never exactly the same
+delightful abode without it.
+
+Except for a few handsome, additional pieces of furniture and some odd
+pictures and china which the girls had brought home from abroad, there
+was no material change in the beloved room. For Ruth and the girls had
+the good taste to know that its primitive character with its decorations
+of bright Indian rugs and simple furnishings was far more suitable and
+beautiful than any alteration their money could bring. So the newer and
+more splendid furnishings which they had purchased in New York and in
+Europe had been safely stored away for the finishing of their new house.
+And this evening in their former familiar surroundings Jack, Jean and
+Frieda looked not unlike they had on that first evening years ago when
+Jack had returned from her original meeting with Frank Kent and before
+either Ruth or Olive had ever been seen at the Rainbow Lodge.
+
+"But, Frieda dear, it will be far too expensive to make such a change as
+you suggest," Jack protested. "You know that we agreed to have the four
+big bedrooms and two baths on one side of the house and just one
+upstairs sitting room. Now if we try to arrange a private sitting room
+off from your room, it will either make your bedroom too small or else
+rob the rest of us. And another big bay window would cost hundreds of
+dollars more."
+
+"Well, why not?" Frieda returned petulantly. "Here we have all been
+living quietly at the ranch for nearly a year and spending no outside
+money except on the house. It is only because you are suddenly growing
+stingy, Jack. I heard you tell Ruth that we had better not order as many
+new oriental rugs as we planned to have. Mr. Parker says that he can add
+the extra space to my apartment without spoiling the effect of the house
+in the least. Do let me have him do it, Jack darling, please? You know
+you and Jean and Olive will often be talking about things in our big
+sitting room that you won't wish me to hear and I do want a tiny den all
+to myself."
+
+Because Jack did not agree at once to her sister's pleading the girl at
+the piano ceased playing for an instant to glance at her cousin, and,
+surprised by her expression, did not look immediately away.
+
+Jack was frowning and was a little pale. But she had been out all day
+riding over the ranch and talking to the men at the mine, and naturally
+might be expected to be tired. She had gone to her own room and
+undressed almost immediately after dinner, and as there was no
+possibility of any visitors arriving unexpectedly at the ranch, she was
+now wearing a lovely old Chinese blue silk kimono and had her gold brown
+hair in a loose knot on top of her head. Leaning over she suddenly
+kissed Frieda, who sat on the other side of their small table puzzling
+over the drawings for their new place.
+
+"It isn't fair to say that I am stingy, baby," Jack declared, "when you
+know that our house is costing thousands of dollars more than we first
+expected. People say that is just what all houses do, yet just the same
+we have to set a limit somewhere. And of course I don't want you or Jean
+to worry, but there is a possibility that we may not get as much money
+out of Rainbow Mine in the future as we have for the past few years. And
+you know we have not a large fortune stowed away in bank. Besides, we
+have gotten into the habit of living pretty expensively and spending an
+awful lot of money thinking that our mine would hold out forever. Today
+Jim told me that frequently there were gold mines that ceased to yield
+almost altogether when certain veins had been worked out. I don't think
+he meant that this was going to happen to ours--only that our income
+might be cut down."
+
+As Jack finished speaking Jean Bruce got up from her piano stool and
+came across the room to face her cousin.
+
+"It's funny, Jack, that you let Jim give you all this information about
+affairs at the mine, instead of Ralph Merrit. It seems to me that Ralph
+must know more than Jim. And as he is head engineer you know you ought
+to get your information from him," she protested.
+
+Rather wearily Jack leaned back in her chair; yet she answered without
+any show of temper. "I thought you knew, Jean, that Ralph has not yet
+come back to the ranch. Five or six days ago he wrote Jim not to expect
+him for some little time as he had important business to look after. So
+you see I could not very well discuss business with him while he is
+away."
+
+With a little shrug Jean turned to stare into the fire.
+
+"Yes, but you could have waited until Ralph's return and then have had
+the conversation with him. Besides, it isn't only Jim who has been
+telling you that the gold in our mine will give out unless some new
+method for mining it is employed. No, it is the other miners who have
+been grumbling to both of you. I wonder if they can be dissatisfied with
+Ralph's management? But, Frieda, for goodness sake don't be a baby and
+don't worry Jack about spending more money on our new house than we can
+afford. Dear me, I wonder how we shall behave if suddenly we should
+become poor as church mice again. It would be my duty then, I suppose,
+Jack, to let you get rid of supporting such an expensive cousin by some
+means or other."
+
+Already won over by her sister's argument, since Jack's judgment was
+almost always hers in the end, Frieda had left her chair and was sitting
+on the arm of her sister's, pulling softly at the loose coils of her
+hair and trying to rearrange them.
+
+She and Jack both stared at Jean in surprise and consternation. What was
+the matter with her? Why should she talk in this absurd fashion? Had
+they ever felt or shown any difference between her and themselves in the
+right to everything they possessed? Something was making Jean unlike
+herself tonight.
+
+Seeing the hurt and surprise in the other two faces Jean at once changed
+the subject.
+
+"Jack, have you heard anything more about when Miss Winthrop and Olive
+are planning to come for their visit to us?" she demanded. "Just think,
+we have not seen Olive since our return from England! Won't it be
+splendid for you to have her with you again, Jack dear? Frieda and I are
+so dreadfully spoiled and lazy, we never do anything to help you about
+the ranch and only complain if things go wrong and we haven't more money
+to spend. I do wish somebody would show me how to be useful. I haven't
+even the beds to make now we have another girl to help Aunt Ellen."
+
+Jack shook her head. "I am sorry you are bored. I wish I could think of
+something to interest you. You seemed to like the ranch when we first
+came back and the work at the mine. The only word I have heard from
+Olive since her other letter was a short note in answer to my telegram
+that begged her to come at once. She said that she and Miss Winthrop had
+a lot of business matters to look after, but meant to run away as soon
+as possible. What in the world was that?" And Jack, who seemed unusually
+tired and nervous tonight, startled the other two girls by jumping up
+unexpectedly.
+
+Jean had also heard the noise and turned in the direction from which it
+came.
+
+"It is only that tiresome boy, Carlos," she explained. "I mean to tell
+Jim that I don't like his sneaking up here and peering into our window
+in that spooky fashion. Carlos can move more like a spirit than a human
+being anyway! But what has become of him recently, for now I think of it
+I have not seen him before for several days?"
+
+"He has been away from the ranch most of the time," Frieda answered
+sleepily, "for I wanted him to do an errand for me the other day and
+could not find him. But Aunt Ellen says he has come to her for food
+several times and then has gone off with as much as she would give him.
+Somehow I'm fond of Carlos--he was such a queer, handsome little boy
+when he first came to us. I hope Olive will understand him better than
+the rest of us do. But dear me, what does he mean by coming in at the
+front door without knocking?" And Frieda also jumped up hurriedly. "I
+hope he is not bringing us bad news!"
+
+Not only had the front door opened, which had not yet been locked for
+the night, but the door of the living room was mysteriously unclosing
+just half an inch at a time.
+
+The three girls were seriously annoyed and Jack spoke sharply:
+
+"Carlos, what do you mean by entering our room without asking
+permission? Unless you have something important to say I should prefer
+your waiting to speak to us until tomorrow."
+
+A soft voice, which was not that of the Indian boy, replied: "But I
+can't wait till morning or not another moment, Jack dearest, when I have
+traveled across a whole continent to see you. And please forgive Carlos
+for my sake, because he and I have been planning this surprise together
+ever since I left Primrose Hall."
+
+Afterwards Olive Van Mater could only get a few steps further inside the
+old Lodge living room, because Frieda, Jean and Jack at once flung
+themselves upon her. And the tears were gathering fast in the girl's big
+star-like black eyes as she tried her best to explain the mystery of her
+arrival and to embrace her three friends at the same instant.
+
+"You see, Miss Winthrop found that she could not leave home for some
+time yet and I was so tired and so nearly dead to see you that she would
+not let me wait until she could come. So I thought that I would rather
+surprise you than anything else I could imagine. I wrote Carlos when to
+expect me and to have a horse and carriage at the train. But the poor
+lad has been at the station apparently for several days, fearing he
+might make some mistake and that I should arrive without his knowing.
+But you brought me home safely after all, didn't you, Carlos?" And Olive
+disengaged her hand for a moment from the girls' hold to extend it to
+the Indian boy.
+
+"Goodness, how you have grown, I haven't had a good look at you until
+this moment," she ended admiringly.
+
+And surely Carlos made a handsome picture. In honor of Olive's
+home-coming he wore a soft shirt of some yellow material and a pair of
+clean khaki trousers with a bright sash knotted about his waist and a
+crimson tie at his throat. All the surliness had disappeared from his
+expression, his skin was like polished bronze and his eyes like shining
+coals, as he took his old friend's hand and for a moment pressed it
+reverently to his lips.
+
+Then Jack removed Olive's traveling hat and long broadcloth coat, with
+every movement of her hands a caress.
+
+"But please, Carlos and Olive," she demanded, "I don't pretend to be
+able to hear outdoor sounds as you can; yet I have fairly well trained
+ears of my own. Would you mind telling me how you managed to drive a
+rickety old hired carriage up to the very door of Rainbow Lodge with us
+in the living room and yet never a sound heard we?"
+
+Olive laughed. "That is our secret, but if you must know, we did no such
+thing. Half a mile away I sent the driver back to the station and Carlos
+and I ran on tiptoes under the stars all the way home." The girl ended
+her sentence with a slight catch in her breath. "Then please to remember
+that we are both Indians, or at least I am almost one. And now won't
+somebody go and find Ruth and Jim, for I just must see the baby this
+minute even if he cries his eyes out the rest of the night."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THEIR RIDE TOGETHER
+
+
+OLIVE and Jack had scarcely been alone for more than a half hour at a
+time since Olive's arrival almost a week before. But before ten o'clock
+this morning they had both started off on horseback with their lunch
+boxes packed, leaving word at home that they were not to be expected
+back until sundown.
+
+First of all they yearned for a long, uninterrupted gallop together over
+the sweet-smelling, wild, rose-strewn prairies. For not since the very
+first year of Olive's life at Rainbow Ranch had they enjoyed this
+formerly well-loved entertainment. Soon after then had come Jack's
+accident, and until this year she had not been in entirely good health
+during any of their days at the ranch.
+
+And the beauty of this special windswept, sunlit day was nature's gift
+to the two friends' reunion.
+
+Jack rode a little ahead on her own horse, Romeo, which she had bought
+immediately after their return from abroad and christened "Romeo" in a
+kind of joking recollection of their visit in Rome. Of course, he was
+the fastest riding horse on Rainbow Ranch, but not a beautiful animal,
+since he had been chosen for speed and endurance rather than appearance.
+And in truth he was only a rough Western pony with sagacity and
+knowledge of the country, dignified by the name of horse simply because
+of his slightly greater size and length of limb.
+
+Following close behind, her pretty nose almost able to touch the other
+animal's rough coat, came Olive's smaller mare, which Jean had named
+"Juliet" by reason of following Jack's horse about whenever they were
+permitted to graze in the open fields.
+
+Juliet had been no one's special property, since she had been born on
+the place and no one had chosen her for personal use. So shortly after
+Olive's return the other three girls had escorted her to the stables and
+there solemnly presented her with "Juliet," avowing that no one else
+should have the privilege of using the mare except with Olive's consent.
+
+The two friends rode for more than an hour after leaving the
+neighborhood of the Lodge without speaking, except now and then to call
+attention to some particularly beautiful effect in the landscape. First
+they galloped to the farthest outskirts of the great thousand-acre
+ranch, which was still as carefully and scientifically managed as during
+the time when the Rainbow Mine was an undiscovered quantity and when the
+girls and Jim's living depended entirely upon its success. There were
+groups of cattle scattered here and there wherever the alfalfa grass was
+ripe for eating, and mares with young colts were allowed free pasture.
+But by and by when a far-off rim of hills could be seen, with their
+summits glistening with caps of snow and the sky above them so scattered
+with fleece-like clouds that snow and cloud seemed to touch and melt
+into each other, Jack slowed down for a moment, waiting for her friend
+to come up alongside her.
+
+"Is it because I am a Western girl and all this means childhood and home
+to me that the country seems more beautiful and inspiring than anything
+we saw in Europe, Olive dear?" Jack asked.
+
+And Olive looked into the other girl's face searchingly for an instant
+before replying. She had been wondering for a good many months why
+Frank Kent had never come to America to see Jack when on leaving England
+she had believed that he and Jacqueline were almost on the point of
+being engaged. Several times recently she had actually written and asked
+Jack why on earth Frank had not made his promised visit to Rainbow
+Lodge. Without really answering, Jack had always arranged to evade her
+questioning. "Frank was too busy, he was thinking of running for
+Parliament, he preferred waiting until Olive was also able to be at
+home, so that they might be there together once again." None of these
+replies had made a very profound impression upon the questioner. So
+today Olive had planned in her own mind to get at the real truth. Jack
+would not dare to refuse to answer her direct inquiry if once she had
+the courage to demand it of her. Positively she must know whether
+Frank's apparent indifference was due to a change in his own feeling or
+to an unreasonable request on Jack's part for postponing her decision.
+
+Now at Jack's question, studying her friend's face, Olive feared that
+this last idea must be the true one. Love of her old home, the grip
+which the western country and atmosphere always had on the girl's
+character and affections--these must have been waging a winning battle
+against her former affection for Frank Kent.
+
+Must she ask Jack if this were true? No, Olive decided that she had best
+refrain until later in the day. For Jack was not at the present moment
+in the mood for confidences. She was just gloriously alive and filled
+with the physical beauty and splendor of the morning. Later on, when
+there had been opportunity for more conversation, Olive would make her
+query. For there were dozens of intimate personal things which she and
+her best beloved friend must get at the heart of before this ride of
+theirs together was over. So now Olive only laughed, and leaning over
+lightly stroked the neck of the other horse.
+
+"It is only because you are such a pagan, Jack, that Europe seems too
+crowded for you," she answered. "Besides you know how dearly you finally
+learned to love the English country, although it was the direct opposite
+of all this! Doesn't its wonderful greenness, the splendid old trees and
+the flowers and cultivated beauty of the fields make up to you for the
+great wide spaces and the colors in your prairies?"
+
+Slowly Jack shook her head, in reply, at the same instant taking off her
+soft brown felt hat and hanging it on the pommel of her saddle. "I don't
+know," she answered, drawing in a deep, quiet breath.
+
+The past year of outdoor work and amusement on the ranch had brought
+back to Jacqueline Ralston the glow and brilliant, healthy color of her
+childhood. Her complexion was several shades darker than it had been the
+summer before, her cheeks more vividly rose and her hair lighter from
+exposure to the sun. Then Jack had again grown dreadfully indifferent to
+clothes since their return home, much to Jean's and Frieda's disgust and
+to Jim Colter's secret amusement. For quite forgetting their fortune and
+the fact that she was now almost ready to cast her first vote in
+Wyoming, Jack had returned to wearing the old brown corduroys or faded
+khakis of her youth, together with almost any soft hat which she
+happened to find convenient for her outdoor jaunts. And only when the
+other girls insisted, or Ruth pleaded, or guests were expected to dinner
+at the Lodge, would Jack return to wearing the pretty toilets which she
+had brought home from Europe. For not one single dress had she given
+time or thought to purchasing since then, although Jean and Frieda
+frequently amused themselves by sending east for hats and gowns.
+
+So today, although Jack was actually the older and in times past had
+looked it, Olive would have been considered her senior. For one reason
+she was still weary from the shock and strain of her grandmother's death
+and from the business difficulties resulting from her strange will. Then
+there was a last and final interview with Donald Harmon which even yet
+the girl did not like to recall. She was sorry not to be able to return
+his affection. Moreover, Olive's new riding-habit was of black cloth,
+which Miss Winthrop had ordered from a well-known New York tailor,
+adding to her appearance of age and dignity. Yet in spite of the
+elegance and decorum of her own riding attire, Olive did not feel the
+objection to her friend's as Jean and Frieda undoubtedly would have. For
+Jack's costume was eminently characteristic. Moreover, the old corduroy
+skirt and leather leggings and slouch hat were not unbecoming now that
+her coat was open showing the curve of her strong white throat.
+
+It was equally characteristic of Jack when they finally reached the
+clump of trees where they were to have luncheon to jump first from her
+horse and then lift Olive as carefully down as though she had been her
+masculine escort. Afterwards it was she who led the horses to water, fed
+them and then tied them.
+
+Coming back, she flung herself down on the ground by her friend and
+taking one of the girl's hands in hers kissed it, saying carelessly:
+
+"Olive, child, did you hear any one or anything while I was away? I
+thought we were going to have a perfectly peaceful and uninterrupted
+day, but I have an idea that while I was looking after the horses I
+heard some one stirring about not so very far off. Still I may have been
+mistaken or it may have been a deer or a wildcat. This woods gets so
+much denser as one goes further into it. This is near the same place
+where I managed to break my poor little pony's legs several years ago.
+It was when we were making that horrid visit at the Norton's before it
+was finally decided that you were to come and live with us. I never have
+been able to think of having to shoot 'Hotspur' without its giving me
+the shivers." And Jack now took a small pistol out of a leather holster
+fastened about her waist. "I never go on a long ride with either of the
+girls without carrying this," she remarked carelessly, "but I don't
+believe I am ever going to like hunting again as I did when I was
+younger. That was one of the lessons I learned when I was ill so long--a
+greater respect for life, anybody's or anything's." Then the girl's
+voice grew suddenly hushed.
+
+"Didn't you hear a slight noise then?" she whispered.
+
+After a moment of enforced silence Olive shook her head. "No, or at
+least nothing of importance," she replied. "Of course these woods must
+have wild game in them, since it is the only place with running water
+nearer than Rainbow Creek. But it is odd your having this impression
+now. Several times I meant to tell you and forgot--that while we were
+riding I kept having the idea that some one was following after us. Half
+a dozen times I looked around thinking that it might possibly be either
+Jean or Frieda. But I saw no one, so of course it must have been only a
+fancy."
+
+"Well it certainly was neither Jean nor Frieda," Jack replied
+laughingly. "They have both grown too lazy for such a journey as we are
+taking. But come along, because if we are ever to get to your old Indian
+village and back again this afternoon, we must hurry."
+
+For this had been the supposed object of Jack's and Olive's free day
+together. Soon after her arrival at the Lodge Olive had suggested that
+she would very much like to go back to the little Indian village where
+she had lived as a child with old Laska, and see if the woman and her
+son were yet alive. She desired also to pay a visit to her former
+teacher and first friend, who was still at work among the Indian
+children at the little Indian reservation school.
+
+Before the two girls had finally arrived at their destination, it was
+Olive who discovered the ghost stealthily pursuing them. And it was he
+whom Jack must have heard in the woods.
+
+Olive at once turned apologetically to her friend. "Don't be cross,
+Jack, and don't scold if I tell you something," she began unexpectedly.
+"But just now I saw at some distance behind us a brown shadow on a brown
+horse. So I'm afraid it is Carlos who has been trailing after us. But
+really it is my fault for having told him where we intended going.
+Probably he won't trouble us if we don't wish to notice him."
+
+Frowning, Jacqueline returned: "I'm sorry to confess it to you, Olive
+dear, but really, Carlos is getting to be rather a nuisance to Jim and
+me. I do hope you may be able to influence him to settle down to some
+kind of work or study--to anything he likes. Neither Jim nor I care so
+much what except that his idleness is a bad influence among the men on
+the place. There is no use in my trying to do anything with him, for he
+has taken such a violent dislike to me. Frieda says that I am too much
+of a boss and it has offended the boy's dignity. But I shan't scold
+today since Carlos is only following us because he does not entirely
+trust me to look after you and adores you so that he does not wish you
+out of his sight."
+
+Just as though four or five years had not passed with its crowded and
+ever changing experiences, walking up to old Indian Laska's dirty hut
+alone Olive Van Mater found the Indian woman still sitting in her same
+open doorway, smoking the apparently identical pipe and clothed in the
+same old nondescript rags of former days with a brilliant Indian
+blanket across her shoulders. But at the sight of her beautifully
+dressed visitor the Indian woman showed not the slightest sign of
+recognition. Nor did she do anything further than nod and grunt several
+times in succession when Olive assured her that she had once been the
+girl "Olilie," who had lived with her from the time she was a baby.
+
+Possibly Laska could neither understand nor believe what this charming
+American girl was trying to explain to her, but certain it was that she
+never once invited Olive inside her former home, nor showed the
+slightest interest in her, except to smile at the handful of small
+change that was bestowed upon her in parting. For of course Olive had
+long since ceased to feel any bitterness against the old woman, whose
+ignorance and greed had not been nearly so responsible for her past
+unhappiness as her own grandmother's careless neglect of her.
+
+Olive's interview with her first teacher was such a great pleasure and
+satisfaction to them both, that except for Jack's insistence that it was
+already past time to go back to the ranch and that Olive and her old
+friend could now meet each other frequently, the two girls would never
+have started for home until nearly sundown. And as it was they were an
+hour later than they should have been in leaving.
+
+They were not able to ride as rapidly as in the morning because neither
+of the horses was so fresh. So that by and by, just as both girls had
+wished, they fell into the first long, confidential talk they had
+enjoyed in nearly a year.
+
+And there was so much to say! Olive had to repeat the strange terms of
+her grandmother's will and her own positive intention not to marry
+Donald Harmon, no matter what the second will might insist upon--even if
+it left her penniless.
+
+Then Jack confided the present trouble at the Rainbow Mine. For during
+Ralph's continued and unexplained absence the miners had grown uglier,
+threatening that unless a new engineer was secured at once they would go
+upon a strike. Moreover, they would see that no other men be allowed to
+take their places. Already they insisted that there was not enough gold
+in the former veins to make Rainbow Mine worth working. A new manager
+and new machinery must be procured at once.
+
+Just how to quell the disturbance and set things right neither Jim
+Colter nor Jacqueline could decide at present. Of course they were
+awaiting with impatience Ralph Merrit's return in order to have a talk
+with him. But afterwards what should they do? Would Ralph be forced by
+the miners into advising them to buy more machinery before he knew just
+what should be done? This might sink all their capital and make them
+poor again.
+
+"Really it is Jean and Frieda about whom I am worrying the most if we do
+lose our money," Jack frankly acknowledged. "For Ruth and Jim and I can
+be happy living as we used to do. But then of course the building of our
+new house must be completed, since the contract is already given for
+finishing it."
+
+So the two friends talked on, and it was small wonder that the sun was
+sinking as, followed by the ever watchful Carlos, they finally rode up
+to the Lodge. But Olive had not yet satisfied herself in regard to the
+state of affairs now existing between Jack and Frank Kent.
+
+In answer to a point-blank question Jack had simply replied that she and
+Frank had not been engaged to be married. Also that she had too much
+upon her mind at present to ask him to make them a visit. However, now
+that Olive had arrived, perhaps Frank would wish to come in a short
+time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THAT SAME AFTERNOON
+
+
+SINCE a short time after lunch Jean Bruce had been alone at the Rainbow
+Lodge, except for the presence of Aunt Ellen and the housemaid. For at
+about two o'clock Jim and Ruth, Frieda and the baby had driven off to
+pay a long visit to some old-time friends. For Ruth had not entirely
+recovered her strength since the baby's birth and therefore Jim was
+unwilling to have her far away from him.
+
+But Jean was not lonely, or at least not for the first few hours. She
+had letters to write--one to her New York friend, Margaret Belknap, and
+another to her adored Princess, who had never wavered in her interest
+and affection for the American girl since Jean's visit to her in Rome.
+
+Then, at about four o'clock, Jean strolled over to look at their new
+house, which seemed to have been making tremendous strides in the last
+few days, now that the outside had been entirely completed. She had one
+or two suggestions that she wished to make to the architect about her
+own room and this was the best hour for having a talk with him, as she
+happened to know that he had been spending most of the day with his men.
+The architect did not superintend their house building more than two or
+three times a week. Determined to have their new home as beautiful and
+as harmonious as possible, the girls, Jim and Ruth had decided upon
+employing the most distinguished architect in that part of the country.
+Theodore Parker was a Wyoming man with his central office in Laramie,
+and yet his work on public buildings and his creation of certain types
+of houses for western millionaires had given him a reputation throughout
+the country. So it was scarcely possible to expect him to devote a large
+portion of his valuable time even to the construction of "Rainbow
+Castle." For Jean's laughing title for their new home had somehow clung
+to it.
+
+The place would probably be almost, if not quite, as beautiful as many a
+palace, Jean thought, as she slowly approached the front entrance. This
+was to have a flight of broad, low stone steps leading up to it, while
+the base of the house would be banked with low, close-growing evergreen
+shrubs.
+
+For the outdoor work on their estate the girls had not consulted a
+landscape gardener, but they had studied many books and pictures of
+beautiful gardens and had then developed certain ideas of their own. In
+order to keep the view of the rolling prairies to the distant line of
+hills several miles beyond, the slope before the house was to be left
+unchanged. Here and there were flower beds in the carefully planted and
+tended blue grass lawn, which with constant watering and top soil might
+be persuaded to grow. But on either side and toward the back of the
+modified colonial mansion were to be the real gardens. Although the
+flowers had not yet been planted, bushes had been set out that were
+later to form green and blossoming aisles. In the preceding autumn a
+dozen or more large evergreen trees had been transplanted from the
+nearby forests, and zealously tended all through the winter, so that
+already they showed signs of growth.
+
+Jean's interview with Mr. Parker was entirely satisfactory and the girl
+would have liked to linger and talk at greater length with the big,
+purposeful man, who seemed to bring to one of the noblest of all the
+professions the spirit of the artist, and the executive ability of the
+business man. But Mr. Parker was plainly too busy to give her more than
+a few minutes of his attention, although in their conversation they did
+wander from her errand far enough to permit their discussing a few of
+their impressions of Europe. And, oddly enough, the architect who had
+studied in Paris and traveled a great deal, had never been to Italy, the
+mother of much that is most beautiful in modern architecture.
+
+A man of about thirty-five or six, Jean imagined he must be as she
+returned to the Lodge, and assuredly extremely good-looking, with his
+iron-gray hair, dark eyes and smooth face. One could hardly help
+wondering why he had never married.
+
+At home once more, Jean suddenly had a sensation of feeling deserted and
+forlorn. What could she do to amuse herself? Although she insisted upon
+denying it to her family, certainly there were occasions lately when
+their former life did seem dull and uninteresting to her. Yet perhaps
+Jack was right in thinking that this was due to her paying no special
+regard to the things that were happening on the ranch itself. Should
+she take a walk now, or go down to Rainbow Mine to see if anything was
+going on? Ralph Merrit was still away, certainly for an unaccountably
+great length of time! And undoubtedly there was some kind of trouble
+brewing among the workers in the mine, though what it was Jean had not
+the remotest idea. Yet Jack and Jim had been plainly annoyed and
+concerned over some disturbance, otherwise so many consultations between
+them and their workmen would have been unnecessary.
+
+But at the present moment Jean did not find the subject of the mine of
+sufficient interest to persuade her to walk down to it in an effort to
+make her own investigations. Things would clear up soon enough without
+her troubling. For there had to be friction every once and a while where
+so many people were employed.
+
+Yawning several times, Jean finally dropped into a hammock that had been
+swung for Ruth on the porch at Rainbow Lodge. She was holding a magazine
+in her hand and reading it fitfully.
+
+Probably Jean would have assured you that she was wearing the oldest and
+simplest dress in her entire wardrobe and that she really had not made
+any kind of toilet for the afternoon. Yet with Jean Bruce pretty
+clothes and a graceful and pleasing fashion of wearing them were second
+nature. It is true her pale pink cashmere frock was not new and was made
+in a straight piece with no trimming save a round lace collar and a
+girdle of broad pink silk ribbon. Yet Jean had wound a ribbon of the
+same color about her dark brown hair, until her usual pallor seemed to
+be warmed by its glow.
+
+For a half moment she must have fallen asleep, for she was awakened by
+thinking she heard some one coming toward the Lodge. The next moment
+Ralph Merrit stood beside her.
+
+He looked entirely unlike himself; his clothes were untidy; he seemed
+not to have slept for a number of nights; his face was worn and drawn.
+Jean was startled into sudden pity and interest. For Ralph had always
+seemed so capable and so efficient and if things worried him, he had
+always kept them to himself.
+
+Now as Jean struggled to her feet he only said: "How do you do, Jean.
+Will you tell me, please, whether Mr. Colter is at home or whether I may
+be apt to find him anywhere about the ranch?"
+
+But Jean's eyes questioned, although her lips as yet said nothing, and
+the young man flushed.
+
+"I must beg your pardon for my appearance," he began awkwardly, "but I
+have been doing some rather hard traveling and I have not yet been to my
+own quarters to fix up. I had no idea of running across you." Ralph
+stared hard for a moment at the dainty girl slowly rising out of the
+hammock and then at himself. She was like the inside of a sea shell in
+her pink costume with her white skin and the pretty detached air she so
+often wore.
+
+Ralph laughed uncomfortably and not very mirthfully.
+
+"Won't you wait a minute, please?" Jean asked quietly. "Jim is not here
+and won't be for some little time perhaps. But I have an idea that you
+are hungry as well as tired and I have been longing for some one to
+drink afternoon tea with me." And before her companion could reply the
+girl disappeared.
+
+Ralph Merrit fingered his hat uncertainly. He did not wish to remain and
+yet it would seem singularly ungracious to have Jean return and find him
+vanished. And since he had a confession to make, why not begin with her
+to whom it would be hardest to say it?
+
+Ralph dropped into a chair on one side of a small rustic table and Jean
+and the tea party had both arrived before he lifted his eyes again.
+Under the influence of the tea, strawberries and cream and Aunt Ellen's
+hot scones, with Jean making herself as charming as she knew how to be,
+Ralph could not help forgetting for a few moments the things that were
+weighing upon him, while he enjoyed the gifts that the fates provided.
+
+And Jean was truly kind, for she was shocked as well as a little bit
+frightened by Ralph's appearance. Naturally she was not unaware that he
+had once cared for her, even though he had not recently revealed it in
+any open fashion. And of course Jean felt that she had always regarded
+Ralph with the sincerest friendship.
+
+She was hoping now that he would tell her what was worrying him as a
+sign that their old friendship was yet alive, when Ralph spoke.
+
+"Jean, I might as well tell you now as a little later," he began, "it
+can't be delayed for any length of time at best. I am going to have to
+say good-bye to you all pretty soon."
+
+Jean's hand shook a little, so that she first set down her teacup.
+
+"You mean that you are having to go home for a visit. I hope nothing has
+happened to your mother or sister; I was afraid you were feeling
+troubled," the girl answered.
+
+With the old decision that she remembered the young man shook his head.
+
+"No, it is not that," he returned, "but simply that I am going to resign
+my position as engineer of Rainbow Mine. Fact of the matter is, I am not
+making good. The men don't like me, don't want to work under me, and
+things are in a muddle anyhow. My staying on would only embarrass Jim
+and Miss Ralston." (Ralph only called Jack by her grown-up title when he
+was considering her as his employer.)
+
+"So you are going to quit just because things at the mine are no longer
+plain sailing. Is it because you have had a better position offered you?
+Then of course I am sure, even though it makes everything much harder
+for them, Jack and Jim would neither of them wish to stand in your way,"
+Jean answered with intentional cruelty.
+
+And the young man understood her. "That is not fair, Jean; you know
+those are not my reasons," he declared. "I am leaving to _save_ Jim and
+Jack the trouble, not to make things more difficult. If I clear out the
+men will quiet down and perhaps they will get hold of some other
+engineer who will understand the present situation better. The truth is
+our old gold supply is giving out and we have got to find a different
+method of getting at the gold deeper down. I have been away studying how
+this might be done for the past ten days, but I have not yet made up my
+mind."
+
+"Then stay on until you can decide, Ralph," Jean replied quietly, "or at
+least until you are certain that you don't know what to do. Surely you
+must know the situation at the Rainbow Mine better than any one else. I
+have been guessing that both Jim and Jack were worried, but you know
+they won't go back on you until the very last minute and not then unless
+you say the word. So I don't think I would let the other miners frighten
+me away. It seems to me that a man will never be able to manage other
+men if he turns and runs at the first approach of a storm. I should
+never have believed this of you, Ralph, of all people!"
+
+With a little, quickly suppressed sound that was almost a groan Ralph
+suddenly dropped his head. "But a man isn't fit to govern other men if
+he can't govern himself, Jean," he answered.
+
+Even the color of her pink gown did not now hide the pallor of the
+girl's cheeks.
+
+"What are you talking about, Ralph Merrit?" she demanded a little
+unsteadily. "You behave as though you had robbed a bank or taken more
+than your share of gold out of the mine. I wish you would not be so
+absurd--I do hate uncomfortable people."
+
+The man got up. "I am sorry, Jean, and I did not mean to trouble you
+with my personal confession," he went on, "though I thought it only fair
+that I should tell Jim Colter. No, I have not been robbing anyone except
+myself and my own family, though the men may be saying even that of me
+soon," he added bitterly. "But the truth is that I have been speculating
+until I have lost every red cent that I have earned and I don't think a
+man who has been as big a fool as I have has the right to try and hold
+down a job the size of mine."
+
+"You have been speculating!" The girl repeated the words almost
+foolishly, as though not understanding at first what they meant. Then
+she flushed angrily. "Ralph, what a perfect goose you have been! For
+goodness sake tell me what ever induced a sensible, level-headed fellow
+like we all believed you were to do such a stupid thing?" Jean demanded.
+
+But this was the one question which of all the questions in the world
+Ralph Merrit could never answer Jean truthfully.
+
+"Hush, never mind!" Jean interrupted hurriedly, for she could see what
+her companion had evidently not yet observed and that was that another
+man was at this moment approaching the house. His face had looked ugly
+and forbidding, but at the sight of Jean he raised his hat.
+
+The girl recognized him as John Raines, a man of about fifty years of
+age and a kind of leader and spokesman among the other miners.
+
+"Beg your pardon, Miss," he began stiffly, "but having just heard that
+Mr. Merrit has returned to the ranch, I want to ask him if he will come
+and have a little talk with some of us men. We've been waiting for this
+talk for a considerable time."
+
+Ralph stepped down from the porch at once. "Certainly, I will come
+along with you now," he answered quietly. And then turning to Jean and
+with a gesture asking that she excuse him, the young man followed the
+older one. And Jean could not but notice how slender and boyish and,
+yes, how spent he looked as he walked behind the big, heavy miner, with
+arms and chest so powerful that he seemed able actually to have crushed
+the slighter man like a great bear, had he so desired.
+
+What could the miners be wishing with Ralph that they must see him at
+once, now when they knew that Jim Colter was not on the ranch?
+
+Without trying to answer the question herself and only lingering long
+enough to fasten a dark coat over her light frock Jean hurried after the
+two figures, taking care, however, that neither of them became conscious
+of her presence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+"COURAGE MAKES THE MAN"
+
+
+THERE were as many as twenty men waiting to talk to Ralph Merrit within
+the vicinity of the Rainbow Mine. And they chanced to be standing close
+together near one of the big rocks that rose like a miniature fortress
+beside Rainbow Creek. After Ralph had entered the group, Jean managed
+without being observed to slip behind this rock where she was in safe
+hiding.
+
+But just why she had followed the two men and what her motive was for
+concealing herself she did not try to explain to herself. Simply she had
+yielded to an impulse of fear, of curiosity and perhaps to some other
+instinct that was partly protective. One young fellow among so many
+older, rougher and more lawless characters! What might not happen to
+him?
+
+And yet Jean Bruce had not her cousin Jacqueline's physical bravery nor
+determination of purpose, and moreover she had an openly expressed
+dislike of mixing herself up in the things which she did not consider
+essentially feminine. However, she had no idea now of letting anyone
+guess her nearness, not even Ralph Merrit himself.
+
+Sitting down on the ground in a kind of scooped-out cave in a rock she
+could occasionally manage to get a glimpse of the miners, although at
+present while they were talking quietly she could only rarely catch a
+word or so of what they were saying, and not a sound from Ralph, who
+seemed the calmest and most self-controlled of them all. After a while
+she realized that John Raines, the man who had been sent to summon her
+companion, must now have been chosen as spokesman for the lot and was
+evidently making his voice sufficiently loud for them all to hear
+distinctly. And this of course included the unknown listener.
+
+"See here, Mr. Merrit," John Raines began quietly, "us men have been
+talking things over among ourselves for some time past and we have done
+come to the pretty positive conclusion that we don't like the way you're
+running things at Rainbow Mine. And we thought it might be fairer to
+you, all told, just to mention this little fact and to let you quit
+without any kind of rumpus or trouble for nobody."
+
+Jean could not see Ralph Merrit's face or even his figure, he was so
+closely surrounded, but because he too was speaking so that his entire
+audience might hear, Jean understood every word.
+
+"What's the trouble with me, Raines, as a boss?" he asked with such
+self-control and apparent lack of anger that Jean was both amazed and
+pleased.
+
+Then there was a kind of low muttering among the other men and finally
+their spokesman went on:
+
+"I guess you know most of our complaints pretty well by this time--we've
+been tellin' 'em to you long enough and hard enough. If this is a
+profit-sharing business, as you and Jim Colter and Miss Ralston said it
+was goin' to be, then you ain't gettin' gold enough out of the Rainbow
+Mine to suit us."
+
+"But we are getting all we can, aren't we? You men aren't loafing with
+the work?" Ralph interrupted.
+
+John Raines scowled. "That's senseless talk! You know what the trouble
+is; we have already gotten out most all the gold there is near the
+surface of the earth around here. Now what we have got to do to make it
+pay big again is to get more machinery and try different ways of
+working. And we want a boss to tell Miss Ralston and Jim Colter to get
+busy buying the new machinery and then to show us how to run it. We are
+not going to waste any more time around here on a few dollars pay a
+day."
+
+From her hiding place Jean did her best to hear Ralph. Here of course
+was the time and place for him to make the same confession to the miners
+that he had recently made to her. For he did intend to do just what the
+men had demanded of him, resign his work and give way for a better man.
+Nevertheless, he evidently intended delaying a bit longer before making
+the confession.
+
+"But I have explained to you men before this why I have not done what
+you ask," he went on, still in a reasonable tone of voice. "I told you
+that I did not feel certain that it was the _best_ thing to do. We are
+by no means sure that there is enough gold below the present mine to
+make it worth while to go deeper. You men know what a lot of money the
+machinery for certain kinds of gold digging takes. It would probably eat
+up pretty much all the capital that the owners of the Rainbow Mine
+have. And I don't want to tell them to buy this machinery until I am a
+lot surer that the gold is down there waiting to be hauled out."
+
+John Raines glanced about at the faces surrounding him. It was easy
+enough to take his tone from their expressions.
+
+"Then there is no use wasting any more of our time and yours in talk,
+Merrit," the older man announced in a rougher manner than he had before
+employed. "Your sentiments was pretty well known to us before you
+spouted them forth. And that's just the point! You don't know what ought
+to be done about things and we do. And we want a man to boss us that
+knows same as we. Now, young man, you just get out pleasant and the
+quicker the better."
+
+All over her body, to the very tips of her ears, Jean felt herself
+tingling with sudden, overpowering anger. Why had Ralph Merrit not said
+what he intended saying before now? To resign at this moment in the face
+of this other man's insolence, which represented the same feeling in his
+companions, was to behave like a small boy at school who had been stood
+up in a corner and soundly thrashed by his schoolmaster and then made
+to apologize for his pains. Jean felt that she would never care to look
+Ralph in the face again. But he was speaking now for the third time.
+
+[Illustration: "SHE HAD HEARD THAT MASTERFUL TONE BEFORE"]
+
+"Have Miss Ralston and Mr. Colter told you that they wanted me to quit?"
+he inquired. "It seems like they would have mentioned the matter to me
+first. I have usually taken my orders from them and not from the men
+_under_ me."
+
+There was quite a different ring in Ralph Merrit's voice during this
+speech that made the girl behind the rock unexpectedly put up her cold
+hands to cool her hot cheeks. She had heard that masterful tone before,
+but not in some time.
+
+"No, they ain't said nothing yet," Raines admitted. "But it don't
+matter; you got to quit just the same. You can't run a gold mine by
+yourself with all your 'book larnin,' and it's either you or us that
+gets out."
+
+"Then it'll be you," Ralph replied in such a matter-of-fact and
+undisturbed fashion that Jean could hardly believe she had heard him
+aright, or else she must have been dreaming less than an hour before.
+
+"Look here, fellows, don't be fools," Ralph went on, still showing no
+loss of temper. "The hour Mr. Colter and Miss Ralston tell me they want
+me to give up my job at the Rainbow Mine, that hour I go. And the minute
+I am really convinced that another man is able to do my work better than
+I can, that man gets my position, if I can persuade the Rainbow Mine
+owners to try him. But I've got to study things out here a little
+longer, I've got to make some new experiments and maybe kind of feel my
+way slowly toward deciding what had best be done. I have been away for
+the past ten days studying conditions at other mines and trying to find
+out some of the latest ideas in mining machinery."
+
+But the other men were making no pretense of listening and were
+muttering and talking among themselves as a direct and intentional
+insult to the speaker. Ralph waited in silence, and Jean had an
+intuition that the end of the discussion was about to take place. The
+noises that the miners were making were ugly, vicious sounds entirely
+unfamiliar to the girl's ears and she had no conception of what they
+might portend. She had a sudden fear that they might mean some bodily
+injury to the younger man. Then would she have the courage to rush out
+to his defense as Jack undoubtedly would have, no matter what overtook
+her?
+
+But she was mistaken in the form of her present uneasiness.
+
+"You can talk that way here, if it makes you feel better, young fellow,"
+one of the other miners announced contemptuously, "but it ain't goin' to
+make a mite of difference in the way things has to go. We give you
+thirty-six hours' notice to get clear of Rainbow Mine, and if you don't,
+why you can stay around here and play by yourself as long as you like
+provided your bosses are willing to give up the gold-mining business.
+Because if you stay, we git out and that means there is not another
+miner going to be allowed down a shaft in this here mine."
+
+"You mean," said Ralph, "that you are going to strike and make the other
+men boycott us. I don't believe your union will stand for it. You
+haven't got a kick coming to you about your hours of work, or your pay,
+or any of the conditions about the mine. And just because you don't
+think I've got brains enough for my job is no reason why you should
+strike. I want you to know, you fellows," and here Ralph's voice was no
+longer in the least conciliatory, but as firm and decisive as a judge's
+sentence, "I am a union man myself, but you must understand once and for
+all that if the Rainbow Mine owners agree to stand by me I am going to
+keep on with the job of bossing this mine. And I am going to keep on
+digging out the gold we can get with our old tools until there's a way
+of knowing what ought to be done next. But I think in the future it is
+going to suit me better to have another lot of men to work with me and I
+think I'll be able to get hold of them. You may go to your quarters now.
+I'll let you hear in the morning what Miss Ralston and Mr. Colter want
+to do."
+
+And to Jean Bruce's immense amazement, though some of the men laughed
+rudely and others muttered threats and curses, the entire number after
+some delay and further discussion among themselves, walked off, leaving
+Ralph Merrit entirely alone. Notwithstanding, the miners were evidently
+unanimous in their intention.
+
+Jean snuggled closer than before in her rocky alcove, scarcely daring to
+breathe for fear of their discovering her and so creating further ill
+feeling. Then after they had gone, and the last man of them was
+entirely out of sight, she still did not move. For Ralph Merrit had
+never stirred from his position and she did not know whether she even
+wished him to learn of her eavesdropping.
+
+Ralph did not move and Jean was growing bored with her cramped position,
+now that events were no longer sufficiently exciting to make her forget
+herself. Besides, did she not really wish to let Ralph know just how she
+felt about him?
+
+Curiously he did not turn around until she was within a few feet of him.
+Yet when he did, Jean laughed and clapped her hands childishly at the
+change in his expression since their interview on the veranda.
+
+"Why, Jean, where have you come from? You did not see anybody, did you,
+on your way from the house? This is not a place where you should be."
+
+Jean nodded. "Yes, I did see everybody and heard everything. Please
+forgive me for being a horrid spy," she confessed, "but I was hiding
+behind that rock the whole blessed time. And oh, Ralph, I am so pleased
+and proud of you! Of course Jack and Jim will stand by you to the bitter
+end--I should dare them not to; but then nobody need ever accuse Jim
+and Jack of not enjoying a good, clean fight."
+
+Jean put her hand through the young man's arm. "Do come on back to the
+Lodge with me. It is almost time for the others to be coming home. You
+must rest a while first and have dinner and then tell them what you
+intend to do."
+
+A little dazed by the girl's unexpected appearance and by her sudden
+flow of words, and still deeply engrossed on what had just taken place,
+Ralph Merrit allowed himself to be led along for a few steps in silence.
+
+"You must think I am a good deal of a turncoat, Jean, and don't know my
+own mind for half an hour," he said finally. "Maybe I haven't the right
+after all to get you people into trouble."
+
+Jean gave the young man's arm a vehement shake. "You haven't got the
+right to be anything but--a man, Ralph Merrit!" she announced.
+"Goodness, you don't know how ashamed I was of you and for you a while
+ago! I suppose it is because I am such a coward myself, because I am so
+afraid of rough things and rough places, that I love courage more than
+anything else in the world."
+
+"Do you, Jean?" Ralph murmured almost to himself. "Well, I have been a
+coward in more ways than one in these past six months."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE MIDNIGHT CONFERENCE
+
+
+FOR hours after dinner the family at the Rainbow Lodge sat in their big
+living room talking over matters with Ralph Merrit. Better than he had
+been able to explain to Jean he now made the present situation clear to
+his listeners. And by his frankness in acknowledging that he had not yet
+been able to make up his mind as to what was best to be done for the
+future of Rainbow Mine he restored Jim's and Jack's full confidence.
+
+The discussion was absorbing; only Frieda, after an hour or so of what
+seemed to her a repetition of the same conversation, grew sleepy and now
+and then dozed for a few moments with her yellow head nodding
+uncomfortably.
+
+Why stay awake longer when she understood the state of things perfectly?
+Ralph had said that they would probably have much less money out of the
+Rainbow Mine for a time. Later, if he saw his way clear by spending
+their capital and buying new machinery, they might become a great deal
+wealthier. And while naturally the first of this information was
+discouraging, the second idea had kept Frieda quite wide awake until ten
+o'clock. Earlier in the evening she had felt frightened at the thought
+of the miners striking and the trouble that they might be going to have
+on the ranch for the next few days; but Jim and Jack did not appear
+alarmed, so after a time her nervousness was partly allayed.
+
+They both had declared that Ralph must not for a moment consider
+surrendering to the men; for apparently they intended not only to
+dismiss him but thereafter to run the Rainbow Mine with no consideration
+for its owners. It might take a few days for Ralph to get together
+another group of capable miners, but the delay was the only annoyance.
+For no one appeared to believe that the old men would make trouble. They
+were merely trying to bluff and threaten Ralph.
+
+Jean, having seen with her own eyes the bitterness and dissatisfaction
+among the workers, was not so completely convinced. Nevertheless she
+said nothing of her own doubt, not regarding her opinion in the matter
+as of special value. Moreover, she enjoyed seeing Ralph Merrit so sure
+of himself once more and so determined to swing things to a successful
+issue. It recalled the days when he had first been summoned to help them
+with his judgment as to whether or not Rainbow Mine contained sufficient
+gold to make it of importance. And what a change in their lives their
+wealth had created for them! At least Jean had previously believed this
+to be true, but studying the faces in the little group about her tonight
+she was not so sure of the others. Assuredly Ruth and Jim, who were
+sitting on a sofa with Ruth's hand slipped quietly and quite
+unconsciously inside Jim's, were not dependent for their happiness on
+the possession of a great deal of money. And there was Jack leaning both
+elbows on a small table nearby with her face in her hands, listening
+intently to every word Ralph was saying. Had she ever seen her cousin
+more animated or more interested? Well, she had always known that the
+mere spending of money had never given Jack the same degree of pleasure
+that it had her. It was "making things happen" that Jack cared most for,
+and now that difficulties were presenting themselves in regard to the
+Rainbow Mine, actually Jack seemed almost to be enjoying the prospect.
+Frieda was nodding, so that even she could not be very deeply concerned
+at the prospect of poverty, and Olive could certainly not be accused of
+being mercenary, since she was calmly turning her back on a large
+fortune rather than fulfil the conditions of her grandmother's will.
+
+Jean smiled and sighed almost in the same breath. She could not pretend
+to any such highmindedness, she was afraid that she was the kind of girl
+whom she had heard people describe as "loving luxury like a cat."
+Certainly she did care more than she should for beautiful clothes,
+handsome houses, travel, society and everything that money alone could
+buy. And yet, after all, the wealth of Rainbow Mine was not hers: it
+belonged to Jack and Frieda, though they had always shared their income
+with her as though she had been their sister instead of their cousin.
+Whether their gold mine had now ceased to be of value or whether deeper
+down under the earth it should hold a larger fortune, was it not still
+her place to make her own future? With a start Jean came to herself. The
+clock had just struck midnight and Ralph had risen.
+
+"As soon as things straighten out, Mr. Colter, I am going to ask you to
+let me send for two or three of the big mining experts. For of course
+you would want their opinion as well as mine. I will tell the men your
+decision in the morning. Thank all of you for your faith in me and
+good-night."
+
+But Ralph's movement must have awakened Frieda, for she sat up suddenly
+and yawned. "Who is it you are going to send for to come to the ranch?"
+she demanded unexpectedly. "Oh, I do hope some one who isn't a hundred
+years old. Why can't you ever ask a young man's advice, Ralph
+Merrit--you are young yourself?"
+
+And then as everybody laughed, Jack pinched her sister's inviting pink
+cheek.
+
+"What a foolish baby you are, Frieda Ralston," she declared, "I hardly
+think that Ralph's mining experts will be of the slightest interest to
+you."
+
+After Jim and Ralph had gone out in the hall together and were talking
+quietly Jean slipped out after them.
+
+"Don't you think, Jim," she asked, "that Ralph had better not go down to
+his old quarters to sleep tonight? You know his room is in the same
+house with half a dozen of the miners and of course nothing will
+happen, but I don't believe the men are exactly devoted to him and--"
+Jean put her hand coaxingly on the young man's coat sleeve. "Sleep on
+the divan in the living room tonight, won't you? We haven't a spare
+room, but I assure you it is most comfortable."
+
+Jim nodded. "That isn't a bad idea, Ralph."
+
+But the younger man shook his head, although his eyes thanked the girl
+for her interest.
+
+"No, Jim," he said, "you and Jean are both awfully kind, but the one
+thing that the fellows I disagreed with today must not think is that I
+am in the least afraid of them. Oh, I realize I am up against a pretty
+tough proposition--they are not the kind to back down easily and are
+accustomed to getting their own way, but your faith and belief in
+me----"
+
+Ralph stopped, his voice a little husky. "Good-night, Jean, and thank
+you." Then he turned to Jim Colter. "I wonder if you would mind walking
+a short distance with me. There is something else I must tell you that I
+could not mention in there tonight."
+
+And as the two men disappeared Jean had a sudden feeling of
+thankfulness. How curiously things turned out. If she had not chanced to
+be on the porch at Rainbow Lodge that afternoon she might never have
+heard Ralph Merrit's confession. If the men had not summoned him for
+their talk just when they did, Ralph would have gone away from Rainbow
+Mine feeling that he had made a failure of his life and of his work.
+
+And Jean's pretty brown eyes filled with tears. They had all been fond
+of Ralph for several years and would have been sorry to have him vanish
+out of their lives. She was glad too that he had recovered from the idea
+that he once had of caring for her more than the other girls. Or at
+least Jean believed that she was glad, for it is a very rare woman who
+can honestly rejoice at the loss of a lover, even though he continues to
+be her friend.
+
+Out in the dark together Jim Colter put his great arm across the younger
+man's shoulder. "Yes, I know it is more serious, boy, than we pretended
+in there, but I'm with you to the uttermost and things will turn out all
+right. It may not hurt my girls to have less money for a while, though
+of course it would come pretty hard on them now to be poor, after we
+have taught them such extravagant tastes. But in any case, old fellow,
+the fault will not be yours and you must not take the result too
+seriously."
+
+Ralph had not spoken, but he now braced himself and drew a slow breath.
+
+"Look here, Jim, I didn't say all I ought to have said in there with
+your wife and the girls--somehow I couldn't. For I let you say you would
+stand by me and have faith in me when all the time I knew I wasn't worth
+it."
+
+Then Ralph made the same confession to his man friend and employer as he
+had to Jean earlier in the day. He told him that he had been speculating
+steadily for the past six months. To Jim's question as to why he felt he
+had to grow rich in such a hurry, again Ralph made no reply. When the
+older man put out his hand to say good-night, Ralph Merrit held it for a
+moment longer than usual.
+
+"Jim," he asked, "may I make a promise to you? This has been one of the
+biggest days in my life. I came home this afternoon pretty well
+down-and-out, intending to give up my work and pretty much everything I
+want to attain in the world. Then--well, wonderful, unexpected things
+began to happen. Now I hope I am a man again. So I want to promise, not
+so much you as myself, that I am going to cut this speculating business
+out absolutely and that I am going to keep on being a man if I can
+manage it, no matter what happens."
+
+There was something in Ralph's words and in his manner that made Jim's
+blue eyes shine and gave the extra warmth and heartiness to the farewell
+clasp of his hand. Moreover, he had suddenly recalled a confidence that
+Jack had made to him in regard to Ralph Merrit's feeling for Jean. And
+if ever there was a man who knew how to offer sympathy and understanding
+to a discouraged lover, that man was Jim Colter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+A DILEMMA AND A VISITOR
+
+
+"GREAT SCOTT," muttered Jim Colter at the breakfast table some days
+later, "if there was only another man around this place to take care of
+you women, I would not let Ralph Merrit carry so much of this burden
+alone. It's getting past a one-man's game to manage our present
+affairs."
+
+In return Jack shook her fist at him with what was not all a pretense of
+indignation. "Ruth, you may not object to hearing your husband speak of
+you as a burden," she protested, "but I can't say I ever like hearing
+that I am not able to look after myself. Oh, yes, I know what the family
+thinks of my vanity! But seriously, Jim, there isn't any danger, no
+matter what goes on down at the mine, of anybody's annoying us. You need
+not worry over leaving us alone. I am quite sure we don't need 'another
+man.' The ranch is too full of them already!" And Jack shrugged her
+shoulders in the face of her guardian.
+
+But from her place at the head of the table behind a big silver coffee
+urn, Ruth looked at the girl in the seat next her who had just finished
+speaking.
+
+"I am sorry to hear you say that, Jack," she began quietly, "because
+pretty soon we are going to have what you and Jim are pleased to call
+'another man' as our guest at the Rainbow Lodge and one whom of all
+others I most wish to see."
+
+Jack was puzzled, but Olive Van Mater, with a swift glance at the older
+woman, felt the blood leaving her face and her hands turning cold. Her
+lids drooped swiftly over her dark eyes and immediately she devoted
+herself to eating her breakfast, though all the while she was studying
+Jack's expression.
+
+At this moment a diversion was created by the entrance of a very fluffy,
+blue-eyed person in a pale blue breakfast toilet, who after kissing Ruth
+slipped into a place next her sister.
+
+"Sorry I'm late," she said, without any suggestion of real contrition,
+"but since Jim makes us stay in the house so much lately there isn't any
+reason for getting up."
+
+"Thank you, Frieda darling, for the pleasure you take in our society,"
+Jean murmured, setting down her coffee cup in mock indignation. "I am
+sure that each and every member of your family feels grateful to you for
+your flattering suggestion. But since we are of no interest to you,
+perhaps you would like to hear that Ruth has just said we are to have an
+unexpected visitor--a man!"
+
+Frieda first helped herself to the entire pile of griddle cakes. "I
+suppose everyone else has nearly finished," she remarked by way of
+explanation. And then: "Oh, I suppose the visitor is one of those
+tiresome men who is coming to help Ralph about the mine. I do wish
+things would quiet down, because as soon as our new house is finished
+Jean and I are dying to have a houseparty. Ralph said himself that his
+mining engineers were too old to be any fun--the youngest one is past
+thirty!"
+
+"Yet I am still able to get about at that age, Frieda Ralston," Jim
+Colter protested.
+
+At this instant Jack shook her head. "We are being very impolite to Ruth
+by talking so much," she declared. "Ruth was going to tell us about a
+new visitor and of course we are desperately anxious to hear. Who is
+he, Ruth, a stranger or an old friend? And where are you going to find a
+place for any one else at Rainbow Lodge?"
+
+Purposely Ruth waited a moment in the silence that followed.
+
+"I'll give you three guesses," she said finally.
+
+"Peter Drummond and Jessica! Wouldn't it be splendid if they came to us
+on their wedding trip?" Jack answered immediately.
+
+"No," Ruth answered.
+
+"Tom, the chocolate-drop boy!" Jean exclaimed, laughing at Frieda's
+sudden blush.
+
+But Olive Van Mater had put down her knife and fork and was looking
+quietly at Ruth. "May I have a turn at guessing, please?" she asked in
+her usual gentle fashion. "Isn't our visitor to be Frank Kent?"
+
+And then as Ruth nodded with a smile of pleasure every pair of eyes at
+the table immediately turned upon Jacqueline Ralston.
+
+And Jack's cheeks grew suddenly a deeper pink, like the heart of a pink
+rose, for she was too surprised for the present to be self-conscious.
+
+"You must be mistaken, Ruth dear," she insisted. "Frank hasn't written
+me; I haven't said that he could come." And then seeing what her words
+suggested, she went on in greater confusion, "I thought he was to wait
+until our house was finished or until later in the summer or until some
+time," she ended lamely. "I don't understand."
+
+"Perhaps Frank will explain to you, dear," Ruth replied carelessly. And
+then turning toward the other girls:
+
+"You see Frank has been writing me about his visit for several weeks.
+But he and I both wanted his coming to be a surprise. He has said that
+he could not endure waiting longer to see his dearest friends. So a week
+ago when he arrived in New York he telegraphed me to know when he could
+come to the Rainbow Ranch and of course I said 'at once.' I rather think
+he may be here some time this afternoon. You won't have to worry now,
+Jim, about taking care of your wife and family, for Frank will----"
+
+But Frieda was clapping her hands together with much more pleasure than
+that slightly selfish young person usually showed.
+
+"Oh, I am so glad, Jack. We do like Frank better than any one we know,
+don't we? And if you don't, I am sure Olive does," she persisted.
+
+Jim got up from his place. "I don't like this fashion you have, Mrs.
+Colter, of corresponding with gentlemen and not informing your husband,
+but just the same I am delighted that Kent is coming to us. It's amazing
+what a fine fellow he is for an Englishman, and certainly we owe him a
+lot. When a man marries at another's house--and such a wedding--it's
+hard work getting even with him!"
+
+Out to the door Ruth followed her husband.
+
+"I am dreadfully uneasy about this trouble at the mine. I did not dare
+show how much I am worried before the girls. But you must tell me just
+what the conditions are, Jim. You know we don't believe in marriages
+where the woman is shut out from facts," Ruth insisted.
+
+For half a moment the man hesitated. Then he kissed the little woman who
+had to stand on her tip-toes to be on a level with his chin.
+
+"I don't tell you the facts, Ruthie dear, because I don't know them," he
+answered. "How can I tell what a lot of crazy, obstinate men are going
+to do? But evidently the miners who deserted us have managed to
+intimidate the other mine workers in this neighborhood. Ralph has not
+been able to get hold of any men who want to work for us, and things at
+the mine have been idle for some time, as you know. So far, all we have
+been able to do is to have the cowboys do picket duty down at the mine
+so as to keep the other fellows from wrecking our machinery or blowing
+us up. There, don't turn white as a sheet, Ruth! I don't believe that
+the old miners are that anxious to injure us; yet we have to be on the
+look-out. Merrit has got to be away all day today hunting for men, so I
+must be on the job. Sorry I can't meet Kent, but you'll see that he is
+looked after all right and I'll be with you at dinner tonight. I'll
+bring Merrit with me if I can persuade him--he is apt to be pretty well
+fagged."
+
+The greater part of the day the four girls spent together in the garden
+near the Lodge. It was a lovely June day, with the air full of the
+scents of innumerable wild flowers. And everything within the immediate
+neighborhood of the Lodge was as peaceful and undisturbed as though the
+mine were a hundred miles away. Jean and Jack at least half a dozen
+times confessed to the desire to walk over to the mine and see what was
+taking place; but since Jim had given strict orders against it they did
+not quite dare.
+
+A part of the time they spent helping Frieda gather great bunches of
+violets from her old violet beds, which had never been allowed to die
+out, until the Lodge was finally filled with them and the big living
+room was fair and fragrant enough for any festival.
+
+Then, when other amusements failed, there was always the new house to be
+investigated. It was now so nearly completed that when things quieted
+down at the mine again, if they were still to have a sufficient income
+to meet expenses, the moving into the new home was to take place.
+
+While the other three girls were rummaging about making suggestions Jack
+managed to slip quietly away. She went directly to Ruth, who was in the
+nursery with her little son. And as Jack was never used to evasions or
+to trying to get her own way by indirect methods, she asked immediately:
+
+"Ruth dear, may Olive and I drive to the station and meet Frank Kent
+this afternoon? I have a special reason for wishing to be there. You
+see, dear, I don't want Frank to think that I am not delighted to see
+him or that I have put off his coming to us because I had forgotten him.
+You knew he had been wanting to come for a long time, didn't you?"
+
+Ruth nodded. "I had guessed it, Jack, though I did not know positively
+until Frank's letter to me. Nor do I know now why you put off his visit.
+I am not asking you to tell me," she added quickly. For, observing the
+sudden look of reserve on the girl's face, she appreciated that it must
+be respected. "Frank merely said that he wanted to see us so much, and I
+did not see how his coming could fail to give pleasure. You don't mind,
+do you, dear?" Ruth concluded, wondering if this might be the moment for
+confidence.
+
+Although still keeping her clear, almost transparently honest gray eyes
+on her friend, Jack flushed.
+
+"Yes dear, I do want Frank, now that Olive is here," she replied. "I
+meant to write him and ask him just as soon as things were quiet at the
+mine again. Now may we go to meet him?"
+
+Ruth looked worried. "I have been wondering what we ought to do about
+going to the station all morning," she returned. "Of course some of the
+family must meet Frank or he will feel deeply wounded, but I can't leave
+the baby and yet there seems no man about the place to go with you
+girls. Jim has taken possession of everybody."
+
+Jack kissed Ruth on the hair and then bent over and looked at the baby
+with a new expression of wonder and reverence. She had always been much
+more afraid of the "little Jimmikins" than the other girls.
+
+"Don't trouble over things a minute, Ruth. You know the danger that Jim
+is fearful of for us is what may happen here on the ranch. But we shall
+be leaving the ranch as soon as we drive through the gate. Moreover, we
+can take Carlos with us for an escort; he is only a boy, but he will do
+perfectly well. And if we don't take him, it won't make much difference
+since he would be more than likely to follow us. As far as I can see he
+trails constantly after Olive like a faithful dog. It would annoy me,
+but I don't believe she has even noticed how much he does it. I wonder
+what the boy's exact reason is? Nevertheless, as it gives Carlos a
+regular occupation, I suppose we should be grateful."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+CROSS PURPOSES
+
+
+OLIVE was not so unconscious of the Indian boy's attitude toward her as
+Jack believed. Indeed she could not well be. And now as the three of
+them drove together to the station she was pondering on whether or not
+she should confide her experience to Jack. But Jack was not sympathetic
+toward Carlos, for with her intense and forceful nature it was hard for
+her to understand the boy's idleness and dreaming. Therefore to tell her
+what had recently occurred would doubtless make her prejudice the
+deeper. For she was almost sure to regard the boy's behavior as
+impertinence and to wish to send him at once away from the ranch.
+
+Yet though Olive herself was annoyed, she did not wish matters to go so
+far as that. For she had a peculiar appreciation and pity for the Indian
+boy's difficulties which no one else could so readily have. Had she not
+been raised among the Indian people and did she not comprehend their
+shy, proud natures? For white people to realize that the Indian, even in
+the midst of his overthrow and degradation, still considers himself
+their superior is an almost impossible conception. Nevertheless Olive
+knew this to be true. The white man's religion is to the Indian less
+full of visions and of dreams. An educated Indian writes:
+
+"When we plant our plumes where the shrines are, our first prayer is for
+good thoughts--that our children may be wise and strong, and that the
+God of the sky may be glad of us. I have listened to the mission talk
+many days, and nothing in the words of the missionary is more white than
+the thought which we plant with the prayer plumes on our shrines."
+
+Neither does the Indian, though of course there are exceptions in his
+race as in all other things, have the respect that we feel he should
+have for the advantages of our education. What more does it teach him of
+the woods and the fields, of the beauty and imagery of nature, of all
+that he cares to know? Of a boy who had been to a government school an
+Indian says:
+
+"He comes back to his people and knows that if he lives there it must be
+as his father lived--except that now he has more cultivated tastes to
+satisfy, and no further means or methods of earning the price of them.
+To plant the corn, herd the sheep, hunt the rabbits, take care of his
+share of his own village--these are the life-work of the Indian. The
+schools teach him to do that no better than his fathers did it before
+him. He is taught to read and write, and he asks 'for what?'
+
+"The cities of the mesa have no books, and have never felt the need of
+them. Why should he read of the American life he lives apart from?"
+
+Therefore Olive understood that though the boy Carlos might not be able
+to express himself in this fashion, in his heart of hearts this was
+exactly the way that he felt. Why should he study what Jim Colter and
+the girls wished him to learn? Books and figures had no possible
+interest for him or relation to the life which he meant to lead. His
+world was the outdoor one, among the animals and birds, under the new
+moons of each succeeding month, and lifting up his eyes and his heart to
+the sun when he wished to be glad.
+
+To work like the other men did about the ranch, digging under the earth
+or plowing in the fields! This was not for the son and the grandson of
+many chieftains! It was not merely laziness on Carlos' part that kept
+him from making himself useful, but the feeling that any such labor as
+he might be expected to do was beneath his dignity. Therefore the boy
+could never really get into his mind the idea that the white people were
+his masters, although in a vague way he knew that they felt themselves
+to be. It was this thought that was always the foundation of Carlos'
+sullenness and lack of gratitude.
+
+So Olive realized that the Indian boy's letter to her, which she had
+found at her door one day hidden among a bunch of prairie roses, had not
+been written in any spirit of presumption or audacity. Had she not at
+one time seemed to be an Indian like himself? Had she not lived among
+them, eaten their food and spoken their speech? And was it not for her
+sake that Carlos had left his own tribe and taken upon himself many of
+the ways of the white man? The boy had cared for his "Princess Olilie"
+always, but in years past he had been a boy and felt as one. Now he was
+a man!
+
+All this and more Carlos had put into his note. Olive remembered it at
+the present moment almost word for word, for it had touched and hurt her
+at the same time. Although Carlos was too young to mean all that he had
+said, she knew that with his queer nature he must suffer from her reply.
+
+For he had written:
+
+ MY LADY OF THE LONE TRAIL:
+
+ Are you not weary of the life and the ways of the
+ white women and men? Are you not tired of having
+ your soul shut up between four walls of wood with
+ no vision for your eyes by day and no night wind
+ to touch your cheek as you lay asleep? You and I
+ have grown older now; there is no one in any
+ Indian tribe to hurt us. Have I not stayed quietly
+ here waiting and watching for you, learning many
+ things which I have hated, that we might not fail
+ to understand each other? For my love for you is
+ as the Tu-wa-ni-ne-ma, the sand of the desert.
+
+ Therefore will you not come away with me back to
+ the wonderful, free outdoor world, where we lived
+ together for a little while when both of us were
+ children. Under a tree in a dim forest I shall
+ build for you such a nest as only a man shall
+ build for his mate. Then in the day time I shall
+ plant corn while you weave the beautiful Indian
+ blanket, which the Indian Laska taught you to
+ make. And in the night we shall listen to the
+ little night bird of the desert, the Hoetska. But
+ both day and night we shall be alone and away
+ from these people who do not understand me as you
+ do and who will never love you as I do.
+
+ Whenever you will come with me, I shall have two
+ horses waiting.
+
+Olive stole a glimpse at Jacqueline's face. For a quarter of an hour
+they had been sitting beside each other, and yet neither one of them had
+uttered a word. But certainly she should not tell Jack of Carlos'
+unhappy and impossible letter. For Jack might be amused, she might be
+angry, and certainly she would be resentful.
+
+No, Olive decided that she must keep the boy's secret inviolate. Some
+day she would have a chance to see him alone. Then she might be able to
+explain how far she herself had traveled from the old Indian days--how
+she could never again love the things that the boy did, nor endure the
+life which he wished to lead. Besides, Carlos was only a boy, while she
+was almost a woman--at least a good many years his senior! Perhaps she
+might even tell Carlos that it would be best for him to go away from
+Rainbow Ranch, back to his own people where he could live with Indian
+boys and girls of his own age. There was the Indian village not far off
+to which she herself might return after a few years. For one of these
+days the Indians were to have a teacher who _could_ understand their
+point of view as well as that of the white people. Perhaps Carlos might
+by that time be married to a girl of his own race and be able to help
+her with her chosen work.
+
+But she must not speak of this idea to Jacqueline either, for the
+suggestion always made her friend unhappy. It was odd how utterly
+devoted she and Jack were and how intimate; yet they did not often speak
+of the deepest desires of their hearts to each other. Not once had Jack
+voluntarily mentioned Frank Kent's name since their return from the
+visit to Lord and Lady Kent the year before.
+
+Was Jack in love with Frank? Olive could not make up her mind. Because
+if she were, what was standing in the way of their engagement? Of course
+Jack could never have dreamed of her foolish, impossible affection for
+Frank, who had never been anything except her good friend. Olive was
+quite certain that she had never by any sign betrayed herself. She
+believed that she had entirely recovered from her former feeling, and
+was hoping with all her heart that Jack and Frank would now find out
+that they truly loved each other.
+
+But what was making Jacqueline so unusually quiet? Olive's slender hand
+slipped into her friend's larger and firmer one, and Jack's fingers
+closed over it lovingly.
+
+They were now almost at the depot and Frank Kent's train would be due in
+another quarter of an hour. If only Jack would not look so pale and
+reserved--she was not nearly so pretty as usual! Her face was white and
+her eyes had dark shadows under them. Jean and Frieda had insisted that
+Jack wear a new silk suit that had recently been made for her, but it
+was not half so becoming as her old brown corduroys or faded khaki;
+neither was her cream-colored straw hat with its single brown rose so
+picturesque as the ranch hat in which Frank had first seen her.
+
+Olive sighed, and the sigh attracted the other girl's attention.
+
+"I have been a dreadfully stupid companion, Olive dear. Forgive me,"
+Jack murmured penitently. And then: "How pretty you are looking! Frank
+will be so glad to see you, I know!"
+
+At this moment Carlos stopped the carriage and pair of horses before the
+station platform, where both girls got out without time for further
+speech. Yet all this while Jacqueline had been thinking: "If Olive still
+cares for Frank after this year of absence I am sure that her feeling
+will never change. So if this be true I shall tell Frank that I do not
+care for him enough to marry him. Olive has had too unhappy a life for
+me to add to her unhappiness. Surely when Frank believes that I do not
+love him, he will find out what Olive means to him and how immeasurably
+she is my superior, in beauty, brains, sweetness and everything that
+counts. Then he will know that he has liked her best all along!"
+
+Nevertheless and in spite of all her excellent reasoning as the whistle
+blew announcing the approaching train, Jack caught her breath. She hoped
+that Frank would not be angry with her for having refused to let him
+come to Rainbow Ranch for almost a year. Could she dare to pretend that
+she had forgotten the conversation which they had had in that last ride
+together between the hawthorn hedges of an English lane?
+
+When Frank Kent came down the steps of the train with his grave,
+handsome face flushed with eagerness--and something else--it was Olive
+Van Mater whom he found waiting for him alone on the platform. With all
+his old delightful friendliness and charm of manner he greeted her,
+dropping his luggage to hold both her hands close for a moment.
+
+Yet Olive to save her life could not at once be equally friendly and
+natural. For what in heaven's name had become of Jacqueline Ralston at
+this critical moment? As the train drew in, she had been standing close
+by her side. Here she was approaching them at last, holding out her hand
+stiffly, with a frozen smile on her face.
+
+"Awfully glad to see you, Frank; you are looking very fit after a trip
+across the continent. Sorry not to be here when your train got in, but I
+had to attend to something about the horses. Give me your check and let
+me see after your trunk. Everybody at the ranch is well and tremendously
+anxious to see you."
+
+Frank smiled. Holding on to his trunk check he followed the girl a few
+yards to the spot where his trunk had been thrown out. Olive waited
+alone to watch his bags.
+
+"Hope you will be more enthusiastic over seeing me yourself, dear, when
+I have a chance to talk to you," Frank remarked in the quiet fashion
+that always had its effect on the girl's ardent nature. "You are glad,
+aren't you?"
+
+And while Jack nodded, not entirely trusting herself to speak, Frank
+laughed, saying: "Here comes a porter. I'll have him carry my stuff to
+the carriage. It is like you, Miss America, to wish to start out by
+taking care of me. But if I am an Englishman and too much accustomed to
+being waited upon, at least I won't endure that!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+A DINNER PARTY
+
+
+DINNER at Rainbow Lodge on the evening of Frank Kent's arrival was
+sufficiently gay and delightful to make up for many preceding weeks of
+quietness.
+
+For not only was Frank's appearance an unexpected pleasure to the entire
+family, but a few hours before sundown Ralph Merrit had returned home
+with an old friend of his, whom quite by accident he had met in a nearby
+town and persuaded to come with him for a short visit at the ranch.
+Henry Tilford Russell was to be a new experience to the four girls,
+since never in their wandering either at home or abroad had they met any
+other young man in the least like him.
+
+Before bringing his guest up to the Lodge for dinner Ralph had managed
+to escape from him for a few moments in order to see Ruth privately and
+to explain to her a few of his friend's peculiarities, so that no member
+of the family need be unnecessarily surprised. For one thing, the
+stranger was inordinately shy, disliking girls more than anything in the
+whole world. In fact Ralph was at last obliged to confess that had his
+friend guessed how many maidens he would be obliged to face at dinner,
+gladly would he have preferred starvation to joining them. But since
+Russell had asked no uncomfortable questions, Ralph had not felt in duty
+bound to forewarn him. Then, as his guest was about thirty years old,
+according to Frieda Ralston's calculations he was much too elderly
+anyhow for the Ranch girls' consideration.
+
+Yet notwithstanding all these drawbacks Ralph Merrit had been
+exceedingly anxious to bring his friend to the Rainbow Ranch. For in
+spite of the young man's shyness and social awkwardness, he was
+exceptionally brilliant, and was regarded almost a genius in his chosen
+line of work. Henry Tilford Russell was the assistant professor of
+ancient languages in the University of Chicago and Ralph had known him
+there in his own student days. However, he had recently suffered a
+breakdown from overwork and was now in the West on a trip for his
+health. But the fact about his former friend over which Ralph Merrit
+was particularly enthusiastic and desired to have Ruth impart to the
+girls, was that of his own free will Professor Russell had chosen the
+life of a student. His father was a wealthy and prominent Chicago
+lawyer, at one time the American Ambassador to Greece, so had the son
+desired he might have followed the idle existence of most other rich
+young men.
+
+In the midst of seeing that the baby was safely stored away in his
+silk-lined crib and that the table was set for extra guests, and that
+Aunt Ellen prepare a specially good dinner, Ruth had no time for
+extended conversation with the girls. She did manage to mention to Jean
+and Frieda that Ralph had brought home a stranger to whom they were to
+try to be agreeable. But this bit of information was almost swallowed up
+in the more important news that Ralph had at last succeeded in getting
+hold of a new set of men and that work on Rainbow Mine was to begin
+again within the next day or so.
+
+Then, soon after, Frank appeared, and everything else was forgotten in
+the welcome to him.
+
+Just as though he had been her older brother and Frieda a little girl,
+Frank kissed her, insisting that she had grown, although at eighteen
+Frieda certainly considered herself quite past the growing stage.
+
+Introduced to the new baby, Frank did not seem in the least nervous or
+abashed as most men are by such very tiny persons. Indeed, he apparently
+had overcome all his old reserve and shyness and without this was simple
+and charming, as persons of high birth and breeding are most apt to be.
+
+Fifteen minutes before dinner Ruth had positively to force the four
+girls to dress. Then, as Jim was getting ready at the same time, she had
+a few moments alone with Frank Kent.
+
+"You know what I have come for, don't you, Mrs. Colter--Ruth?" Frank
+began with the directness that the woman had always admired in him.
+
+Ruth made no pretense of not understanding. "It would be hard for all of
+us, and I don't see how Jim would be able to get along on the ranch
+without Jack," she replied. "For you see he and Jack really are like
+'partners,' their old name for each other. But if it is for Jack's
+happiness you know how we should all feel. But, Frank, I feel I must
+warn you that Jack won't be easy to win, and it is because I care for
+you so much that I hope you will not be discouraged. She is not just
+like most girls, and----"
+
+Frank nodded. "I have understood that all along," he interrupted. "Still
+there is one thing, Ruth, that you do not know. Last summer I persuaded
+Jack to confess that she did care for me. Yet she insisted that there
+was something, she could not explain to me what it was, that stood in
+our way--some barrier that had to be broken down before she could
+consent to marry me. What it was I don't know and that is one of the
+things I have come half way across the world to find out. Can you guess
+of any possible obstacle to Jack's feeling for me?"
+
+In a puzzled fashion Ruth Colter drew her delicate brows together.
+Frank's remark had startled and surprised her. "No, not unless it is her
+affection for us and the ranch," she replied.
+
+Before another confidence could be exchanged, Jim had stamped into the
+living room, looking bigger and more splendid than ever, suggesting the
+strong wind from his own beloved prairies. A few moments later Ralph
+Merrit and his guest followed, and afterwards Olive, Jean and Jack.
+
+Perhaps because she remembered that Frank had always liked her best in
+white, Jack wore a plain white silk dress cut square in the neck and
+with no trimming but the girdle and little ruffle of lace. It was a
+dress which she had owned for over a year, and Frieda was annoyed with
+her for wearing it on the evening of Frank's arrival. Notwithstanding,
+as there was no time to change after her sister's protest, Frieda
+finally conceded as Jack left the room that she did look fairly well.
+For the truth was that no one of the older girl's more elaborate toilets
+could have suited her half so well.
+
+Jack was pale and not altogether sure whether she was the more happy or
+unhappy over Frank's presence, yet somehow her unusual pallor was not
+unattractive, with her burnished brown and gold hair and the healthy
+scarlet of her lips. Then in some indefinable fashion Jack's expression
+had recently grown gentler, indeed tonight her manner held a certain
+timidity, giving her one of the charms that she sometimes lacked.
+
+Both Olive and Jean were also simply dressed, since their dinner party
+was an impromptu one and entirely informal. Olive had on a lavender
+muslin with a bunch of Frieda's violets at her waist, while Jean was
+dressed in a pale yellow voile frock with primroses embroidered upon it.
+
+Ralph Merrit frowned and then tried to smile as Jean came forward to
+shake hands, congratulate him and meet his guest, "What right had a poor
+fellow even to dream of a girl so fitted by beauty and grace to every
+high position? Suppose by some miracle Jean should in time learn to care
+for him, what would he have to offer her? Here was Frank Kent (and Ralph
+was perfectly aware of Frank's intention), and if Jack cared for him she
+would have all the things of this world that Jean so frankly loved,
+wealth, a high social position and one day an old English title."
+
+But while Ralph Merrit was continuing to pursue this wholly futile train
+of thought, Jean was every now and then glancing toward him demurely
+from under her heavy shaded brown eyes with a look which he perfectly
+understood.
+
+"What in the world is the matter with your friend, Mr. Russell?" the
+look said plain as any words. For Jean was doing her level best to talk
+to the stranger and in return for her efforts he would not even turn
+towards her.
+
+On first being introduced to Jacqueline the Professor had turned crimson
+to the tips of his large ears, though in a measure he had been prepared
+for one girl, since Ralph had mentioned a "Miss Ralston" in connection
+with the ownership of the Rainbow Mine. Later the meeting with Olive had
+added resentment to his confusion. Why had Merrit not warned him of what
+he would have to endure? Jean was an impossible third. Why, no such
+misfortune as meeting with three girls had overtaken him since he
+reached the great womanless West! For though the West did have its
+tiresome quota of females, so far he had managed to escape speaking to
+any of them except on strictly business matters.
+
+Well, he was in for it now, and would have to endure the evening as best
+he could; yet already he had made up his mind to escape as soon as
+daylight came in the morning.
+
+Jean's well-meant efforts to make herself agreeable to Ralph's friend
+were entirely wasted; yet after dinner was announced the young Professor
+found himself more at ease. For fortunately he had been placed on Mrs.
+Colter's left and next him was an empty chair--evidently for some member
+of the family not at home he thought with a suppressed sigh of relief.
+
+Overhearing Frank Kent ask some question of interest in regard to the
+mine, Professor Russell forgot his embarrassment sufficiently to add
+several questions and comments of his own. And it happened to be during
+one of his own speeches that an unexpected movement near him made him
+glance toward the empty chair.
+
+"Great Scott! Was this a big wax doll about to take her place next him?"
+
+Yet, though the doll was struggling with the chair and evidently trying
+to draw it out from under the table, it never occurred to Henry Tilford
+Russell to render her the slightest assistance, in spite of the fact
+that she was smiling at him appealingly out of the very largest and
+bluest eyes he had ever seen.
+
+The lateness of Frieda Ralston's entrance did not appear to have
+surprised her family, who were entirely accustomed to it; however, the
+magnificence of her dinner toilet plainly did. For whatever had inspired
+Frieda to dress up as she had? It was small wonder that she was late.
+
+Even in the midst of her duties as hostess Ruth Colter's gray eyes
+widened and it was on the tip of her tongue to scold Frieda for her
+foolishness. Yet, recovering herself in time and recalling the presence
+of their guests, she said nothing.
+
+With a faint suggestion of reproach Jack shook her head at her sister,
+while Jean and Olive openly smiled at each other. So the situation would
+have passed off without any unpleasantness if it had not been for Jim
+Colter. When would Ruth teach Jim that he was not to tease the Ranch
+girls before strangers just as if they were tiny children?
+
+With real astonishment and some mock admiration Jim stared at the latest
+comer, at the same time giving a characteristic chuckle and low whistle.
+Then, in spite of the fact that Jack, who was sitting near, gave his
+foot a warning pressure, he exclaimed:
+
+"What in heaven's name, Baby, does all that finery mean? You aren't
+going to a ball later on this evening, are you, and forgotten to mention
+it?"
+
+Then, with everybody at the table staring at her, Frieda felt her lips
+beginning to tremble and her eyes fill with tears, as at last she
+slipped into her place. Why should her appearance create so much
+comment? She had dressed up because she wished to and for no other
+special reason.
+
+Often in the past year when things at the Lodge had been dull for a long
+time she had amused herself in trying on her pretty clothes. No one had
+ever objected before, but now, just because there were strangers, or at
+least one stranger, present, she had to be made the object of family
+criticism and ridicule. If only they were alone Frieda felt that she
+would like to tell Jim and everybody just how hateful they were. For of
+course there had been no thought in her mind of Ralph's guest when she
+had put on her blue _crepe de chine_ dress with its low neck and elbow
+sleeves and floating chiffon draperies. The costume had been a present
+from her sister, Jack, who always could save more of her income than she
+or Jean. She had only wished to find out whether it was becoming to her
+and that was why she had also taken so much time and care in fixing her
+hair. Certainly she knew that Ralph's guest would be as old as the
+hills--Ralph had plainly stated that he would be.
+
+Frieda gave a little start, which she promptly repressed so that no one
+should notice it, when she heard a pleasant voice whispering
+unexpectedly close to her ear:
+
+"Don't mind their teasing you; I think you look--just jolly."
+
+And in reply Frieda smiled tremulously upon the newcomer.
+
+He was old, just as she had expected--his hair was already beginning to
+grow thin upon the top of his head. He was slender and delicate looking
+and of only medium height, yet his eyes were certainly the brownest and
+almost the kindest that she had ever seen, in spite of the fact that
+they had a kind of absent, far-away expression even while they seemed to
+be fastened upon her.
+
+"Thank you," Frieda returned a second later, having by this time
+regained both her lost dignity and self-possession. But this time the
+younger Miss Ralston found their latest visitor displaying a curious
+eccentricity. Now he was plainly laughing at her. Naturally Frieda could
+not have dreamed that Professor Russell, whom Ruth had finally concluded
+to introduce to her, considered her a little girl of about fourteen.
+Otherwise, not for anything in the world, would he have made the speech
+which he first addressed to her.
+
+The truth was that this old-young Professor was extremely fond of
+children and only objected to girls after they had grown up. Then
+because he was so shy himself he had a keen sympathy for embarrassment
+in other people. So it was to these two causes that Frieda owed his
+friendliness.
+
+Nevertheless, as she was entirely unconscious of this fact, Frieda
+continued to talk to him very calmly and comfortably during the entire
+meal. He did appear surprised over an occasional remark of hers, but as
+he hardly ever answered, Frieda guessed that this might be his method of
+revealing his appreciation of her attentions. Actually the two of them
+were out on the porch with every one else vanished from sight for the
+moment before Professor Russell entirely awoke to the fact that, though
+his companion was still extremely young, she could not exactly be
+regarded as a baby.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+TWO CONVERSATIONS
+
+
+"JACK, you have not played fair with me; what is it that has happened?"
+Frank Kent asked quietly.
+
+It was an hour since dinner time at the Lodge and Frank had so insisted
+upon Jack's taking a walk with him that without rudeness she had not
+been able to refuse. It was an enchanting June night, warmer than usual
+in that part of the western country, and with a moon that shines perhaps
+nowhere on this earth with exactly the same wide radiance.
+
+Jack and Frank had walked down the tall aisles of cottonwood trees near
+the house and were now standing a few yards on the farther side of them
+in a clear and revealing light. At Frank's words the girl flinched as he
+had known that she would. For just that reason he had chosen them, since
+nothing could hurt Jacqueline so much or make her come so immediately to
+her own defence as any suggestion that she had not played fair. Other
+girls might not suffer so greatly from this accusation; but honesty,
+candor and a kind of straightforwardness, which some persons are pleased
+to think as masculine traits, had always been Jack's leading
+characteristics. Now, however, though her companion waited impatiently
+for her reproach or her denial, for a moment he heard neither.
+
+"I am so sorry, Frank, that you feel in that way about me," Jack began
+finally. Then, almost in a whisper: "I have not intended to be unfair to
+you. I--I had not promised you anything."
+
+Jack was not looking into Frank's face as she spoke, but at the silvery
+whiteness of the ground beneath her feet.
+
+"But nothing has happened, if you mean that I have become either angry
+or disappointed in you," she added timidly.
+
+Difficult as the girl had anticipated this conversation might be, it was
+more trying than she had expected.
+
+What could she say? How could she truthfully present the situation to
+Frank, as it appeared to her, without putting Olive in an impossible
+position? Because in spite of Olive's denial through the message to Jean
+at the close of the last Ranch Girls' book, Jacqueline was still firmly
+convinced that her friend felt so great an affection for Frank Kent that
+it was influencing her whole life. Did it not explain why she absolutely
+refused to consider Donald Harmon's proposal of marriage, in spite of
+Don's devotion and her grandmother's expressed desire? Moreover, even if
+Olive did not like Donald sufficiently well to consider marrying him,
+why should she insist that she intended devoting her future to teaching
+the Indian children?
+
+To Jack Ralston such a career suggested pure martyrdom. Olive might do
+anything else in the world that she liked, even if her grandmother left
+her no inheritance. For there was Miss Winthrop, who regarded Olive
+almost as a daughter and who would do everything possible for her. She
+might have almost any happiness and yet Olive actually talked as if she
+meant to do what she had so long said she intended as soon as she was a
+few years older and the proper arrangements could be made.
+
+Jack bit her lips until they positively hurt. Actually she felt a shiver
+of repugnance at the idea of going away with Frank to every happiness if
+her going involved leaving her dearest friend to such a fate. Could she
+ever really be happy with this thought in the back of her mind?
+
+No, Jack decided once again that she was far stronger than Olive and
+better able to look after herself and to bear, if need be, both loss and
+loneliness. Besides, had she not had many joys in the past and Olive for
+many years so few? Surely if Olive still cared for Frank, as she
+believed, in a little while there need be no further doubt of it. In
+that event it must be her duty to tell Frank that she did not love him
+and would never consent to leave the ranch for his sake. After that
+Frank would undoubtedly turn at once to Olive, who had always been his
+friend and upon whose sympathy he could surely count. Olive, too, was so
+much prettier, her nature so much gentler and sweeter, she would make a
+far better wife. Frank might be angry with her at first, Jack
+acknowledged to herself at this moment, but he would be more than
+grateful in the end.
+
+Jack laid her hand pleadingly on the young man's coat sleeve.
+
+"Frank," she asked more wistfully than she herself realized, "won't you
+promise not to talk about your feeling for me for a time? Won't you just
+stay on here with us at the Rainbow Ranch as you used to do and let us
+have a happy time together? I am worried about such a number of things.
+Perhaps the money in Rainbow Mine is going to give out and we may have
+no further income from it. Then there is this strike of our miners. Jim
+and I don't say a great deal about it to the others, but we are so
+afraid the old men may resort to violence when we try to get things to
+running smoothly again and that Ralph or some one else may be seriously
+hurt. Don't you see that I just can't think about anything else now?"
+
+"No, Jack dear, I can't honestly see why your having all these worries
+and annoyances can affect your knowing whether or not you return my
+love. It is not as though I had never spoken of it--you have had a whole
+year to decide. But if you wish me to wait longer, of course I shall do
+as you ask. Only please don't let it be too long."
+
+Then before the girl could reply she and her companion had both started,
+and instinctively Jack clutched at the young man's arm.
+
+The next moment she gave a relieved laugh.
+
+"I don't see why I should jump in that fashion just because we heard a
+slight noise behind us," she apologized. "I suppose other people have
+just the same right that we have to be outdoors enjoying the moonlight."
+
+Jack then turned around, looking back into the grove of cottonwood
+trees. "Jean, Olive, Frieda," she called lightly, but when no one
+responded, thinking no more of the incident she moved on a few steps.
+
+"Come on, Frank, let us have a real walk, it is too lovely to go back to
+the Lodge so soon. I want to ask you such a lot of questions and about
+your mother and father and Kent Place," she pleaded.
+
+Frank's attention was not to be so easily diverted. For several moments
+he continued staring at the spot where undoubtedly he had heard the
+noise of light footsteps only a few seconds before. The sound had come
+from the neighborhood of the trees nearest them; but why did no figure
+emerge into the light or move off again in the opposite direction? The
+night was so bright and the air so clear that no one could have escaped
+without being either seen or heard. But Frank was too interested in the
+prospect of a longer time in the moonlight alone with Jacqueline to
+waste a great deal more thought upon a possible intruder. Once again he
+glanced back, but as no one was in sight, he and Jack were soon deep in
+an intimate and happy conversation.
+
+Notwithstanding, neither the girl nor the man were mistaken in their
+original impression that some one had been in their neighborhood during
+at least a part of their conversation. For when they were both safely
+out of sight a slender figure stole from behind one of the largest
+cottonwood trees and ran off with the fleetness and noiselessness of a
+wild creature. There was an ugly expression on the face--one of
+resentment and suspicion and yet of so great unhappiness that the other
+emotions might have been forgiven.
+
+For the Indian boy, Carlos, fifteen minutes before had just concluded a
+conversation with the only person in the world for whom he felt any real
+affection. And foolish and mistaken as his dream had been, it hurt no
+less to find it shattered.
+
+A few minutes after dinner, when all the family were together on the
+veranda at Rainbow Lodge, Olive had several times noticed Carlos
+hovering about in their vicinity, now on a pretence of bringing a
+message to Jim Colter which might as easily have waited until morning,
+then asking some perfectly unnecessary question of her. And finally with
+the persistence and stoicism of his race he had planted himself like a
+slender and upright column against a side of the house, deliberately to
+wait until he could have his way.
+
+There was not the slightest use of pretending that Olive did not
+understand what his intention was. Carlos wished to talk with her,
+wished to have an immediate answer to the letter which he had lately
+written her. Moreover, she feared that unless she gave in to him he
+might show some trace of his feeling before the assembled company.
+
+Quietly Olive slipped over to Ruth Colter.
+
+"Ruth," she whispered, when no one was paying any especial attention to
+either of them, "I have something rather important that I must say to
+Carlos. He is here now waiting. Do you think it would make any
+difference if I go and talk to him for a few moments? We won't go any
+distance from the house, just to some place where no one may be
+disturbed by us."
+
+And Ruth agreed to the girl's request without considering it seriously.
+To the older woman Carlos was only a child, sometimes rather a difficult
+one it was true, but at any rate only an idle, mischievous boy, whom the
+Ranch girls in their usual impulsive generosity had befriended and in a
+measure adopted. But that Carlos should think of himself as a man and
+actually have the impertinence to consider himself in love with Olive,
+Ruth simply could not have believed had she been told the truth at this
+moment.
+
+So Olive, pretending to go to her own room for a scarf, had afterwards
+stolen out of a side door and come close up to where the Indian boy was
+standing.
+
+"Carlos," she said kindly, "I would rather you did not linger about the
+veranda because you wish to speak to me. If you will come away with me
+for a little distance we can talk. I received your letter and you want
+to know what I think of it?"
+
+Without a word the boy nodded, but he followed the girl for a few yards
+until they were standing ankle deep in the shimmering green foliage of
+Frieda's violet beds which were not far from the Lodge. And although in
+the path a few feet away there was a small bench where the girls often
+rested after their work among the flowers, Olive would not consent to
+sitting down.
+
+Slowly and patiently as she could, she explained to Carlos the utter
+impossibility of his feeling for her. In the first place, he was a boy
+while she was a number of years his senior. Then he was completely
+mistaken in his idea that because she had been raised among Indian
+people she cared for their life or habits. Not for anything on earth
+would she return to their simple and primitive existence. Because Olive
+was essentially gentle and because her sympathy and understanding of the
+Indian boy's nature was a matter of experience as well as kindness of
+heart, she did try to take the sting away from the present situation so
+far as she could; yet she felt obliged to be firm, for there must be no
+repetition of Carlos' foolish letter to her. He must appreciate that she
+was fond of him because he had once befriended her in a difficulty, and
+that she was grateful and would always be interested in his welfare. But
+to care for him in any other fashion was absolutely out of the question.
+Never again must he even dare to refer to the subject.
+
+Notwithstanding her resolute attitude and the arguments which she had
+used so forcibly, at the end of their conversation Olive did not feel
+sure that Carlos was as entirely convinced of the absurdity of his
+desire as he should have been. For she had spared him the one course
+open to her that might have brought him to his senses--sheer ridicule.
+Therefore when Olive was back in her own room alone and undressing for
+the night, since she had not felt in the mood for rejoining her friends,
+she wondered if she had been altogether wise. Certainly she had not
+liked Carlos' manner, and two remarks of his near the conclusion of
+their talk had left her very angry.
+
+"It is Miss Ralston who has turned you against me," he had muttered
+sullenly. "She don't like me, she don't understand. She thinks I am no
+more than a servant about her place. If it had not been for her you
+might have stayed always in the wilderness with me when both of us were
+children. Then you would never have known of your people nor learned to
+love the stupid white man's world. Miss Ralston is my enemy; therefore I
+hate her." And with these words Carlos had drawn up his lean, boyish
+frame with the majesty of a deposed king.
+
+Olive's sudden wrath had humbled him for the moment at least; yet just
+before she turned to go he had said again with equal passion, although
+his manner was quieter and more subdued.
+
+"Then if it is not Miss Ralston who has come between us, there is some
+one you care for. I wonder if it can be the far-away guest and friend,
+who arrived this afternoon by the iron trail of the prairies?"
+
+When Olive did not answer but walked quietly back to the Lodge, Carlos
+stood for a time like a bronze statue, silent and unmoving; then swift
+as a shadow he threaded his way between the cottonwood trees, actually
+observing Jack and Frank from the beginning to the end of their
+conversation, although hearing little of what they said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+A VISIT TO RAINBOW MINE
+
+
+TWO days later, as things were once more in working order at the Rainbow
+Mine, Ralph Merrit suggested that Jim Colter bring Ruth and the girls
+and Frank Kent down to see how things were going. And soon after
+luncheon the little party started.
+
+A trip to the mine was actually like an expedition to a foreign place,
+so long a time had passed since the family had been allowed in its
+vicinity, and so of course everybody was in especially fine spirits. It
+was well to have Rainbow Mine running again and a relief to find that
+the striking miners had yielded to circumstances so much more readily
+and peaceably than their first threats suggested. They had influenced
+the mine workers near at home to have nothing to do with Ralph Merrit's
+management; nevertheless since the arrival of his new force the
+atmosphere about Rainbow Ranch had remained serene and untroubled, so
+that evidently the strikers were not to be heard from.
+
+True, a single ugly letter had mysteriously appeared at daylight this
+morning left before the door of the new foreman, but except for
+mentioning it to Ralph, the man had paid no further attention to it. And
+Ralph, in the interest and excitement of getting things into working
+order at the mine, had given it less consideration than it deserved. For
+the annoyance was not so much in the threat of trouble that the letter
+contained, as in the puzzle of its being found at the quarters built for
+the Rainbow Mine workers, which were not far from the old Ranch house.
+No outsider had been seen anywhere about the great ranch either on the
+preceding day or night.
+
+Jim and Frank and Jack walked on ahead in order that they might have a
+few moments' conversation with the new miners; for no one had yet gone
+down the shaft into the mine. Before lunch they had been going over the
+machinery and seeing that the elevators for the men and for the ore were
+in good working order.
+
+Now Ralph Merrit was insisting that he be lowered first into the mining
+pit and that his new men with their hammers and chisels and other
+mining paraphernalia follow after him. However, observing that Ruth and
+the other girls were coming nearer he went forward to speak to them. Not
+since the evening when he and his friend had taken dinner at the Rainbow
+Lodge had he seen any one of them.
+
+"We are awfully pleased, Ralph, that affairs are straightening out so
+comfortably," Ruth began. "I think we owe you a vote of thanks." She had
+not known what had been making Ralph Merrit so unlike himself for the
+past few months, since neither Jim nor Jean had seen fit to confide
+Ralph's weakness to any one else; but she did recognize the change for
+the better in him today. She had never before thought of Ralph as
+specially handsome, yet he looked so fine and capable; his expression
+was so full of energy and ability that instinctively Ruth held out her
+hand.
+
+"Go in and win, Ralph," she added, half laughing and half serious. "I
+don't just know what it is that you are fighting for, except to make
+more money for the girls who don't deserve it. But whatever it is I am
+going to put my money on you, even though betting is against my Puritan
+traditions; for you'll win in the end. Why, Ralph, you look like the
+famous statue of 'The Minute Man' near Boston, except that you have not
+his gun or knapsack. You're just as typical an American fighter and just
+as ready for action."
+
+Crimsoning like a small boy at unexpected praise, Ralph crushed Ruth's
+hand in reply until she had to repress a cry of pain.
+
+"I'm not worth the powder to blow me up if you really knew the truth
+about me, Mrs. Colter; but just the same any kind of fellow likes a
+compliment now and then, and I don't remember when I have had one," he
+returned.
+
+A movement of Jean's graceful shoulders and a single glance from her
+demure dark eyes made the young man swing half-way around to face her.
+
+"You are not disputing that statement, are you?" he demanded. "Why
+shouldn't a fellow like a compliment as well as a girl?"
+
+Jean slipped off the big pink straw hat she had been wearing and with
+the velvet ribbon about it, swung it on her arm like a basket.
+
+"Oh, I am not disputing _that_ part of your statement if you please,
+sir," she answered. "I am only regretting that you have forgotten all
+the other compliments which you have received in the past. For when I
+remember how many I have bestowed upon you lately, it is discouraging
+to think what a failure I have been in trying to make myself agreeable."
+
+Just why recently, indeed ever since their conversation together that
+afternoon on the veranda at the Lodge and later here in the shadow of
+one of the great rocks, Jean Bruce had been trying to make herself
+particularly agreeable to Ralph Merrit and to win back his former
+attention and friendship, the girl herself did not know. On her return
+from Europe, after a few months at home, she had certainly discouraged
+Ralph's devotion, feeling instinctively that his affection for her had
+now become more serious than in the past when he had looked upon her as
+only a half-grown girl. For Jean did not wish to be unkind or unfair,
+and assuredly Ralph had none of the things to offer her which she
+desired. Perhaps because of this she had talked more of wealth and of
+worldly ambitions than she might otherwise have done. And Ralph had
+either understood her intention or else had recovered from his former
+affection, for in the past few months, during his foolish and futile
+struggle for money through speculations, he had entirely ceased making
+love to her or treating her in any way differently from the other
+girls.
+
+At heart Jean was essentially a coquette, one of those girls and women
+who, having once gained a man's admiration, cannot bear to find
+themselves losing it. And surely Jack and Frieda and Olive had often
+accused her of this vice.
+
+Now, knowing that Ralph cared at present more for the successful working
+of the Rainbow Mine than for anything else, Jean pointed with apparently
+the deepest concern toward the group of new men.
+
+"Tell us about the new miners, won't you please, Ralph," she asked,
+"their names and where some of them came from--anything you know? They
+are a splendid-looking lot of fellows!"
+
+But at this moment Frieda interrupted the conversation to ask a
+question. "Who is that thin man over there all by himself in the blue
+overalls and old hat? Why isn't he with the others who are being
+introduced to Jim and Frank and Jack? I wonder if Jim knows him?"
+
+Then, quite unaccountably, Ralph Merrit appeared extremely
+uncomfortable.
+
+"See here, Frieda, I might as well tell you, for you would be sure to
+find out anyhow if I didn't. That fellow isn't one of the new miners.
+He is Russell, the friend I brought up to the Lodge with me to dinner
+the other night. You see----"
+
+But Frieda's eyes were widening and in truth the other three women
+seemed almost equally surprised.
+
+"But I thought Professor Russell had gone away from Rainbow Ranch,"
+Frieda protested, "why he told us good-by the night he left and said
+that he would have to be off so early the next morning that he could not
+see any of us again."
+
+Ralph nodded. "I know," he conceded in some embarrassment. "And you're
+still to think he has gone if you please. Don't any one of you go near
+enough to Russell to speak to him or he will probably die of confusion
+before your eyes. I am afraid I forgot he was around and he is under the
+impression that he is safely disguised. You see the truth of the matter
+is this. When Russell got me away from the Lodge the other night there
+is nothing he did not say to me for having taken him unprepared to a
+place where he had to meet four girls. He declared it nearly killed him
+and he had every intention of sneaking away from the Ranch house the
+next morning on foot rather than suffer the chance of meeting any one
+of you again. He is an awful ass, but just the same he is a tremendously
+clever fellow and I was awfully anxious to show him the mine and he
+wanted to see it almost as much. So I persuaded him that he could just
+stay on at the Ranch house with me for a few days, letting you believe
+he had disappeared until he saw how things down here looked and worked.
+I assured him no one of you ever came near the men's quarters, but now
+he is hanging around the mine waiting for me as I promised to take him
+down into the pit as soon as we start work. Don't scare him to death
+beforehand."
+
+Ruth and Jean and Olive laughed, and Olive said sympathetically:
+
+"Poor fellow, I can feel for him. I used to feel so shy that nearly all
+strangers made me wretched. But I don't see just why he should be so
+specially severe upon girls?"
+
+"Because he is a goose," Frieda returned so sententiously that every one
+else laughed. So plainly was she offended at her own failure to charm
+their strange guest a night or so before.
+
+It was time for Ralph to say good-by. Arrangements at the pit shaft had
+been made so that the first elevator could be lowered into it. He then
+waved his hand in farewell to his friends, as he and the new foreman of
+the mine and the odd-looking figure of Henry Russell climbed on to the
+elevator.
+
+"I shall go away before they come up again, so that foolish fellow won't
+even have to look at me," Frieda remarked scornfully, as without any
+hitch or delay the car slowly disappeared into the bowels of the earth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE EXPLOSION
+
+
+THE new crowd of miners were anxiously waiting about the mouth of the
+pit shaft, which led down into the deepest excavation that had yet been
+dug in the neighborhood of the Rainbow Creek.
+
+There were other openings, but because this was the largest, Ralph
+Merrit had desired that his workmen begin their labor here. For by
+extending and deepening the passages in the lower part of this shaft he
+hoped to make important discoveries of new veins of ore. And once
+convinced that a quantity of new gold was actually to be found under
+this ground the young engineer had no idea of giving up before he had
+devised some intelligent and not too expensive method of bringing more
+wealth to the surface of the earth.
+
+Not many feet from the company of men Jack Ralston and Frank Kent were
+standing together talking of some detail in connection with the work,
+while Jim Colter was hanging over the pit opening in company with the
+men who had charge of the lowering and raising of the mine elevator.
+
+Evidently Ralph Merrit and his two companions had made a safe landing
+below, for shortly after their disappearance there was a signal, and
+slowly the lift traveled up into the daylight again, now ready to take
+on another lot of passengers.
+
+"Steady, no crowding," Jim Colter called out as the next relay stepped
+hastily forward. "Merrit will want to start things going in the tunnel
+before you descend."
+
+One man had already gotten aboard, while another had one foot extended
+toward the platform, when suddenly from underneath them there came a
+tearing, splitting noise and then a muffled roar like the instantaneous
+explosion of a thousand guns.
+
+The passengers in the elevator fell on their knees and all around the
+opening of the pit there was powder and blackness and a fall of stones
+like a swift rain of meteors.
+
+By accident Ruth Colter's back happened to be turned away from the scene
+at the mine, so that the first sound she remembered hearing was her
+husband's hoarse shout of horror and then as she turned the sight of
+his great form lying prostrate on the ground with Jack and Frank trying
+to drag him away from danger.
+
+But when Ruth would have rushed toward him, Olive and Frieda held her
+fast, and the next instant a wave of weakness and darkness so
+overwhelmed her that she had no strength to move.
+
+When she opened her eyes she could see Jean's face, white as a sheet,
+dancing before her and hear her saying:
+
+"Jim isn't hurt, dear; only stunned by his fall. See, he is on his feet
+again giving orders. And Jack and Frank must be all right, they were not
+so near. But what could have happened, what caused the explosion? It's
+the men down inside the mine who must be horribly hurt. Ralph----"
+
+But Jean shook with such nervous terror that Frieda's arm encircled her,
+and the next moment the four women moved nearer the place of the
+disaster.
+
+They were just in time, for at the moment of their approach, although
+Jim Colter's face was so black that you could hardly distinguish him,
+with his forehead bleeding from an ugly wound and his clothes torn and
+burnt, he was giving orders like the general of an army and like trained
+soldiers the miners were obeying him.
+
+"I'll take four of you men who will volunteer to go down inside the mine
+with me. I don't know what has happened, but we are pretty apt to find
+things serious. It sounded like a dynamite explosion and there may be
+another. Fortunately for us the elevator is above ground and we can
+lower it. Some of you see that stretchers are brought here. Jack, keep
+your head and get hold of a doctor at once. I hope we may need him," the
+man added grimly, as he swung his great length aboard the small car, his
+companions crowding close against him.
+
+Unmindful of the awed silence that had followed the noise of the
+explosion, unmindful of the two score of rough strange men, Ruth
+breaking away from the girls now ran forward crying:
+
+"Jim, you can't go down into the mine first. I can't let you. There is
+the baby and me, you must think of us and of the girls. You may be
+horribly hurt."
+
+She was near enough now so that she could look straight into her
+husband's blue eyes and something in Jim's expression calmed her
+instantly. Then for the time he too seemed conscious of the presence of
+no one else.
+
+"Don't be frightened, Ruth, I shall be all right, dear, and back again
+with you in ten minutes perhaps. But in any case, girl, don't you see I
+have got to go down before the others? This is our mine and two of the
+men down there are almost boys."
+
+Some quiet order Jim then gave and slowly for the second time the lift
+sank down toward the dark abyss under the earth. For Ruth had made no
+other sound or protest, only keeping tight hold on Frieda's and Jean's
+hands. Olive had gone with Jack and Frank Kent in the direction of the
+Rainbow Lodge.
+
+To the watchers at the pit opening after the elevator had landed the
+second time there was a moment when they believed that they could hear
+voices below. Then the waiting seemed interminable. In point of fact
+only a few moments more had passed before the signal indicated that the
+car must be drawn up again.
+
+And this time it was Jean Bruce who covered her eyes with her hands.
+
+There was a grinding of the cables and then an unmistakable groan, so
+it was not only the faces of the women that blanched whiter. Many of
+these miners were middle-aged men who had been in mining disasters where
+many hundreds of lives were at stake. Now, since no further disturbance
+had followed the first brief explosion, they realized that only the
+three men who had first gone down into the pit had been injured. Yet it
+was nerve-racking not to be able to foretell whether these three men
+would be brought up alive or dead.
+
+Jim Colter and one of his helpers were standing upright in the car and
+Jim held in his arms a limp, crumpled figure, unconscious, his blue
+overalls charred and blackened, his absurd old hat quite gone. Indeed,
+the grave and learned professor of ancient languages looked like a
+broken slip of a boy in the big man's keeping.
+
+There on the floor of the car another figure was resting. The face was
+upturned to the light and though the eyes were closed the expression of
+the mouth showed that the man had not fainted but was suffering great
+pain.
+
+Frieda touched Jean Bruce on the arm.
+
+"It is not Ralph, but the new foreman who seems to be very badly hurt,"
+she whispered. "Look, the other men are carrying him off. I can't tell
+about Ralph's friend, Mr. Russell. But where is Ralph? Why hasn't he
+come up with the others?"
+
+And this last question of Frieda's was being echoed in the minds of the
+waiting woman and girl.
+
+Why had Jim brought up two of the wounded men and left the third, their
+oldest friend, still in the depth of Rainbow Mine? It was impossible not
+to believe that Jim had done this because these men were not too badly
+injured to be helped.
+
+For he had now placed his burden on the ground and was examining the
+young man with the skill and care of a surgeon, while some one else
+bathed the face. A stretcher had been secured for the foreman who was
+now being taken to his own quarters to await the coming of a surgeon.
+
+"Jim," Ruth Colter put her hand on her husband's shoulder and her face
+was almost as white and strained as it had been during her last speech
+with him, "the elevator is going down again and you are not going with
+it. Tell us, please, what has happened to Ralph?"
+
+Without waiting to hear her guardian's answer Frieda suddenly burst
+into tears. Of course she had been dreadfully unnerved by the recent
+accident and now this uncertainty about their friend, besides the sight
+of their new acquaintance stretched out there at her feet as though he
+were dead when the last time she had seen him he had been eating his
+dinner, was more than she could bear.
+
+"Ralph? Great Scott, I am a brute, Ruth, Jean, Frieda!" Jim Colter
+exclaimed. "Why didn't I tell you at once? Ralph isn't badly hurt at
+all; he is bruised and burnt and shaken up, but nothing more, so far as
+I could tell. So of course he insisted that we bring up the two other
+fellows first. It's a plain miracle that there's anything left of the
+three of them. So far as I could understand somebody had fixed a bomb
+down at the end of the pit shaft, but the thing was clumsily made and
+only half went off. Ralph said they were blown about a good deal and the
+atmosphere was pretty thick, but unless the new foreman has been injured
+internally there was no great harm done. I think this young man has
+nothing more serious the matter with him than a broken leg. And I expect
+we shall be able to mend that for him at Rainbow Lodge."
+
+At these words Henry Russell opened his eyes, but whether because of
+Jim's suggestion or the pain he was enduring, or whether because the
+sight of the girls, he groaned aloud and then closed his lips again.
+
+"I don't think he wants to be taken to the Lodge," Frieda suggested
+mournfully. "You see he wants us to think he has gone away."
+
+Then possibly because Ruth's and Jim's nerves had both been strained
+almost past endurance for the past half hour they laughed aloud at
+Frieda's speech.
+
+Jean had slipped away and it was her white and yet happy face that Ralph
+Merrit saw first as he came back into the world of daylight again.
+There, though he was staggering and nearly blind and covered with blood
+and grime from the shock he had just received, he found Jean's hands
+before any others and held them close for a moment while she murmured:
+
+"I am so glad, so glad; it is because you have some big work to do in
+the world that you have been saved, I am sure, Ralph."
+
+A moment later Ralph was quietly accepting the congratulations of his
+workmen, while he tried to explain to them just how the explosion had
+taken place. That the bomb had been placed down the shaft by one of the
+former miners there could be no shadow of doubt.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+AN UNFORTUNATE DISCUSSION
+
+
+"BUT why won't either Jean or Frieda come with us?" Olive asked a week
+after the unfortunate accident at the Rainbow Mine. With a surprise that
+she did not pretend to hide Jack Ralston turned to look at her friend.
+
+"I thought I had explained to you, dear," she protested, "that Jean said
+she felt it her duty to write a long letter of sympathy to the Princess
+Colonna. You see she only heard yesterday of the death of the old Prince
+and though she does not feel that the Princess will be exactly
+inconsolable (he was so much older and they thought so differently about
+many things), yet of course Jean has to say that she is dreadfully sorry
+and is there anything she can do and all that. It would not surprise me
+in the least if the Princess came west and made us a visit. I told Jean
+to invite her. She was born in this part of the country and I rather
+think she will be glad to get away from Rome while she is in heavy
+mourning. It is a pity she did not have a son, isn't it? The title will
+have to go to her husband's nephew, Giovanni Colonna. You remember he
+and Jean were such good friends."
+
+But although the two girls were walking along side by side toward the
+stables back of the Rainbow Lodge, it was plain that Olive Van Mater was
+not listening with any real interest to what her companion was saying.
+
+"Then why won't Frieda ride with us?" she expostulated. "I am sure it
+has been ages since we four girls had a long ride together and it is a
+wonderfully beautiful morning. What has become of Frieda lately
+anyhow--I almost never see her except at meal times?"
+
+With a laugh Jack Ralston laid her arm lightly across her friend's
+shoulder.
+
+"Poor Olive, to have only my poor society! But, dear, we have not had
+but one other ride together, the one that we took to the Indian village
+soon after your arrival. Does it bore you so dreadfully to have only me
+as a companion? You must not come with me then, simply because I asked
+you. I can get one of the boys to ride over the ranch with me; perhaps
+Carlos would be willing to do that much! I don't know what has happened
+to Frieda, but the child is making a perfect martyr of herself. That
+poor young Professor seems not to wish anyone to do things for him
+except Frieda or Ruth. You know he perfectly hates the sight of the rest
+of us. And as Ruth is so busy with Jimmikins and the house she can't
+nurse him a great deal. So he just lies in his room, which is Frieda's
+by the way, and moans and groans until Frieda comes to amuse him. What
+do you think I beheld our baby doing the other day? Reading him some
+dreadful article on Egyptian Hieroglyphics from a learned magazine. She
+hadn't the faintest idea what it was all about and she looked like a big
+yellow butterfly imprisoned in a dark place. I am sure I am awfully
+sorry the erudite young professor had to break his right leg in the
+depth of Rainbow Mine and that we have him on our hands for six weeks or
+more--almost as sorry as he is I expect. Still I am not going to have
+Frieda sacrificing herself to him much longer. I mean to tell her
+tomorrow that it is quite unnecessary. He is a dreadfully spoiled
+person."
+
+"But wouldn't Frank have enjoyed this long ride with you this morning,
+Jack?" Olive repeated, still refusing to take any interest in what Jack
+was saying, but instead clinging obstinately to her own train of
+thought. "I am sure Jim would have let Frank off from the trip with him
+if he had known that you had to take this long ride to hunt up the lost
+mares and colts."
+
+Jack nodded, but her expression was hurt and puzzled. "Of course Jim
+would have let Frank come with me or would have come himself if he had
+known of the trouble. But both Jim and Frank were away before I heard of
+the loss. Besides, it does not make any difference, for I am sure I have
+ridden over Rainbow Ranch looking up our lost horses and cattle ever
+since I was fourteen or fifteen years old. But if you think the ride may
+be too long for you, please don't come, Olive. I shan't be in the least
+hurt if you don't feel like it. Kiss me good-by and go back to the
+Lodge. Ruth will be overjoyed at your return and I'll be perfectly all
+right with Carlos."
+
+But although Jack Ralston spoke so cheerfully and in such good temper
+she was not truthful in pretending that Olive's present attitude was not
+hurting her feelings. The truth is that she felt that Olive had not
+been exactly the same toward her since Frank Kent's arrival. And if Jack
+had needed any further proof to add to her past conviction this was
+sufficient. Always before, Olive had loved her better than any one else,
+even more than she did her friend, Miss Winthrop. And Jack was certain
+that she had done nothing to make Olive angry or to wound her--she
+herself was so utterly unchanged in her own affection.
+
+What a hopeless, horrid puzzle it all was and of all persons was not
+Jacqueline Ralston the most inadequate for straightening it out? She had
+no methods but those of frankness. If only she dared ask Olive how she
+actually felt.
+
+But Olive would hardly have been able to explain to her, because in
+these last few weeks the girl had not understood herself. Before Frank
+Kent's coming to the Rainbow Lodge she had been sure of having entirely
+recovered from her past fancy for him. Had she not fought it all out in
+those final weeks in England when she had realized the extent of Frank's
+devotion to Jack and the impossibility of her own position? And
+now--well, whatever turn events might take, Olive felt the fault would
+be largely Jacqueline's. For why did Jack fail to return Frank's
+affection? Why did she continue to treat him with such disregard and yet
+keep him lingering on at the ranch? Really Olive wondered if her own
+emotion was not now one more of sympathy for Frank and impatience with
+Jack. Surely Frank was too fine a fellow from every point of view to be
+trifled with. And no one would ever have suspected Jack of being a girl
+of such a character.
+
+Olive again looked closely into her friend's face and what she saw there
+for the moment disarmed her. Of course she was more angry with Jack than
+she had ever dreamed it possible that she could be and yet she had not
+meant to wound her over this small question of their having another ride
+together to search for lost stock. Perhaps this very morning Jack might
+be in a humor to confide in her the cause of her mysterious conduct. She
+must have some vital reason, it was so unlike her to be cruel or not to
+know her own mind.
+
+"Of course I won't go back to the Lodge," Olive finally protested. "For
+I do wish the ride immensely; it was only that I thought it might be a
+pleasure for the others too."
+
+And to this half-hearted apology the other girl made no reply.
+
+A few moments later, having arrived at the beautiful new stables built
+within the past year at the Rainbow Ranch, Jack and Olive found their
+two horses already saddled. And a little while after, finding the Indian
+boy, Carlos, at his own tent door, the three of them mounted and rode
+away.
+
+Now riding with Jacqueline Ralston over their great thousand-acre
+Wyoming ranch to seek for cattle or horses that had gone astray was apt
+to be fairly strenuous, and no one unaccustomed to riding should ever
+have thought of attempting it. Yet Olive had done the same thing dozens
+of times in the years when she had first came to live at Rainbow Ranch,
+and on starting out this morning had no idea of growing tired before her
+friend did.
+
+The first part of their trip was easy enough, for although Jack cantered
+along fairly rapidly she made no detours, only keeping a careful lookout
+in all possible directions. For she had no thought of finding the lost
+mares and their young colts anywhere within the immediate neighborhood
+of that part of the ranch which was apt to be ridden over oftener than
+the more distant fields. And Carlos had been asked to make the few
+necessary excursions whenever a rise in the landscape or a group of
+trees or rocks made a possible hiding place.
+
+But a short time before midday the three riders came to a distant part
+of Rainbow Creek, where the character of the ranch land changed and
+where there were frequent hummocks and sand hills and great boulders
+split into natural caves and canyons. This part of the creek had no
+connection with the Rainbow Mine but was sometimes used in an emergency
+as a drinking place for the stock, although the stock was not supposed
+to wander here without guidance, as there were many ravines and
+dangerous places where especially the young cattle or colts were apt to
+be injured.
+
+Here the riding under Jacqueline's guidance became more difficult and
+fatiguing. For not only did she leave the ordinary beaten trail, but she
+made her horse pick his way along what appeared an utterly impossible
+track over rocks, in the deep loose sand, now following a partly dry
+creek bed and occasionally splashing through water so deep that it
+reached almost to her riding boots. For another hour Olive followed,
+not realizing her own exhaustion, but wondering why her breath should be
+coming in such short gasps and why her back should ache in such an
+unaccountable fashion.
+
+Curiously enough it was Carlos who first discovered Olive's predicament.
+For the past ten minutes he had been riding as close by her side as was
+possible under the conditions, not speaking a single word, but examining
+her closely with his small, burning black eyes. And when Olive, without
+being conscious of it, turned a shade whiter, even then he did not speak
+to her but instead rode silently forward until he was opposite Jack.
+
+"All women have not the strength of men!" he began sullenly. The girl
+stared at him in amazement, not guessing what he meant.
+
+Then Carlos grew angry and his words came faster than usual. "If you
+think more of lost animals than of her whom you call friend, it is well
+that you should go on until she falls. Have I not often heard and now
+see with my own eyes that there are squaws who care nothing for their
+own sex."
+
+Half rising in her saddle Jacqueline Ralston lifted her riding whip, and
+almost before realizing what she was doing she had struck the Indian boy
+sharply across his lean shoulders.
+
+"You are not to speak of American women as squaws, Carlos. How often
+have Mr. Colter and I told you that you were never to do it? And,
+moreover, you are to understand that I will not endure your
+impertinence. What has happened to put you in so evil a mood?" Jack
+asked more quietly now, sorry for her own loss of temper. For she
+realized in a small measure just how keenly an Indian feels the
+degradation of a blow from an enemy, unless he is able to return it with
+increased vengeance. And Jack had no illusion about Carlos' attitude
+toward her. He had turned a kind of ashy white under his bronze skin and
+his body had quivered once and then become perfectly tense, not from the
+force of the blow, which had not cut deeply, but from his own passion.
+
+However, before either the boy or Jack could speak again, Olive had
+ridden up between them, grieved and frightened over her friend's action
+and wondering what could have occurred between them in so short a time.
+
+"Jack dear, what has Carlos done or said?" she demanded quickly. "It
+was not fair of you to strike him, knowing that he could make no
+defense."
+
+Instantly Jacqueline Ralston felt her face flushing with a swift rushing
+of hot blood to her cheeks until her temples pounded and her eyes
+flashed. Never before in their entire acquaintance had she remembered
+being really angry with Olive. Yet had she not borne a good deal already
+that day and for several weeks beforehand in Olive's indifference and
+critical air toward her? Now in this trouble she had just had with
+Carlos, Olive was immediately taking the Indian boy's part without even
+asking her for an explanation. Nevertheless a second glance at her
+friend's face made her instantly control her own emotion, appreciating
+at the same time what Carlos' impertinent speech to her had meant.
+
+"You are tired, Olive. I am so sorry," she replied at once, instead of
+answering the other girl's question. "I did not realize how hard we had
+been riding, or that you are out of practice after a year in New York
+while the rest of us were here at the ranch. We'll have luncheon and
+rest and then maybe you'll feel better."
+
+Jack nodded curtly to Carlos to assist Olive in dismounting while she
+slid off her own horse without help. Then she put her arm about the
+other girl, leaving the boy to lead the three horses. In a little while
+she and Olive had found a flat rock shadowed by a cliff from the sun.
+Here Olive sat down while Jack opened up their luncheon boxes and made
+the necessary preparations. But all the time she was reflecting upon
+what she had best do or say to the Indian boy. She was sorry that she
+had struck him, although still extremely angry at his manner and speech
+to her. If Carlos had felt worried over Olive's exhaustion it would have
+been simple enough to have told her in a more polite fashion. The truth
+was that she and Jim were both getting extremely tired of the Indian
+boy's presence on Rainbow Ranch. She would talk over this incident today
+with her guardian and ask him if he felt that she owed Carlos an
+apology. If he did she would make whatever reparation she could and
+after that they would try and find another home for him. But at present
+she was still too annoyed to wish to have the boy near her.
+
+"You can find water for our horses and tie them somewhere not far away,
+Carlos," Jack ordered, leaving Olive and walking a few yards across the
+sand to where the boy stood, still sullen and resentful in his manner.
+"Then ride on for another half hour and see if you can find any of the
+lost mares or colts. When you return we will have lunch saved for you."
+
+And so Jack Ralston temporarily dismissed the difficulty confronting
+her. For in any case it was disagreeable to have Carlos staring at them
+while she and Olive ate, and she did not wish him as a companion at
+their luncheon.
+
+Carlos' society could hardly have increased the discomfort of their
+meal. For Olive was either too weary or too vexed to wish to talk, and
+Jack in too strange a tumult of feeling.
+
+Then suddenly, as the two girls were sitting there together in the warm,
+caressing sunshine, hardly more than a few feet apart and yet sundered
+by leagues of misunderstanding, it seemed to Jacqueline that she could
+no longer endure all that she was suffering for her friend, unless Olive
+made some sign that her sacrifice was worth while. For Jack made no
+effort to hide from herself, however much she concealed it from other
+people, that each day of her life she was learning to care more and more
+for Frank Kent, for his love and his complete understanding and sympathy
+with her temperament. She knew that she had many faults, but she also
+knew that Frank was aware of them and forgave them. However, there was
+one fault that she did not have and it was not fair that she should bear
+the ignominy of it. She would no longer hurt and confuse the man she
+cared for by her apparent inability to make up her mind.
+
+Jack's full red lips closed more tightly than was usual to them as she
+lifted her head, showing the firm line of her throat and chin. Then she
+took a deep breath, straightening her shoulders and glancing with her
+wide open, heavily fringed gray eyes directly into the eyes of her
+friend.
+
+Olive was more rested, was less pale, but was evidently still as much
+estranged from her. And though the conviction had come upon her
+suddenly, Jack felt convinced that this was the appointed moment when
+she must wrest the truth from the other girl. She hated herself for her
+own stupidity in not finding out by more subtle means and scarcely knew
+now what she intended to do or say. It was as if she stood on the bank
+of an icy stream with the shore of truth on the other side, a shore
+which by some method she must reach. Therefore, with Jacqueline
+Ralston's disposition, there appeared but one means. Boldly she must
+plunge in, no matter what the result.
+
+"Olive dear," Jack began abruptly, not looking at her friend, but at a
+small smoke-colored cloud over in the western sky, "I know you are angry
+with me about Carlos and I am sorry. He was impertinent, but I don't
+suppose you would think that justifies what I did. But it is not about
+what happened just now that I want to talk. You have not felt like you
+once did for me for several weeks--not since Frank Kent came to the
+Lodge. Would you mind telling me why?"
+
+To Jack's directness of thought and speech her friend by this time
+should have grown accustomed. And indeed until now Olive had always
+loved and admired Jack for it. But today she was tired and her head
+ached and this unexpected question had taken her completely by surprise.
+The girl's dark cheeks flushed richly and her ordinarily gentle
+expression changed.
+
+"Jack, you are absurd!" she answered irritably. "What right have you
+anyhow to consider that my feeling for you has any connection with Frank
+Kent? What does Frank mean to me?"
+
+Now if only Jack had been content with this answer or had possessed some
+of Jean Bruce's tact and resourcefulness! She had neither. So her gray
+eyes darkened and her face grew white and unhappy.
+
+"Forgive me, Olive," she murmured, humbly enough for proud,
+high-tempered Jack, "but that is what I, oh, so much want you to tell
+me. For sometimes I have thought that perhaps you do like Frank just a
+little bit more than an ordinary friend. And if it is true, dear, don't
+you feel that we have been close enough to each other to have you make
+me your confidant?"
+
+It was very gently put, after all, and therefore Olive should not have
+been so wounded or so angry. However, and perhaps because there was so
+much of truth in the other girl's suggestion, Olive was both hurt and
+embittered.
+
+"You have not the shadow of a right, Jacqueline Ralston, to say a thing
+like that to me," she returned with the passion and protest of a too
+sensitive nature. "How dare you sit there and calmly suggest to me that
+I am in love with Frank Kent when you know perfectly well that he cares
+for no one in this world but you. Do you suppose that I have no pride
+and no self-respect?"
+
+And then, dropping her head in her hands, Olive began crying, hardly
+understanding her own tears, so much were they a combination of pain and
+of petulance. For the questions she had just put to Jack were the very
+ones that she had so often asked herself. And if she had found no answer
+to them, how could any one else?
+
+But Jack did not attempt making a reply. For a moment she was silent,
+feeling miserably conscious of the failure she had just made. For had
+she not merely succeeded in mortifying her friend without arriving one
+bit nearer the truth which she sought?
+
+But by and by Jack laid her hand caressingly on the other girl's dark
+hair. "Don't cry, Olive please," she begged. "You know what a stupid
+person I am and how often Jean and Frieda think I do and say the wrong
+thing. Here comes Carlos and when he has eaten his lunch you must let
+him take you back to the Lodge. You are too tired to ride any farther
+and I can manage very well by myself, or else you can send one of the
+stable boys this way to find me."
+
+Without making a reply Olive continued to sob, only now a little more
+quietly, and in the meanwhile allowing Jack to make all the arrangements
+for her return home. It was unfortunate perhaps that she also paid so
+little attention to the Indian boy, who was sitting within a few yards
+of her, pretending to eat. In reality he was either keeping his eyes
+fixed moodily upon her, or else turning them upon Jacqueline Ralston
+with such an intensity of dislike that had she been aware of it, she
+must have been vaguely disturbed.
+
+A little later Olive and Carlos started home together. In farewell Olive
+simply nodded her head to Jack, showing no other sign of forgiveness or
+affection; but she had only ridden for a comparatively short distance
+when she was as bitterly sorry and as ashamed of herself as Jack had
+previously been, and at the moment would have liked to turn back. She
+realized that she had been both unreasonable and unkind. What could
+have been the matter with her? Surely her fatigue must have had
+something to do with it, for people were rarely sensible when
+over-tired. Jack had not intended breaking down the barrier of her
+reserve for no reason but idle curiosity.
+
+Then suddenly Olive's hands tightened on her bridle reins and her black
+eyes softened. How unutterably blind she had been for so long! For was
+not Jack's recent question to her the keynote of the whole puzzling
+situation? Jack certainly must fear that she cared more for Frank than
+she should. Would this not perfectly explain her attitude toward him
+since the beginning of his love-making? Olive quickly recalled the final
+weeks of their visit in England, then Jack's repeated efforts to thrust
+her into Frank's society and so to evade him herself! Then since Jack
+Ralston's return to the ranch had she not resolutely refused to let
+Frank Kent come to see her until Olive was also at the Lodge?
+
+Sudden and relieving tears rolled down the girl's hot cheeks, which she
+did not for the moment attempt wiping away. How like her quixotic Jack
+to refuse to accept her own happiness at the price of her friend's! And
+how near she, Olive, had come to permitting Jack to sacrifice all three
+of them to her mistaken sense of loyalty and love!
+
+Well, tonight Olive intended straightening everything out by answering
+the inquiry to which she had refused to reply to before. For in the
+light of her present revelation had she not at last felt a weight
+lifting itself from her own heart and a clear vision come to her mind?
+Let her measure her affection for Frank Kent by that which she felt for
+Jacqueline. Why she loved Jack a hundred times better than she ever
+could Frank! Jack had been her first friend: all that she was she really
+owed to her. If only she did not have to wait an hour longer before
+making three persons happier than they had been in many weeks!
+
+Half-way around Olive turned her pony's head. But no, she was too tired
+to go back to Jack and besides they could have no intimate conversation
+under the present circumstances. Moreover, it had been growing much
+warmer in this last half hour, in spite of the fact that every once and
+a while there were unexpected gusts of wind blowing the sand into her
+own eyes and her mare's. The truth was that she should never have
+consented to leaving Jack. She should have insisted on her going home at
+the same time with them. Ruth and Jim Colter would both be annoyed at
+the idea of Jack's riding about the ranch alone, and any one of the men
+whom she might send back to look for her would probably be several hours
+in searching and perhaps never discover her at all.
+
+For the first time in half an hour Olive Van Mater glanced across at the
+boy, Carlos. He had not spoken a dozen words to her in the course of
+their trip, so how could she dream that all this while he had been
+turning over and over in his mind the bitterness of Jack's insult? Then
+not only was his animosity a personal one, but on coming back from the
+needless errand upon which he had been driven away, had he not found his
+one time Princess in tears and such sorrow that she had not yet ceased
+from grieving? Her trouble could have but one source. Perhaps Miss
+Ralston had even dared wound her in the same way that she had him! And
+then Carlos had clenched his teeth, continuing more rigid and doggedly
+quiet than before. For of course he should soon be revenged for both of
+them! The only thing was to wait until his opportunity came.
+
+"Carlos," Olive said unexpectedly. "I am almost back at the Lodge now
+and will have no difficulty in going the rest of the way alone. But I
+wish you would go and find Miss Ralston. Tell her please to come home at
+once, that I want to speak to her about something most important. And I
+think you had better hurry, for I am a little bit afraid that a storm is
+coming up."
+
+Possibly Olive had expected a demur. If so she was mistaken, for without
+replying the boy wheeled his horse and started back in the direction
+from which they had just come.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A DESERT STORM
+
+
+PERHAPS no one except an Indian could have found Jack so swiftly, and
+yet Carlos was engaged in the search for her over an hour. For the girl
+had gone some distance beyond the place of their last meeting and still
+had found no trace of their lost stock.
+
+She was vexed for a moment at Carlos' reappearance, but gave no sign.
+Indeed she managed to say "Thank you" when he briefly explained that he
+had taken Olive near enough home to have her make the rest of the
+journey without an escort and then that she had sent him back to
+continue the hunt. Not a suggestion did he give of Olive's real message
+for Jack to return home immediately.
+
+A girl with Jacqueline Ralston's knowledge and experience of western
+life should have required no such message had she taken her usual normal
+interest in her surroundings. For there was a sufficient forewarning of
+what was approaching for her to have understood. Nevertheless, for once
+in her life Jack was almost completely oblivious of the landscape and of
+the conditions of the sky and atmosphere. For her conversation with
+Olive had made her more unhappy and puzzled than she had previously
+been, since she had surely succeeded only in making the tangle harder
+for any one of them to unravel.
+
+Now and then, as she continued her ride beyond the end of the Rainbow
+Creek and into the broader sweep of their prairie lands, the girl almost
+forgot the original object of her day's excursion, only feeling that
+more than anything she desired to be outdoors and alone. So that instead
+of leading the way as she had done in the morning she now allowed the
+boy Carlos to take his own trail, following without much thought close
+behind.
+
+By far the larger portion of the broad area of the Ralston ranch was
+cultivated land, to the extent that the fields beyond the Lodge were
+most of them planted with alfalfa grass and other grains according to
+their fertility. Occasionally there were barren spaces of land where the
+sands from the desert had settled too deeply for any growing thing, and
+as these were at the outermost edges of the ranch Jim Colter had left
+them undisturbed, waiting for a time when there should be less work
+nearer home.
+
+Therefore when Jack suddenly discovered her horse ploughing heavily
+through one of these sandy stretches she realized that they were farther
+away from Rainbow Lodge than she had appreciated. And certainly it was
+now time to turn back. She was afraid that she could hardly manage to
+arrive at home before dinner time and that would mean a scolding from
+Jim, who would hardly consider the rescue of a few lost mares and colts
+a sufficient excuse for making the rest of them uncomfortable and
+uneasy.
+
+Jack smiled a little ruefully, checking her horse and allowing him a few
+moments of rest. She had not even that good excuse to take home with
+her, for she had not seen a trace of the stray stock and had really
+scarcely looked for them since luncheon. But then Carlos must have been
+more attentive--she was really surprised at the boy's apparent interest
+since he rejoined her. He had taken the entire initiative. Even now he
+was some distance ahead and going too fast for his horse's strength in
+such difficult ground.
+
+"Carlos, Carlos," the girl called as loudly as possible. Then she
+patted Romeo's neck with swift penitence. Ordinarily she was quick to
+remember the comfort of her own mount, but today she had been most
+extraordinarily selfish. However, it was odd that in spite of his long
+day's travel her horse did not seem to wish to stand still even for a
+moment. He kept pawing the earth, sniffing and turning half way round in
+his eagerness to start for home.
+
+The mystery needed only a little time for solving. All afternoon in a
+subconscious fashion Jack had realized that the air was unpleasantly hot
+and stifling and that the sun had not been shining since luncheon. The
+little cloud which she had first noticed in the west, a queer
+funnel-shaped cloud, had been constantly growing larger. Of course it
+meant a storm, but it was still far enough away not to be immediately
+alarming. However, they must get home as soon as possible, and Carlos
+evidently had not heard her cry.
+
+Twice again Jack shouted his name, but as he did not turn his head she
+touched her pony lightly with her riding whip and rode after him. She
+regretted now that she had allowed the boy to get so far ahead of her,
+for her own few minutes' delay had naturally increased the distance
+between them. Yet Jack did not feel that it would be fair for her to
+turn back without informing her companion. It seemed almost cruel to
+force her jaded horse at such a pace through the loose sands; yet how
+else could she ever hope to catch up with her escort? Carlos did not
+usually show such poor judgment with his own steed.
+
+Then finally it occurred to the girl that the Indian boy was refusing
+deliberately to answer her as a punishment for their trouble earlier in
+the day. If this were true she was foolish to waste any more time and
+energy in pursuit of him. She could get back home alone long before
+bedtime by allowing her horse to walk for a part of the way. Then if the
+storm should overtake her, she would not be far enough from the Lodge to
+have it make any serious difference. As for her scolding, well, Jack
+felt that she would have to accept that as philosophically as possible
+under the circumstances. For Jim would have a double grievance, since he
+did not like any one of them to ride for any distance with only Carlos
+as a companion.
+
+Shrugging her shoulders, too tired really to be angry again that day,
+Jack called once more. This time, to her surprise, Carlos actually rose
+in his saddle, pointing with evident excitement toward some
+indeterminate objects at a little distance off. Jack could not see what
+they were, although she guessed at once. After all, their hard day's
+work had not been in vain! Carlos had assuredly discovered the lost
+stock. True they must have wandered beyond the confines of the Rainbow
+ranch, since Jack was familiar enough with their own boundary line to
+know that Carlos was even at this instant passing beyond the wire fence
+which circumscribed it.
+
+Their stock oftentimes got outside the ranch by mysterious methods of
+their own. Therefore if Carlos believed that he saw the mares they had
+been searching for the entire day, it would be foolish to turn back
+without them. It was unfortunate that the heavy cloud in the west seemed
+to be driving toward them with so much greater speed in these last
+fifteen minutes. Still if it should reach their vicinity before they
+could get the lost mares and colts into some kind of shelter the animals
+must perish. For the mares would never desert their young and the colts
+could never endure the force of the wind and the great blankets of sand
+that would probably sweep over and cover them.
+
+Jack was not mistaken in one point of view. She knew, as only a
+Westerner could, that the storm approaching was not rain, but wind, and
+that it might mean a sand storm in the desert.
+
+A saner judgment however would have suggested that Jacqueline Ralston
+start back home at once, leaving Carlos to follow her. But she
+appreciated the tremendous difficulty that the boy would have in
+rounding up the frightened animals alone and forcing them into some
+place of refuge. Really, it never occurred to Jack not to help. She had
+been so accustomed to just such work on the ranch from the time she was
+a small girl.
+
+So on she rode now, straight after the Indian boy, perhaps for an eighth
+of a mile or more beyond their boundary, yet still the loose thick sands
+which were whirling and eddying in gusts at her horse's feet.
+
+And always Carlos kept as far as possible ahead.
+
+Jack finally came to a position where she found out the mistake which
+she believed both she and the Indian boy had innocently made. The dark
+objects ahead of them had been only a group of close growing sage bushes
+that they had mistaken for the lost stock. Crying out once more to the
+boy to turn back, Jack now made no pretense of waiting to discover
+whether or not he heeded her. For the wind was blowing more fiercely,
+bringing with it the heat of a sirocco, and the sand was pouring into
+her eyes and ears, almost blinding and choking her. Beyond her there
+were small sand hills and ravines where a few moments before the earth
+had lain smooth as a carpet.
+
+Jack perfectly understood that the full fury of the storm had not yet
+reached her vicinity. Her effort must be to get beyond the sand plains,
+back if possible to the neighborhood of Rainbow Creek, where behind one
+of its great rocks she might find partial shelter.
+
+But her heart was pounding uncomfortably and her fair skin felt as
+though it were being pricked by innumerable needles. Moreover, Jack was
+frightened. She knew just what a sandstorm meant on the western
+prairies. She was not far from the edge of a portion of barren lands
+that formed a kind of miniature desert, and the worst of the situation
+was that she herself was very tired and that through her own selfish
+forgetfulness her horse was even more so. Every foot of the way the girl
+strove to encourage the exhausted animal. Yet it was impossible to make
+real headway in such a soil while buffeted by such a gale.
+
+Then Jacqueline Ralston heard a strange noise and, as she had heard it
+once before in her life, she must have recognized it had not her other
+senses also added their warning.
+
+The roar and rush behind her were seldom equalled by any other kind of
+tempest.
+
+For half an instant rising in her saddle the girl glanced back. Carlos
+was not far off now and spurring his horse remorselessly.
+
+For beyond the boy at no great distance and driving rapidly forward was
+an immense dark yellow cloud. The peculiarity of this cloud was not
+merely in its color, size and shape, but that instead of being overhead
+it almost touched the surface of the land.
+
+The girl slid off her horse.
+
+"Down, down," she said quietly, pulling hard on her bridle. And then as
+her horse's knees touched the ground before him, Jack flung herself face
+downward, clutching at the loose earth for endurance and strength.
+
+The cloud would be upon them in another moment with terrible
+destructive force. For not alone did it represent the fury of the wind,
+but was formed of a mountain of sand driven before it.
+
+A sound, which the girl guessed must have come from Carlos, suggested
+that he was following her example. Yet she dared not look back to see.
+Now the sand storm was upon them.
+
+The thunder and terror of it are past understanding.
+
+One chance only Jack believed they had for their lives. If the sand
+cloud was sufficiently high above the earth not to touch them they would
+be safe. Otherwise they would be driven before it like chips of straw.
+But of any actual, conscious sensation which she suffered as the cloud
+passed over her, Jack was not aware. She knew that she was praying the
+instant before, but at the time itself she only clung the closer and
+sank deeper down into the earth, which is the final refuge of us all.
+
+The moment following, however, the girl felt as if she had been bruised
+and beaten by a thousand furies. Her body ached with fatigue, her tongue
+felt scorched and swollen and her eyes smarted with intense pain. There
+was no further danger; storms of this character come with one terrible
+driving blast of wind and then go straight on in their course.
+
+Jack blinked and stirred sufficiently to turn over and see that her
+horse was safe. As well as its master a western broncho understands how
+to meet strange weather conditions that would bring destruction to any
+other animal.
+
+With a sigh of thankfulness the girl then stretched herself more
+comfortably along the ground, resting one elbow in the sand and leaning
+her head upon it. For Carlos and his pony were equally safe and
+evidently not so frightened as she was, for the boy was already
+staggering toward her dragging his horse by the bridle.
+
+The girl was not yet able to speak. Yet she watched Carlos with
+indifference and entirely without suspicion as he came to within a few
+feet of her and reaching downward pulled her horse on to his feet again.
+
+The horse staggered and Jack had half an inclination to ask the boy to
+wait a little while before forcing him to stand. However she did not
+seem to have strength enough even to make this protest. Nor did she
+speak at first when she saw Carlos leading the two horses away from the
+place where she was resting.
+
+What on earth did the boy have in mind to do? It was useless to try to
+brush the sand from the horse's coats and there was no water near enough
+to give them each a drink.
+
+Jack frowned, then she not only sat up but rose quickly on her feet. For
+Carlos had mounted his own pony and without a word to her was riding
+away, taking her horse with him. The girl called, but again the Indian
+boy was afflicted with the curious deafness that had affected him all
+afternoon. Then Jack ran after him, stumbling and crying as she ran. But
+she was far too exhausted to make much headway and still Carlos would
+not glance around. He was not even going in the direction of the Rainbow
+Ranch.
+
+Just how long her futile chase actually continued Jacqueline Ralston did
+not realize. So long as she could manage to keep the boy in sight she
+followed him, floundering in the sands and uncertain of her direction.
+However, when he was so far away that she could no longer see him, Jack
+sat down again. What annoying freak had possessed Carlos to ride off
+with her horse without offering any explanation? Well, he would
+doubtless return within a short time, so there was nothing to do except
+wait.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+OLIVE'S REMORSE
+
+
+BACK at the Lodge Olive undressed and lay down upon the bed for a short
+rest. Afterwards, when she felt that Jack must surely have received her
+message she rose and put on the lavender frock that was the other girl's
+especial favorite.
+
+Olive was by this time no longer tired, but in better spirits than she
+had been for several weeks. For in less than an hour, perhaps, things
+would be entirely cleared up between herself and her best friend.
+
+"Dear old Jack, was there ever anyone else in the world quite so
+generous or so absurd? Did Jack really think that she had the privilege
+of bestowing her lover upon her friend, simply because she was under the
+impression that the friend desired him? What would Frank have had to say
+in the matter?"
+
+Then Olive blushed. Possibly after all she had been more absurd in
+allowing herself even for an hour or a day to think that she cared for
+a man as far beyond her reach as the moon. Let her be honest with
+herself at least! Had she not actually shed tears in secret? And this
+when from the very beginning of their acquaintance, Frank Kent had
+always been her only loyal and devoted friend and nothing else. Well,
+matters would soon be sensibly adjusted.
+
+In the living room Olive found Ruth and Jean sewing, but in reality
+devoting by far the greater portion of their time to admiring the baby,
+who from inside his crib was placidly surveying the world with the
+dignity of a philosopher.
+
+"Where is Jack, Olive?" Ruth inquired at once, frowning and glancing
+toward an open window. "It is so hot I am afraid we are going to have a
+storm and I have been reproaching myself all day for letting you girls
+start out on such a wild goose chase this morning. Why on earth did Jack
+not send the men after the stock?"
+
+Jean looked up from her work. "Oh, don't worry about Jack, she has been
+doing this kind of thing ever since she could walk or ride and she began
+both at about the same time. I believe Jack did send one of the cowboys
+off in one direction while she and Olive and Carlos took the other. But
+you know most of the men have gone with Jim and Frank to a round-up a
+good many miles off. I wonder if they will be back in time for dinner?"
+
+During this speech the door of the living room had slowly opened and
+Frieda in a white muslin frock with a big book under her arm had quietly
+entered. Her cheeks were flushed and her expression so uncommonly
+serious, that remembering Jack's story of her younger sister's devotion
+to the Professor, Olive smiled.
+
+However, Frieda's first remark was an odd one.
+
+"I am sorry if you have left Jack and Carlos together, Olive," she
+began, puckering her white brow. "I don't believe any one in this family
+realizes how Carlos hates Jack. I think if he could he would like to do
+her an injury. You see she tries to boss him and he perfectly loathes
+having any one dare interfere with him. Then Carlos is so lazy and Jack
+has no use for any one who is lazy, except me. I wish she would come
+home. If I had not promised Mr. Russell to go on reading to him I should
+go out and look for her."
+
+Frieda walked over to the front window and the next moment Ruth had
+joined her. They both stood staring ahead of them hoping for a sight of
+the familiar brown figure on horseback. For Jack usually rode up to the
+house with such a splendid rush toward the end that even under ordinary
+circumstances a vision of her was worth while.
+
+"Don't be tiresome, Baby, and frighten Ruth," Jean expostulated.
+
+Olive said nothing, but slipped out of the room and hall into the
+garden. It would not be worth while to trouble the others with the story
+of the difficulty between Jack and Carlos that morning. Nevertheless it
+was not pleasant to recall the expression on the Indian boy's face
+during their ride home, nor his long silence. Of course he rarely spoke
+to other persons, but ordinarily he engaged in long confidences with
+her, talking of the birds, wild flowers, any outside thing which he saw
+and loved.
+
+Surely in ten or fifteen minutes more the two wayfarers must return. In
+the meantime Olive would not go back to join the others as it would not
+be wise to communicate her own nervousness to them. So for the next
+quarter of an hour she walked up and down outside the Lodge, making
+several trips to the stables to see if the stable men had any
+suggestions to make and to inquire what they thought concerning the
+possibility of a storm. For there was little use in trying to argue the
+truth away. The atmospheric conditions were strange and depressing.
+Unless the wind changed, driving the single black cloud in an opposite
+direction, something out of the common was sure to occur. If only Frank
+Kent or Jim Colter or even the cowboys belonging to the ranch were at
+home, in order that they might go out and look up the wanderers!
+
+Finally Olive sent the two men who took care of the private stables to
+reconnoiter. Then on her way back to the Lodge she found Jean hurrying
+in the direction of the Ranch house.
+
+"I want to find Ralph Merrit and ask his advice as soon as possible,"
+Jean explained. "It is so late now he is sure to have quit work at the
+mine. Ruth is convinced that we are going to have a cyclone and is
+nearly frantic over Jack and Jim and Frank, all away from home. Yet I
+hate having Ralph start out alone--he does not understand what the
+weather out here means so well as the rest of us, even if he has been
+here a good many years now. But I must confess I wish that Frieda had
+not made that uncomfortable speech about Carlos' disliking Jack so much.
+I am afraid it is true. Oh, Olive, what a pity it is that you happened
+to leave them!"
+
+This was the only word of reproach that any member of the Rainbow ranch
+family made to Olive Van Mater during all the excitement and distress
+that came afterwards. And of course Jean did not mean her words to carry
+a sting--they were only an obvious exclamation.
+
+Nevertheless Olive did not require outside censure to make her suffer as
+keen remorse as was possible to her sensitive and devoted nature. For
+she knew herself to be far more responsible for the day's catastrophe
+than any one would ever dream.
+
+Only the edge of the sand storm swept the neighborhood of the Rainbow
+Lodge. Half a mile from the house it veered in its unaccountable way,
+carrying its destructive force straight across the adjoining ranch,
+wrecking half a dozen valuable buildings and killing a large number of
+cattle. Yet it came sufficiently near the Lodge for everybody inside the
+house to understand what was happening, even if Jim Colter and Frank
+Kent and a dozen of the cowboys had not ridden home furiously only five
+or ten minutes before, having raced the wind storm across the prairies
+and come off victorious. Both looked fairly worn out, as they came
+clanking into the living room, still in their riding clothes and boots
+and covered with a fine coating of yellow sand.
+
+"Jehoshaphat, but it is good to be indoors!" Jim exclaimed at once,
+putting his arm about his wife and gazing around him. "It is a good
+thing Frank isn't a tenderfoot, even if he is an Englishman. For if that
+sand storm had struck us--well, I am not going to put on airs. I have
+been a ranchman now for a good many years, but I never feel very hopeful
+that anybody such a gale hits is going to come out alive." Then perhaps
+in answer to the thought in the mind of every person in the room Jim
+ended abruptly: "Where's Jack? Hasn't she manners enough to say 'howdy'
+to two fellows who have nearly ridden themselves to death?"
+
+Following his speech, Jim was not immediately aware of the peculiar
+strained silence in the room, although Frank knew instantly that
+something had occurred in which Jack had a part. Under the western tan
+of the past few weeks his face whitened. But he set his teeth and
+straightened his broad shoulders. For his was a strength of will and of
+character worthy to match with Jack and capable of longer endurance.
+
+For a moment no one seemed to dare to answer Jim's question. And then it
+was not Ruth or any one of the three Ranch girls who replied, but Henry
+Russell, who had hobbled into the living room on his crutches,
+forgetting his terror and dislike of girls in his effort to offer his
+friendly sympathy, and incidentally, though he himself was not aware of
+it, to keep the lovely blond doll of his first acquaintance from making
+herself more miserable than necessary.
+
+"I, I am afraid Mrs. Colter and--and the others are feeling a little
+uneasy about Miss Ralston," he murmured. "She went out this morning with
+the Indian boy, Carlos, to ride over the ranch and she has not come in
+just yet. I have told them that she certainly must have taken refuge
+with a neighbor or else that the storm has not come within her vicinity.
+They tell me that these western siroccos are very freakish."
+
+But neither Jim Colter nor Frank had heard anything except the first
+part of their visitor's speech.
+
+Afterwards Jim paid no attention to any one in the room except to lean
+over and kiss Ruth. "We will find her in a little while, don't worry.
+Jack is always getting into scrapes and being grown up seems to make
+little difference," he remarked grimly as he marched off.
+
+But Olive clung desperately to Frank Kent's arm as he tried to follow
+him.
+
+"Please let me speak to you a minute alone before you go," she pleaded.
+Then when they were out in the yard and away from the others she put her
+hand on Frank's arm and looked at him with an earnestness which he did
+not in the least understand.
+
+"When you find Jack will you please give her this message from me," she
+asked. "Tell her that she has been making a dreadful mistake all along
+and that there is nothing in the world that will make me so happy as to
+hear of her engagement to you. Please tell her this when you first find
+her, don't wait until you are at home again."
+
+With a rather unusual show of emotion Frank pressed both of Olive's
+hands in his. "You believe that Jack really cares for me?" he demanded.
+
+And then as Olive bowed her head without replying he mounted a fresh
+horse, riding away in the direction that Olive had indicated.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+JACK SURRENDERS AT LAST
+
+
+IT was almost dawn when Frank Kent believed that he heard a faint answer
+to his last shouting. He was several miles from the outskirts of the
+Rainbow Ranch and in a neighborhood where he might least expect to find
+the girl he sought. But every acre of the ranch had been thoroughly gone
+over during the night, and still the men under Jim Colter's leadership
+were continuing the search along the track swept by the storm, but
+without finding a trace of Jack or the Indian boy or of the two horses
+which they were known to have been riding.
+
+[Illustration: "THE STARS HAD DISAPPEARED AND BEYOND THE UNIVERSAL
+GRAYNESS THERE WAS NOW A FAINT ROSE LIGHT"]
+
+So, independently of the others, Frank had recently decided to try a new
+neighborhood, not because he had any faith in its being the right one,
+but because he felt that he must work alone. It was unendurable to
+continue longer hearing the other men declare that there was little
+chance of finding Jack or Carlos alive. For had they not been within
+the track of the sand storm they must certainly have returned home
+before this. Now Frank plunged on in the direction of the recent sound,
+although he had heard nothing a second time in reply to his continued
+calling.
+
+Deep in his heart he was devoutly grateful that the dawn was finally
+breaking. The stars had disappeared, and beyond the universal grayness
+there was now a faint rose light. A moment before a western lark had
+risen before his aching eyes, poising, fluttering and then sailing
+straight overhead, singing its song of praise at the approach of the
+sun.
+
+So Frank in a measure could behold the objects ahead of him, though
+among them he saw nothing to suggest Jacqueline Ralston. He was riding
+over flat country with little before him but sand and low scrub plants.
+And there were no signs of a horse's hoofs having lately struggled
+through it. Finally, however, Frank got down off his own horse and,
+stooping low, examined some faint tracings in the sands. He had not been
+trained to making observations of this sort and even with the best of
+scouts it is difficult to find footprints, in so fine and shifting a
+soil. Nevertheless when Frank straightened up again his face was less
+haggard and discouraged. For he had found a suggestion of a girl's
+riding boot printed in the sand and now and then in curious circles
+there were other such impressions.
+
+With her head resting on a sand dune as though it were nature's pillow
+Frank at length came upon the girl. And even when within a few feet of
+Jack it was impossible to tell whether she was asleep or had fainted--or
+whether her silence and rigidity meant something worse. Yet the girl's
+expression was too worn and exhausted for the last great mystery; it had
+not the ineffable peace that comes after nature's final surrender. Even
+before he could touch her Frank had recognized this.
+
+Quietly he began bathing her face with water poured upon his
+handkerchief from the water flask which he had carried all night in his
+pocket. Jack's own little water jug told its own story, since it was
+lying empty at her side, drained to the last drop. Then, when the girl's
+heavy lids fluttered slightly, Frank poured water between her scorched
+lips. Her first sign of consciousness was when she put up her hands to
+try and cling to his flask that she might have more. Yet the man drew it
+away, telling her to keep quiet and close her eyes for a few moments
+longer. Afterwards he allowed her another drink of water and then a few
+drops of beef tea from a smaller bottle, which Ruth Colter had given
+him.
+
+Finally, with Frank's arm about her, Jack managed to sit up.
+
+"I am so glad it was you who found me, Frank," she said a moment later.
+"All night I have thought you would come." She did not even try to walk
+or to explain what had happened, but let Frank lift her up on his horse,
+where she leaned against him in utter weakness and dependence, while the
+horse started slowly toward home.
+
+The ride needs must be a long and fatiguing one even though aid reach
+them before their arrival at the Lodge. And Jack's pulse was still too
+faint to have her suffer further exhaustion. But after a while Frank
+leaned over, pressing his lips against the girl's heavy gold brown hair
+which had become unloosened from her long wandering and hung in two
+curled braids down her back.
+
+"Are you glad I found you because you care for me, Jack?" he whispered,
+feeling that it was not altogether fair of him to ask such a question at
+such a time, and yet too impatient to wait.
+
+The girl answered, "Yes" quite simply. A little later she added like a
+child: "Besides I knew you wouldn't scold, Frank. And of course I have
+been foolish and headstrong. I don't seem to know how to grow up. You'll
+ask Ruth and Jim not to make me explain to them until I have rested."
+
+Frank smiled, but felt a curious lump in his throat--this new humility
+and dependence were so unlike Jack. Unconsciously the arm that had been
+holding her up closed more firmly about the girl's figure.
+
+"Jack, Jack," he murmured, leaning low down until his lips were not far
+from her ear. "I have waited so long, I can wait no longer. You have
+just said that you cared for me, and for the second time I have believed
+you. Then you mean, you must mean that you are willing to be my wife."
+
+For just an instant the girl's body quivered as though with a weakness
+beyond her power of control. The next moment she was shaking her head
+quietly and firmly, and although her companion could not see her face he
+heard her whisper, "No," with a measure of her old decision.
+
+"Very well then," Frank returned just as firmly, "you shall never be
+troubled by my asking you that question again. As soon as possible I
+shall go home to England."
+
+Once more the girl's shoulders trembled as if she had been struck an
+unexpected blow, but she made no reply. Frank realized that he was not
+playing fair and that she should not be troubled further.
+
+For five or ten minutes more they rode on in complete silence, while
+Jack felt herself growing weaker and weaker. She was ashamed to be such
+a burden and yet only her own will power and Frank's arm were sustaining
+her.
+
+A little later and Jack had again to be put down on the ground in a half
+fainting condition. By this time they had passed beyond the stretches of
+sandy desert and were in one of the outlying meadows of the Rainbow
+Ranch, not far from a branch of their creek. As Jack was almost
+unconscious Frank was able to bathe her face more comfortably, pushing
+back the tangled hair out of her eyes, that she might look more like the
+girl he loved. Then he shut his lips close together and his chin became
+squarer and his jaw firmer than ever Jacqueline's had been in her most
+obstinate days.
+
+"I have just told a lie," he said to himself and yet rather grimly.
+"For of course I shall go on asking Jack to marry me until she finally
+consents. If she did not care for me that would be another matter and I
+should be a cad to annoy her. But there can't be any other barrier real
+or fancied that is big enough to come between us permanently."
+
+Then, as Jack opened her eyes for the second time, and sat straight up
+as though vexed with her own weakness, Frank had a sudden recollection
+of Olive's strange message to him when he had first started on his
+search.
+
+"Tell her it has all been a dreadful mistake and that there is nothing
+in the whole world that will make me so happy as her engagement to you."
+
+"What could Olive's words mean? Who had made a mistake? Had Jack been
+under some cruelly false impression?" Frank was utterly mystified. Yet
+he held out his hand. "Come, dear, we will walk for a few minutes," he
+said gently, "and I will lead the horse. You will feel less stiff and
+tired with a little exercise. See, the daylight has come. How beautiful
+and fragrant the world is!"
+
+Some change in Frank's voice, or in his manner--the girl did not know or
+care to think what the change might mean--made her take the hand held
+out so quietly toward her and hold it close in her own cold fingers. How
+exquisitely she could always be at peace with Frank, how perfectly he
+understood things without having them explained to him! After all, he
+was not going to be angry with her because of her unreasonable and
+unkind behavior. She had felt his anger a little more than she was
+willing to endure in her present state of exhaustion.
+
+So Jack looked overhead with more of her accustomed sparkle and
+animation than she had yet showed. The sky was a radiant rose color, so
+deeply pink that it cast its reflection on the ground at her feet. They
+were near a group of trees and the birds were beginning to waken one
+another with mild reproaches and then sudden bursts of eloquent song.
+
+"Frank," Jack began pensively enough, "I never saw a more wonderful
+dawn. But do you happen to have anything in your pocket more substantial
+than beef tea? I have not had anything to eat since yesterday at noon
+and I think perhaps I am dying of hunger."
+
+With a laugh her companion let go her hand, drawing a package from his
+pocket. "Ruth gave me this at midnight along with the beef tea, but I
+have not been interested enough to see what was in it," he explained.
+
+Greedily Jack tore open the bundle and had devoured a large chicken
+sandwich before good manners even suggested her sharing the luncheon
+with its owner. Afterwards Frank also confessed to being hungry, and so
+they walked on toward the Lodge like happy, runaway children, almost
+safe at home again.
+
+Yet while he talked and laughed and ate Frank Kent was not forgetting
+Olive's words nor her final injunction to him. "Please tell her what I
+say when you first find her. Don't wait too long," she had begged.
+
+"Jack, dear," Frank began casually in the midst of something else they
+had been discussing, "there is something I want to ask your forgiveness
+for before another five minutes have passed. Because I don't think I can
+hold out much longer. Back there on horseback when you were nearly dead
+with fatigue I was angry with you and told you that I never meant to ask
+you to marry me again. That was the most untruthful speech a man ever
+made! Because if you are too tired to listen I may have to wait until
+you have rested a little while, but not any longer. You know you care
+for me, dear. You are not the kind of a girl who would deceive a man by
+your words or your manner after all these years of friendship! There is
+some mystery that is keeping you from showing me your real feelings. I
+can't guess what it is. Yet Olive must think so too, for she told me to
+tell you that you had been making a dreadful mistake about something or
+other, heaven only knows what! And that our engagement would make her
+happier than anything in the world."
+
+Jacqueline Ralston stood ankle deep in the rose-touched meadow grass
+with her straight-forward, honest gray eyes looking into the blue eyes
+of her companion.
+
+"Did Olive tell you to say that to me? Did she really and truly seem to
+mean it?" she asked wonderingly.
+
+Frank Kent nodded, not trusting himself to speak, nor wishing to lose an
+instant's vision of the girl's face, or an inflection of her voice.
+
+Jack had been pale before; but now her face had flushed with such a look
+of exquisite gentleness and surrender, that in spite of all she had
+recently endured she had never been so beautiful.
+
+Then it was like her to say with self-evident sincerity: "Of course you
+are right, Frank dear, I could not hide how much I cared for you even
+though I have done my best. It will be hard for me to leave the ranch
+and the people I love, but it would be harder to stay on here--without
+you!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+RAINBOW CASTLE
+
+
+SOME weeks had passed, and it was now early fall at the ranch. But
+another change had taken place besides that of the seasons, for Jim and
+Ruth and the Ranch girls had moved away from the old Lodge into their
+splendid new home.
+
+To everybody's satisfaction, however, the Lodge was not deserted; for
+Ralph Merrit had changed into it from his old quarters, and his friend,
+Henry Tilford Russell, was still with him--not that the young professor
+had become an invalid owing to his accident at the Rainbow Mine, for his
+broken leg was completely healed. But as he had come west for his
+general health somehow the Rainbow Ranch seemed to hold more curative
+properties than any other place. And Ralph was delighted to have his
+society. The youthful professor of ancient languages appeared to have
+recovered in a measure from his previous prejudice against girls, or at
+least he was able to find the companionship of the four Ranch girls
+endurable.
+
+The move to the big house had been somewhat hastened for several
+reasons, the most important being that Jacqueline Ralston and Frank Kent
+were to be married during the first part of October. Frank would not
+consent to returning to England without Jack. He insisted that she was
+far too uncertain a quantity to be left alone in her beloved western
+lands, since her prairies were his most dangerous rival. Moreover, as he
+had promised his father to stand for a Liberal seat in Parliament that
+same winter, Jack was needed at Kent House to aid him in winning his
+election.
+
+Now it seemed that all of the intimate friends that the girls had
+acquired in their two years away from home, had suddenly decided to pay
+visits to the Rainbow Ranch. Among them were the Princess Colonna and
+her nephew, Giovanni, who, because of the death of her husband without
+heir, had inherited the Prince's ancient title.
+
+Miss Katherine Winthrop had finally arrived, and her presence seemed to
+compensate Olive for the loss of a good deal of Jack's companionship;
+yet when the two friends were able to be together without any one else,
+they were as intimate and as devoted as at any time in their lives. And
+though Jack never referred to the subject of their unfortunate
+conversation, she could find no trace in Olive of unhappiness or regret.
+
+It is true that Miss Winthrop and the girl, who was like a peculiarly
+devoted and sympathetic daughter, spent numbers of afternoons in the
+nearby Indian village discussing Olive's desire to become a teacher to
+the Indians when she was old enough and sufficiently well trained for
+the task. For the older woman was wise enough not to oppose the girl's
+present fancy as Jack had done, only insisting that she wait until she
+felt sure of her own fitness.
+
+But although Olive had frequent talks with old Laska, who never could
+entirely connect the charming young American lady with the child she had
+persecuted, there was a new member of the village community with whom
+Olive would have no conversation. And this was her once devoted friend
+and admirer, the Indian boy, Carlos.
+
+After Jacqueline Ralston's home-coming, when she had the opportunity to
+explain her unaccountable disappearance, it was Jim Colter who at once
+armed himself with a short whip and demanded that the business of
+punishing Carlos be left entirely to him. Yet, notwithstanding her long
+night of wandering about in the sand, too weary and too stupefied to
+find her way home or to believe that the boy would not eventually return
+with her horse, Jack immediately became Carlos' defender, finally
+persuading her guardian to punish the boy no further than by not
+permitting him again to set foot on Rainbow Ranch. She also confessed
+her own share in the day's difficulties, taking a part of the blame upon
+herself by insisting that if she had not struck the boy he would never
+have attempted so ugly and dangerous a revenge.
+
+Jim and Frank, though at last agreeing to Jack's wish, did have one
+interview with Carlos. But though they came away leaving the boy
+frightened and submissive, he never was brought to confess just what he
+had intended in riding off with Jack's horse. Perhaps during the long
+afternoon he had vainly been trying to think of some form of vengeance
+and then at the last moment the idea of stealing Jack's horse and
+deserting her had come like a sudden inspiration. Or perhaps the boy
+had meant to return--no one ever knew. He had gone on with the two
+horses to the nearest Indian village and never again left it for any
+other home. For the effort to civilize Carlos had been a vain one and he
+cheerfully reverted to the habits and companionship of his own race.
+
+Nevertheless, he did not go unpunished, although no one ever knew in
+what his punishment consisted. But the refusal of Olive's further
+friendship was a sorrow which the Indian lad endured in silence to the
+end of his days. For he never married and was that very rare figure
+among his people--an old bachelor, looked after by old women and the
+squaws of other men. And this when half a dozen Indian maidens would
+gladly have mated with Carlos. For he was unusually handsome and was
+always admired and reverenced by his own nation.
+
+At the time they moved into the new house Ruth and Jim and the girls
+were feeling particularly happy and prosperous, because, not long after
+the announcement of Jack's and Frank's engagement, Ralph Merrit had made
+discoveries of fresh supplies of gold in Rainbow Mine. Also, he had
+devised the long-sought-for method by which the gold could be extracted
+without too great danger and expense. He had not trusted entirely to his
+own judgment and experience, for three of the greatest mining experts in
+the West had been sent for, who were open in their praises of Ralph's
+idea and plan, predicting a big future for him and offering him
+opportunities with them should he ever care to leave the Rainbow Mine.
+
+But this new "pot of gold at the end of the rainbow," Ralph had
+straightway announced was to be his particular wedding gift to Jack and
+Frank. Certainly he had no idea of deserting his old friends, now that
+he was again able to prove his usefulness. So he was working on in
+apparent contentment when the Princess and the young Prince appeared.
+Then once more his dream faded and it was hard for Ralph not to think of
+his work as mere drudgery in which the labor was almost all his and the
+large rewards for others.
+
+For like lightning out of a clear sky, soon after the Princess Colonna's
+installation in their new home, even before Ruth or the girls had become
+accustomed to her presence, with entire formality she asked Jim Colter's
+consent to Jean Bruce's marriage to her nephew, Giovanni, the young
+Prince Colonna. When Jim was only barely able to express his surprise
+and consternation at such a suggestion, she explained to him a complete
+understanding of his feelings, that this method of procedure in a
+question of marriage was the custom in Italy, her nephew's country.
+Therefore the young Prince would never dream of speaking to Jean without
+first obtaining her guardian's approval. Nevertheless, Mr. Colter must
+not believe that there was any lack of affection on the Prince Colonna's
+part, for he had never ceased thinking and talking of Jean from that
+first hour of their meeting in the Pincio Gardens in Rome.
+
+In reply to the Princess, Jim could only flush and stammer, saying that
+he would prefer first talking the matter over with Mrs. Colter before
+giving his answer. For the truth was that Jim really wished to shout
+aloud his refusal to consider such a proposition even for five minutes.
+Jean to marry a wretched little Italian youth, no taller than she was
+herself, when she might have almost any clean, hard working American
+fellow! It was bad enough for his adored Jack to be going away with an
+_Englishman_, but then Frank Kent was different!
+
+Nevertheless, Jim understood that the reply which he really wished to
+make was not altogether fair and certainly not courteous to their
+guests. Ruth must at once find some way of clearing up the situation.
+
+So soon as her husband had explained the matter to her Ruth was under
+the impression that she did see a way. With the Princess' and the Prince
+Colonna's consent she herself would first speak to Jean, letting them
+hear later whether Miss Bruce was willing to listen to the Prince's
+suit.
+
+Of course this was the best way out! Jim sighed with relief at his
+wife's suggestion, for neither he nor Ruth had the faintest idea that
+Jean would do anything but refuse even for a moment to consider the
+Prince or his offer. Ruth believed that she had always understood Jean
+better than any one of the four Ranch girls.
+
+Without comment the girl heard of the young nobleman's proposal, and
+instead of declining, she asked to be allowed to consider it. In the
+meantime the Prince and his aunt were to remain at the Rainbow Ranch in
+order that Jean and the young man might learn to know each other better.
+
+They were frequently together and very soon the state of affairs was no
+secret to any member of the family, or to their closest friends. And
+although a number of persons were puzzled, no one said a word to Jean.
+Could it be possible that she was going to marry solely for position? No
+one believed that she could have come to care so deeply for the young
+Italian prince in so brief a time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+A PARTY AT THE NEW HOUSE
+
+
+THE society people in that part of Wyoming within the radius of the
+Rainbow Ranch were deeply interested and some of them a good deal
+excited over the fact that an American-Italian Princess and an Italian
+Prince were being entertained in their midst.
+
+For some time previous to the coming of their guests Ruth and the girls
+had planned giving a large evening party. Originally the idea had been
+to make it a kind of house-warming as well as a formal announcement of
+Jack's engagement. But as Jack begged not to be made specially
+conspicuous in regard to the invitations, they were finally issued by
+Mr. and Mrs. Colter asking that their friends do them the honor of
+meeting Miss Katherine Winthrop, the Princess Colonna and her nephew,
+the Prince Giovanni Colonna, on a certain September evening. According
+to the desires of the Ranch girls the entertainment was to be both a
+reception and dance, for the new home was large enough for both. For
+while the older guests were talking to one another in the music room and
+library, the big living room could be used for dancing.
+
+It was about six o'clock on the afternoon before the ball when the four
+girls in dressing gowns of various shades slipped through the wide
+colonial hall and entered the big parlor. Frieda dropped into a chair
+set close against the wall and sighed deeply. Her yellow hair had been
+washed only a few hours before and was now in a big loose knot on top of
+her head, though it kept breaking forth into delicious curls about her
+white forehead and neck.
+
+In answer to the sigh Jack sat down on the floor at her younger sister's
+feet. "Isn't everything all right, Baby? Isn't the room as lovely as you
+expected?" she asked anxiously. For although Jack had always been
+unusually tender and devoted to Frieda, she was even more in these days,
+with the thought of leaving her so close at hand.
+
+Again Frieda sighed, but this time she explained herself. "It is more
+than all right. It is more beautiful than I ever expected any place
+belonging to us could be. Not that I did not love the dear old Lodge,
+but this house is, well--different. Isn't it dreadful that you are going
+away so soon, Jack, dearest, after all our work and planning? It will
+never seem just like home without you."
+
+With a sudden movement Jean crossed the room, placing her fingers
+lightly upon Frieda's lips.
+
+"We have promised Jack not to say anything like that, Frieda dear," she
+protested, "at least not tonight. We must all have the happiest evening
+of our lives, one that none of us shall forget."
+
+The younger girl glanced up at her cousin wistfully with a question on
+her lips, but instead of asking it she clapped her hands softly
+together.
+
+"See that lovely light coming through our stained-glass window! Isn't it
+like a rainbow! Oh, I hope it means good luck just as it always has in
+the past! And somehow it makes this room more beautiful. I did not dream
+anything could!"
+
+Naturally Frieda was prejudiced and an enthusiast, and yet she had ample
+reason for her point of view. For a moment there was an unusual silence
+as the four girls looked around them. Consciously or unconsciously they
+realized that these next few weeks were to mark important changes in
+their lives. For after they had slipped by things could never be exactly
+the same. Jack would be married and that would represent the first
+important break, and after that--well, they were not little girls any
+longer, for even Frieda had lately shown unmistakable signs of being
+grown-up.
+
+The walls of the long room were hung with western smilax and since the
+party was to be a typical American one, the girls had been wildly
+extravagant and used American Beauty roses for the decoration. Now the
+air was fragrant with their rich and penetrating perfume. The old
+colonial mantel was banked with them, and garlands of green swinging
+from one white column to another had big baskets filled with roses
+suspended between the posts. The room itself was fifty feet long and
+three-fourths as broad. All the woodwork and the walls were a warm gray.
+The greater part of the furniture had of course been removed and a white
+tarpaulin covered the hardwood floor, but in the bay window there were
+palms and vases of roses and an old-fashioned colonial sofa, besides
+several chairs. Also there were occasional chairs along the walls for
+the older persons who might care to watch the dancing. The music was to
+be concealed in the hall behind a bank of evergreens just beneath the
+wide mahogany stairs.
+
+"Well, if there is anything more that can be done to make this place
+more attractive, I am sure I don't know what it is," Jean insisted at
+last. "And I am especially glad that we asked Mr. Parker to come
+tonight. Because of course he may have built more expensive houses than
+ours, yet I am quite sure he has never made one more attractive.
+Besides, he is awfully nice. Gracious, girls, who is that knocking? Ruth
+thinks we are being nice and obedient and lying down until seven."
+
+But Olive had walked over to the closed door and opened it half-way.
+
+"Don't be alarmed," she laughed back. "It is only the flowers Frank is
+sending us for tonight. Let's open them now and see what choice he has
+made. Ruth told him about our dresses, so that he could not make any
+serious mistake."
+
+Almost concealed by four great boxes reaching as high as her head,
+Olive came back to where Jack was sitting and placed them in a great
+pile before her.
+
+"You give them to us, Jack dear, since they are from Frank," she urged.
+
+The first was marked with Frieda's name, but as she took the top off the
+box and lifted out a card her cheeks turned suddenly crimson.
+
+"These are not from Frank after all," Frieda remarked with a pretense of
+unconcern, "Mr. Russell says that I was so kind about reading to him
+when his leg was broken that he asked Frank as a special favor to let
+him send me my bouquet for tonight." Her fingers fumbled nervously at
+the tissue paper and her eyes were downcast, since she did not specially
+care to have any one staring at her at this moment. She could imagine
+Jack's puzzled and slightly worried expression and Jean's and Olive's
+teasing looks. For the absurd friendship that had developed between the
+solemn young Professor and Frieda was one of the ill-concealed jokes in
+the family.
+
+"What do you suppose that a man who dabbles in Egyptology for an
+amusement would send as a bouquet to a baby?" Jean inquired mockingly.
+"Possibly a lotus flower, for there are learned persons who declare that
+Cleopatra was a bewildering blond lady," and Jean pulled at Frieda's
+yellow curls.
+
+The next moment along with the other girls she gave a cry of admiration.
+Who would ever have suspected the Professor of such exquisite taste? For
+in some way he had managed to make his bouquet suggest the girl to whom
+it was offered. For it was formed of hundreds of tiny forget-me-nots set
+close together and encircled with small white star-like flowers.
+
+Jean's roses were the deep pink color that she always loved and Olive's
+were a wonderful golden yellow. But Jack hesitated a moment before
+opening her box, which was the largest of the four and curiously heavy.
+
+Half guessing how she felt Olive laid her hand lovingly on her friend's.
+
+"Take your flowers up to your own room and look at them first by
+yourself if you would rather," she suggested. However, Jean and Frieda
+both raised a storm of protest.
+
+And Jack laughed. "It isn't that I am such a bashful person that I don't
+want you to see even the flowers Frank has given me--I would not be so
+absurd," she confessed. "But I have an idea that perhaps Frank has put
+something more than flowers in my box. And I don't think I shall ever,
+ever be able to wear them. Oh, children, what made me fall in love with
+an Englishman and one who may inherit a title? Certainly I shall never
+be able to live up to it!" Doing her best to hide her nervousness Jack
+buried her hot cheeks in a great bunch of white jasmine flowers; but
+Frieda's fingers were pointing inexorably to a white velvet jewel case
+which still remained in the flower box half buried in evergreens.
+
+With a smile Jack picked it up, touching the spring. On the satin shone
+a miniature crown of diamonds and pearls and an exquisite necklace of
+the same jewels.
+
+"Gracious," Frieda gasped, "I didn't know Frank Kent was a millionaire!
+Why he always has declared that he was a great deal poorer than lots of
+American fellows! I wonder if he has been deceiving you all this time,
+Jack, to keep you from marrying him for his money."
+
+"Goose!" Jack laughed; but Frieda's absurdity relieved the situation.
+"Don't you know that these jewels are heirlooms in the Kent family,
+that they always belong to the wife of the eldest son? I told Frank to
+wait until our wedding day; but he seemed to wish me to wear them
+tonight. I don't believe I possibly can, they are too lovely--and
+somehow they don't seem to suit me."
+
+Olive placed the tiara on Jack's gold-brown head. The girl's gray eyes
+were shining softly, her head was tilted back the least bit and a rich
+color flooded her cheeks and lips.
+
+"I don't think Frank need be exactly ashamed of you, Lady Kent," Jean
+murmured with teasing affectation. And then: "You funny Jack! Is there
+any other girl in America who would not care more than you do for
+Frank's splendid position and all the rest of it? Not for a single
+instant do I believe that you gave it a thought! Dear me, I wish your
+own sweet cousin were so high-minded!"
+
+"Girls," said a reproachful voice suddenly, "is this the way you keep
+your sacred promise to me to rest until dinner time? Go back to your
+rooms instantly," Ruth Colter scolded. Yet she was hardly an impressive
+figure with her hair rolled up in a tight knot and a light shawl thrown
+over her kimono. "I heard such a terrible chattering in here that I was
+afraid a collection of magpies had gotten in an open window and thought
+they had come upon an enchanted garden." Here Ruth ceased talking
+suddenly, having caught sight of the beautiful ornament on Jack's hair.
+
+"Gracious, dear, what a wonderful possession! Do let me see it more
+closely," she asked. "But take it off first and then come here and kiss
+me. A diamond tiara is hardly appropriate with a dressing gown and I
+can't bear to see you looking so regal and so far away from the rest of
+us."
+
+And with a break in her voice, Ruth put her arm around Jack and then led
+the small procession forth from the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+MAIDS AND MEN
+
+
+"I WOULD give a great deal to have my people see you tonight, Jack,"
+Frank Kent whispered several hours later.
+
+[Illustration: "YOU WOULD HAVE MARRIED ME ANYHOW"]
+
+True to her promise Jacqueline had dressed before the others and come
+down for a few moments alone with Frank. And it was small wonder that
+the young man was proud of her. She had on a pure white tulle dress made
+over silk and no ornament except the string of pearls and diamonds about
+her throat. For she had persuaded Frank to let her wait until after
+their marriage before wearing the more conspicuous jewels. Somehow she
+felt that the tiara would look out of taste and inappropriate among her
+old friends and neighbors. The bouquet of jasmine flowers with their
+darkly shining green leaves were resting in her lap.
+
+"Your people will see enough of me, Frank, before very long," she
+answered. "How glad I am that they already know me and that they do
+not object very seriously to our marriage! Of course they must have
+preferred your caring for one of your own countrywomen, but----"
+
+"You would have married me anyhow, wouldn't you, dear, even if they
+_had_ objected?" Frank asked and then laughed at himself. "That's a
+dreadfully unfilial speech, but I expect every man likes to feel that
+the girl he cares for would have stuck to him through every kind of
+obstacle--poverty, obscurity, the world's misunderstanding. Not that I
+have much doubt of you, Jack. You are giving up more than most people
+realize in turning your back on the dear old ranch and your beloved
+family. But we'll come back as often as possible and have them come to
+us, and after a while Ruth must let Frieda be with you for a year or so.
+She is my little sister, and honestly I don't quite like her intimacy
+with this fellow, Russell--he is much too cranky and old." Frank had
+taken Jack's hand and was touching it to his lips when she made a quick
+though silent signal. She and Frank were sitting in the bay window
+almost hidden by evergreens and at this moment Ruth and Jim, the other
+three girls and their guests were entering the ball room.
+
+Olive wore a yellow crepe dress and carried the yellow roses. Jean was
+in deep pink, her costume of shimmering satin and lace, and had one of
+Frank's flowers in her dark brown hair. Her bouquet was not the same
+that it had been two hours before, when she had first removed it from
+its wrappings; for now encircled by Frank's roses were a dozen purple
+orchids.
+
+"Do you think, Frank, that Jean intends--" Jack whispered softly,
+inclining her head toward her cousin to indicate what she meant to say.
+Then when her companion made no reply, fearing to be overheard, she
+continued. "It is Jean I am most worried about. How can she make up her
+mind to marry a foreigner instead of an American? Just look at the
+Prince and then at Jim or Ralph Merrit. He is so little and so dark and
+so kind of different. Even that scar on his face from a duel he once
+fought makes me have almost a dislike for him, though I know it is
+foolish of me."
+
+"But Jean isn't really going to marry him!" Frank protested.
+
+This time Jack nodded uneasily. "I am afraid so; indeed she almost told
+me that she intended to accept him; and I suppose she means to do it
+this evening. I wish I could have said something to influence her, but I
+did not dare. Besides, it would have done no good. You know Jean might
+have said that I too was marrying a foreigner and had no right to say
+anything to her. Only the difference is that Jean does not love
+Giovanni--and then an Englishman isn't the same and--"
+
+Frank was now smiling over Jack's effort at an apology and explanation.
+She had slipped her hand into his and was holding it fast. At this
+moment a splendidly handsome figure marched across the floor with
+surprising swiftness and now stood looking down upon the girl and man
+with an expression that was a combination of wrath, sympathy and
+devotion.
+
+"Jacqueline Ralston," Jim began so unexpectedly that to save her life
+Jack could not restrain a guilty start, "have I not told you and Frank
+Kent at least a dozen times that I would not have any stealing off by
+yourselves or any spooning until you were safely away from the Rainbow
+Ranch? It is bad enough, Kent, when I think of your taking my 'partner'
+from me and leaving me to look after this great place without her. But I
+tell you I can't stand _looking_ at you doing it."
+
+And Jim gave a mournful sigh that was part pretense and part reality.
+
+Its effect was to make Jack at once jump to her feet and throw her arms
+about him, regardless of his immaculate shirt. Then she ran for
+protection to Ruth.
+
+Happiness had made Ruth grow a year younger each month, her husband had
+stoutly declared, and though this statement was not strictly true, she
+did look very little older than the four Ranch girls as she stood
+waiting to receive their guests tonight. For the girls and Jim had
+insisted that she discard her nun-like fondness for gray and drab colors
+at least for this one evening and wear white. So Ruth's costume of heavy
+white corded silk with silver trimming was both youthful and becoming.
+
+On one side of the hostess stood Miss Katherine Winthrop, looking
+singularly handsome and imposing in a gray satin evening gown trimmed
+with duchess lace and with a bunch of Frieda's violets at her waist.
+Olive was next in line, and then Jean, while on Ruth's other side the
+Princess Colonna was made more radiantly fair by a wonderful black gown
+and a diamond star in her hair. Jack stood beside her, and then Frieda.
+
+The Princess seemed far more at ease and better able to appreciate and
+make herself popular with the hundred or more visitors than Miss
+Winthrop. For the Princess appeared almost to have forgotten, for the
+time at least, the years spent in the formal society of Rome and to be
+remembering only her own early girlhood in this same western country. A
+large number of the guests were traveled and cultured persons, the
+owners of large ranches and estates; but Jim had asked that all of their
+old acquaintances be invited regardless of wealth and position, so that
+there were many interesting figures who appeared as "western types" to
+Miss Winthrop, but whom the Princess immediately understood and enjoyed.
+
+Indeed during the evening Jim Colter, who had never liked the Princess
+Colonna nor felt entirely comfortable in her presence, confided to Ralph
+Merrit that maybe a Princess could after all be a real live woman,
+though he hoped to the Lord that Jean Bruce was not going to undertake
+the job. Ralph had little comfort to offer either to Jim or to himself
+in return for this confidence. For everybody in the ball room who had
+heard the gossip concerning Jean and the young Prince had no doubt of
+its ultimate outcome. And naturally they marveled over two of the
+Rainbow Ranch girls making such distinguished marriages.
+
+Perhaps Jean was not altogether displeased with this gossip, for she
+certainly danced with the young Prince most of the earlier part of the
+evening. The exact number of her dances Ralph Merrit could have told,
+although he was not conscious of having counted them. For except for
+dancing once with each one of the four Ranch girls and once with Ruth,
+he had spent the rest of the evening watching the dancers from a safe
+corner. For some reason or other he seemed not to feel sufficient energy
+for anything else.
+
+It was a few moments after eleven o'clock that same evening when the
+Princess Colonna, feeling a hand laid lightly on her arm and turning,
+discovered Jean Bruce alone. The girl seemed to have grown suddenly
+tired and pale.
+
+Fortunately the older woman's companion suggested at this moment that
+she might like him to get her an ice, so that she and Jean were
+uninterrupted for a moment.
+
+"I wonder if you could come somewhere with me for a little while, where
+we could talk without any one else seeing us?" Jean pleaded. "I know you
+will think it strange of me, Princess, but all of a sudden it seemed to
+me that you were the only person in the world whom I could ask a certain
+question. And I must ask it of you before another hour has passed."
+
+Jean spoke quietly and with entire self-possession; yet there was no
+doubting the girl's earnestness or her necessity.
+
+Instantly the Princess slipped her arm through Jean's with the
+affectionate intimacy which she had always felt for her and the woman
+and girl together left the room. Providentially for their opportunity to
+be alone, the greater number of guests were now in the supper room. So
+without much effort Jean found two chairs at the end of a long veranda
+which had been enclosed for the evening's use and made into a kind of
+conservatory. There they appeared to be quite free from interruption.
+
+The older woman sat in the shadow, but could see the girl's face
+plainly. And though she could hardly guess what question Jean might
+wish to ask her, she was not altogether uncertain of the subject
+uppermost in the girl's thoughts, so thoroughly had her nephew taken her
+into his confidence.
+
+"Princess," Jean began, but she was not looking at her friend. Her eyes
+were seeing nothing, she was so deeply engrossed. "I wonder if you will
+tell me if you were happy in your married life? Oh, yes, I know that
+sounds like an impertinence; but I do not believe that you will think of
+it in that light. You understand I would ask you for no such reason. The
+Prince was a great deal older than you, but then you were very good
+friends and you had a splendid title and people everywhere looked up to
+you and were proud to meet you. I remember how dreadfully impressed we
+girls were when we first saw you on board the steamship. It did not seem
+to us then that a Princess could be like other people. And none of us
+ever dreamed of knowing you as an intimate friend. Those days when I was
+visiting you in Rome it seemed so wonderful to me that you, an American
+woman and a western girl like me, could be a leader in European
+society!" Jean drew a long breath. "Of course it never occurred to me
+then that any such chance could ever come to me. It sounds like a fairy
+tale and yet my own family don't understand how I can care so much for
+position and a title and all that it must mean."
+
+"I _understand_," the Princess finally replied when Jean had given her
+opportunity to speak, "but there is one thing or at least one person
+whom you have not mentioned, my nephew, Giovanni. Do you care for him,
+Jean?"
+
+In answer the girl, whose clear pallor was one of her noticeable
+characteristics, flushed hotly. "I like him very much, he is most kind,
+he----"
+
+"You mean that Giovanni is entirely devoted to you and that you regard
+him as a friend. I see," the Princess finished softly. "And you think
+that after you marry him you will learn to care more for him because you
+would most enjoy his title and all it could do for you. I wonder just
+what Giovanni would receive in exchange for all he has to give?"
+
+For a moment the older woman took the girl's cold fingers in her own.
+
+"I don't mean to hurt your feelings, dear, or to seem unkind. But you
+have asked me to talk to you tonight because you believe that better
+than any one else I can understand and appreciate your ambition and your
+emotions. And you are entirely right. I know just what you are thinking,
+just what you have been saying to yourself over and over ever since I
+asked your guardian to permit you to marry my nephew. I know because I
+have passed through almost exactly the same experience. So I am going to
+talk frankly about my marriage to you tonight, Jean, though I never have
+and probably never will again to any one else as long as I live. You
+see, I, too, was a Western girl, only I was a great deal poorer in the
+beginning of my life than you have ever been. And then my father and
+mother were plainer people. But one day when I was about twelve years
+old my father began making a great fortune, and when I was fourteen, as
+is the way in this western country, he was many times a millionaire. In
+those days the West was not what it is now, so as my mother was
+ambitious for me and believed I was going to be a pretty woman I was
+sent East to school. Later on I went to Paris and studied there, and
+then to Italy, so that I might learn several languages. Now and then I
+used to see my father and mother, but not often. They did not enjoy
+Europe and I seemed to have so much to learn there was little time to
+stay at home. One or two wonderful summers I spent here in the West with
+them, loving this country and its people almost as your cousin Jack
+does. But by and by, when I was traveling in Italy with some rich
+American friends, I met the Prince Colonna. He asked me to marry him and
+I--well, I thought about things pretty much as you are doing, dear. I
+wanted to be a Princess; I thought it the most romantic, wonderful fate
+possible for a plain American girl with nothing but some prettiness and
+her money to exchange for fairyland. True, my Prince was old, but I
+liked him and I thought we would be better friends after we married. I
+believe we were. But, dear, I was not happy. I have missed the most
+wonderful thing that can come into one's life, for by and by I found
+that the people with titles were nothing but ordinary human beings. The
+people who count most, or at least who count most to me, are the people
+who do things for themselves, who have made their own way and their own
+positions, like so many of our big American men. Often I was very lonely
+and sad and often sorry for a decision I made years ago when I was even
+younger than you are tonight."
+
+The Princess let go Jean's hand which she had been holding.
+
+"Isn't there any one here in your own country, Jean, whom you like
+better than you do Giovanni, whom you would a great deal rather marry if
+he had the same position to offer?" she inquired.
+
+For a moment the girl made no answer. Then she said faintly: "Yes,
+Princess, there is, though I have never confessed it to anybody in the
+world except you, and scarcely to myself. For you see it is not only the
+other man's lack of money and position that comes between us, but Ralph
+does not even care for me. Some time ago he did, I think, but I was not
+very kind to him then, and now for months and months he has been nothing
+more to me than a friend. So I can see that his feelings have changed
+entirely. I thought if I went away with Giovanni I too would forget. It
+is hard to be right here on the ranch and have to pretend and pretend
+all the time that I feel toward him just as I used to when I was a
+little girl."
+
+"Jean," the older woman's voice had quite changed and was now both cold
+and stern, "I wonder what kind of a partnership you think marriage is?
+Do you think that when men go into business together that one brings
+everything to the firm and the other nothing? For that is what you wish
+to do with Giovanni. You must play fair, child. Why do you consider that
+an Italian is different from other men? Giovanni is young; he is not
+unattractive. Unless you loved him, you would soon learn to hate each
+other. For his sake if not for yours I could never approve of your
+marriage."
+
+But before Jean could reply the Princess had laid a restraining touch
+upon her. "Some one is coming toward us--a stranger, I think. We had
+best talk of this another time."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+OLD FRIENDS AND SOMETHING MORE
+
+
+JEAN did not recognize the newcomer at once. Then she held out her hand,
+trying to speak naturally.
+
+"Mr. Parker, I am so glad to see you. I was afraid you were not coming
+back at all. Princess, Mr. Parker built our new house. Mr. Parker, this
+is our friend and guest, the Princess Colonna."
+
+The tall man bowed politely. "I was told to bring you and the Princess
+Colonna back to the ball room if you would consent to come," he
+returned.
+
+From out of the shadow the slender, blond woman rose quietly, taking a
+few steps forward. "I shall be most happy to go back with you, Mr.
+Parker," she replied. And then standing within a few feet of her new
+acquaintance she stared at him curiously.
+
+"Theodore Parker, it isn't fair of you after all these years to have me
+recognize you when you have forgotten me. It makes me think that I must
+look a great deal the older!"
+
+But with a laugh the woman held out both hands, and now standing in the
+light that fell from a yellow shaded lantern the Princess' face and
+figure were in plain view.
+
+"Beatrice, the Princess Colonna! Why of course I have known your name
+always. How stupid of me not to have thought! But I could never have
+dreamed of meeting you out here in Wyoming. The Prince, your husband?"
+
+"He is dead," the woman answered. And then turning to Jean: "It is odd,
+dear, but Mr. Parker and I have known each other a very long time. It
+gives me great happiness to see him again and makes me think of that
+girl I have been telling you about. Won't you come back to Mrs. Colter
+with us?"
+
+But Jean shook her head and the man and woman moved away, leaving her
+alone.
+
+It was in this same place that Ralph Merrit, also trying to steal away
+from the guests, found her ten minutes later.
+
+Left to herself, Jean had been crying softly, although she could not
+exactly have explained the cause. Life was such a jumble--one wanted so
+much and had so little! Then often the very thing that had seemed fair
+and desirable turned to bitterness and regret! Well, to one thing she
+had at least made up her mind--she would not marry Giovanni. Yet she had
+promised to give him an answer within the hour.
+
+Hearing Ralph's step she started nervously. And then with the
+familiarity of old acquaintance she frowned upon him.
+
+"I thought you were the Prince Colonna," she began crossly.
+
+Ralph stiffened. "I am sorry that I am not. I had no idea of disturbing
+you. But I'll go and find your Prince if you like."
+
+"He is not my Prince; don't be stupid, Ralph, and do please sit down. I
+don't see why you feel it so necessary to avoid me recently."
+
+"Don't you?" Ralph answered. Then for several moments he said nothing
+more. However, though he did not appear to be looking, he had a clear
+enough vision of Jean's face, her dark eyes swimming in unshed tears,
+her heavy lids and the pallor of her cheeks.
+
+"Jean," Ralph swung himself around swiftly and Jean saw the firmness of
+his lips, the decisive outline of his jaw and his high, almost noble
+forehead, "if there is any one in this world, I don't care who or what
+he is, who has done anything or said anything to make you unhappy, why
+if I can, won't you let me help to straighten things out. You said just
+now that the Prince Colonna was not your Prince. Perhaps you were only
+angry at my tactless way of expressing things, but if there is any
+trouble between you--" the young man hesitated.
+
+"But there isn't--not the slightest," Jean replied with the familiar
+shrug of her shoulders and that demure expression about the corners of
+her mouth and in her brown eyes that her old friend remembered so well.
+"The truth is, Ralph, that I am tired of your and of other people's
+pretending that you believe the Prince Colonna and I are engaged to each
+other. Because we are not, and never will be." This was as unreasonable
+and inconsistent a speech as any girl could well manage to make.
+
+"Thank the Lord!" Ralph replied, so unconsciously and so sincerely that,
+as he was not looking toward her at the moment, the girl allowed herself
+to smile.
+
+"I don't see why you should be so glad, Ralph?" she murmured.
+
+"Oh, don't you?" Ralph answered between his teeth. "Then to the best of
+my ability I'll tell you, Jean Bruce. I love you, I always have loved
+you from the hour I saw you drying your hair by that brook in the
+wilderness, say a thousand years ago! So now if you are not going to
+marry this Italian youth, why it gives me a longer chance to keep on
+working and working until I have something to offer you that you wish,
+money, position."
+
+Swiftly the girl rose, laying her fingers gently against the young man's
+lips.
+
+"Don't say those last words to me again, Ralph. I feel tonight that I
+never, never wish to hear them again. You have the thing already I want
+most in the world if you are willing to give it to me. Why haven't you
+understood in these last few months? I couldn't exactly propose to you,
+could I, dear?" Jean questioned demurely.
+
+Ten minutes afterwards Jean, with a rose-colored shawl wrapped about her
+shoulders, arm in arm with Ralph, was walking about outdoors, forgetful
+of the autumn coldness, of the guests who were asking for her, of
+everything in the whole world except her own happiness. Finally she was
+surprised by seeing two other figures approaching them who were equally
+oblivious.
+
+With a low laugh Jean drew herself and her companion into the shadow.
+
+"Jack and Frank!" she whispered. Then, as the other girl and man were
+nearly opposite them, "I thought you both promised Jim not to do this
+sort of thing, at least not tonight, Jack Ralston," Jean began
+unexpectedly. "Yet I am glad to have found you alone, because I want to
+tell you first that I am very happy. I don't want other people to know
+it just yet, but I too am going to be married."
+
+There was a note in Jacqueline Ralston's voice as she replied that to
+save her life she could not conceal.
+
+"I am very glad for your sake, Jean darling," Jack answered. "You know
+how much I shall hope for your and Giovanni's happiness."
+
+"Giovanni's?" Jean's manner now suggested unutterable reproach. Ralph
+Merrit stepped forward and stood close beside Jean.
+
+"Hasn't any member of my beloved family sense enough to guess that I
+have always cared for Ralph, or at least I have always cared for him in
+the past six months," Jean protested. "It is only that I have had to do
+desperate deeds to make him care for me."
+
+But the girl's next words were smothered in Jack's embrace, while Frank
+was giving Ralph's hand such a squeeze that though it was considerably
+hardened from labor, it was difficult for him not to wince.
+
+Then the four young people were so interested in one another that they
+paid no attention to two other persons who were seen coming toward them,
+until they finally discovered one of them to be Frieda. She was looking
+more ethereal than ever in a long pale blue silk coat with a chiffon
+scarf about her blond head, and was accompanied by the Professor.
+
+"Whatever are you doing out here? It seems very rude to our guests,"
+Frieda murmured reproachfully. "I am sure Jim and Ruth will think it
+very rude of you."
+
+"But, Frieda, baby," Jack protested, "aren't you and Professor Russell
+also out here, as you call it? I can't see that we are much more to
+blame than you."
+
+Frieda gazed upward at the serious young man, who returned her glance
+with such solemn gravity that Jack felt a shiver of apprehension, while
+Jean stared at the new-comers closely, as if trying to solve a puzzle.
+
+"Oh, no, it is not the same with us," Frieda answered serenely. "You see
+Ralph and Jean are not engaged at all, and you and Frank have been
+engaged such a long time, Jack, so you ought to be used to it by now.
+But Henry and I, why we just become engaged half an hour ago, so of
+course we like to be out in the moonlight together," Frieda ended
+conclusively.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Five years have passed away and Jacqueline Ralston is now "Lady Kent"
+with a small son of her own to inherit the title, while Frank is a
+well-known Liberal member of Parliament. But they still make frequent
+trips back to the old Rainbow Ranch, which Jack, in spite of her
+affection for her new home, has never ceased to love better than any
+other place on earth.
+
+And these home-comings of Lord and Lady Kent and the small "James Colter
+Kent" are usually the signal for a foregathering of all the four Ranch
+girls with their husbands and families under the great sheltering roof
+of "Rainbow Castle."
+
+For no one of the girls now lives continuously at the Ranch, which is
+still left to Jim's devoted management. As much as possible of their
+time Jean and Ralph and their small daughter, Jacqueline, spend with
+them--partly in order that Ralph may continue to supervise the working
+of the Rainbow Mine which has not yet failed in its output of gold.
+Ralph Merrit has recently become one of the best known mining experts in
+the United States, so that his advice is constantly being asked both in
+this country and abroad. And wherever he travels Jean and her little
+girl accompany him, for Jean has become one of the most devoted and
+absorbed of wives.
+
+After the entirely surprising announcement of Frieda Ralston's
+engagement to Professor Russell on the night of their ball at the ranch,
+Jack, Ruth and Jim Colter seriously opposed her marriage. In the first
+place, Frieda was too young to know her own mind; Professor Russell was
+more than ten years her senior and they had not a single taste in
+common. So by and by Frieda was brought to consent to having her
+engagement postponed. Afterwards she spent one whole year in England
+with Jack, seeing as much of society and young men as her sister could
+arrange for her. Nevertheless, to everybody's surprise, Frieda stuck to
+her original choice and two years after her engagement became Mrs.
+Russell. She is exceedingly happy.
+
+So far Frieda has no children, but lives with her husband's parents, and
+as he is an only child, they continue to spoil and adore her. Also the
+grave young professor, who has never outgrown his first impression of
+Frieda as a glorified doll, still treats her as if the least harshness
+would utterly destroy her.
+
+Olive Van Mater is unmarried and already insists upon calling herself an
+old maid. She is not devoting her life to teaching the Indians, although
+she has partly fulfilled her old dream. At the close of the year, when
+her grandmother's final will was read, to the immense surprise of every
+one, Olive inherited one-half her large fortune, the other half being
+divided among the Harmon family. For the will announced that if any girl
+was able to show such self-will and such disregard of wealth as Olive
+had shown, should she fail in the interim to marry Donald, that
+therefore she alone deserved her grandmother's inheritance. As this
+money was far more than Olive wanted or needed, she was thus enabled to
+found an agricultural school among the Indians, which was to teach them
+to combine their old knowledge with the new discoveries of science and
+so to make life happier, if possible, for a misunderstood race.
+
+Yet Olive was to marry in the end an artist whom she finally met while
+visiting Jack and Frank at Kent House. The young man was poor and
+unknown then, but his first success was won with a painting of the head
+of his beautiful wife and daughter.
+
+Possibly Jim and Ruth might have been lonely now and then at the old
+ranch, except for the fact that in the course of time they had four
+daughters of their own besides Jimmikins and each one bore the name of
+one of the former Ranch girls.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
+
+Page 26, "contenance" changed to "countenance" (and gentle countenance)
+
+Page 31, "one" added to text (no one else was)
+
+Page 73, "frienship" changed to "friendship" (old friendship was)
+
+Page 80, "you'r" changed to "you're" (way you're running)
+
+Page 82, "he" added to text (he had recently)
+
+Page 106, "to day" changed to "today" (today hunting for)
+
+Page 166, "dreadully" changed to "dreadfully" (you so dreadfully)
+
+Page 181, "petulence" changed to "petulance" (and of petulance)
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ranch Girls at Home Again, by
+Margaret Vandercook
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