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+Project Gutenberg's The Ranch Girls in Europe, 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 in Europe
+
+Author: Margaret Vandercook
+
+Illustrator: Mary Pemberton Ginther
+
+Release Date: January 12, 2011 [EBook #34929]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RANCH GIRLS IN EUROPE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Emmy and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note: Bold text is denoted by =bold= and italic by
+_italic_.
+
+[Illustration: "JACK, DON'T YOU KNOW ME?"]
+
+
+
+
+THE RANCH GIRLS SERIES
+
+The Ranch Girls In Europe
+
+--BY--
+
+MARGARET VANDERCOOK
+
+ ILLUSTRATED BY
+ MARY PEMBERTON GINTHER
+
+ THE JOHN C. WINSTON COMPANY
+ PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1914, by
+ THE JOHN C. WINSTON COMPANY
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ I. BIRDS OF PASSAGE 9
+ II. SALVE! 25
+ III. NEW ACQUAINTANCES 35
+ IV. THINGS PRESENT AND THINGS TO COME 44
+ V. A SOLDIER OF FORTUNE 54
+ VI. RUTH'S ATTITUDE 63
+ VII. GIBRALTAR 73
+ VIII. A MORE IMPORTANT OBLIGATION 82
+ IX. REFLECTIONS 94
+ X. ITALIAN VIOLETS 105
+ XI. FONTANONE DELL' ACQUA FELICE 115
+ XII. AFTERNOON TEA 122
+ XIII. JACK 131
+ XIV. THE PRINCESS' MYTHOLOGICAL BALL 143
+ XV. A SURPRISE 156
+ XVI. LEAVING ROME 167
+ XVII. THE OVERSEER OF THE RAINBOW RANCH 182
+ XVIII. RELIEF OR REGRET? 192
+ XIX. RECONCILIATIONS 200
+ XX. AN ENGLISH COUNTRY PLACE 209
+ XXI. MIDNIGHT CONFIDENCES 217
+ XXII. OLIVE'S ANSWER 226
+ XXIII. THE WEDDING DAY 234
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ "JACK, DON'T YOU KNOW ME?" _Frontispiece_
+ PAGE
+ HER TONE WAS THAT OF ABSOLUTE AUTHORITY 19
+ "DON'T BE FUNNY, DICK; I'M LOST AGAIN" 119
+ RUTH STARTED UP THE AISLE ON LORD KENT'S ARM 236
+
+
+
+
+The Ranch Girls in Europe
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+BIRDS OF PASSAGE
+
+
+"IT seems incredible, girls, but I simply can't find her."
+
+The young woman who made this remark was standing on the deck of an
+out-going ocean steamer. The great boat was ploughing its way through
+the Ambrose channel, leaving the long nose of Sandy Hook a thin line of
+white on one side. Fading away into the background like dim gray ghosts
+were the giant towers of New York City. The speaker was wearing a long,
+gray traveling coat with a blue lining, and a felt hat of the same
+colors rested close against her ash-brown hair.
+
+Immediately three girls turned to face her. The minute before they had
+been leaning against the ship's railing. One of them revealed a
+suspicion of tears in her curiously dark eyes; the second had her lips
+shut unnecessarily tight to hide her emotion; while the third showed
+only rejoicing.
+
+"Dear me, Ruth Drew," this girl now began in mock tragic tones, "you
+don't suppose that our infant has fallen overboard already, do you? Or
+do you suspect some one of having run away with her? At this present
+moment I presume that Frieda Ralston is in our stateroom. But it is
+possible that she is engaged in making the acquaintance of some one on
+shipboard whom she has decided she is crazy to know. The most probable
+supposition, however, is that she is trying to persuade a steward to
+give her something to eat. For over an hour ago she informed me that she
+was starving to death and wished to open one of her boxes of candy
+before leaving the New York pier. She is sure to turn up in a moment or
+so. Do please stay here with us and help Jack and Olive mourn. They are
+shedding tears over having to say farewell to the 'Stars and Stripes,'
+and incidentally to our best-beloved friends. But I can't even show a
+polite amount of emotion I am so happy over starting off on our trip at
+last."
+
+Here Jean Bruce, one of the four Ranch girls from the Rainbow Lodge,
+abruptly ceased talking. She had been noticing for the past few minutes
+that a stranger had been listening to her conversation with a kind of
+well-bred amusement. And as she happened to be the person whom Jean had
+most admired since coming aboard the Martha Washington, it seeming
+annoying to be the subject of her smiles. However, Jean should not have
+been offended, for her sallies had awakened the first animation in the
+young woman's face since the hour of their sailing. Until recently she
+had been standing in a listless attitude within a few feet of the Ranch
+girls, apparently uninterested in anything in the world. In her slender
+arms she carried what looked like an entire tree of American Beauty
+roses. And now and then she had pressed her face against them. The
+traveler's costume had first attracted Jean's attention--it was so
+beautiful and fashionable. The coat was of dull blue silk; the small hat
+emphasized the classic outline of the young woman's haughtily poised
+head with its crown of pale-gold hair, and at a respectful distance a
+maid and a courier waited in attendance upon her.
+
+Jack and Olive, even in the midst of their absorption, had been brought
+to admit that the stranger's appearance was fascinating. While to Jean's
+more romantic fancy she suggested no less a heroine than the Princess
+Flavia in "The Prisoner of Zenda."
+
+In the moment of Jean's silence Jacqueline Ralston drew their chaperon's
+arm through hers, giving it a reproachful squeeze.
+
+"If you are going to begin worrying over us, Ruth, in the very first
+hour of what Aunt Ellen called 'Our tower,' whatever is to become of you
+before we are through? I am sure Frieda is all right. And this time Jean
+is telling the truth. Olive and I have been feeling low in our minds
+over saying good-by to Jim and Ralph and Miss Winthrop and Peter and
+Jessica and a few others. But just the same we are as happy over the
+prospect of our trip as Jean Bruce is, every single bit!"
+
+During this moment Ruth had again allowed herself to be silenced, but
+now she moved determinedly back from Jacqueline's detaining grasp.
+
+"I don't think you girls understand the situation," Ruth argued a trifle
+impatiently. "Of course I have already searched for Frieda in every
+probable place on the ship and have had the stewardess helping me. She
+simply is not to be found! I don't like Frieda's running off from the
+rest of us in this fashion and I don't understand it. Where did you
+leave her, Jean, when you came on board the second time after going
+ashore for another farewell to Mr. Colter? I was so busy having our
+steamer trunks put into our staterooms that I could not join you." And
+for an instant, remembering that there were other reasons why she did
+not wish to be present at this final parting with Jim Colter, Ruth Drew
+hesitated and flushed. Would her New England conscience never allow her
+to be satisfied with telling only half the truth?
+
+But Jean, forgetting the presence of her embarrassing audience, shook
+her head in protest.
+
+"Frieda didn't come on board with me. I came on alone. Why, Jim and
+Ralph had fairly to shove me up the gang-plank before the last 'all
+aboard' was sung out! Frieda came on with Jack and Olive several
+minutes before. That is, I thought so. Surely you can't mean----"
+
+In this same instant Olive Van Mater's arm slipped around Jacqueline
+Ralston's waist. For although almost a year had passed since Jack's
+recovery from her long illness and operation, she was not yet entirely
+strong. Frequently she had to use a cane in walking. Today, however, she
+had insisted that she was able to get along without it. So Olive feared
+that this sudden and surprising news of her little sister might prove
+too much for her. It was characteristic of the two friends' relations
+that Olive's first thought in this crisis was not so much for Frieda as
+for Jack.
+
+Nevertheless her friend did not yet require her aid. Although at Jean's
+surprising words Jacqueline Ralston had turned pale, she was perhaps not
+more so than Ruth and the other two girls. However, she was evidently
+doing her best to hold on to her self-control and not to allow the
+moment's bewilderment and fright to overwhelm her.
+
+"No, Frieda did not come on the ship with us the second time, Ruth," she
+explained, turning quietly toward their chaperon. "But please do not let
+us be alarmed. She must have come aboard by herself beforehand. For I
+can remember hearing her say her last good-by to Jim while I was still
+talking to Peter. Frieda is nearly seventeen; why, it is ridiculous to
+suppose that she would be so foolish as to let the steamer sail off
+without her! Besides, wasn't Jim right there! And isn't he always
+possessed of the idea that we will be late for things and that unknown
+catastrophes will overtake us? If necessary he would have put Frieda on
+board by main force. So let's go find her."
+
+Very quickly, then, the little party of four turned from their former
+places. And Jean's face, which had been the gayest in the group at the
+beginning of this conversation, was now the most terrified.
+
+"If Frieda Ralston isn't on board the Martha Washington with us, she
+most certainly is not on land with any of our friends," Jean insisted,
+"for I know that Frieda left them on the pier before I did. So if she
+isn't on this ship something dreadful must have happened to her; some
+one must have stolen her away. Oh, what on earth shall we do?"
+
+Jean was following the others in such a complete state of panic that she
+hardly knew what she was saying. So at first she scarcely heard the low
+voice sounding close to her ears. Only one thought occupied her mind.
+Frieda was lost before they had fairly started on their journey. If she
+could not be found on the ship, what were they to do? Of course they
+could send Marconigrams back to Jim Colter and Ralph Merrit, who had
+come all the way from the ranch to New York City to say farewell to
+them. But if Frieda should happen not to be with them or with any of
+their other friends, must there not be days and days of horrible waiting
+and anxiety before they could return home? Each moment the great steamer
+was carrying them farther and farther away from the United States and
+not all the gold in the Rainbow Mine could persuade her to alter her
+course or to stop until they reached Gibraltar.
+
+The voice spoke again. Evidently its owner must have pursued Ruth and
+the three girls.
+
+"I am afraid you are in some difficulty. If my maid or courier can be of
+any service to you I shall be most happy. Evidently you have not crossed
+before."
+
+This final suggestion, even in the midst of her anxiety, made Jean
+flush uncomfortably. Immediately she stopped and turned around,
+recognizing the young woman who had previously both attracted and
+annoyed her. Something in Jean's expression must have betrayed her
+irritation, for the stranger smiled again.
+
+"I hope I haven't offended you," she apologized. "I only wished to be
+useful. You _are_ in trouble, so you must let me try to serve you."
+
+In their overwhelming anxiety Ruth, Olive and Jack had continued on the
+way to their staterooms, leaving Jean to answer for all of them. Now, to
+her chagrin, the tears began overflowing her eyes like a frightened
+baby's.
+
+And only a few moments before had she not secretly hoped to make a
+favorable impression upon this most interesting of their fellow
+voyagers?
+
+Jean had believed that she was looking unusually well herself. For her
+blue silk dress with its touches of red embroidery, her blue chinchilla
+coat with its scarlet lining and her hat with the single red wing in it
+had been considered the most effective of the Ranch party's going-away
+costumes.
+
+[Illustration: HER TONE WAS THAT OF ABSOLUTE AUTHORITY]
+
+So why should she be making herself so ridiculous before a total
+stranger?
+
+Jean did not realize that the emotion of parting with her friends and of
+leaving her own country had been greater than she cared to admit even to
+herself. Then this sudden overwhelming worry about Frieda had left her
+nerves completely unstrung.
+
+Therefore she was extremely grateful when the older woman led her to a
+more secluded part of the promenade deck. New York was now out of sight,
+and most of the passengers were hurrying off to their rooms. Jean and
+her companion were almost entirely alone.
+
+"We--we have lost our little sister," the young girl began incoherently.
+"Or at least we have been unable to find her and do not feel altogether
+sure that she came aboard with the rest of us. Oh, I realize that this
+must sound absurd and impossible to you. It does to all of us. But what
+can have become of her?"
+
+With a slight but imperious nod of her head, which, even in her
+excitement, Jean did not fail to observe, her new acquaintance summoned
+her courier. And although she spoke to him in Italian the girl was able
+to understand. The man was told to await their return. Then if
+ordered he was to see that the ship was thoroughly searched for a
+missing passenger without unnecessary notoriety.
+
+A little later the young woman moved away with Jean. "Your sister is
+probably in her own stateroom by this time. However, if she is not and
+is on the ship we shall find her in a few moments." Her tone was that of
+absolute authority, as though the great vessel were her private yacht.
+Jean wondered how any woman not more than twenty-eight could give such
+an impression of poise and experience.
+
+Notwithstanding Frieda had not yet been discovered in any one of the
+staterooms. She had been expected to occupy a room with Jean. Olive and
+Jack were to be together and Ruth to sleep alone. However, in Ruth's
+stateroom, which the girls had chosen as being specially attractive,
+Jean and her new friend found Jacqueline Ralston waiting alone.
+
+"I have promised to remain here while Miss Drew and Olive have gone to
+speak to the proper authorities," Jack explained, with the curious
+self-control which she was almost always able to summon under special
+strain. "We hope my sister has simply mistaken her stateroom and may
+come to us at any moment. But if you will be so kind as to have your man
+assist us in our search, why we shall be deeply grateful. You see, we
+are rather too frightened to be sensible, besides being inexperienced
+travelers. And Frieda is so much the younger!" Here, with a break in her
+self-command, Jack dropped unexpectedly into the nearest chair. She had
+forgotten even to ask their visitor to be seated, nor did she have the
+faintest idea of her name, nor the reason for her interest in their
+predicament.
+
+An hour later and the Martha Washington had been thoroughly and quietly
+searched for the missing Frieda Ralston. Yet there appeared to be
+absolutely no trace of her. Of course her baggage had been brought
+aboard the ship with the other girls'. Even her silver toilet bag, Jim's
+parting gift, was safely stored in her stateroom. Frieda had been last
+seen ashore with nothing in her hands except a small gold link purse.
+
+Finally when the news reached the Ranch party that Frieda was positively
+not to be found on the steamer, for the first time in her career Ruth
+Drew collapsed.
+
+Not that she was more wretched than the girls over Frieda's
+disappearance, but because of her greater sense of responsibility. For
+almost a year, ever since their return from boarding school to the
+Rainbow Ranch, Ruth had been separated from the Ranch girls and living
+quietly in her old home in Vermont. In that time she had never heard
+from Jim Colter nor of him, except what the girls had written in their
+letters. Their meeting in New York had been entirely formal and without
+a word of private conversation. Yet now it was the thought of Jim's
+sorrow and indignation, should anything have happened to his baby,
+Frieda, that Ruth found the hardest thing she had to bear. For had she
+not once acted as Jim Colter's upright judge? What now must be his
+judgment of her?
+
+Several hours of this interminable afternoon were spent by Jack and
+Olive waiting in the ship's office for answers to their Marconigrams.
+But, when the answers finally did arrive, the news was only
+discouraging: "Frieda had not been seen by either Jim or Ralph or by any
+one of their acquaintances since the sailing of the Martha Washington."
+
+Yet, notwithstanding the many hours of searching and distress, Jean's
+new friend had never deserted them. She had not even gone to her own
+room to remove her coat and hat. Indeed, her whole time had been spent
+in encouraging Ruth, in making suggestions to the three girls, and in
+having her maid and man do whatever was necessary toward assisting them.
+Still no one of the Ranch party even knew her name.
+
+Twilight had come and the lights were shining brilliantly everywhere
+over the big ship. A fog horn had sounded and suddenly Jean felt that
+she could bear the suspense no longer. She must break down, yet no one
+of the others must see or hear her. Slipping out into a dark passageway,
+she hid herself and cried for half an hour. Then making up her mind that
+since nothing more could be done toward finding Frieda, she might at
+least devote herself to comforting Ruth, she walked quietly back into
+Ruth's stateroom. There she found their new friend just in the act of
+leaving.
+
+"You will be better by yourselves for a little while," she was saying,
+holding Jack's hand in one of her own and Olive's in the other, while
+looking sympathetically at Ruth. "My man will see that dinner is served
+in your room, and by and by I will come again to say good-night. You
+must not lose courage. The American girl never loses courage or ceases
+to fight while there is still work to be done."
+
+Having for the moment forgotten herself and her own sorrow, Jean became
+more aware of their new acquaintance's unusual sympathy and kindness.
+
+"You have been wonderfully good to us," she began chokingly, "and
+perhaps at some time we may be able to show you our great appreciation.
+But tonight, tonight--" and Jean could get no further. Then, summoning
+more strength of character, she continued, "I wonder if you would mind
+telling us your name? You must already know most of our history, as we
+have talked so much of ourselves in speaking of Frieda."
+
+For a moment Jean's friend appeared to be hesitating. Perhaps she did
+not wish to talk of herself, for she was now looking as weary as Ruth
+and the Ranch girls.
+
+"You must not think I am not a fellow countrywoman when I tell you my
+name," she replied slowly, and with the slightly foreign accent which
+the girls had neglected to notice in their distress. "I was once a
+western girl myself, oh, many years ago, in a little mining town. So I
+was able to recognize you as soon as I saw and heard you talking. Now I
+am an Italian, however, or at least my husband is. My name is Beatrice,
+the Princess Beatrice Colonna."
+
+Jean actually gasped out loud. Here she had been talking to a real live
+Princess without knowing it, when in her most romantic moments she had
+only conceived of a literary one.
+
+If they had not been in such great trouble over Frieda, how thrilling
+this meeting would have seemed! Yet, except for their sorrow, they might
+never have spoken to the Princess. And now here she was standing right
+in their midst talking just like any one else!
+
+A moment later and she had vanished with these parting words:
+
+"Promise me not to be too unhappy while I am gone. And perhaps when I
+return we may have devised some better scheme for finding your little
+Frieda."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+SALVE!
+
+
+FOR several moments after the Princess' withdrawal no one moved or spoke
+in Ruth Drew's stateroom. Ruth was lying on her berth, almost in a state
+of prostration, with Jean kneeling on the floor by her, resting her head
+upon the same pillow. On the divan Olive and Jack sat close together,
+Olive trying her best to think of some new consolation to offer her
+friend. For although the four Ranch girls loved one another with almost
+equal affection, after all Jack and Frieda were own sisters.
+
+For the past year the girls and Ruth had been planning this trip to
+Europe. When the school year at Miss Winthrop's had closed and Jack had
+concluded her trying experience at the New York hospital, the girls,
+escorted by Jim Colter, had gone home to the Rainbow Ranch. In the
+autumn they then intended to join Ruth again in the east and set sail.
+However, when the fall came around, Jack was not so well, affairs at
+the mine were in a kind of a tangle and Olive's grandmother desired her
+to spend another school term at Primrose Hall. So the European journey
+had been postponed until the following spring. Now it was early March
+and the Rainbow Ranch party was starting forth upon the Mediterranean
+trip. Their plan had been to stop over for a day in Gibraltar and
+afterwards to see Italy thoroughly before entering any other country.
+
+However, on this, their first evening at sea, when they had anticipated
+so much happiness, there was but one question and one desire in the
+hearts of Ruth, Jack, Olive and Jean.
+
+How could they bear the ten unendurable days before their ship reached
+Gibraltar and the second ten of their return journey to New York?
+
+For Ruth and the girls had finally concluded that Frieda had never
+sailed on the Martha Washington. Of course a few passengers had been
+discovered who claimed to have seen a young girl answering Frieda's
+description. However, no one would swear to it. And even if Frieda had
+fallen overboard, surely some one would have seen or heard her. Her
+disappearance had taken place among a crowd of apparently well-dressed
+and well-behaved people. It hardly seemed possible that she could have
+been kidnapped. Nevertheless the steerage had been quietly investigated
+without the slightest clue having been established.
+
+It was the old story that was once more repeating itself. Nothing seems
+more improbable than that any one whom we know and love can suddenly
+vanish without leaving a trace of his or her whereabouts. Yet when this
+actually does take place, no one has a sensible suggestion to make. All
+is confusion, uncertainty and at last despair.
+
+However, neither Ruth nor any one of the three Ranch girls were making
+any noise, so that they suddenly became aware of a movement down the
+short hall leading to Ruth's room. And then followed a knock at the
+door.
+
+Ruth turned over, facing the wall. "The steward is bringing our dinner.
+Do please do your best to eat something, girls, for we shall need all
+our strength," she pleaded.
+
+Jacqueline shook her head. "Not tonight. If you will let me get away to
+myself for a few hours I shall be stronger by tomorrow."
+
+For the first time there was something in Jack's voice that brought her
+chaperon, cousin and friend to a quick realization of their own
+weakness. For, although Jack's right to sorrow was certainly greater
+than theirs, until now, had she not been the strongest and most hopeful
+of them all? And this when two long years of illness had left her far
+from strong. Possibly through suffering she had learned a finer
+self-control.
+
+As she moved toward the closed door with her face white as a sheet,
+suddenly Jean flung herself in her cousin's path.
+
+"Don't go until you have tried eating something," she begged. "We can't
+bear to have you ill again besides our anxiety about Frieda."
+
+Jean flung open the stateroom door, but stumbled back and was actually
+caught by Jack.
+
+For there on their threshold stood the Princess, holding by the hand a
+young girl with a quantity of light hair tumbled loosely about a flushed
+face. Her blue eyes with their long lashes were looking indescribably
+sleepy and injured and in her other hand she held a small, gold-linked
+purse.
+
+Jean sank down on the floor as Jack released her hold on her. Ruth
+started up with a cry; Olive rose quickly to her feet, only to drop back
+into her old place again. Therefore it was Jack who reached the figures
+at the door first. And there her long-controlled self-restraint gave
+way, as she flung her arms about the newcomer's neck.
+
+"Oh, Frieda, Frieda Ralston," she sobbed. "Where have you been and what
+has happened to you? Who could have kept you away from us for all these
+hours. Hours--why you must have been away years!"
+
+But Frieda had now come into the stateroom, with the Princess following
+her. And though she had kissed Jack dutifully and affectionately enough,
+she gazed with astonishment and some resentment from one white face to
+the other.
+
+"I--I haven't been anywhere," she protested. "At least, I have just been
+asleep."
+
+"Asleep!" Jean whispered the single word over several times. "Asleep!"
+Yet certainly everything in Frieda's appearance suggested this to be the
+truth. Her face was as calm and untroubled as a big wax doll's, her
+color and eyes as serene.
+
+"But how, when, where?" Ruth Drew inquired, struggling between the
+hysterical desire to burst into laughter and tears at the same moment.
+
+"I made a mistake in our stateroom," Frieda explained with that offended
+and yet apologetic air which the other girls knew so well. "You see, I
+came on the ship a little after Olive and Jack did and saw them standing
+together waving to people. I knew they would never stop until we got
+clear out of sight of New York. And I--I was so dreadfully tired! You
+remember we had been out to the theater two nights in succession and had
+just had the long trip from Wyoming to New York; so I thought I would
+lie down for a few minutes' rest. I couldn't find Ruth in our stateroom
+or in hers, but I supposed that she had gone up on deck. So I took off
+my hat and coat and lay down--and--that's all there is to it."
+
+Olive started the laughter. The nervous tension of the past few hours
+had been too great for everybody. Now Frieda's voice, her manner, her
+explanation, had turned what had seemed a tragedy but a few minutes
+before into a ridiculous farce.
+
+"Would you mind telling me, Frieda," (Olive struggled to be as serious
+as Frieda might consider proper), "how you could find a stateroom in
+which you could sleep for five or six hours undisturbed, when every
+single room, every spot aboard this big ship has been ransacked to find
+you?"
+
+But here Jean's Princess, who had not spoken before, laughed gaily.
+
+"Please, this is where I come in. Isn't that the American slang?" she
+queried. "I found Goldilocks asleep in my bed just as the little bear
+did in the old fairy story. Remember, my stateroom is the only one that
+has never been investigated, since I have spent the entire time with
+you. It is true that my maid and courier have been into my sitting room,
+which adjoins my bedroom, several times. But they have also been too
+worried over your loss even to have unpacked my trunks. Imagine what an
+odd sensation it was for me to discover two big, blue eyes staring at me
+from my very own pillow!"
+
+And the Princess laughed as naturally and cheerfully as an ordinary
+American girl.
+
+"I wasn't asleep _then_!" Frieda defended. Catching the expression of
+her cousin Jean Bruce's face, she realized that she would never hear the
+last of this escapade.
+
+"Then why, baby mine, when you came back from dreamland did you not
+struggle into the hall and find out what had become of your family?"
+Jean demanded.
+
+"Because I was cross," Frieda whispered. "You see, I thought it hateful
+of you to have let me stay such a long time by myself. And I meant never
+to get up until you came and found me, even if I starved!"
+
+"And speaking of starving!" Jean exclaimed, clasping her hands together
+in a dramatic fashion and gazing at Frieda who now appeared as hungry as
+she had been sleepy a few moments before.
+
+But although Ruth and the three Ranch girls had done their best to make
+her remain so, Frieda was not a baby. She turned to their new-found
+acquaintance. Something in her sister's face showed at least a part of
+the strain which her family had been under.
+
+"I am afraid I hardly know how to thank you, Mrs.--Miss--" she
+hesitated.
+
+"She isn't a Miss or a Mrs. either; she is a Princess!" Jean whispered,
+supposing that no one else could overhear her. However, seeing Frieda
+shake her head with indignation over her cousin's continued teasing, the
+four women, including the Princess, laughed in chorus.
+
+"I am a Princess, really, Frieda, but my title does not mean anything
+serious in Italy. And I hope you may not like me any the less well for
+it."
+
+The girls noticed that the Princess had spoken as informally to Frieda
+as though she were one of them, but now as she turned toward Ruth again
+her manner changed.
+
+"For the second time let me bid you good-night and offer my
+congratulations," she said.
+
+And there again was the coldness, the hauteur and the superiority, which
+Jean had resented before their misfortune had awakened the young woman's
+sympathy.
+
+In the midst of a murmur of thanks from every one else in the room, Jean
+quietly opened the door for their visitor. But it was hardly possible
+for the Princess successfully to pass two large men bearing enormous
+trays of dishes in their outstretched arms.
+
+"Dinner!" Jean murmured soulfully, forgetting her new-found dignity.
+
+And the Princess' tired-looking, big blue eyes were immediately turned
+wistfully toward the food.
+
+"I am dreadfully hungry too," she announced, speaking like a girl again.
+"I wonder if you would let me have some of your dinner. You see, it is
+too late to dress now and I shall be all alone."
+
+Five voices answered and several hands reached forward to draw their
+guest down into the most comfortable chair. A little later the table was
+laid with a bunch of roses, which Ruth had received anonymously, to
+serve as the centerpiece. And seated between Jean and Frieda was a real
+live Princess; when in their fondest dreams the Ranch girls had only
+hoped to see one drive past some day in a coach and four.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+NEW ACQUAINTANCES
+
+
+AMBITION in this world is often gratified in a most unexpected fashion,
+and so it happened with Frieda Ralston!
+
+For weeks before leaving the Rainbow Ranch she had discussed with Jim,
+with Ralph Merrit, who was still engineer at the mine, and with her
+sister Jack, whether or not they believed she would be able to make
+agreeable acquaintances aboard ship or during the months of their travel
+on the other side. For Frieda was certain that she should soon grow
+weary with nothing to entertain her but miles of salt water, hundreds of
+art galleries, thousands of pictures and statues. It was all very well
+for Jack and Olive to enthuse over these possibilities and for Jean to
+pretend to feel the same way. She wanted _people_ for her diversion and
+hoped to be able to make a few friends in the course of their ocean
+crossing. Though how this was to be accomplished without a single
+introduction Frieda did not know. However, on the morning of the second
+day of their voyage the youngest Ranch girl made the discovery.
+
+In a state of blissful unconsciousness and without reflecting on the
+events of the day before, she started down to breakfast with Jean and
+Olive. Jack and Ruth were a little too weary to care about making early
+appearances.
+
+The morning was a perfect one, with a smooth sea, and the dining room
+was crowded with passengers. One would hardly have expected that the
+quiet appearance of three young girls could have attracted any special
+attention. For a few moments they waited for the head steward to be
+found, and were then led to their seats at the First Officer's table. It
+was all very quickly done, yet Jean and Olive were distinctly aware that
+a subdued murmur followed them; then that an entirely unnecessarily
+large number of heads were turned in their direction. Of course Frieda
+noticed this, too, but she merely presumed that their fellow travelers
+were curious and had not the good manners that they should have had. The
+idea that she or Jean or Olive could be exciting any particular
+attention never occurred to her at first, so deeply did the scene hold
+her attention.
+
+Then, without warning, something took place which made Frieda flush and
+tremble. Except that she was holding a ménu card in her hand at the
+moment the tears would have shown in her eyes.
+
+Seated just across the table opposite her was a large, middle-aged
+woman, dressed in black and wearing a quantity of handsome jewelry. She
+stared hard at Frieda for the first few moments after her arrival. Then,
+turning to the young fellow who sat next her, she announced in a loud
+enough voice to be heard from one end of the table to the other, "It was
+the plump, yellow-haired one, wasn't it, created such a stir? Seems like
+it ain't possible she could have been asleep in some one's stateroom.
+Much more likely she was in some kind of mischief! I am going to ask her
+what she _really_ was doing?" Then she leaned half-way across the cloth
+and, except for the young man's agonized protest, most assuredly would
+have asked her question of Frieda.
+
+But in an instant Jean grasped the situation. She was quicker than any
+of the other girls to understand social matters, and now realized that
+something must be said and done at once. Not only must she cover up the
+awkwardness of the present moment, but save Frieda from further
+discussion later on. They had believed that their search yesterday had
+been conducted quietly, and yet questions must have been asked of many
+passengers aboard and the whole business of the lost girl thoroughly
+gone into. Frieda herself should speak now and right the whole matter.
+Of course this would have been the better way, Jean thought. And yet one
+glance at Frieda showed this possibility hopeless. Should the strange
+woman ask her a single question or say another word concerning her
+escapade, it was apparent that the youngest of the Ranch girls would
+burst into tears before the many strangers at the breakfast table!
+
+Frieda was not feeling very well. Perhaps because she had slept so long
+in the afternoon, or, perhaps, for more sentimental reasons she had lain
+awake several hours during the night past worrying over the events of
+the afternoon. Not that she dreamed then that she might be talked about
+aboard ship, but because she was sorry for the girls' and Ruth's
+anxiety. Yet evidently persons had been commenting upon her! Moreover,
+had she not just been called plump before everybody at their table?
+Frieda was extremely sensitive on this subject and no one of her family
+or friends dared mention it. It was because Jack and Olive were both so
+absurdly thin and because Jean had a remarkably beautiful figure for a
+girl of eighteen that Frieda might seem a little large in comparison.
+The real truth was that she had only a soft roundness of outline, which
+put attractive dimples, and curves in the places where you might have
+expected angularities.
+
+Therefore, in the pause following the older woman's speech, Jean looked
+across the table with an air of quiet amusement. Immediately she held
+the attention of the persons nearest them and at the same time gave the
+embarrassed young man a reassuring smile.
+
+He was not a young man, however. Jean decided from the weight of her
+eighteen years of masculine experience that he was a college boy
+probably in his Freshman year and certainly far more refined in his
+manner and appearance than his ordinary-looking mother.
+
+"If you were kind enough to be interested in our difficulty of
+yesterday, I should be glad to explain to you how it had a happy
+ending," she began in a friendly voice. "I suppose it was foolish for us
+to have been so frightened."
+
+And then in detail Jean went through the history of the entire
+occurrence, beginning with their discovery of Frieda's absence, closing
+with the moment of her appearance, and neglecting nothing to make her
+story a good one. This in spite of Frieda's hot blushes and imploring
+although unuttered requests for silence. In the end, however, every
+member of the audience laughed, and Frieda determined never to forgive
+Jean's unkindness, while Jean and Olive were both silently
+congratulating themselves that any mystery surrounding her proceedings
+had been so soon and so easily cleared up. They were fully aware that
+their story would soon be circulated among a number of their fellow
+passengers.
+
+Yet for a long time afterwards Frieda Ralston would always recall this
+first breakfast aboard the Martha Washington as one of the most
+uncomfortable meals of her whole lifetime. More than anything she hated
+being laughed at. And even the young man, whose mother had started the
+entire unpleasantness, had the impertinence to forget his own
+responsibility and to smile and exclaim "Great Scott" over her ability
+to sleep so long and well in the midst of such great excitement. Later
+in the meal he attempted smiling at Frieda once or twice, hoping that
+she might have come in time to regard the situation more humorously. But
+she had returned his glances with a reproachful coldness that apparently
+had reduced him to a proper state of silence and humility. One thought,
+however, upbore Frieda until she was able to withdraw from the dining
+room. At least, she need never again recognize the presence of the two
+objectionable persons across the table from her. For not only should she
+never speak to them, she would not even incline her head in recognition
+of their existence at meal times, although she had heard that this was a
+polite custom among even the most exclusive of ocean travelers.
+
+Seated in her steamer chair next her sister Jacqueline half an hour
+later, with a veil tied close about her little scarlet velour hat,
+Frieda was dumfounded to observe this same objectionable young man
+stopping calmly before them.
+
+Looked at closely he had a well-shaped head with almost too heavy a
+jaw, a bright color, brown eyes and hair that he was vainly trying to
+train into a correct pompadour. His shoulders were broad and athletic,
+of a kind the younger Miss Ralston had previously been known to admire.
+
+First the young fellow bowed politely to Jack. Then he turned as
+directly toward Frieda as though they had already been properly
+introduced.
+
+"I am awfully sorry my mother made you so uncomfortable this morning,"
+he began bravely, and turned so crimson that Frieda felt her heart
+relenting.
+
+"Mother is an awfully good sort, but she hasn't been around much and did
+not guess how you would feel. And--oh, well a fellow can't be expected
+to apologize for his mother! Only as she asked me to come and talk to
+you, I am trying to do my best."
+
+Then, answering a nod of invitation from Jack, who had liked his
+straightforward manner, he sat down in the vacant chair next Frieda and
+pulling out a box of chocolates from his pocket began to tell her the
+story of his life. His name was Richard Grant. He and his mother came
+from Crawford, Indiana, where his father had been a candy manufacturer
+until his death a few months before. Richard was in his second year at
+Princeton when his father had died, so, as his mother felt a trip abroad
+might help her, he had dropped behind his class for half a year in order
+to do what she wished.
+
+He seemed so straightforward and so good-natured that by and by Frieda
+forgot to remain angry. So when he begged her to come and be introduced
+to his mother she hardly knew how to refuse.
+
+Nevertheless Frieda found her first conclusion had been right. Mrs.
+Grant was as impossible as she had previously thought her. Could she
+ever endure the mother's acquaintance for the sake of the son's?
+
+Still, Frieda continued walking the deck with her newest acquaintance
+until Ruth was obliged to send Olive and Jean to look for her. And a
+number of persons aboard had been watching the youngest of the Ranch
+girls with a good deal of pleasure. For Frieda had never looked more
+attractive than she did in her scarlet steamer coat and cap, with her
+blue eyes as wide open and as deeply interested in everything about her
+as a clever baby's and her cheeks, without exaggeration, as deeply pink
+as a La France rose.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THINGS PRESENT AND THINGS TO COME
+
+
+THE ensuing week at sea was one of the most delightful in the Ranch
+girls' lives and in many ways illustrative of their future history.
+
+An ocean steamer filled with passengers is in itself a miniature world,
+so many different types of people are represented, there is such freedom
+of association, such a leveling of artificial barriers that often exist
+on land. Frequently a fellow traveler reveals more of his character and
+history to some stranger whom he may meet in crossing than ever he has
+confided to a life-long friend.
+
+Until the present time the four Ranch girls and their chaperon, Ruth
+Drew, had lived singularly sheltered lives. First brought up almost like
+boys under the care of their overseer, Jim Colter, three of the girls
+had known only the few neighbors scattered within riding distance of
+their thousand-acre ranch. While Olive's acquaintance, owing to her
+curious childhood, had been even smaller and more primitive. Then had
+come the year for Jean, Olive and Frieda at Primrose Hall under Miss
+Katherine Winthrop's charge, when their horizon had broadened, admitting
+a number of girls and a few young men to be their friends. But this
+could hardly be called real contact with the world, since always they
+were under Miss Winthrop's wise guidance. While as Jack had spent
+exactly the same length of time at a hospital she had had even less
+experience with people. The last ten months with three of the girls
+again at the Rainbow Ranch had meant a return to the same kind of quiet
+every-day existence, varied only by the interests of the working of the
+mine. Olive's six months apart from the others had simply been devoted
+to further study with Miss Winthrop with week-end visits to her
+grandmother at The Towers.
+
+Then, although Ruth Drew was almost ten years older than any one of the
+Ranch girls, in many ways she was fully as ignorant of the world. It had
+never yet occurred to her that there were persons capable of
+misrepresenting themselves, nor of pretending to be what they were not
+and using innocent friendships for purposes of their own. Nor had it
+occurred to her that the reputation of the four girls for having
+suddenly acquired great wealth might place them in danger.
+
+From the time Ruth had been a little girl she had never had the
+disposition for making many friends. Always she had been timid and
+retiring, devoting herself to her father until after his death. Except
+for the year spent at the Ranch and the winter at the hospital in New
+York with Jack, Ruth had never known anything outside the narrow circle
+of a Vermont village life. Not that a village does not furnish almost
+all there is to learn of human nature, but that she had shut herself in
+from most of it. The freedom of the wonderful ranch life, the contact
+and friendship with Jim Colter, which for a while had looked like
+something more than friendship, had widened the little Vermont school
+teacher's horizon. Then had come the break with Jim, and the past winter
+at home she had shut herself up even more completely. During the many
+evenings alone in her small cottage there had been plenty of opportunity
+for Ruth Drew to regret her decision against Jim, but whatever passed in
+her mind she had kept to herself. Not even to Jacqueline Ralston, who
+at one time had been her confidante, had she made any confession.
+
+So perhaps from the standpoint of worldly wisdom the Rainbow Ranch party
+was none too well equipped for a long journey or for the meeting with
+many different types of people and the making of friendships which might
+be of grave importance in after years.
+
+And, notwithstanding the fact that Ruth and the four girls were
+singularly devoted to one another, there was no question but that they
+were five widely unlike characters, and that their interests must often
+lie in as many different directions now that their opportunities were to
+be so much broader.
+
+For a disinterested observer (if ever there is such an one) it would
+have been difficult at this time in the Ranch girls' lives to have
+decided which one was the most attractive--beauty and charm are in
+themselves so much a matter of personal taste. But perhaps to older and
+more thoughtful persons it was now Jacqueline Ralston who would make the
+strongest appeal.
+
+Jack was only a few months older than her friend, Olive Van Mater, less
+than a year older than her cousin, Jean Bruce, and yet looked a good
+deal more mature and felt so. This was true, not only because after her
+father's death she had been in a measure the head of the Rainbow Ranch,
+but because her year of illness had given her more time for
+introspection than is allowed most girls of her age. Sometimes she
+believed that this whole year had been completely lost, and then again
+came the knowledge that she could have learned certain lessons in no
+other way. Yet now she was determined to waste no further time, but to
+get as much as possible out of each passing day and to live fully and
+completely.
+
+Jacqueline Ralston did not look entirely like the brilliant, vigorous
+Ranch girl who three years before had ridden alone across the prairie to
+search for her lost cattle. She had less color in her cheeks, perhaps,
+except under the pressure of some unusual excitement, but her hair was a
+deeper bronze, her eyes a clearer gray, and her rather full lips a
+brighter crimson. There was something about her expression not always
+easy to understand. The old wilfulness was still there, the old habit of
+knowing her own mind and wishing to have her own way, but with it a
+greater power of self-control than most girls of nineteen have--and
+something else. What this other trait was neither Jack herself nor her
+friends yet knew. This trip abroad might mean more to her than to any
+one of the other four girls. In spite of her lameness, which was never
+apparent except when she was greatly fatigued, Jack was tall--five feet
+seven inches--and held her shoulders with the erectness of other days.
+Slender, Jack would always be, but not thin, for sixteen years of
+outdoor life had given her too fine a beginning.
+
+In each person's atmosphere or aura, if you prefer to call it so, there
+is usually a suggestion of some one distinctive quality, some
+characteristic that shows above all others. With Jacqueline Ralston it
+was purity. She was straightforward and unafraid, without cowardice and
+without suspicion. Having once believed in you, Jack would stand by you
+through thick and thin. More than anything in the world she hated a lie.
+For some reason she had always been and always would be what for want of
+a better word is called "a man's woman," meaning that men would
+understand and sympathize with her point of view and she with theirs.
+
+Olive Van Mater was just the opposite of Jack. Although the story of
+her strange early life was now fully explained, she would never lose her
+shyness and look of gentle mystery. Nor would she ever be able to make
+friends among strangers so readily as the three other girls. Many
+persons there would always be who would explain her shyness as coldness
+and a lack of interest. Still she could reveal herself more easily to
+girls and to women than to men. And although her peculiar beauty and
+sweetness could not fail to win her admirers because of her sympathy and
+self-forgetfulness, all the days of her life her own sex would make the
+strongest appeal to her.
+
+In Jean Bruce the two types were mingled. Jean wanted to attract people.
+She wanted to make everybody like her and she always had and always
+would. It did not matter to her who the people were, whether they were
+young or old, girls or boys, she simply had the desire to be liked and
+went about accomplishing it on shipboard just as she had at Primrose
+Hall and everywhere else. This proved that Jean had the real social
+gift, but then her talent had never been disputed by any member of her
+family.
+
+With Frieda Ralston, however, the question of type was at this time not
+important. She was two years younger not only in years but in a great
+many other things, and when it did not interfere with her pleasure she
+meant to keep so. There was only one thing at present that Frieda was
+interested in and that was having a good time, and certainly she was
+accomplishing it. When Dick Grant was not dancing attendance upon her,
+and very often when he was, there were a dozen other girls and young men
+of about Frieda's age aboard, by whom she was constantly surrounded. It
+worried Ruth a great deal, but then, unfortunately, Ruth was the only
+member of the Rainbow Ranch party who was seasick. And the three girls
+simply did not take the trouble to spend much time looking after Frieda.
+
+Though neither of them wished her to know it, both Olive and Jean tried
+to be especially careful of Jack. And this was particularly hard since
+Jack resented any suggestion that she was not as strong as they were.
+She was under the impression that she could walk without difficulty in
+spite of the rolling and pitching of the ship. Nevertheless she did
+finally promise Ruth to remain in her steamer chair unless one of the
+girls could be with her, and though she did not see any sense in her
+promise, meant to keep her word.
+
+On the fourth afternoon out, at about four o'clock in the afternoon, the
+weather became unexpectedly heavy. Ruth had long ago given up and gone
+to her room. Frieda was playing games in the salon, but Jack, Olive and
+Jean were on deck watching the approach of the storm. Jack adored the
+water. She had wanted the ocean to look altogether different from her
+prairies, to bring a wholly new impression into her life. But until
+today the calm, gentle, even roll of the waves at a sufficient distance
+had not been so unlike the far-off rippling of the prairie fields. Now,
+with the approach of a storm, with the blackness, everything seemed
+different.
+
+The three girls had been wrapped in their steamer rugs sitting quietly
+in their chairs, Jack supposing that Olive and Jean were as interested
+in the storm as she was.
+
+Suddenly Jean sighed. "The face of the waters gets a bit tiresome after
+a while, don't you think so?" she asked. "Remember the Princess asked us
+to come and have tea with her some afternoon. Suppose we go now. Seems
+as though she is a chance that ought not to be neglected. Who knows if
+the Princess takes a truly fancy to us she may do something thrilling
+for us when we get to Rome. Ask us to a court ball perhaps!" Jean
+laughed at the absurdity of her suggestion.
+
+But Jack frowned a little. She was grateful to the stranger for her
+interest and former kindness to them; yet she rather resented the air of
+mystery and seclusion surrounding her and her haughty attitude toward
+the other passengers. A princess might of course be different from other
+human beings; Jack felt she had no way of knowing. Nevertheless the
+Princess Colonna had confessed that she was an American girl. Why should
+a marriage have made so great a change in her point of view? In a vague
+fashion Jack was a little resentful of the homage which Ruth and the
+three other girls offered their new acquaintance. Now she slowly shook
+her head.
+
+"You and Olive go, Jean. Really I would prefer to stay by myself for a
+little while and watch the storm."
+
+Five minutes afterwards the two girls had departed, leaving Jack
+comfortably wrapped up in her steamer chair, and insisting that they
+would return in time to take her down to her stateroom to dress for
+dinner.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+A SOLDIER OF FORTUNE
+
+
+JACK may have been asleep for a little while. She was not quite sure.
+Anyhow, when she opened her eyes, she was surprised to see how the storm
+had increased and how entirely the promenade deck had become deserted.
+There had been a few persons about when Jean and Olive had departed, but
+now she saw no one except a man walking quietly up and down as though
+the pitching of the ship in no way affected him. He was wearing an
+English mackintosh with the collar turned up past his ears, but neither
+his appearance nor his existence at present interested Jack. Her only
+thought was for the oncoming storm. As yet there was no rain falling,
+only a cold gray Atlantic mist enveloped the sky and the sea. The waves
+had curling borders of white foam as they rolled and broke. There was no
+relief in the sky. Once the thunder roared as though they were
+cannonading on the other side of the world and then a single flash of
+lightning split straight across the horizon. Jack had thrown aside her
+steamer rug and was sitting upright in her chair, her hands clasping
+both sides. The color had gone from her cheeks (the storm was so
+wonderful, almost it was taking her breath away), but her head was
+thrown back, showing the beautiful line of her throat, and her lips were
+parted with the intensity of her admiration. Then the boat dipped and
+half the ocean picture became obscured.
+
+It never occurred to Jack that she would be running any risk of falling
+by moving from her place. Never had she been able to think of herself as
+an invalid, even after her two years' experience. Besides, was she not
+well by this time and the railing of the deck but a few feet away?
+
+When the ship had righted itself she stepped forward without any
+difficulty, laying her hand lightly on the rail for support.
+
+Then she became wholly absorbed. The plunging and tossing of the great
+steamer was fairly regular, so that Jack found no especial trouble in
+keeping her footing.
+
+So unconscious was she that she did not glance over her shoulder at the
+solitary passenger pacing the deck, although in the course of his march
+he must have passed her at least half a dozen times. Nevertheless the
+man had not been so unmindful of his fellow traveler. He was possibly
+twenty years or more her senior.
+
+Unexpectedly the ship gave an uneven lurch, almost twisting herself
+about, and at the same instant an immense amount of spray struck Jack
+Ralston full in the face. With a little cry of surprise straightway she
+lost her clasp on the rail and would have gone down in a heap if an arm
+had not immediately steadied her.
+
+"I beg your pardon; you might have fallen. At the moment I happened to
+be passing." The man spoke stiffly.
+
+In Jack's position, after her long suffering from a fall, one might have
+expected her to be frightened. However, although she was being kept on
+her feet by a perfect stranger with no one else in sight, while a storm
+raged around them, she was not even embarrassed.
+
+Catching hold on her old support again, this time more firmly, Jack said
+"Thank you" in an even voice. And then, as though she must have sympathy
+in her enjoyment from some quarter: "Isn't this storm splendid? It
+seems to me that before I have seen nothing but land, land all my life!
+I thought I loved it, but somehow all this water gives one quite a
+different sensation. I feel as if I weren't a person, but just a pair of
+eyes and lungs!" Jack spoke these last words with little gaspings for
+breath. So hard was the wind blowing that it had wrapped her heavy coat
+close about her; her hat had slipped backward and her heavy yellow-brown
+hair whipped across her face.
+
+Her courage and frankness made her companion smile. And, although until
+this moment Jack had not paid any special attention to her rescuer, she
+now observed that he had a skin so bronzed as to look almost like
+leather, that he had a closely clipped blonde moustache and equally
+light hair. Also, that his eyes were of the deep blue seen only with
+that complexion, and that his bearing was distinctly military.
+
+"But the sea is after all not so unlike a distant view of your American
+prairies," he replied. And in answer to Jack's expression of surprise:
+
+"I know your name, Miss Ralston. Among many other things I have tried
+running a ranch in the west, although none too successfully."
+
+Whatever the strange man's intentions, certainly his words succeeded in
+arousing Jack's attention. For at once, without liking to ask, she was
+curious to find out how he had discovered her name. Then she was always
+interested in any ranching experience. The people she had been meeting
+on board ship were most of them from cities and without any special
+outdoor knowledge. Only a few persons actually have kinship with nature,
+and they have usually spent their youth in the _real_ country, in big,
+open, unpeopled spaces as Jacqueline Ralston had.
+
+This time she smiled more shyly. "I thought you were an Englishman--a
+soldier." Jack hesitated. She did not think that a few words of
+conversation with a stranger, who had been kind to her, made any
+difference, but it would not do to talk on indefinitely.
+
+Instantly, as though divining her thought, the man's hat was lifted, and
+he moved a few paces away.
+
+But at this moment the storm broke. No rain had been falling up to this
+time, but now the clouds lightened, and from between two of them a heavy
+sheet of water descended, apparently straight on to the ship's deck.
+
+Why did Jack not run to shelter? Still she stood clinging with both
+hands to the ship's rail, her head thrown back inhaling deep breaths of
+the salt spray air. She was enjoying the storm but actually was afraid
+to move. Surely now that the storm had fairly broken either Olive or
+Jean would come for her. Both girls had made her promise not to return
+to her stateroom alone and at the present time it was impossible. The
+decks were soaking wet and slippery and she was tired from too long
+standing and opposing her strength to the fury of the wind.
+
+Yet the sailors were rushing about, lashing the tarpaulins to the
+balustrade, and in a few seconds she would be obliged to move.
+
+Jack set her teeth. It was absurd to be afraid of falling just because
+of a former weakness. She turned, took a few steps forward and then the
+ship gave another sudden lurch.
+
+It was Jean Bruce, however, who made the outcry. She and Olive were
+running down the deck without hats or coats and regardless of the storm
+for their own sakes. They were not yet near enough to save Jack from
+slipping. However, there was no need for them.
+
+When Captain Madden turned and left Jack he walked only a few steps away
+and then as the rain descended swung himself about to enter the door of
+the saloon about midway the promenade deck. Naturally he expected the
+girl with whom he had just been talking to have run on before him, she
+was even less well prepared for the downpour. But to his surprise he saw
+that Jack had remained fixed at her place.
+
+This was carrying a love of nature a little too far. Not only would the
+young woman get a thorough soaking, she would be in positive danger in a
+few moments should a wave break over the deck. It was odd that no ship's
+officer had yet suggested that she go inside.
+
+Captain Madden did not wish to offend Jack by officiousness. He had
+still no idea of her lameness, although he had been watching her more
+carefully than any one dreamed for the past few days. However, he did
+not wish to see her hurt and so put an end to his scarcely thought-out
+plan.
+
+The second time that the stranger held her up on her feet Jack could
+only stammer and blush. It seemed rather absurd to have been rescued by
+the same person twice in ten minutes and yet she did not even now wish
+to confess her difficulty in walking alone.
+
+Jean and Olive saved the situation.
+
+"Thank you ever so much," Olive began, arriving first and a little out
+of breath.
+
+"We never can be sufficiently grateful to you!" Jean exclaimed. "And oh,
+Jack, I suppose you can't imagine what had become of us? We sent the
+stewardess for you half an hour ago. Ruth is dreadfully worried."
+
+But Jean was not in the habit of forgetting her manners and so stopped
+speaking of their private concerns. She and Frieda had both seen and
+spoken of the man who was now with her cousin. He had his place at a
+table across from theirs and, possibly because of his soldierly
+appearance, had seemed unlike the other men aboard.
+
+"My cousin isn't very well, or at least she hasn't been," Jean
+announced, remembering Jack's sensitiveness. And then as Jack and Olive
+moved quickly away she added with a gracious condescension that made the
+older man smile: "Our chaperon, Miss Drew, will express her appreciation
+to you in the morning." And fled out of the rain as though she had been
+eight instead of eighteen.
+
+Notwithstanding, Captain Madden did not immediately leave the deck after
+the girls' withdrawal.
+
+"Things have turned out rather better than I could have arranged them,"
+he remarked thoughtfully, pulling at his moustache. "She is an
+uncommonly attractive girl. Lots of spirit, but I've an idea she has yet
+to learn a great deal about men and women. It's worth trying anyhow.
+It's jolly odd my having run across them in this fashion and recalling
+what I was once told."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+RUTH'S ATTITUDE
+
+
+BY the next morning the storm had abated, and for the rest of that day
+and evening Captain Madden devoted the greater part of his time to
+making the acquaintance of the Ranch girls' chaperon. More than this he
+accomplished, for he inspired in Ruth Drew a genuine admiration and
+liking. And while she and the older man talked together Jack usually sat
+quietly by listening to everything that was said.
+
+In all their lives Ruth and Jack had never known anyone like this
+Captain Madden. Here was a man who had traveled all over the world, who
+had fought in the Boer war and more recently in Mexico and had hunted
+big game in Africa. Indeed he had done most of the things and seen most
+of the people that had before appeared to them like events and figures
+to be known only through books. And yet he was modest, never once
+picturing himself as a hero or even a particularly important person,
+although there were times when both Ruth and Jack felt that he was being
+hardly fair to himself. And on those occasions, if the man observed any
+change in the young girl's face, there was no sign on his part. Captain
+Madden was not particularly good-looking, but had unusually charming
+manners and the soldierly carriage that can not fail to win admiration.
+Then, as he was forty years old and had attracted considerable notice on
+board, it was something for the Rainbow Ranch party to be singled out
+for his attention.
+
+Frankly, however, Frieda Ralston thought her sister's rescuer dreadfully
+elderly and a bore. Olive and Jean, although agreeing to her first
+conclusion, could not accept the second. Nevertheless neither of the two
+girls from the beginning of their association liked Captain Madden
+particularly well. They both wondered why Ruth and Jack should find him
+so agreeable. Then after the passing of another twenty-four hours, there
+was not so much a question of Ruth's liking, as of Jack's enjoying
+talking to a stranger for hours and hours.
+
+Actually before the Martha Washington had sighted Gibraltar Jean had
+already complained to their chaperon of Jack's intimacy with a
+stranger, besides almost quarreling with her cousin.
+
+It was true that Peter Drummond and Jack had been and were specially
+devoted friends and Peter was as old as their new ship acquaintance. But
+then Peter had always seemed different somehow, and his fancy for Jack
+had been largely explained by her likeness to Jessica Hunt. For while
+Jessica was still teaching at Primrose Hall and no word had been spoken
+of an engagement between her and Mr. Drummond, the Ranch girls were
+still convinced that something would develop between them later on.
+
+To Jean's grumblings that Jack was making herself conspicuous by seeming
+to prefer Captain Madden to any other one of their new friends on the
+ship Ruth explained that it was but natural. For while Jean and Olive
+and Frieda could walk endless miles with anybody who happened to please
+their fancy at the moment, Jack could only take short walks now and then
+and with some one who understood her difficulty. And while they danced
+every afternoon and evening in the saloon, or pitched quoits for hours
+on deck, Jack's only chance for amusement lay in conversation. It was
+only because Captain Madden knew more and talked better than their other
+new friends that Jack seemed to prefer his society. Since his discovery
+of her old accident he had shown her every consideration.
+
+Of course if Captain Madden had had no introduction to the Ranch girls
+and their chaperon, save that of his having assisted Jack at a difficult
+moment, Ruth Drew would never have permitted their acquaintance to have
+taken so intimate a tone in a few days. However, half an hour after his
+first meeting with her, the mystery of his having appeared to guess
+Jacqueline Ralston's name in his first conversation with her had been
+explained.
+
+In this world it is perfectly useless to marvel over the coming together
+of persons in the most unlikely places, who happen to know exactly the
+same people that we do, and yet we will always go on exclaiming and
+being tremendously surprised by this fact.
+
+Not only was Captain Madden intimately acquainted with the Ranch girls'
+old friend, Frank Kent, but actually was a cousin of his. Although, as
+he confessed, he belonged to the Irish and therefore the poor branch of
+the Kent family. It was not until Frank had returned to England, after
+spending the winter at the Norton place next the Rainbow Ranch, that
+Captain Madden had made up his mind to come to America and try his own
+fortune in the west.
+
+And there could be no question of the truth of his history, since he
+chanced to have a photograph of the Kent house in Surrey which Frank had
+often in times past shown to Jack. Besides he knew the names and
+characters of every member of Frank's immediate family. Moreover, he had
+remembered Frank's description of the Rainbow Ranch, Jack's and Frieda's
+names and Jean Bruce's and a little something of their discovery of
+Olive. He had even heard of Jack's and Frank's finding of the first gold
+in Rainbow Creek. And on seeing a group of these same names printed
+together on the ship's sailing list, Frank's story had come back to him
+and he had then guessed that Jack was the oldest of the girls and must
+be Miss Ralston.
+
+As a matter of course it then followed that this kinship with Frank Kent
+proved a bond between Captain Madden and the ranch party, but more
+especially with Jacqueline Ralston, who had been Frank's most intimate
+friend.
+
+For nearly two years there had been no meeting between Frank and the
+girls, not since his sailing for home, when Jack was taken to the New
+York hospital.
+
+Nevertheless their former intimacy had largely continued, Frank often
+writing to Ruth and the four girls. Perhaps Jack had heard oftener than
+the others because of her illness; shortly before their sailing Frank
+had written to ask if he might join the Rainbow Ranch party in Italy.
+But to Jack's letter begging him to wait until their coming to England
+in May there had been no time as yet for a reply.
+
+It was Olive's argument in the beginning that Jack's pleasure in Captain
+Madden's society was due to her past fondness for Frank. But from the
+first Jean's point of view was otherwise.
+
+It may have been caused by the old temperamental differences between
+Jean and her cousin. Fond as they would always be of one another, never
+had they been able to agree on liking the same people or things. So to
+Jean's suggestion that she could see nothing in Captain Madden to make
+Jack like to talk to him so much, Jack had replied that she could see
+nothing in Jean's American-Italian princess to make Jean wish to follow
+after her like an admiring shadow. At least Captain Madden had had
+exciting experiences that must always interest a girl of Jacqueline
+Ralston's disposition. She did not mind his age, for how could he have
+known all that he did had he been younger? Jack, it must be remembered,
+had been brought up on a ranch, had ridden horseback, hunted, fished and
+done most things that usually appeal to a boy more than a girl. She
+could not help admiring physical bravery beyond anything else. If the
+time of her illness had taught her something of the value of spiritual
+courage, there was still a great deal that she had yet to learn. Captain
+Madden had fought with Lord Roberts in South Africa, and had lately been
+with the Mexicans under Madero. What more reasonable than that the
+stories he was able to tell should be deeply entertaining to Jack, who,
+after two years of being shut up indoors, was more than ever in love
+with the thought of an active life?
+
+And Jean's Princess would of course appeal to her, since her ideal of
+life and romance had always been of so different a kind.
+
+To her it seemed wonderful almost past belief that a princess should
+have taken a fancy to four inconspicuous American girls. Jean did not
+say or even think that this liking was more for her than for the others,
+but this was plain enough to them. Every day the Princess invited Jean
+alone to her stateroom for a little talk, and sometimes would walk about
+for hours on the deck with her. Unlike Captain Madden in frankness, she
+had told Jean little of herself. Nevertheless in some unexplained
+fashion the young girl had guessed that in spite of wealth, beauty and
+position, her Princess Beatrice was not particularly happy. Perhaps her
+husband was the trouble! Only once or twice had she mentioned the
+Prince's name, and that in such a casual fashion that it was impossible
+to get any real notion of him. Jean was not without the hope of having
+her curiosity gratified later on, however, since in an idle moment (and
+perhaps without really meaning it) the Princess had asked Jean to come
+and bring her cousins and friends to see her when they reached Rome.
+Nobody except Olive, who was always sympathetic with one's wishes and
+dreams, believed that this invitation meant anything serious.
+Nevertheless Jean cherished the hope of being a guest in a real palace
+some day.
+
+Although the Princess Colonna seemed to have nothing to do with anybody
+aboard the Martha Washington, by an odd coincidence she appeared to have
+previously met Captain Madden. Probably their acquaintance was a slight
+one, for they only bowed in passing and had never been seen talking to
+each other. Indeed, Jean's new friend was in a measure responsible for
+her prejudice against Jack's. She had hinted several times in a veiled
+fashion that the girls must remember not to become too intimate with
+strangers in traveling abroad. There was no direct reference to Captain
+Madden. So when Jean mentioned her own impression of the Princess'
+meaning to her cousin, Jack naturally suggested that the Princess was
+equally a stranger and so equally to be avoided.
+
+However, it must not be supposed that this question of new friendships
+had become a really serious one during the early part of their ocean
+voyage. For after nine days, when the Martha Washington was to make her
+first stop at Gibraltar, the girls were equally delighted at the
+prospect of being shown over the great English fort by a British army
+officer. Also Captain Madden agreed to have any other friends that Ruth
+or the Ranch girls desired to join their party. And at Ruth's invitation
+the Princess Colonna consented to be one of them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+GIBRALTAR
+
+
+EARLY on the morning of their steamship's first landing during the
+voyage, Jack came up on deck. She had asked Olive to come with her, but
+she was at the moment engaged in writing to Miss Winthrop at Primrose
+Hall, who had become more like her mother than a friend. She promised to
+join her room-mate in a few moments.
+
+It was an ideal morning, and Jack hoped to have a long look at the sea
+before the other passengers were about to distract her with
+conversation. In a short while their steamer was due to pass Cape
+Trafalgar, where Lord Nelson won his famous victory over the French and
+Spanish in 1805, and from then on every traveler aboard, except the ill
+ones, would be crowding about the ship's railing for the best views.
+
+Jack felt wonderfully well. Only a few days more than a week at sea, and
+how much she had already improved! Not since the winter at the ranch
+when she was sixteen had she felt so vigorous and had such joy in
+living. Surely before their trip was over she would be her old self
+again. And if this part of their journey had been so unusually
+interesting, what would their trip through Italy mean, with Switzerland
+and England to follow in May?
+
+ "How much of my young heart, O Spain,
+ Went out to thee in days of yore,
+ What dreams romantic filled my brain
+ And summoned back to life again
+ The paladins of Charlemagne,
+ The Cid Campeador."
+
+Jack laughed, recognizing the speaker's voice at once.
+
+"I am the wrong person to be quoting poetry to, Captain Madden," she
+replied, scarcely turning her head. "I told you the other day that Jean
+and Olive are the literary members of our family. I hardly ever used to
+read a book, except now and then my school ones, until my accident. Then
+I took to reading from necessity. I am not in the least clever or
+romantic, and reading has so often seemed to me like finding out things
+second-hand. I am afraid I really want to _do_ the exciting things
+myself."
+
+Jack was hardly looking or thinking of her audience as she talked. One
+of the nicest things about their new acquaintance was that one was able
+to say almost anything to him and he would understand. She was feeling
+curiously gay this morning, as though something of unusual importance
+was about to happen to her. Of course it was the thought of their first
+leaving the steamer after nine days of ocean travel. Nevertheless, Jack
+had dressed with unusual care, not intending to make another toilet
+before going ashore. Instead of her usual brown steamer coat she was
+wearing a long, heavy white woolen one, with a soft white hat trimmed in
+a single feather curling close around the crown. And under the brim her
+hair was pure bronze in the sunlight and all the old color of the ranch
+days had this morning come back into her cheeks.
+
+"I am only quoting guide-book poetry," Captain Madden explained, after a
+moment's admiring glance at his young companion.
+
+Suddenly Jack ceased gazing over the water to look at him. "Captain
+Madden," she asked with the directness which some persons liked and
+others disliked in her, "you told us once that you were a British army
+officer, didn't you? Then would you mind explaining why when you are to
+show us over the English fort at Gibraltar today, you are not wearing an
+English officer's uniform?"
+
+If for the fraction of a second there was a slight hesitation before
+Captain Madden's reply Jack failed to notice it.
+
+"I am very glad you asked me that question, Miss Ralston," he answered,
+coming to the edge of the ship's railing and leaning one arm upon it as
+he talked. "I am afraid I have been sailing under false colors with you
+and the other members of your little party. I simply meant you to
+understand that I was at one time a member of the British army. Several
+years ago I resigned my commission. Else, my dear young lady, how do you
+suppose I could have attempted to run a ranch in your west and been
+permitted to fight with the Mexicans on the losing side? I am a soldier
+of fortune or misfortune, whichever way you may choose to put it."
+
+The older man spoke half in jest, but Jacqueline Ralston stared at him
+in a more critical fashion than she ever had before. Could she have been
+making a hero in her mind of a man who was no hero at all?
+
+"But I can't understand how a man who has once been in the army could
+stop being," she remarked slowly.
+
+Her companion shook his head. "No, of course you rich Americans can't
+understand," he replied. "The fact of the matter was that I did not have
+money enough to keep up my position. Though I can hardly expect a young
+American girl with a gold mine at her disposal to realize what a lack of
+money means."
+
+Jack moved her shoulders impatiently, letting her clear gray eyes rest
+for the moment upon her companion's profile. He looked a soldier every
+inch of him and a brave man. Yet what could his confession mean?
+
+"I haven't been a rich American girl always, Captain Madden," she
+returned. "And I don't know why you think I am one now. But a lack of
+money would never have made me give up my profession if I cared for it."
+
+It was perfectly self-evident that Jack was feeling a sense of
+disappointment in her companion. Although they had only known one
+another for a week, and Captain Madden was so much older, intimacies
+develop more rapidly aboard ship than anywhere else in the world,
+except perhaps on a desert island. Jack suddenly realized that she had
+been giving more thought to her companion's history than there was any
+reason for doing.
+
+She looked back over her shoulder. Numbers of persons with field glasses
+in their hands were coming on to the deck.
+
+"Miss Drew and the girls will soon be joining us," she suggested,
+meaning for Captain Madden to understand that she no longer wished to
+discuss his personal affairs. "I must go and search for them if they
+don't come at once. I think I can already see the point of Cape
+Trafalgar. In a short time we must be entering the Straits of
+Gibraltar."
+
+The next second Jack started to move away, but a glance from the man at
+her side held her. It was curious that she, who had never yielded to any
+one in her life except of her own will, should feel his influence.
+
+"You are only a young girl and I am possibly twice your age," Captain
+Madden began, "yet our acquaintance aboard ship has been so pleasant
+that I do not wish to have you misunderstand me. There were other
+reasons for my leaving the British army, but you may believe this to be
+the chief one: I am not a good soldier in times of peace. When the Boer
+war was over, I wanted to be where there was still fighting to be done.
+My country was weary of war and so I joined the Russians in their war
+with Japan."
+
+Jack shyly extended her hand. "That is all right, Captain Madden," she
+replied. "I know Ruth and Olive think it dreadful for me to be
+interested in fighting. Of course I hope there may never be any more
+great wars, but--" and here Jack laughed at herself, "to save my life I
+can't help being interested in battles and heroes who fight on against
+losing odds. I had a grandfather who was a general in the Confederate
+army."
+
+And Jack, resting her chin on her hand with her elbow on the balustrade,
+gazed out to sea, apparently satisfied. Indeed, she was so vitally
+interested in the view before her that she hardly heard Captain Madden
+add:
+
+"If your friend, Frank Kent, should ever offer you any other reason for
+my resignation--" But at this instant Ruth Drew and Olive appeared
+between them, and Ruth slipped her arm through Jack's. At once Captain
+Madden stepped aside, surrendering his place to Olive.
+
+It was odd, but as Ruth approached Jack and her companion, for just a
+passing moment an uncomfortable impression entered her mind. Jack and
+Captain Madden did seem to be talking together like intimate friends.
+Perhaps Jean had been justified in her grumbling. Nevertheless, Captain
+Madden was twice Jack's age, and why should they not be friends? It was
+as absurd to feel uneasy over them as over Frieda and her chocolate-drop
+boy.
+
+And hearing Frieda's laugh behind her, the next second, Ruth turned
+around with a smothered sigh of relief. Here came Frieda in her crimson
+coat and hat with Dick Grant at her side holding the inevitable box of
+candy in his hand. Following them were Jean and her Princess.
+
+They were just in time, because the Martha Washington was at this moment
+entering the Straits of Gibraltar. To the right there loomed, like a
+gray mirage in the background, the Mountain of the Apes in Africa. And
+there, directly ahead, was the historic Rock of Gibraltar.
+
+"Isn't it thrilling to have reached a foreign country at last!" Jack
+exclaimed, turning again to her first companion. But on her other side
+Frieda pulled at her coat sleeve impatiently.
+
+"If you are going into raptures over everything you see while we are
+abroad, I don't know what is to become of you, Jacqueline Ralston!" she
+argued. "Of course the Rock of Gibraltar is fairly large, but I have
+seen almost as big stones in Wyoming. Have a piece of candy."
+
+And when everybody in the little company laughed, Frieda would have been
+offended if she had not already grown accustomed to starting just such
+foolish attacks of laughter. What had she said that was in the least
+amusing, when she had just made a plain statement of fact? For how could
+she possibly have guessed how her point of view typified that of many
+American travelers?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+A MORE IMPORTANT OBLIGATION
+
+
+IT was in the late afternoon of the same day and over toward the west
+appeared the flaming colors of an African sunset.
+
+Since mid-day hundreds of the Martha Washington's passengers had been
+landed at Gibraltar. They had been shown through the famous English
+stronghold, where guns and ammunition are so strangely stored for
+defense and had seen the town at the northwest foot of the rock
+protected by formidable batteries. Then, weary in mind and body, they
+had been again transferred to the special tender and put aboard their
+steamer.
+
+Standing at the edge of the water and leaning on Olive's arm waiting her
+turn to be taken back, Jack wondered if among all their fellow
+passengers there was one half so fatigued as she? She had not mentioned
+it, but this was hardly worth while, for Jack's face, except for her
+lips and the shadows under her eyes, was perfectly colorless, yet that
+morning she had thought herself as strong as anyone else. However, Jack
+need not have felt discouraged, for every member of the Rainbow Ranch
+party looked almost equally used up. The truth is that, through Captain
+Madden's guidance, they had seen more of the great fort than the other
+ship's passengers. Then by accident they had lost their return places in
+the tender, and so been obliged to wait until a later trip.
+
+The celebrated Rock of Gibraltar runs north and south three miles and is
+about three-quarters of a mile in width. The entire rock is undermined
+with subterranean galleries containing cannon in great number. Some of
+the lower galleries that are not in use may be visited by travelers, but
+both Frieda and Jean assured Captain Madden that if there were any
+possible passages which they had not journeyed through, it was indeed
+hard to believe.
+
+Each member of the expedition was cross. For there is nothing more
+trying to the nerves and disposition than too strenuous sight-seeing.
+
+Ruth was worried at having permitted Jack to undertake a trip that was
+so plainly too much for her strength. Jean was annoyed because the
+Princess Colonna, who had been one of their party all day, had scarcely
+spoken to any of her friends. Even Captain Madden she had acknowledged
+only by the coldest greeting, while absolutely ignoring every one else.
+And although Dick Grant and his mother had been included in the Ranch
+girls' immediate party, solely on Frieda's account, she and the young
+man had been on the verge of quarreling at least half a dozen times.
+However, it was not altogether the young people's fault, because Mrs.
+Grant had been trying. Every once in a while Frieda had felt obliged to
+decide that in the future she must have nothing more to do with the son.
+If there was a possible stupid question to be asked, always Mrs. Grant
+had asked it; if there was a place where the rules forbade her entrance,
+that was the particular place which she had insisted upon seeing.
+Indeed, if Frieda had been able to foretell how Mrs. Grant was to end
+the long day with them, she would have wished that their original
+uncomfortable acquaintance could have closed on the morning it begun.
+
+Suddenly from the signal station on top the Rock of Gibraltar the little
+company in waiting on shore heard the loud report of the six o'clock
+gun. Six o'clock and yet here they were on land! The ship's officer had
+announced that the Martha Washington must steam away again promptly at
+six! Nevertheless there seemed no real danger of the Rainbow Ranch
+party's being left behind. For half a mile out at sea their ship still
+waited at anchor, while approaching within a few yards of the Spanish
+shore was the small boat known as the tender.
+
+Watching it come toward them Jack swayed and might have fallen except
+that Olive kept a tight hold on her.
+
+"Please help me up the gang-plank when we go on board, Olive dear?" Jack
+whispered, "I don't want any one to guess how wobbly I feel."
+
+And Olive nodded reassuringly.
+
+A little later and the tender had reached the big ship. Now, however,
+the transference of the passengers was not to be so easily made. The
+waves were no longer blue and quiet as they had been all day. From
+somewhere a high wind had blown up off the land and each time the
+smaller boat attempted anchoring alongside the big one, a breaker drove
+it backward or forward. There was grave danger of the tender's being
+shattered against the great ship.
+
+Nevertheless no one aboard either of the two boats seemed seriously
+frightened, excepting Mrs. Grant. Frieda was so scornful in watching the
+stout, elderly woman clutching at her son, asking dozens of hysterical
+questions that she quite forgot to be nervous herself. Indeed, she
+almost failed to appreciate the scene, so unique to her experience.
+
+Ruth and the other three Ranch girls were not so oblivious. For the time
+being they were standing close together, having in the excitement
+forgotten all past weariness. The Spanish and English sailors, manning
+their small boat, were splendidly capable. Through a megaphone orders
+were called out to them from the big steamer, and instantly the men made
+ready to obey. But whatever the discipline and intelligence, the will of
+the sea was not to be soon conquered.
+
+Had there been more time the smaller boat could have been finally
+brought alongside the larger one and her few remaining passengers safely
+put on board, but the night was coming down, and both the officers and
+travelers were growing impatient. A few moments afterward and the tender
+was brought to anchor within a safe distance of the Martha Washington.
+Then a life boat was lowered. When this came alongside the tender a
+ladder was dropped overboard and the Ranch party and their friends
+ordered to embark. The method appeared a simple enough one. One had only
+to climb down the ladder and be lifted into the small boat.
+Nevertheless, five persons looked anxiously at Jacqueline Ralston, and
+Jack purposely refused to return any gaze. Not for worlds would she have
+Ruth or the girls guess that she felt any nervousness at having to do so
+easy a thing, with several persons at hand to help her.
+
+During this period of waiting, Captain Madden had been standing not far
+away, talking in low tones to the Princess. Now he moved quietly
+forward. His face was flushed as though his conversation had not been
+agreeable. However, his manner toward Jack was extremely kind.
+
+"If the climbing down the ladder will be too much for you, Miss Ralston,
+won't you allow me--"
+
+Jack shook her head. Already Jean was descending the side of the boat,
+the Princess following soon after. And although the small tender plunged
+with the movement of the waves and the rowboat rocked unceasingly, half
+a dozen hands held the ladder firm.
+
+There was no danger. Jack joined Frieda in frowning impatiently at Mrs.
+Grant, who was nervously protesting to her son that she could never make
+the necessary effort. Then her gray eyes lighted with amusement. With a
+slight inclination of the head she suggested that Captain Madden play
+knight errant to the only female in distress.
+
+Olive and Frieda went down one after the other. Ruth, however, would not
+leave the tender until she saw Jack safely through the climb overboard.
+And in the meantime the rowboat had made a journey to the steamer, put
+its occupants aboard and returned once more to the smaller ship.
+
+But by this time the gorgeous sunset colors had faded and the twilight
+was fast closing down. And although Mrs. Grant, having at last mustered
+sufficient courage, insisted on being allowed to enter the rowboat
+first, Ruth Drew would not hear of it. She had waited, watching the
+other girls in order to see how difficult the climb might be for Jack.
+Now it was wiser to have no further delay.
+
+If Jack had felt any nervousness previously it had now entirely passed.
+How absurd to be frightened by anything so simple! With a gesture to the
+man in the boat below she flung her heavy white coat down to him. Then
+she swung herself over the side of the boat and commenced descending the
+ladder with all the ease of her athletic days. The distance was not
+great. Although the boats were rocking and plunging the experience was
+exhilarating.
+
+It happened during the few moments required for Jack's descent that
+Captain Madden and Dick Grant chanced to be standing on either side of
+Mrs. Grant. Therefore, what afterwards occurred could hardly have been
+prevented.
+
+Of course Mrs. Grant was under the impression that Jack had reached the
+end of the ship's ladder. Some call from below or some mental
+hallucination must have given her the idea. For without a word she
+suddenly darted forward and before any one could speak or move seized
+hold of the top rung of the overhanging rope ladder. It was only for an
+instant. Immediately the sailor standing alongside, grasped her firmly
+by the arm, but the single movement had been sufficiently disastrous.
+
+Jack had nearly reached the end of her climb. So near was she to
+stepping into the rowboat that one of the men below had his arms
+outstretched to receive her. So possibly she had relaxed the firmness of
+her hold. For when the surprising jerk came from the top of the ladder
+the girl wavered half a second and then appeared to let go altogether.
+She fell not backwards but over to one side. And only her own family
+understood why she had happened to collapse in this fashion.
+
+Instantly, however, before an other sound could be heard, there came the
+queer rushing noise of the water closing over her. And then followed a
+cry that seemed to come from a hundred throats at once. Above them all
+Ruth believed she heard Frieda on the deck of the big steamer.
+
+Ruth did not utter a sound. Really there seemed not to be time. Almost
+instantaneously did Captain Madden's coat drop at her feet. Then
+followed his dive overboard. There were plenty of people nearby to have
+pulled Jack out of the water. Perhaps his action was unnecessary.
+However, Captain Madden had at once recognized Jack's grave danger. They
+were only half a mile from shore, where he suspected the undertow was
+dangerously strong. It was now almost dark so that her body might be
+drawn under one or the other of the two large boats. And his suspicion
+must have been true, because Jack did not come up near the spot where
+she had gone down. There were half a dozen sailors ready to offer aid
+had it been necessary. But the moment after Captain Madden's dive, he
+rose again holding the girl easily with one hand and swimming. When they
+reached the side of the life-boat the sailors pulled them in, wet of
+course, but otherwise unhurt.
+
+"I am exceedingly sorry and ashamed and grateful," Jack murmured in
+Captain Madden's ear later when, safely wrapped in his coat, she was
+being rowed back to the Martha Washington. "In the words of Mr. Peggoty,
+if it hadn't been for you I might have been 'drowndead.'"
+
+Captain Madden shook his head. More than anything else he admired
+Jacqueline Ralston's courage. Indeed, he was beginning to think that the
+task which he had set for himself might not be so disagreeable to
+perform.
+
+"Oh no, there were dozens of other men equally ready to do just what I
+did, only I managed to have the honor first," he returned lightly. And
+of course by his ignoring his own action, Jack was the more impressed by
+it.
+
+For she looked at the older man gravely. "I can understand that you
+don't want to be thanked for what you have done. I know that from my own
+experience once. But just the same I shall always be grateful to you.
+And if ever there is a time when I can in any way show my gratitude--"
+
+To do Captain Madden justice he felt uncomfortable over Jack's excessive
+gratitude, for whatever his other faults of character, he was a
+physically brave man.
+
+Although insisting that she was perfectly well and that her wetting had
+not done her the least harm, Jack was straightway put to bed and dosed
+with warm drinks. So that Olive, in order to talk with the other girls
+and yet allow Jack to sleep, was obliged to slip into Ruth's stateroom
+soon after dinner.
+
+There she found Ruth and Jean engaged in argument.
+
+"Of course I am grateful to Captain Madden," Jean was saying in an
+irritated tone of voice, "but just the same, I don't see why he could
+not have waited for one of the sailors whose business it was to rescue
+Jack. We all of us know what a queer disposition Jack has and how if she
+once likes a person she sticks to him through thick and thin. And
+I--well, candidly, I don't want her to like this Captain Madden any too
+much. I don't trust him and I would write to old Jim tonight if I knew a
+single thing to say against him or any reason for saying it."
+
+"But you are simply prejudiced, Jean dear. Anyhow we will be landing in
+Naples in a few days and after that see no more of our ship friends,"
+Ruth argued. "So if I were you I would say and think nothing more about
+this. Really, such a casual acquaintance is not of so great importance."
+
+And Ruth frowned, because Frieda was staring at her cousin with her big
+blue eyes wide open with the effort to guess what possible reason Jean
+could have for showing so much unnecessary feeling. For her own part,
+her anger was directed entirely against Mrs. Grant and her son. And she
+firmly made up her mind not to speak to either one of them again, no
+matter how humble their apologies.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+REFLECTIONS
+
+
+RUTH had her way. When the Martha Washington finally arrived in Naples,
+good-byes were said to all their ship's acquaintances and the Rainbow
+Ranch party had their first ten days in Italy to themselves. There was a
+little time of rest and then visits to the Island of Capri, to the ruins
+of Pompeii, to Mount Vesuvius. And before very long Ruth and the four
+girls found themselves yielding more than they had dreamed to the
+wonderful spell of southern Italy. Not that any one object or place made
+so great an impression beyond another, but because Italy seemed so
+different from their own land. It was as though they had one day been
+transported by an airship for a journey through the planet Jupiter or
+Mars.
+
+The soft Italian voices with their tuneful cadences, the laziness and
+air of having all eternity for the performance of a task, the big,
+brown-eyed beauty of the women and children--it was all irresistible.
+Actually the girls felt their own characters changing. Where was their
+old energetic desire to take long walks, to rise up early and certainly
+never to waste a moment in a nap in the afternoon? Why in Naples one
+felt always drowsy, less inclined to talk, and wished only to drive and
+dream and feast one's eyes and ears and nose, all the senses at once.
+For here was beauty, music and such fragrance, surely the three graces
+of nature! And the roses, they were everywhere in bloom, climbing over
+every ruined wall and broken gateway, covering whole hillsides, until at
+last Jack was obliged to admit that they were as abundant and even more
+beautiful than her own wild prairie roses.
+
+But Naples was only to be the Ranch girls' first introduction to Italy,
+their first taste of her delights. Rome was really the central object of
+their pilgrimage, where the greater part of their time was to be spent.
+
+And Rome Ruth had decided must be taken seriously.
+
+In Naples she had let things drift, had even felt as inactive and
+pleasure-loving as her younger companions. But then she had been tired
+from her sea voyage. Many persons had said that it required a week or
+ten days for recovery if one had been seasick. Also this may have
+explained why so frequently of late she had caught herself thinking of
+Jim Colter. Why should the nights in Naples recall moonlit evenings on
+the ranch which they had spent together years before?
+
+Almost the only suggestion that Jim had made to her before their sailing
+was that the girls should acquire enough culture on their European trip
+to compensate him for the loss of their society. And Ruth had
+conscientiously determined to do her best. All the winter past she had
+devoted to the study of Roman history. Indeed, it had helped her pass
+many a lonely evening, when otherwise the picture of the Rainbow Lodge
+living room, with the girls seated about the fire and the big figure of
+their guardian stalking in and out half a dozen times within the hour,
+had a fashion of appearing before her eyes.
+
+Ruth had begun her acquaintance with the Ranch girls as their teacher.
+So that now, although they were nearly grown, it was hard for her to
+give up all her old principles and practices. In their different ways
+the four girls were charming, and yet there was much Ruth felt that
+they should know. However, the past year had made more changes in their
+characters than she could ever have supposed. She had been surprised to
+find how much they now cared for people and society, and had been
+disappointed as well; for Ruth had not realized that the Ranch girls
+were yet old enough for these interests, in spite of the fact that Jack
+was nearly twenty and Olive and Jean not so far away. Jack in particular
+had been a revelation to Ruth, who had been making special plans for her
+intellectual development. For she was the oldest of the four girls and
+yet had never had the advantage of Primrose Hall and Miss Winthrop.
+After their trip abroad then, there would be time enough for society,
+their chaperon decided, actually believing that the natural experiences
+of life can be persuaded to wait for set times and set places.
+
+So all the way along the road from Naples to Rome, Ruth was making her
+own plans for the four girls, little guessing what was occupying their
+minds. Nevertheless their thoughts were as eternal to youth as any
+symbol of eternity in the most wonderful of all cities.
+
+ "'Tis the center
+ To which all gravitates. One finds no rest
+ Elsewhere than here. There may be other cities
+ That please us for a while, but Rome alone
+ Completely satisfies."
+
+Or at least this was Ruth Drew's idea, as she sat watching the landscape
+fly past her window, with these lines keeping time to the turning of the
+car wheels.
+
+Notwithstanding that, Jean Bruce sat exactly opposite, with her eyes
+closed showing the length of her dark lashes against the clear pallor of
+her cheeks, Jean was not devoting all her energies to reflecting upon
+the historic curiosities of ancient Rome. She wanted to see everything
+of importance, of course, but she was also wondering if the Princess
+Colonna would keep the promise made in their farewells on the steamship.
+Would she call on them in Rome and afterwards invite them to meet her
+friends? The invitation might possibly be to an afternoon tea; yet even
+then there was a chance of meeting some member of the Italian nobility
+or other prominent person. And Jean did not think herself a snob because
+she wanted to meet big people as well as to see big things. Always they
+had led such a quiet life at the ranch, and boarding school had offered
+but few opportunities for making outside friends. Indeed, her only other
+chances for mingling with the world had been their summer trip through
+the Yellowstone and her week's visit to Margaret Belknap during the
+Christmas holidays at Primrose Hall. So Jean's social aspirations were
+possibly not unreasonable.
+
+And, curiously enough, Olive Van Mater, for at least a portion of their
+pilgrimage to Rome, was considering certain friends whom she might
+possibly meet there, instead of the marvels of the city itself. For she
+was expecting that her cousins, Mrs. Harmon, Donald and Elizabeth, might
+make their appearance. And although Olive was fond of all three of them,
+she could not look forward to their meeting with pleasure. The truth is
+that Olive's grandmother, as we must know from the past volume in this
+series, was a self-willed, unwise old woman. No sooner had she seen
+Olive and Donald together half a dozen times and noticed the young
+fellow's liking for her granddaughter, than she had made up her mind the
+way she intended to escape her own difficulty. Why puzzle to decide
+whether she should leave her large fortune to the Harmons, as she had so
+long promised, or give it to the newly found granddaughter?
+
+"Let the two young persons marry and share the money between them.
+Elizabeth could be comforted with a reasonable legacy." This decision
+Madame Van Mater had confided to Miss Winthrop almost as soon as the
+idea had come into her head. And then, in spite of Miss Winthrop's
+openly expressed disapproval, after Olive's return from the ranch for
+her second winter at Primrose Hall, her grandmother had made known her
+wishes to her.
+
+"So that you may not get any other love nonsense into your head," Madame
+Van Mater explained to Olive, as though there could be no possibility of
+her desire being disobeyed. And this in spite of the fact that Olive had
+insisted that Donald could never care for her or she for him, and that
+nothing would induce her to follow her grandmother's wishes. Indeed,
+except for Miss Winthrop, Olive might have been made extremely unhappy.
+But her friend had explained that Madame Van Mater was growing childish
+with age and would probably change her mind in regard to the willing of
+her wealth many times before her death. Also she assured her that
+Madame Van Mater had never mentioned her purpose to Donald Harmon, and
+if Miss Winthrop could influence her, never should. Nevertheless Olive's
+peace of mind and pleasure in her cousin's society had been successfully
+destroyed by her grandmother's suggestion. Actually the girl lived in a
+kind of shy dread of Don's ever finding it out or attempting to follow
+Madame Van Mater's wishes. She had always protested that the greater
+share of the family fortunes should be left to the Harmons. She herself
+would be content with very little and wanted no special favors, since
+her grandmother had never brought herself to care for her.
+Notwithstanding this, the old lady had seen that her granddaughter had
+an even larger sum than the three Ranch girls for her traveling expenses
+in Europe. And had said that she was to buy whatever she liked and to
+send for more money whenever it was necessary.
+
+Yet Ruth and the girls were traveling in a far more expensive fashion
+and spending more money than they ever had before. For, in spite of the
+discovery of the Rainbow mine, they had continued to live simply.
+Nevertheless, in starting off on their European trip, Jim had advised
+them to have a good time and not to worry, as he guessed the gold mine
+could do the rest.
+
+So that Jack in the course of her journey from Naples rather wondered if
+Captain Madden had not received a wrong impression of the amount of
+their wealth. Or possibly Frank Kent had told him. In any case it was
+annoying for Frank to have mentioned their financial affairs to so
+complete a stranger as Captain Madden had then been. Jack was glad she
+had written asking Frank not to join them in Italy. Two years might have
+made a great change in his character, so that they could not be friends
+as they had once been. Besides, had she not guessed, without actually
+having been told, that Captain Madden and Frank, in spite of being
+cousins, were not particularly good friends? And as Captain Madden had
+mentioned that there was a bare chance of his spending the spring in
+Rome it might be awkward meeting them together. Of course Jack had not
+spoken of the chance of running across Captain Madden in Rome to any of
+her family. In the first place, Captain Madden had been by no means sure
+of his presence there, and in the second, Jack had the impression that
+Jean, Olive and Frieda did not like him. This was absurd, of course,
+with a man so much older! As he had traveled and spent other seasons in
+Rome, surely he would be an agreeable guide and help them to see the
+right things in the right way?
+
+Only Frieda, besides Ruth, was not looking forward with either pleasure
+or dread to any persons whom she might happen to run across in Rome.
+Certainly Dick Grant and his mother were to be there (Dick had told her
+every detail of their plans in the course of their early acquaintance),
+but whether they were in Rome or not was of no interest to Frieda. For
+the younger Miss Ralston had been true to her decision and not once in
+the two-day-and-a-half sail from Gibraltar to Naples had she
+acknowledged the existence of either Mrs. Grant or her son. And this in
+spite of their humble apologies to Jack, and her sister's ready
+acceptance of them.
+
+However, this much justice must be accorded the Ranch girls that when,
+at sunset, they at last entered "the eternal city" all personal thoughts
+and considerations were swept from their minds. High in the distance
+they could see the tower of St. Peter's; in the midst of the town ran
+the muddy stream of the Tiber; and over all Rome's beauty and antiquity
+hovered the golden atmosphere for which the city is also justly famous.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+ITALIAN VIOLETS
+
+
+"DO make up your minds and let us go somewhere," Frieda pleaded. "I
+don't see that it is so important where we go first."
+
+She was wearing a new lavender cloth frock trimmed in silk and a hat of
+the same shade, with a big bunch of violets resting against her yellow
+hair. From her hand dangled her adored gold-link pocketbook. So there
+was no question of Frieda's preparedness for beginning their first day's
+sight-seeing in Rome. Ruth and the other three girls showed no such
+signs of being ready for immediate departure.
+
+They were together in their big sitting room, which overlooked a
+beautiful enclosed court, characteristic of Italian hotels and homes.
+And at least half an hour of their morning the girls had devoted to
+gazing out of their windows. In the center of the courtyard a fountain
+played continually--not a fountain of an ordinary kind, but the figure
+of a beautiful boy, with his arms high in the air, holding two great
+shells into which the water poured and then splashed down to the ground
+below. Around the enclosure were copies of famous statues and miniature
+orange and lemon trees.
+
+Jack in a comfortable silk dressing gown was placidly gazing at this
+scene when Frieda's speech arrested her attention.
+
+"Why be in such a hurry, Frieda mia?" she inquired. "You know we have
+firmly decided not to begin our labors too early. Besides, this morning
+we are tired and don't you see that Ruth, Jean and Olive are deeply
+engaged in laying out our plan of campaign? It has got to be arranged
+where we are to go, what we are to do on our arrival, what things we are
+to thrill over and what to pass by." And Jack laughed, letting her eyes
+rest for a moment on Ruth's face. Their chaperon's expression was so
+serious. Did Jack guess that her education was about to be solemnly
+taken in hand? Well, she felt very young this morning and very much in
+need of learning a great many things. Rome gave one such an overpowering
+sense of ignorance!
+
+But Frieda was much displeased. "You told me you would be ready at
+half-past ten, Jacqueline Ralston, and let me go and dress. Now it is
+after eleven. And if nobody will come with me I shall just go out and
+walk up and down by myself."
+
+From the pages of her Baedeker Ruth looked up quickly. It was not often
+that she was positive with the girls, but she had insisted that during
+their stay in Italy no one of them go anywhere alone.
+
+Frieda blushed penitently. "I didn't mean it, Ruth, of course. Still, I
+think it's hateful for none of you even to start to get ready."
+
+"Oh, do be quiet, Frieda, and sit down and wait, or, if not, go to your
+own room," Jack remarked impatiently. "I think you are forgetting our
+compact very soon. One more objection and you will kindly place your
+fine in Ruth's charge."
+
+Without replying, Frieda marched haughtily out of the sitting room and
+into her own and Jean's bed room.
+
+It was true that the night before leaving Naples the Rainbow Ranch party
+had made a kind of "Traveler's Agreement Society," setting down a number
+of rules for their mutual benefit and promising to follow them.
+
+The suggestion had come from Olive who was always the peacemaker in all
+differences of opinion. For although the travelers had been only a few
+weeks upon their journey, already they had learned that there is nothing
+that is a surer test of one's amiability than constant sight-seeing,
+which entails a continuous moving from place to place of people who are
+expected to do the same things at the same time regardless of their
+personal tastes and inclination.
+
+From the top of her suit-case Frieda drew forth a sheet of paper.
+Possibly Jack had been right, for the rules of their compact read:
+
+First: In all questions pertaining to travel, such as the selection of
+places to be visited, choice of hotels, etc., the rule of the majority
+shall prevail.
+
+Second: In all questions in which there is a moral issue at stake, a
+matter of right or wrong to be decided, the chaperon's judgment is to be
+followed.
+
+Third: If any member of the party becomes weary during the course of the
+journey, all are to rest. (This rule was made for Jack's protection and
+was Olive's proposal, knowing that her friend would never voluntarily
+give up, if she thought her fatigue might interfere with their
+pleasure.)
+
+Fourth (and this was of Jack's recommendation): Each one shall try to be
+as agreeable as possible to the others' friends, since it is not to be
+expected that they could like the same people equally well.
+
+Fifth: If any one of the five travelers shall make three cross speeches
+in the course of one day, the said traveler is to pay into the keeping
+of Ruth Drew a fine to the amount of fifty cents, United States money.
+For the fourth cross speech, one dollar, and so on, with the amount
+doubling. And at the end of the European trip, this sum, whatever the
+amount, is to be employed for the purchase of a gift for the girl
+against whose name there is the smallest number of bad counts.
+
+And Frieda had rather expected that this prize would fall to her.
+Indeed, she had quite made up her mind to attain it. For certainly she
+was far more amiable than Jack or Jean, and Ruth was apt to grow nervous
+if things went wrong. For instance, take this question of her going out
+on the street alone. Ruth might have known that she had had no real
+intention of being disobedient. Indeed, Olive was the only member of
+their party whom Frieda believed she had reason to regard as her rival
+in amiability. And of course one opponent was necessary to make the
+contest interesting. Really, Frieda desired this prize more than most
+anything she could think of--not just for the prize itself, although
+there was no telling what its value might be, but because it could be
+retained forever like a conqueror's flag to be waved over her family.
+
+For ten minutes more, therefore, Frieda sat down in an upright chair,
+waiting patiently. Notwithstanding this, Jean did not even come in for
+her coat and hat, or with any suggestion that they ever intended leaving
+the hotel.
+
+It was abominably stupid to continue loitering forever, so finally the
+young girl concluded to go down into the hotel lobby and watch the
+people moving in and out, until her family at last made up their minds
+to start. She would not go back into the sitting room again to argue the
+question with them, but leave a little note near Jean's hat explaining
+where she might be found.
+
+In the corridor leading to the open front door Frieda discovered an
+inconspicuous place and was entirely happy observing the hotel guests
+and the small vista of the Roman street which she could see like a
+picture through the opening.
+
+An Italian priest passed by, wearing a solemn, long black robe tied
+about his waist with a huge cord and a round, stiff black hat with a
+broad brim and a flat crown. Frieda stared at him curiously. Then a
+young fellow, evidently an artist from his costume, appeared, and, after
+hesitating a moment, entered the hotel corridor. A few moments
+afterwards he was joined by an older woman with two daughters in whom
+Frieda at once became deeply interested. They were English girls--she
+guessed this by a kind of instinct, they were so tall and fair and
+slender, with drooping shoulders and pink and white complexions. The
+little party left the hotel together and then there was a short interval
+in which nothing happened to interest Frieda particularly, except the
+foreign look of the people moving past in the street.
+
+Weary of waiting, she was glancing at a queer carved clock on the wall
+opposite her, when unexpectedly a fragrance enveloped her. Without
+understanding why, the young girl felt a sudden wave of homesick
+yearning for the Rainbow Ranch. Why should she think of home so
+suddenly? For a few seconds Frieda was unconscious of any special
+reason, and then, turning, she beheld standing in the doorway a small
+Italian boy, beautiful as one of Raphael's cherubs, with a great basket
+of Italian violets hanging on his arm.
+
+Frieda smiled. No wonder she had recalled her home and the violet beds
+planted next the Lodge in the days when she had expected to add to the
+family fortunes by selling flowers. This was before there was ever a
+thought of a gold mine hidden in Rainbow Creek.
+
+What fun to buy a lot of violets for Ruth and the girls and have great
+bunches of them to present, if ever they did decide to come down stairs!
+
+A western girl, Frieda Ralston had always been accustomed to doing
+things for herself. So now it never occurred to her to call a "facchino"
+to accomplish her errand, although this Italian word for porter was one
+of the few words that Frieda had already acquired from her phrase book.
+
+Besides, was the boy not standing right there by the door? Quickly she
+moved toward him. But at the same moment another customer must have
+called from the street or else some servant in the hotel frightened the
+child, for he slipped away and in an instant was half down the block.
+And Frieda followed close behind, entirely oblivious of anything except
+her present purpose. The boy ran lightly along and danced around a
+corner like a sunbeam. There, where he made the turn, a fountain stood
+in the center of the square that Frieda noticed particularly so there
+might be no danger of her getting lost. Fortunately another customer
+stopped the lad when, quite out of breath, Frieda finally managed to
+catch up with him.
+
+She didn't know the Italian words which should be employed in purchasing
+violets, but fortunately the sign language was the original one with all
+the peoples of the world. Very soon the basket of violets transferred
+from the child's arm was swinging on the young girl's. When, with a
+smile and a "buon giorno" (good morning) at the American Signorita's
+prettiness and amazing wealth, the lad vanished as abruptly as he had
+arrived.
+
+Frieda glowed with pleasure. The violets were so exquisite, the sky so
+blue, and the air so sparkling. Surely by the time of her return to the
+hotel her family would be ready to begin their adventures. And there,
+just ahead, was the fountain that she had observed so as not to make
+any mistake about getting back safely.
+
+Walking on in the direction of the fountain for a moment Frieda stood
+admiring its beauty. But not for long of course, because Ruth and the
+girls must never discover her absence. Turning away from the fountain,
+straightway her puzzle began, for there were now half a dozen streets
+leading from this central square and the wanderer had no idea which one
+contained their hotel. Certainly Rome was very queer and unlike any
+other city she had ever seen before. Many of the streets seemed to twist
+and curve, winding in and out among the others. Nothing seemed to go
+straight ahead in any given direction. However, Frieda, having concluded
+that one of them looked a little more familiar than the others, tried it
+first. There was nothing within a block, however, that resembled the
+Hotel l'Italia and she was convinced of only having followed the boy for
+a single street. She had best return to the fountain and start forth
+again. But by the time one has followed this method of procedure three
+or four times without success the effect is apt to be disheartening.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+FONTANONE DELL' ACQUA FELICE
+
+
+SEVERAL tears watered the violets. Frieda Ralston was seated on one of a
+flight of stone steps bordering the antique fountain, with an immense
+stone lion on either side of her and in high eminence behind her the
+figures of the prophets. But Frieda was not in the slightest degree
+interested at this moment in Roman art. For one hour, recorded on the
+face of the small watch in her pocket, she had been engaged in wandering
+up and down likely looking streets in search of their hotel, only to
+return to her starting place again. And this when she had only gone a
+block and a half away in the first place.
+
+Neither had the wayfarer trusted entirely to her own judgment. In spite
+of Ruth's repeated warnings against talking to strangers, she had once
+accosted a man in a queer uniform, thinking him a policeman. He wore a
+dark blue coat, blue-gray trousers, a white cap and belt, so how could a
+newcomer have known him to be a member of the Roman garrison? However,
+when once the soldier had discovered Frieda's desire, his directions
+were so explicit, so accompanied by much waving of his hand and
+statements of "destra" (right) and "sinistra" (left), that Frieda
+believed her way clear at last. Nevertheless, though doing exactly what
+she believed she had been told, the result was the same. Frieda had
+again to return to her fountain, a now painfully familiar spot. In the
+course of this wandering, however, she had passed an ancient church with
+a high flight of steps, where she paused to gaze for a few moments in
+awe and wonder. A number of pilgrims were climbing the wooden steps on
+their knees and children were running about among them offering rosaries
+and small wooden images for sale. Frieda had purchased a St. Joseph and
+then regretted her investment, for at least half the crowd of children
+followed her back to her resting place. They were still whining about
+her begging for pennies, when some time ago she had given them all the
+change she had. Yet they would _not_ leave her alone. Happening to
+glance down at her arm Frieda now made the painful discovery that her
+beloved gold-link purse had disappeared. Still the poor child had her
+violets!
+
+They were no great comfort, however, for, sighing, she glanced through
+an opening among her persecutors to see if aid might be found anywhere.
+There not far away did she not behold the familiar figures of Richard
+Grant and his mother, the acquaintances who had been so scorned toward
+the close of their sea voyage.
+
+With a little extra energy the lost girl might have called to them. For
+they were loitering and studying the pages of their guide-book,
+evidently on their way to visit the famous church which had previously
+attracted her attention. Once Frieda believed that she saw them glance
+in the direction of her fountain. But their purpose must have changed,
+for the next instant they moved off toward the church.
+
+Nevertheless, in spite of her need, the wanderer did not stir or call
+out. For how could she ask assistance of people to whom she had been so
+rude and overbearing but a short time before? And she was so near their
+hotel, surely Ruth would send some one to look for her or come herself
+in a few minutes. No, she must wait a while longer and perhaps, when
+rested, if no one had found her, try to discover her own way again.
+Often Jim Colter had told the Ranch girls to search for things first
+with their heads before beginning to explore with their hands and feet.
+Yet it was pretty difficult to think clearly, and when weary and
+discouraged to remember how one has managed to get lost. This habit of
+getting separated from her family was a trying one, and certainly this
+time Ruth and the girls would be angry as well as frightened.
+
+[Illustration: "DON'T BE FUNNY, DICK; I'M LOST AGAIN"]
+
+Not long after Frieda was wishing sincerely that she had put her pride
+in her pocket and begged Dick's and Mrs. Grant's help in spite of all
+that had passed. She was frightened as well as tired. The children had
+run away on finding that the Signorita's purse had gone. But a few yards
+from her seat an Italian had been curling his black mustache for quite
+an extraordinary length of time, staring all the while at the little
+blonde girl on the fountain steps.
+
+"If you don't mind speaking to me this once, Miss Frieda, would you
+explain just why you are ornamenting the steps of this particular
+fountain alone for so long a time?" a friendly voice inquired.
+
+Frieda jumped to her feet. There were the amused brown eyes, the square
+jaw and the athletic shoulders of Mr. Richard Grant. However, he was
+at the present moment engaged in holding his red Baedeker open and in
+slowly reading aloud: "This fountain is known, I believe, as 'Fontanone
+dell' Acqua Felice,' which, if I recall my Latin correctly, means 'water
+of happiness.'"
+
+"Don't be funny, Dick, please," begged Frieda, forgetting titles and
+squeezing two left-over tears out of her eyes; "I'm lost again!"
+
+"I rather supposed so," the young man replied, "so I left mother to moon
+among the Saints in the church nearby, while I came back to look after
+you. You see, we thought we recognized you sitting here and yet could
+hardly believe our eyes. Tell me what has happened and where you wish to
+go?"
+
+A moment later, after a second careful consultation of his guide book,
+Frieda was escorted through the streets of Rome by a youth, who was
+unconcernedly carrying her large basket of violets in one hand and
+feeding her chocolates from a box which he held in the other. He did not
+seem to bear the least malice, and Frieda herself was extremely
+cheerful, considering her talent for getting into scrapes.
+
+She even promised gratefully to accept the gift of a red Baedeker of her
+own and not to depend on their chaperon's possession of one.
+
+Arriving at the Hotel l'Italia Frieda begged that Dick Grant come in
+with her and let her family know of his presence in Rome and of his
+kindness to her. In reality she wished for a stranger to be present so
+that she might in a measure escape the disapproval awaiting her.
+
+And this time Frieda was correct in her judgment, for Ruth and the girls
+were more irritated with her than alarmed. And even after her
+explanation as to just how the accident happened Ruth seemed
+unreasonable. Actually, right in Richard Grant's presence, she scolded
+Frieda more than she had before in years. However, the young man did
+have the good sense to turn his back and be engaged in earnest
+conversation with Jack during the worst of Ruth's tirade, for which the
+younger Miss Ralston was truly grateful. She was also grateful to her
+sister Jack for inquiring after Mrs. Grant just as though nothing
+unpleasant had occurred between them. For Jack asked either that Mrs.
+Grant come to see them or that they be permitted to call on her.
+
+When Dick had finally departed to join his mother (who must have been
+weary of waiting, except that her good nature was as certain as her bad
+taste), Frieda found as usual that it was Jean's teasing which was
+harder to bear than any scolding. For just as they were at last about to
+leave their hotel and right in the presence of the English lady and her
+two daughters who were returning, Jean pulled a long pale blue ribbon
+from her pocket (one of Frieda's own ribbons) and tied it in a kind of
+lasso about the younger girl's wrist.
+
+"Better keep a string attached to our one ewe lamb, don't you think,
+Ruth dear?" she inquired innocently. And the strangers stared with a
+kind of cold surprise, when Ruth was obliged to produce the pair of
+scissors she always carried in her hand bag to cut the knot, so close
+had the ribbon been drawn.
+
+For the rest of the day Frieda kept close to her sister and Olive,
+feeling too deeply wounded with the other members of their party to care
+to have much to say to them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+AFTERNOON TEA
+
+
+"ON Pincian Hill my father feeds his flocks," remarked Frieda pensively
+one afternoon several days later.
+
+And while Ruth, Jack and Jean tried their best to keep from laughing
+aloud, Olive had to explain.
+
+"It was not Pincian hills but Grampian, Frieda dear, and the speech
+refers to Greece and not Italy."
+
+But Frieda was too blissfully happy and deliciously entertained to care
+either about her mistakes or the cause of the others' laughter.
+
+For at last the Ranch girls were having afternoon tea in the beautiful
+gardens of the Pincio. Near them a military band was playing, and in
+their vicinity apparently most of the best people in Rome, besides the
+summer travelers, had gathered. There were hundreds of carriages moving
+to and fro and stopping now and then while friends exchanged greetings.
+A short half hour ago little King Victor Emmanuel, whose stature is the
+only small part of him, and his beautiful big Queen had driven by,
+giving the four girls and their chaperon one of the most delightful
+thrills of their whole trip. For no matter how good Democrats we
+Americans are at heart, the first sight of royalty cannot fail to be
+interesting. It is only after the royal persons have been viewed often
+enough and long enough that they appear like ordinary persons.
+
+Then, beneath the hill of the Pincio, lay the most wonderful of all the
+panoramas of Rome. There was St. Peter's again (and already the Ranch
+party had spent one entire day in this largest and perhaps most
+beautiful church in the world). There the castle of St. Angelo, the roof
+of the Pantheon, and innumerable other churches and towers, which Ruth
+even after an almost painful study of her map of Rome was not able to
+name. But more fascinating than the buildings, at least to Jacqueline
+Ralston's outdoor loving vision, were the far-off hills with their
+groupings of cypress, palms and pines.
+
+The Rainbow Ranch party had found seats at a table not far from the
+small café in the center of the gardens. And although delectable sweets
+were being served to them, together with very poor tea, not even Frieda
+had been able to display her usual appetite.
+
+Unexpectedly a hand was placed on Jean Bruce's shoulder, and turning in
+surprise she saw standing by her side no other person than the Princess
+Colonna! If Jean had thought her American-Italian Princess beautiful on
+shipboard, the sight of her now in her Parisian toilet almost took away
+her breath. Waiting a few feet away were her companions, two young
+Italians of about twenty and twenty-five years of age, besides an
+elderly man, who was nearer sixty years old than half a century.
+
+"I thought my little Miss Bruce was to let me know when she and her
+friends reached Rome," the Princess began, shaking hands with Ruth and
+the other three girls, while continuing to smile upon Jean. "Is it that
+you do not wish more of my society?"
+
+Jean, having regained her self-possession, shook her head. "That is such
+a ridiculous question I shan't pretend to answer it," she returned. "It
+is only that we have been such a few days in Rome and thought perhaps
+you--"
+
+The Princess made a slight motion of her hand toward the three men back
+of her so that they approached. "_I_ have not a short memory, but
+_you_," she replied. "But permit me to introduce to you my husband, the
+Prince Colonna, and his two nephews."
+
+Fortunately at this instant no one in the group chanced to be gazing
+toward Frieda. For although the older girls had sufficient self-control
+to conceal any expressions of surprise, this was not true of her. At
+this moment her blue eyes opened wider than usual.
+
+The Prince Colonna with his snow-white hair and stately manner, bowing
+courteously over Ruth Drew's hand, was assuredly twice his wife's age.
+
+Jean, Olive and Jack were feeling sufficiently embarrassed by the
+meeting with the two Italian nephews. In less than a moment, however,
+Jean gave a slight but characteristic shrug of her shoulders and then a
+sigh of relief. For both Signor Leon, the younger, and his brother
+Giovanni Colonna spoke excellent English.
+
+"We were so afraid we should not be able to talk to you," Jean confessed
+so frankly that immediately any awkwardness in the situation passed
+away. "You see, we Americans are dreadfully stupid about foreign
+languages. We never realize how important they are until we come abroad,
+and that is apt to occur after our school days have passed.
+Nevertheless, we dearly love to hear ourselves talk."
+
+This was a long speech for the commencement of a conversation with
+strangers, but Jean was soon glad to have had the first opportunity.
+For, drawing a chair close beside hers, Signor Giovanni Colonna never
+gave her much of a chance afterwards. It seemed, by the young man's own
+confession, that he had always wanted to know American girls. His only
+acquaintance so far had been with his aunt, and of course she had
+increased his desire. But the Princess had lately told him and his
+brother of meeting on the steamer four delightful western girls whom
+they might possibly see later on in Rome. From the first Giovanni seemed
+to prefer Jean's society, leaving Leon to the other three girls to
+entertain. The entire conversation between the young man and Jean could
+hardly have lasted ten minutes.
+
+Before saying farewell, however, the Princess had made an engagement to
+call on Ruth at her hotel on the following afternoon with the promise
+that she should bring the four girls to her villa later in the week.
+
+Unfortunately Jack laughed when the two young men were safely out of
+hearing, though still in sight. They were both below medium height, with
+clear, dark skins and curling black hair, and to Jack's American ideas
+were almost too well dressed and formal of manner, although Giovanni was
+really handsome except for a scar across his left cheek.
+
+"They are rather funny, don't you think?" she inquired idly and without
+any special meaning. "I don't believe I could ever learn to like
+foreigners as much as I do American men. They are not so big for one
+thing, are they, Ruth?" And Ruth, before whose eyes Jim Colter's big
+figure straightway loomed, shook her head.
+
+Jean flushed slightly. She had liked the two young men fairly well.
+Moreover, they were her Princess' nephews. Anyhow, her cousin's speech
+had irritated her, although Jack had already forgotten what she had said
+and was once more gazing in fascination at the scene about her.
+
+"Your dislike of foreigners does not include Englishmen, does it, cousin
+of mine?" Jean queried with a too great pretense of innocence.
+
+Jack's clear gray eyes faced Jean's dark ones in such surprise that
+Jean's were the ones to droop.
+
+"If you mean Frank Kent or Captain Madden, why of course I like both of
+them, don't you?" she returned. And then, "Whatever in the world, Jean,
+has made you so cross about Captain Madden? I wonder what idea you have
+in your head! If you knew anything against him on shipboard why didn't
+you tell me?"
+
+Jean discovered that Ruth was frowning upon her more severely than
+usual. Besides, what answer had she to make to her cousin? Really, she
+had no actual reason for disliking their new acquaintance and the
+impression that had once or twice come into her mind on shipboard may
+have been absurd. Ruth had thought it ridiculous and had not agreed with
+her. Now certainly the stupidest possible thing she _could_ do would be
+to permit Jack to guess her suspicion.
+
+"Oh, of course I like them too, I was only bad tempered," Jean replied,
+giving Jack's gloved hand a penitent squeeze and thinking how unusually
+beautiful she was looking this afternoon. Somehow no one appeared so
+well in white as Jack did. She was so fine and pure, so different in
+many ways from other girls. It would never dawn on her to dream of evil
+in man or woman. Jean found herself blushing.
+
+"I like Frank Kent better than most anybody, Jack dear. He is one of our
+oldest and truest friends, I feel sure. Sometimes I wish we were going
+to see him before arriving in England," she murmured.
+
+Half an hour later, driving slowly down the long hill away from the
+wonderful Pincian gardens into the city of Rome, Ruth and the four girls
+were equally surprised at seeing a stiff, military figure on horseback
+lift his hat to them.
+
+"It is Captain Madden, I do believe! I didn't know he was to be in
+Rome!" Frieda exclaimed, and no one made answer.
+
+Later that evening, however, when a great box of her favorite red roses
+containing the English army officer's card mysteriously arrived for Jack
+at their hotel Jean did not know whether to be glad or sorry for having
+held her tongue. Of course Jack was pleased, just as any other girl
+would have been with the attention. But for the life of her Jean could
+not have explained why she felt so convinced that in some fashion or
+other this Captain Madden was to be the evil genius of their European
+trip. However, Ruth Drew was her cousin Jack's chaperon and she did not
+appear concerned. That night, after having thought the subject over for
+an hour when the other girls and Ruth were probably asleep, Jean finally
+came to this conclusion: undoubtedly she must be more foolish than
+anybody else. So no matter what she herself believed, if Ruth and Olive
+remained unsuspicious of Captain Madden's attentions the wrong thinking
+must be her own.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+JACK
+
+
+TEN days later if Ruth and Jean had again talked this same matter over
+together, it is possible that their points of view might not have been
+so far apart. But this was difficult, since Jean was then spending
+several days with the Princess Colonna at her villa several miles from
+the city of Rome.
+
+From the hour of meeting with Captain Madden near the gardens of the
+Pincio, apparently his time had been entirely at the disposal of the
+Rainbow Ranch party. And Ruth having completely banished her momentary
+fear that his kindness meant more than a passing fancy for Jack, was at
+first glad enough to accept his attentions. If she thus revealed a lack
+of wisdom, there would be time enough for regret later on.
+
+It was extremely agreeable to have some one to act as their guide
+through Rome. For in spite of her winter of study Ruth found herself
+becoming dreadfully confused. Rome was so overpowering that actually
+there were hundreds of things one wished to do all at once. Then the
+girls developed such different interests! She and Olive desired to make
+a real study of the many churches in Rome, while Jack curiously enough,
+as she had known nothing of art before, was enthusiastic over the old
+sculpture. Jean and Frieda had no great fancy for the antique, but were
+open in their preference for visiting the shops and for driving about to
+the wonderful gardens and villas about Rome. So every now and then Ruth,
+departing from her original rule of keeping their entire party together,
+had allowed Captain Madden to have charge of several of the girls, while
+she went elsewhere with the others.
+
+And more often than any other way it turned out that Frieda was in the
+habit of accompanying Captain Madden and her sister. For Frieda's
+attitude toward their elderly friend had lately changed. From her former
+dislike she had now become his warm advocate. And if Ruth Drew had been
+suspicious or even properly worldly-minded this fact in itself should
+have begun to open her eyes, so assiduously had Captain Madden been
+cultivating Frieda's liking. When a box of flowers arrived for Jack, or
+sometimes for Ruth, a box of sweets came with them for the youngest of
+the Ranch girls. In their morning riding parties Captain Madden
+announced his preference for keeping by Frieda's side and leaving Jack
+to ride a little in advance as she seemed to prefer.
+
+Once, however, Frieda had innocently repeated a conversation held
+between herself and her escort, which made Jack angry and Ruth
+uncomfortable. For it appeared that she had told Captain Madden the
+entire history of their Rainbow mine, even to the amount of gold taken
+out of it the previous year. And this, when Jack had particularly asked
+her younger sister never to discuss their affairs with strangers, and
+especially their recent wealth. Older now and realizing the good taste
+of this, Frieda, in explaining the subject to their chaperon, was
+puzzled to remember how she had been drawn into the conversation. Of
+course no questions had been asked by Captain Madden, he was too much of
+a gentleman, but somehow in telling him of their past life on the ranch
+and of their acquaintance with his cousin, Frank Kent, naturally she had
+spoken of their mine. To Ruth this explanation did not appear
+unreasonable. Besides it did not seem of importance then whether or not
+Captain Madden might be too much concerned in their private affairs.
+
+Afterwards an evening came while Jean was away at the Princess' villa
+when the Ranch girls' chaperon had her first awakening. The incident was
+a slight one in itself, yet aroused great uneasiness.
+
+Almost every pilgrim who makes his way to Rome has the desire to see its
+ancient ruins by moonlight. And this had been Olive's wish ever since
+their arrival in the eternal city. Her suggestion was that some night
+they drive around the broken walls of the Coliseum and afterwards wander
+about inside the Forum Romanum. Surely in the moonlight it would be
+easier to forget the modern world! Perhaps one might even conjure up a
+mental picture of the great days of pagan Rome, when these same decaying
+arches, columns and temples were monuments and buildings of wonderful
+beauty. For it was past them that the Roman generals used once to lead
+their victorious cohorts bringing home captive the barbarian armies of
+the western world.
+
+One evening, rather laughing over her friend's enthusiasm, Jacqueline
+Ralston had repeated Olive's ambition to Captain Madden. And straightway
+he had suggested that the moonlight excursion actually take place, and
+that he be permitted to act as escort. The moon was now almost in the
+full and certainly Rome was as well worth seeing under its glamor as
+under day-time skies.
+
+Therefore, twenty-four hours afterward, at about nine o'clock, a party
+of seven persons set out from the Ranch girls' hotel. Ruth was riding in
+one carriage with Captain Madden and Jack, while Mrs. Grant, Frieda,
+Olive and Dick were together in the other.
+
+No one talked much. Even Frieda and Mrs. Grant, though not specially
+susceptible to beauty, were somehow silenced. The road to the Coliseum
+led away from the crowded centers of Rome into a kind of eerie
+stillness. Although the radiance of the moon seemed partially to have
+obscured the stars, the night was brilliantly clear. Twice both
+carriages drove about the outside walls of the Coliseum. And through its
+broken spaces the riders could catch strange glimpses of the big
+amphitheater, the crumbling tiers of seats, and now and then the outline
+of a small stone chamber overgrown with moss and lichen, where the
+early Christian martyrs, were once imprisoned before being fed to the
+lions.
+
+In the course of the drive Ruth and Captain Madden spoke to one another
+occasionally, commenting on the unusual beauty of the night and the
+weird and fantastic shadows cast by the moon. But Ruth noticed that Jack
+hardly made a remark and that she was pale. This made no special
+impression, for Jack was probably tired. She was wearing her long white
+cloth coat and a small white hat and for some reason or other looked
+almost younger than Frieda.
+
+But by and by Jack asked that their carriage stop at the entrance to the
+Forum. There a guide could be found with a lantern, should the moonlight
+prove insufficient to light their way about the ruins.
+
+Captain Madden first assisted Ruth to descend from the carriage and then
+something in his manner as he turned to help Jack, gave Ruth a sudden
+feeling of discomfort. What could he have to say to her which her
+chaperon should not hear? And yet Captain Madden did whisper to Jack in
+a low voice as though there were some secret understanding between
+them.
+
+A moment later, when the second carriage had driven up and its occupants
+were alighting, for just a moment Ruth Drew had a brief chance to speak
+to Olive alone.
+
+"Don't leave Jack by herself tonight if you can help it, and on no
+account let her be with Captain Madden without the rest of us." Then,
+scarcely waiting for Olive's reply, Ruth moved off slipping her own arm
+firmly through Jack's.
+
+Certainly the next hour afforded no opportunity for interchange of
+confidences between Jacqueline Ralston and her new friend. But the girl
+seemed glad enough to have Ruth and Olive close beside her. Now and then
+she even asked aid of one or the other of them. For stumbling about in
+semi-darkness among crumbling earth and stone seemed to be making her
+nervous.
+
+Then came a moment when both Olive and Ruth lost sight of Jack
+completely. It was the simplest possible accident. They were in a place
+of shadows, lit only by the moon, which made the spaces behind the
+ruined buildings of almost impenetrable blackness. And although their
+guide and Dick Grant carried lanterns, it was difficult to catch their
+reflections unless one were near.
+
+Olive, believing Ruth to be with her friend, had drawn closer to the
+guide to listen to some bit of information that he was struggling to
+impart to Mrs. Grant. While Ruth, thinking that Olive was discharging
+her task, and finding Dick Grant and Frieda engaging in one of their
+frequent quarrels, had interposed herself between them.
+
+It was at this time that Jack, wearier than she cared to confess, sat
+down on one of the steps beyond the Arch of Titus, descending toward the
+Coliseum. For the moment a cloud had passed half over the moon, making
+the ancient ruin before her appear more gigantic and mysterious. The
+next instant a figure seated itself beside her and Captain Madden's
+voice spoke:
+
+"You think you don't care for poetry, Miss Jack, but surely tonight is
+made for poetry, or poetry is made for tonight. Do you know these lines
+of Byron's in Childe Harold?"
+
+Captain Madden moved nearer the girl so that he might see into her face.
+Then he pointed toward the magical scene close by.
+
+ "A ruin--yet what a ruin! from its mass
+ Walls, palaces, half-cities, have been rear'd;
+ Yet oft the enormous skeleton ye pass,
+ And marvel where the spoil could have appear'd,
+ Hath it indeed been plunder'd, or but clear'd?
+ Alas! developed, opens the decay,
+ When the colossal fabric's form is near'd:
+ It will not bear the brightness of the day,
+ Which streams too much on all years, men, have reft away.
+
+ "But when the rising moon begins to climb
+ Its topmost arch and gently pauses there;
+ When the stars twinkle through the loops of time,
+ And the low night breeze waves along the air
+ The garland forest, which the gray walls wear,
+ Like laurels on the bald first Cćsar's head;
+ When the light shines serene, but doth not glare,
+ Then in the magic circle rise the dead;
+ Heroes have trod this spot--'tis on their dust ye tread.
+
+ "'While stands the Coliseum, Rome shall stand;
+ When falls the Coliseum, Rome shall fall;
+ And when Rome falls,--the world.'"
+
+Jack made no answer for a moment. Then she said quietly, "It is a
+beautiful description; thank you for repeating it to me." She did not
+feel in the mood for talking tonight. The world was too beautiful and
+too strange. Here was she, Jacqueline Ralston, a girl raised on a ranch
+in far-off Wyoming, in the ancient city of Rome. And Captain Madden,
+the friend near her, why should a man so much older and wiser and with
+so great a knowledge of the world that even Rome itself did not seem
+unfamiliar to him, feel an interest in her? She was neither beautiful
+nor clever like Olive and Jean. Yet Jack, though not twenty, was woman
+enough to realize that Captain Madden liked her best.
+
+The next instant she started to get up when, placing his hand on her
+arm, her companion held her back.
+
+"I don't want to speak to you too soon," he whispered. "I don't wish to
+hurry or frighten you. But you must know why I have so longed to be with
+you alone for a few minutes tonight."
+
+"Please," Jack faltered.
+
+And then, suddenly appearing from out of nowhere, Ruth Drew actually
+seemed to swoop down upon the man and girl. Almost immediately she took
+tight hold on Jack.
+
+"Let us go to our carriage at once, if you please, Captain Madden," she
+demanded brusquely. "We have stayed out in the night air far too long as
+it is. It is time we were safe in bed."
+
+Then, although Jack kept obediently close to her chaperon until they
+were back in their hotel, that night when the three girls had fallen
+asleep, Ruth was so restless that, putting on her dressing gown, she
+walked up and down her room for a quarter of an hour. It simply could
+not be possible that this Captain Madden was falling in love with their
+Jack or that she could entertain the slightest interest in him! Why Jack
+was still a child and the man twice her age! Besides, what in the world
+did they know of him except what he himself had told them? The man might
+be a fortune hunter, he might be most anything! Ruth wiped her eyes in
+consternation at the thought of what Jim Colter would say and do if she
+allowed his splendid, brave Jack to become entangled in an unfortunate
+romance. Then she asked herself: Was there no one in Rome who could tell
+them of Captain Madden's history? Recalling Jean's statement that the
+Princess Colonna and Captain Madden were acquaintances before their
+meeting on board the Martha Washington, Ruth relieved her anxiety by
+writing a long letter to Jean. In it she confessed her own uneasiness
+and asked that Jean inquire of the Princess what knowledge she had of
+Captain Madden's past. But she also insisted that Jean keep her reason
+for wishing to know a secret and that beyond everything else she should
+never betray their suspicions to Jack.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE PRINCESS' MYTHOLOGICAL BALL
+
+
+FOR some little time before and after the event, the Mythological Ball
+given at her villa by the Princess Colonna was the most talked-of
+entertainment in Roman society.
+
+The Princess was young, an American and immensely rich. Having married
+into one of the noblest families in Italy, in spite of their poverty, it
+was but natural that she had soon become a conspicuous social leader in
+Rome. Her parties were always regarded with deep interest, but this
+latest ball was to outstrip all the others in novelty and beauty. For
+her guests were invited to appear as characters from ancient Greek or
+Roman mythology. Surely the idea was sufficiently original and daring to
+excite wide curiosity.
+
+And to the Ranch girls, naturally, the Princess' ball was _the_
+important social occasion of their lives. For days Jean had written of
+nothing but the preparations going on at the villa and to inquire what
+parts they wished to impersonate and what costumes to wear. Several
+times she had driven into the hotel for long consultations with Ruth and
+the other girls, for Jean had been asked to remain at the villa until
+after the costume ball. As a matter of course the four girls were a good
+deal overwhelmed at the decisions before them. For in the first place
+Ruth positively declined to be present at the entertainment unless she
+were permitted to appear in a regulation evening dress. For Ruth would
+always be a Puritan at heart and the thought of arraying herself as a
+Pagan goddess, or even as an humbler heroine, actually made the cold
+shivers run up and down her back. To Ruth the Princess' idea seemed
+fantastic and absurd. Nevertheless, she did not wish to spoil the Ranch
+girls' pleasure, and was in reality more deeply anxious than any one of
+them that they should make as beautiful an impression as possible. The
+girls were lovely enough, she felt sure; their only problem was to
+select suitable characters and to see that their toilettes were
+exquisite and appropriate.
+
+Of course the Princess Colonna agreed to Ruth's desire about herself,
+assuring her that there would be others of her guests who would dress
+as she did. However, she made a great point of the Ranch girls' coming
+in costume. For she had been talking of her four American girls to her
+friends in Rome and was counting on their making a sensation. She and
+Jean together had decided on their heroines and also what they were both
+to wear. Jean had then kept her character a secret from the other three
+girls and from Ruth, wishing to be a complete surprise to them as well
+as to everybody else.
+
+The drive from the hotel to the Princess' villa would require almost an
+hour. Notwithstanding, when Captain Madden asked that he might accompany
+the Rainbow Ranch party, Ruth thanked him and declined. There were only
+Jack, Frieda and Olive, she herself making the fourth, so with Jean
+away, one carriage would hold them all comfortably. She did not care to
+separate their little party. They would see Captain Madden later at the
+ball.
+
+No one could have guessed whether or not Jacqueline Ralston had noticed
+it, but it was perfectly true that her chaperon had never allowed her a
+minute alone with her new friend since the night of their moonlight
+excursion. Captain Madden was well aware of it, though he had not yet
+made any protest or given any sign. He had been studying Jack pretty
+closely in the few weeks of their acquaintance and felt fairly sure that
+if she could once be persuaded to make a decision, no amount of
+opposition afterwards would have the power to change her. It was not for
+nothing that her chin had that slightly square outline and that she held
+her head with an unconscious and therefore a beautiful pride. Jack had a
+look of purity and faithfulness that sometimes made older persons watch
+her with a kind of wistful anxiety. Would life ever make her lose her
+faith in her ideals and in the few persons to whom she would give her
+undivided love?
+
+The entrance to the Prince Colonna's estate was through a long avenue of
+magnolia trees so that the night air was heavy with their fragrance. As
+there were several hundred guests driving into the grounds at nearly the
+same time, the Ranch girls' carriage was compelled to move slowly. And
+for this they and Ruth were devoutly thankful. Because they were one
+instant thrilled beyond measure at the prospect of the brilliant scene
+before them, and the next terrified at the thought of the parts they
+were expected to play.
+
+"I don't see how Jean Bruce has ever managed to spend an entire week in
+such grandeur as this and with strangers. I should have died of
+embarrassment!" Olive exclaimed, in a rather shaky voice, slipping her
+hand inside Jack's and giving it a gentle squeeze. She wished to assure
+herself of the reality of the fairy world about her and also to receive
+strength for the coming ordeal from the sense of Jack's presence. For
+never, for an instant, had these two friends swerved in their devotion
+to each other, the one always finding in the other just the qualities
+she herself lacked.
+
+Jack laughed. "Jean, you must remember, is never afraid of any one and
+is the only truly society person among us. Then, if you please won't
+mention it, I've an idea that the Italian nephew is entertaining Miss
+Bruce mightily. Remember she confided that he was teaching her Italian
+and she instructing him in English, poor Ralph! I am afraid Jean will
+never be content at the Rainbow Ranch any more after this experience of
+foreign life."
+
+With her pale blonde hair carefully concealed from the night air in
+clouds of pale blue chiffon, Frieda, from the opposite seat, now leaned
+over toward her sister.
+
+"Jack," she demanded seriously, as only Freida could, "why do you say,
+'poor Ralph!' Do you think Ralph Merrit has ever been in love with Jean?
+They were always friends at the ranch, I know, but Ralph is poor and
+isn't good-looking and doesn't care for society. I am sure he would
+never suit Jean one bit."
+
+But before she had finished speaking, Jack's gloved fingers were laid
+lightly on her small sister's lips. "For goodness sake, baby mine, do
+hush," she implored. "Of course I was only joking about Jean and Ralph.
+I can see how Ruth is frowning at me even in the dark. Who would ever
+have supposed that an infant like you would talk about 'being in love'
+in such a solemn fashion! You don't know the meaning of the word."
+
+"Do you?" Frieda returned, speaking just as seriously.
+
+But Jack only shook her head without replying.
+
+The wonderful ivory-colored house, built in the fashion of the Italian
+Renaissance, was now coming into view with hundreds of low-growing
+evergreen shrubs close at its base. The house itself was lighted with
+golden, shaded lights. To one side was the Italian garden, where the
+girls had had tea with the Princess several afternoons before. It was
+also lighted, but hardly discernible now from the driveway.
+
+By the Princess' orders, Ruth and the three Ranch girls were shown
+immediately to Jean's bedroom, which was apart from the dressing rooms
+provided for her other guests.
+
+There Jean was waiting for them in her fancy costume and in a delicious
+state of excitement. As her door opened, the newcomers, forgetting
+themselves altogether, gave a cry of surprised admiration and were then
+curiously silent.
+
+Jean had been standing in front of a long, gold-framed mirror, and now,
+turning swiftly, moved in their direction. Her costume was of the palest
+pink. The little bodice was of pink silk and pink chiffon, simply made
+and cut with a girlishly rounded neck, trimmed with a narrow edging of
+old lace. But from her silk girdle the skirt showed a wonderful
+arrangement of chiffon drapery, falling below her feet into a slightly
+pointed train at the back. She wore pink sandals bound with pink
+ribbons.
+
+All this Ruth and the three girls observed in the instant that she ran
+to greet them. But the next moment, swinging slowly around on one
+lightly poised toe that the full effect of her appearance might be
+disclosed, between Jean's shoulders could be seen a tiny pair of
+butterfly wings. Her dark hair was parted low over her forehead and
+drawn into a loose knot high toward the back of her head. The costume
+was a lovely one, and Jean looked exquisite in it.
+
+"Can you guess whom I represent?" she asked shyly, abashed by the
+admiration of her own family.
+
+In answer Jack did something unusual between the two cousins, who were
+not usually as demonstrative with each other as with Ruth or with Olive
+and Frieda. For suddenly she leaned over, and holding Jean's chin in her
+white gloved hand kissed her, afterwards studying her face closely.
+
+"I think I can guess, Jean," she returned. "I have been reading so much
+mythology lately, besides seeing so many famous statues. Your butterfly
+wings tell me that you are Psyche. I remember your story. Psyche was
+the daughter of a king and so beautiful that Venus, the goddess of
+beauty, grew jealous of her and sent her son Cupid to punish her for her
+presumption. But Cupid wounded himself with his own arrow and so fell in
+love with Psyche. There is a great deal more to the story, of course;
+afterwards Psyche and Cupid quarreled and for many years she had to
+wander around the world performing difficult tasks before being reunited
+with her love again. Psyche is the Greek name for soul and a butterfly
+the ancient emblem of the soul. Somehow you don't look like yourself
+tonight, Jean," here Jack hesitated; "you are like a spirit. Please
+don't be finding your fate too soon and so flying away from us."
+
+But although Jean blushed and seemed for half a second troubled by her
+cousin's suggestion, she shook her head and began helping Frieda remove
+her wraps. When the blue cloak and the blue veil were thrown aside, the
+youngest of the Ranch girls stepped into the center of the room.
+
+"Do I look almost as well as Jean?" she inquired earnestly. "I thought
+my costume so pretty when we left the hotel. But now that I have seen
+hers--"
+
+Jean was dancing around Frieda as though she had been in reality a
+butterfly. Ruth, Jack and Olive would not allow the maids to take off
+their cloaks in order to give her their undivided attention.
+
+"Frieda is the star of us all, isn't she?" Jack declared, since the
+spoiling of her small sister was a sin upon which the entire ranch party
+agreed. Unwrapping a round gold bowl, she then handed it to her. "Frieda
+represents the lovely goddess, Hebe, who served nectar and ambrosia to
+the high gods on Mount Olympus," she explained.
+
+Quite oblivious of the admiring Italian maids, Ruth knelt down on the
+floor to rearrange Frieda's skirt. The young girl's dress was of corn
+color, almost the shade of her blond hair. So her eyes looked bluer and
+her cheeks pinker than ever. It was odd that her toilet had been copied
+from an old Greek model and yet was not unlike the modern style. A tunic
+of soft yellow crepe was loosely belted at the waist, the overskirt
+falling to her knees. About this was a border of gold braid in the
+Trojan wall pattern and beneath it hung the narrow, plain skirt.
+Frieda's yellow hair was caught together in a bunch of curls and a gold
+fillet encircled her head.
+
+Olive was by this time ready to be admired. She seemed shy at being seen
+even by her dearest friends; but then Olive would never entirely recover
+from her timidity. Tonight she wore Nile green, the shade always best
+suited to her. She was dressed as Amphitrite, the wife of Neptune. Her
+costume was unlike the others. It was of India silk, because of its
+peculiar glistening quality, and strung with tiny sea shells. Around her
+slender throat was a string of pearls, which she had lately bought for
+herself in Rome as a gift from her friend, Miss Winthrop. In and out
+among the braids of her black hair were other strands of pearls. Above
+the middle of her forehead was a jeweled spear with three points. This
+represented a tiny trident, the symbol of Neptune's power over the sea.
+
+Notwithstanding the assistance of the maids, after Ruth Drew had finally
+given a hurried glance at herself in Jean's mirror and had seen that
+three of the girls were ready to go down to the ball room, to her
+surprise she found Jack loitering. The girl had seated herself in a
+chair and, in the face of Olive's and Jean's protestations, still had
+her opera coat wrapped close about her.
+
+"Are you ill, Jack?" Ruth queried, observing that she was paler than any
+one of them.
+
+But Jack shook her head, smiling nervously. All of a sudden she did not
+seem like herself.
+
+"I am _frightened_," she confessed the next moment. "It does not seem
+possible for me to go down to the ball room dressed as I am before so
+many strangers. I don't want to keep the rest of you waiting, but can't
+I stay here by myself for a few moments, Ruth? I want to think about
+something."
+
+But before Ruth could answer Jean had almost forcibly pulled off her
+cousin's wrap. "If you are not ill, Jack dear, how can you be so absurd!
+If it were Olive now who suddenly had an attack of stage fright we might
+forgive her. But you! Why you have never been afraid of people or of
+things in your life. Besides you will only have to speak to the Princess
+and the Prince Colonna. We won't know any one else except Captain Madden
+and--perhaps a few other persons. The others we can just enjoy seeing."
+During her speech Jean had tried to catch her cousin's expression. But
+Jack had her eyes down. Now she jumped hurriedly to her feet and went
+out of the room ahead of the others. Evidently she did not wish to hear
+herself or her costume discussed. She did look unlike the other three
+Ranch girls tonight--taller and older. And while their costumes were in
+colors, hers was pure white, nothing but soft folds of drapery from her
+shoulders to her feet. Her only ornament was a half moon of brilliants
+in the bronze coils of her hair. For Jacqueline, partly because the
+girls had used to call her Diana in the old days at the ranch on account
+of her love of hunting and supposed coldness of character, had dressed
+as the far-famed Latin goddess of the moon.
+
+Slipping down the marble staircase in her gray evening gown, Ruth Drew
+felt like a chimney swallow amid an assemblage of brilliant, gaily
+colored birds. Yet she was glad enough to be inconspicuous. Never in
+their lives had the four Ranch girls been so lovely. Ruth was almost
+sorry. She did not wish them to attract too much attention. The interest
+they had taken in their toilets had been for their own and for her
+pleasure and because of the Princess Colonna's kindness. At this instant
+Ruth decided that so soon as their greetings were spoken she would find
+a secluded place, where they might have their first sight of foreign
+society and yet be properly out of the limelight themselves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+A SURPRISE
+
+
+JACQUELINE RALSTON was sitting alone in a quiet portion of the Princess
+Colonna's Italian garden, listening to the soft splashing of a fountain
+at no great distance away. Now and then she put her hands to her face.
+Why were her fingers so cold and her cheeks so warm? For Jack was no
+longer pale; indeed, her whole countenance was curiously flushed. No
+longer did she look the tall, stately goddess of a few hours before, but
+like a tremulous and startled girl. For Jack had just received her first
+proposal and could not for the life of her tell whether she had accepted
+or rejected it.
+
+Captain Madden had gone away. She had sent him to find Ruth, as she did
+not wish to remain alone; neither did she wish him to stay with her. It
+was not that Jack wanted to confide what had taken place to her
+chaperon. Nothing was further from her intention at the present time.
+For Jack had not yet been able to make up her mind whether or not she
+cared for the man who had just told her that he loved her. And
+fortunately or unfortunately it was not Jacqueline Ralston's habit to
+ask the advice of other people about what seriously concerned herself.
+She must decide one way or the other, and then it would be time to tell
+Ruth. But suddenly she had felt very young and lonely and forlorn with
+an absurd disposition to cry. If only Ruth would come to her now she
+could say that she was tired and not feeling particularly well. It would
+be quite true. Tonight had been the most wonderful in her whole life;
+never had she dreamed of such beauty and such splendor. Yet suddenly
+Jack had felt a kind of homesick longing for Jim Colter and the
+simplicity of their old life on the ranch.
+
+And yet Jack could not truthfully have said that she had been taken
+completely by surprise by Captain Madden's proposal. Ever since their
+meeting with him in Rome, there had been times when she had wondered if
+it could be possible that he was learning to care for her with more than
+a friendly interest. For even a girl as young and as innocent as Jack
+cannot be wholly blind.
+
+Ruth had believed herself a careful chaperon. Little did she dream of
+the intimate talks the girl and man had had together, standing side by
+side in some church or gallery, looking at some special object, when the
+other members of their party had wandered away.
+
+Then had come tonight! Jack had grown tired; Ruth was talking to some
+new acquaintances, Jean and Frieda and Olive were dancing. Captain
+Madden had asked that she walk into the garden with him to rest.
+
+There were many people about and yet they had managed to find a secluded
+place. Jack could see a number of men and women passing near her, some
+of them in wonderfully beautiful costumes, others looking a trifle
+absurd. She closed her eyes, not wishing to see but to think!
+
+Captain Madden had told her that he loved her. He had confessed also
+that he was twice her age and poor. But could Jack forget these things
+and care for him notwithstanding?
+
+One wonders how the man had come to appreciate Jacqueline Ralston's
+nature so thoroughly in the few weeks of their acquaintance? Did he know
+that this appeal would be the surest way to awaken her sympathies? Jack
+had always a passion for doing things for other people rather than
+having them do for her. If she loved Captain Madden, she would gladly
+share all her money with him. It was stupid of her, however, not to
+realize that no true man could have been willing to ask _all_ the
+sacrifices of her. Jack's only present problem was: "Did she care
+enough?" Captain Madden was older and wiser and so much better and
+braver! Think of all the stories he had told them in which she felt sure
+he must have been a hero! Although never once had he so spoken of
+himself! Then, too, had he not saved her life? Jack had never forgotten
+that moment of danger at Gibraltar, however little her rescuer had made
+of his part in it.
+
+Jack sat up suddenly. Captain Madden had consented that she have a week
+in which to make up her mind, but had asked that his suit be kept a
+secret. Now some one was evidently coming toward her and there must be
+nothing in her face or manner to betray her.
+
+What a picture she made at this moment Jacqueline Ralston would never
+know! For nowhere could there be surroundings more beautiful nor a
+figure which seemed so unreal and yet so ideally lovely! Surely Diana
+had wandered to earth from the groves of high Olympus and was resting
+here, waiting for her nymphs. She was sitting on a three-cornered marble
+bench under a group of palms, with the moonlight flooding her white
+dress and sending forth tiny sparks of light from the crescent of
+brilliants in her hair.
+
+In surprise she lifted her head to watch the stranger approaching her.
+She had thought at first that it might be Captain Madden with Ruth or
+one of the other girls. But the man was taller, younger, more slender
+and was alone. Who on earth could he be? Jack rose hurriedly and took a
+step forward. The man was holding out both hands with an oddly familiar
+gesture.
+
+"Jack," he said slowly, "don't you know me? Aren't you glad to see me? I
+arrived in Rome only an hour ago and came directly here. I have spoken
+to Jean and Ruth and now have found you."
+
+"Frank Kent!" Jack repeated, too surprised by the young man's unexpected
+appearance to show any other emotion. "You _have changed_, but in the
+daylight of course I should have recognized you. It was only that I
+should never have dreamed of your coming to Rome without letting us
+know. I asked you to wait to see us until we arrived in England."
+
+She had given both her hands to her old friend and was trying not to
+have her manner appear cold. Yet she could feel rather than see that
+Frank's face was flooding with color, just as it had so easily in those
+old days of their first acquaintance at the Rainbow Ranch.
+
+"That is a discouraging greeting after a two years' separation. I hoped
+you might feel more pleasure in seeing me," Frank suggested.
+
+Jack and the young man had walked slowly forth from her retreat and were
+now within the glow of the yellow-shaded electric lights. Jack looked up
+into her companion's face. He was older and tonight seemed graver. Also
+he wore the expression of dignified displeasure, which Jack recalled so
+readily. She could almost remember this same look on his face the day
+she had run away to the round-up and so lost Olive and brought
+tremendous unhappiness upon herself and her family. Less than anybody in
+the world did Jacqueline Ralston desire to see Frank Kent during this
+particular week of her life. Yet she could not willingly hurt his
+feelings.
+
+Now she laughed, looking a little more like the girl of the past.
+
+"I didn't mean to sound ungracious, Frank. Of course I am glad to see
+you, for you must have had some good reason for coming to Rome just now.
+Otherwise I know you would have granted me my wish and waited until we
+got to England for our meeting. What was your reason?"
+
+But Frank Kent did not at the present moment have to answer this
+question. For within a few feet of them were Captain Madden, Ruth and
+Olive.
+
+And whatever of kindness Jack's reception may have lacked was made up
+for by Olive's enthusiasm. Forgetting her shyness for one of the
+occasional times in her life, she ran forward with her eyes shining and
+a lovely color in her cheeks. Jack thought she had never seen her friend
+prettier or happier.
+
+"Oh, I am so delighted you have come, Mr. Kent--Frank," she declared.
+"It seems too much like old times to be formal. Ruth had just told me of
+your arrival and I could hardly give you time even to speak to Jack."
+
+There could be no doubt of how much pleasure Olive's frank welcome
+afforded the Ranch girls' former friend. Frank Kent had always been
+much interested in Olive and her peculiar history from the day when his
+presence saved her from being taken away from Rainbow Lodge by the
+Indian woman Laska and her son. He had seen her develop from an
+apparently poorly educated, part-Indian into a gentle and charming
+American girl.
+
+And now she was no longer a girl, but almost a woman.
+
+The expression of Frank's brown eyes changed. He gazed so steadily at
+Olive that she blushed and then smiled.
+
+"I have been seeing so many visions tonight I ought to be prepared for
+most anything," he remarked. "But I confess I am not for this
+transformation of Olive into a sea nymph." The young man made no effort
+to conceal his admiration as he held Olive's hand in his own a little
+longer than was necessary.
+
+For just half an instant Jack wondered; then she brought herself sharply
+to task. Because of her own recent experience why should she be dwelling
+so much on one subject? Besides, without wishing any one to guess it,
+she was interested in Frank Kent's and Captain Madden's manner toward
+each other. Captain Madden approached to shake hands with his cousin
+with entire amiability, but to Jack's irritation Frank's behavior was
+hardly civil. The young man never had been able to disguise his real
+feelings (the trait is not an English one); so now he bowed coldly. Then
+he continued talking to Ruth and Olive, almost as though the older man
+were not present.
+
+If all of Jack's friends had been doing their level best to force her
+into the championship of Captain Madden, they could hardly have arranged
+a better method. She slipped her arm through the older man's at this
+moment in a very pretty fashion and together they led the way back to
+the ball room.
+
+It was now a good deal past midnight and Ruth decided that the time had
+come for saying farewell. Jean was dancing with Giovanni Colonna and
+Frieda with Leon. But in a few moments they were persuaded to stop, and
+the Ranch party found the Princess Colonna, to say good-night.
+
+The Princess had appeared at her ball in the character of Atalanta, the
+maiden who could run more swiftly than any man in the world. To all her
+suitors she had imposed the condition that she should be the prize of
+the man who could conquer her in a race, and had been finally won by the
+youth who dropped the golden apples at her feet, which she stooped to
+pick up.
+
+Jean's Princess wore a crimson robe and around her yellow hair a wreath
+of golden laurel leaves. In her hand she carried a golden apple.
+
+Yet in spite of the magnificence of the scene about her, she excused
+herself from her guests and went with the Ranch girls to Jean's room.
+Jean was going home tonight with her family.
+
+Quite like another girl, who was neither a Princess nor yet a
+mythological character, the Princess Colonna kissed Jean good-by.
+
+"I do wish you could let one of your girls stay with me always," she
+said, when she and Ruth were parting. "I think I am often homesick for
+America and the old life in the west which I led as a child. Jean has
+made me feel almost young again."
+
+And though Ruth and the four girls laughed at the suggestion of the
+Princess' needing to feel young, each one of them noticed that when one
+studied her face closely there were lines about her mouth and eyes.
+
+On the way home, the five women crowded into one carriage, Jean turned
+to her chaperon: "I know it isn't good taste to talk about people, Ruth
+dear, when one has been visiting them, so please don't reproach me. But
+I could not help seeing while I was the Princess' guest that, without
+knowing it, she has been a kind of Atalanta. Only in the race for
+happiness the golden apple she stopped to pick up was not money. She had
+wealth enough, but it was a title and a great position. The Prince may
+be very nice. I did not learn to know him very well, but certainly he
+seemed more like his wife's father than her husband. How can a girl ever
+marry a man twice as old as she is?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+LEAVING ROME
+
+
+"I AM sorry, Jean, that you think no one could care for me for myself,
+and that it is my money that is my sole attraction. If that is true I
+could wish for my own part that the Rainbow mine had never been
+discovered."
+
+The two cousins, Jack and Jean, were alone in their sitting room in
+their hotel in Rome. It was about four o'clock in the afternoon, six
+days after the Princess' ball, and although it was raining and a cold,
+disagreeable afternoon, Ruth, Olive and Frieda had gone forth on another
+sight-seeing pilgrimage.
+
+Jack had been writing letters, but had ceased and gone over to stand by
+the window when Jean began her conversation. There was just a chance
+that it might be wiser for her cousin not to be able to see her face,
+for she was quicker to arrive at conclusions than any other one of them.
+
+But Jean had said more than Jack supposed she would have dared. Now she
+turned from pretending to view the dismal picture of chilly orange trees
+and chillier marble statuary and her gray eyes met Jean's brown ones
+coldly.
+
+Jean sighed. Somehow she and Jack had so often managed to misunderstand
+each other, ever since they were little girls. And now, when she
+particularly wanted to keep her cousin from growing angry and to talk
+things over candidly, why, as usual, she had begun matters by putting
+her foot in it. Jack had such an uncomfortable fashion of growing white
+and quiet when she was furious, instead of crimson and teary like Jean
+and Frieda. Why on earth had Ruth ever appointed her to tell Jack Frank
+Kent's account of his cousin and to find out whether she cared for him.
+It was certainly Ruth's place to have done it herself. Why in the world
+hadn't she had the sense to decline.
+
+"But I never said anything in the least like that, Jack, and it is not
+fair of you to suggest it," Jean replied, doing her best to answer as
+gently as possible. "It was only that I told you we had good reason to
+believe that Captain Madden is a fortune-hunter. I don't know, of
+course, whether you care in the least who or what he is, but he is
+desperately poor, has had to resign from the British army because he
+didn't or couldn't pay his debts, and, and--do you care to hear anything
+else?"
+
+Jack's eyes flashed curiously. Jean remembered how ever since she was a
+little girl her cousin's eyes had had this fashion of turning dark when
+any one opposed her will. And they had all thought Jack so entirely
+changed by her illness, so much softened, so much readier to give up her
+own way to other people's. At this instant Jean wondered if any one ever
+really changed in the leading traits of character?
+
+"I don't care to learn anything more just now to Captain Madden's
+discredit," Jack was saying quietly and reasonably enough, "but I would
+like very much to know how you and Ruth, and Olive and Frieda for that
+matter, have heard so much in such a short time? Is it Frank Kent who
+has told you? Because if he has, I should like to tell you that Captain
+Madden had warned me Frank was apt to say disagreeable things about him.
+As for his being poor and having had to leave the army because of it,
+why of course I knew that. And I don't believe I care to hear anything
+more on the subject that you may wish to say."
+
+"But you _must_, Jack," Jean ordered unwisely. "Unless you can
+positively swear to me that Captain Madden means nothing in the world to
+you and that you do not intend having any further friendship with him.
+Ruth told me if I could make you promise this, we need not speak of the
+matter again."
+
+Jack bit her lips. However angry Jean's interference might be making
+her, this was no time to be losing her temper like a silly child.
+
+"I can make you no such promise, Jean, and I don't think Ruth should
+have allowed you to ask it of me. But there is one thing I should like
+very much to have you tell me. How did Frank Kent happen to come to Rome
+at this especial time? Before we left America I asked him to wait until
+we reached England before joining us, and all of you knew of my letter
+and made no objections. I thought it would be better for us to have the
+first of our journey to ourselves while we were learning to be more
+experienced travelers. Frank said he understood and agreed, and yet here
+he turns up in Rome without writing me and straightway begins
+interfering in my affairs. I used to like Frank very much in the old
+days at the ranch, but no amount of friendship can make me forgive--"
+
+"You need not be so unfair to Frank, Jack," Jean interrupted, losing
+control of herself at this evidence of Jack's liking for the middle-aged
+man whom she had always detested, and whom the other members of her
+family were now learning to dislike almost as much. "I wrote Frank Kent
+while I was staying with the Princess Colonna, begging him to join us
+here in Rome at once. Ruth had said she was afraid you were growing too
+much interested in Captain Madden and that we ought to be finding out
+more about him. I knew Frank would know, and I thought you would believe
+what _he_ said. Frank is here now, waiting downstairs to talk to you.
+Perhaps he will have more influence than I can." And without daring to
+find out whether or not her cousin would consent, Jean darted quickly
+from the room. Something or other Jack called after her. Nevertheless
+Jean preferred neither to hear nor heed and a few minutes after
+reappeared with Frank Kent.
+
+During her brief absence Jacqueline was trying desperately hard to make
+up her mind what she had best do. To run away, declining to see Frank,
+would look as though she feared what he might have to tell her. To
+stay--Jack wondered how far in her present mood she might trust herself?
+
+Certainly, on his entrance, Frank appeared as supremely uncomfortable as
+a young man could, which should have softened Jack's heart or her
+temper.
+
+However, his first words were as unfortunate as Jean's had been.
+
+"I never could have dreamed it would be necessary for me to tell you all
+this, Jack," he began. "I never have thought of you except as a
+child--well, not a child exactly, but a jolly, sensible kind of a girl.
+And now, oh, it is too absurd to find you thinking you have a liking for
+a man like Bob Madden! He is more or less of a rascal, you know," Frank
+blurted with the dreadful English directness which the Ranch girls had
+used to like in him.
+
+Jack had been listening so quietly that he had no idea of what mood she
+was in. The next instant, however, it was easy enough for him to guess.
+Jack was sitting quite still in a tall carved chair with her head bent
+a little forward and both hands clasped so tightly together in her lap
+that the knuckles showed white. The lines of the girl's face were always
+clearly cut, but today they seemed more so. Even Jean noticed how deeply
+gray her cousin's eyes looked and how crimson her lips. The bronze of
+her hair was of an even richer tone than usual. Inwardly Jean sighed
+again. If only Jack could realize how splendidly handsome she was and
+how worth while, would she waste any more of her time and their's on
+such an undesirable friendship?
+
+But Jack was speaking. "No, I am not a child, Frank," she declared,
+"though I am sorry you think I am no longer a jolly or sensible girl.
+You see, I am nearly twenty and I don't believe you are more than three
+years older. Ever since you and Jean began talking to me this afternoon
+I have been wondering why you had agreed that I cared for Captain
+Madden. I have never said a word of his liking for me or of mine for
+him. And I am sure he has never spoken to Ruth or anybody else."
+
+"That is just the horridest part of it," Jean murmured irritably. But
+her cousin went on without heeding her. "The truth is I have been
+trying this whole week to find out whether or not I cared enough for
+Captain Madden to promise to be his wife. I was intending to write to
+him and beg him to wait a little longer, when Jean came in to talk to
+me. Now you have both helped me make up my mind. I shall not ask him to
+wait. I shall tell him that I do care and that I do not believe the
+things I hear against him. Oh, he warned me long ago, Frank, of the
+trouble he had had with your family, of how your father had inherited
+all the money so that no one else had any--"
+
+But the rest of Jack's declaration was discontinued because of Jean's
+bursting suddenly into tears and rushing out of the room.
+
+Frank picked up his hat uncertainly. "I suppose it is not worth while
+for me to tell you anything further, Jack, if you have determined not to
+believe me," he declared. "Nevertheless I feel it my duty to warn you
+that I shall talk freely to your chaperon, Miss Drew, and that I shall
+also write Jim Colter. Oh, say, Jack, I can't bear it, you know, for you
+to go and throw yourself away like this!" Frank had started his reproof
+like Jack's grandfather, but the ending was a good deal more like the
+boy friend for whom she had once had such an affection.
+
+Then for a moment Jack's lips trembled and she wanted to say something
+kinder, except for her fear of following Jean's example and beginning to
+cry.
+
+At this moment, however, Ruth Drew, still wearing her hat and coat, came
+hurrying into the room. She had just seen Jean and knew what had passed
+between Frank and the two girls.
+
+Ruth put her arms around Jack. "It is my fault, dear, and I shall never
+forgive myself. I have been blind and a coward straight through. You are
+too young to know anything of the world and have been left too much to
+your own judgment. I ought to have stopped this acquaintance at once and
+I ought to have talked to you myself this afternoon instead of having
+Jean do it. I was just hoping against hope that we had all been mistaken
+and that you would laugh at our idea. But, oh Jack, you won't write the
+letter you have just said. You _must not_, dear; I forbid it. You are
+not yet of age and I am here in Europe as your chaperon, temporarily as
+your guardian. What will Mr. Colter think and say?"
+
+Quietly Jack drew herself away from Ruth's agitated embrace. Frank had
+already gone out of the room.
+
+"Please don't talk to me as if I were a silly child, too, Ruth, please,"
+Jack pleaded. "I am sorry to be disobedient; but you can't forbid my
+writing to the man who has asked me to be his wife. After all, it is
+_my_ life and _my_ love Captain Madden has asked for. But I don't want
+you and Jean and Olive and Frieda to be angry with me and not love me
+any more. I must write Captain Madden, of course, but after that I will
+wait until you hear from Jim." Jack's self-control was giving way now
+and she covered her face with her hands.
+
+"Of course you will tell Jim what you think and what Frank says, and
+poor Jim will be nearly crazy. Because he is sure to believe you as long
+as he has always been in love with you. But Jim has more charity and
+sympathy and will want me to be happy and--" Jack could not go on.
+
+Ruth was by this time shedding tears herself, so that the atmosphere of
+the room with the rain pouring down outside was distinctly dismal.
+
+"Don't we want you to be happy too, Jack? You must believe that; but I
+suppose you consider we are unjustly prejudiced. Still, dear, won't you
+promise me at least not to see Captain Madden again until we have heard
+from Jim?" Ruth implored.
+
+There was no immediate answer, and for this much the older woman was
+distinctly thankful. If Jacqueline Ralston would only once give her word
+there would be no going back upon it.
+
+"Yes, Ruth, I promise," she replied after a little while.
+
+The next moment Ruth had led her to a chair and after Jack had seated
+herself, she rested on the arm for a moment, pressing her cheek against
+the girl's golden-brown hair. For although Ruth was a good many years
+the older, Jack was now several inches taller than her chaperon.
+
+"Are you so sure Captain Madden does mean your happiness?" Ruth
+whispered, and then held her breath, so fearful did she feel of the
+answer.
+
+For the second time Jack hesitated. "Yes, I _think_ so; that is, Captain
+Madden says he will spend his life trying to make me happy. But, oh
+Ruthie, please don't let's talk about anything more that is serious
+just now. It seems to me that everybody has been scolding me all
+afternoon and I'm tired." This was spoken so like a fretful child that
+actually Ruth was able to summon a smile.
+
+Before her reply, however, Frieda came strolling in, carrying a box of
+chocolate drops and thoughtfully biting one in two.
+
+She extended her refreshments to her sister and chaperon. "Dick Grant
+has just brought me these; they are American, and I _am_ grateful to
+him," she remarked pensively. "That foolish Mrs. Grant told me that the
+candy business was such a be-au-ti-ful business and I laughed at her.
+Now I am beginning to think so too. I am so homesick for most anything
+that is American. Isn't Rome dismal today? Ruth took Olive and me to
+another old picture gallery and just as we were trying to take an
+interest in things, suddenly she decided that we had to rush back to the
+hotel. Don't you think we have had enough of Rome? Jean says she is
+tired and I am, and Ruth and Olive say they are a little bit. Besides,
+if we are to see enough of Europe to count, this summer, ought we not to
+be starting out again?"
+
+Ruth had risen and walked toward the window. She was not sure of how
+much Frieda knew of what was troubling all of them this afternoon.
+However, she devoutly hoped that there might be no further reference to
+it until the atmosphere was more peaceful.
+
+Frieda placed herself on a stool facing her sister.
+
+"Jack, let's go away from Rome in a few days?" she demanded. "I am sure
+the rest of us would like to if you are willing."
+
+Jack shook her head. "No, no, Frieda, not for another week or two," she
+protested. "I am sure there are still lots of things that we ought to
+see."
+
+"There would be if we stayed here until we died," the younger girl
+grumbled. "Look here, Jack, you know you like to preach to me sometimes,
+though you are mostly pretty good about it, now I would like you to
+remember our compact. Didn't we promise that if three of us decided that
+we wanted to go to a certain place or do a certain thing the other two
+had to follow suit. So if Ruth and Jean and Olive and I are weary of
+Rome and want to go away, don't you think it your duty to do what we
+like? Just think it over, dear!" And Frieda popped a chocolate drop
+into her sister's mouth and then one into her own with instant
+promptness.
+
+Jack got up and moved toward the door. Somehow, in the face of the
+question she was now having to solve, Frieda's reference to their
+compact seemed childish and absurd. Could she actually have felt young
+enough not a month ago to have entered into such an agreement with all
+seriousness? And yet to give one's word was final.
+
+"All right, Frieda baby," Jack assented, as she was about to cross the
+threshold, "if the others really do want to leave Rome now, it would not
+be fair to keep you here on my account. Wherever you go I will come
+along."
+
+When Jack had finally disappeared and was safely out of hearing, Ruth
+turned from pretending to stare out the window and gave Frieda an
+ecstatic hug. "That is the best thing that has happened to us this day,
+baby!" she exclaimed, not pretending to explain her remark.
+
+Frieda received the mark of affection placidly; she was perfectly
+accustomed to being embraced by her family at unexpected moments.
+
+"Yes, I thought it would be best to get Jack away from the chance of
+seeing him, though I did not want her to guess that was our reason," she
+remarked sagely. "Of course Captain Madden is Jack's first truly beau
+and she takes love and things like that so seriously. She and Olive are
+not like Jean and me. She'll get over it, though, I am pretty sure, if
+we can only get her into the country where she can hunt and fish and do
+the things she used to do. The sky is too blue and there are too many
+flowers in Italy."
+
+Then Frieda went on pensively devouring dozens of chocolates, while Ruth
+retired into her own room to lie down. She was half amused and half
+aghast at Frieda's sudden burst of worldly wisdom. Indeed, she was not
+at all sure whether she wished to shake the youngest of the Ranch girls
+or whether she desired to embrace her again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE OVERSEER OF THE RAINBOW RANCH
+
+
+"OH," sighed Frieda sleepily, "isn't it too delicious to hear the
+American language spoken once again!"
+
+Ruth and the three other Ranch girls laughed almost as sleepily as
+Frieda had spoken. They were on the night train coming up from
+Folkestone to London, after having crossed the English channel from
+Boulogne earlier in the afternoon. It was now the first week of June.
+
+"Bravo, Frieda!" teased Jean. "One can always count on the younger Miss
+Ralston's saying _the_ memorable thing as soon as the Rainbow Ranch
+party arrives on a new soil. Who would have thought of the American
+tongue being employed in the British Isles. I shall mention it to Frank
+Kent as soon as we see him."
+
+"Oh, for goodness' sake, don't be funny, Jean Bruce," the first speaker
+protested, "for you know exactly what I mean. I suppose I should have
+said the English language. But even if the English do speak deep down
+in their throats and their voices are kind of choky and queer, at least
+one can understand what they mean without consulting a dictionary or
+trying to remember something one has learned at school. After having
+heard nothing but Italian, German and French for over two months, I
+could almost have hugged that porter who carried our bags off the boat."
+
+Frieda had been resting her head on her chaperon's shoulder, but now
+lifted it to continue her argument with Jean. However, Ruth drew her
+back to her former place.
+
+"Don't be a purist at this late date, Jean," Ruth murmured, shaking her
+head in a kind of mild reproof. "I must confess I am feeling pretty much
+as Frieda does. English or American, whichever you may prefer to call
+it, after our continental wanderings, England does seem almost like
+home."
+
+And Ruth closed her eyes, she and Frieda both dropping off into a gentle
+doze, while Olive and Jean talked in whispers, and Jack stared out of
+the window into the darkness.
+
+Since leaving Rome, the five young women had become proverbial Cook's
+tourists. They had been traveling almost continuously, sight-seeing
+during every possible hour, and allowing no time for loitering. For
+after Rome had followed Florence, Venice and then Paris, until now they
+were on their way to spend the fashionable season in London.
+
+Such rapid journeying had not been Ruth's original idea, but somehow
+after Jack's experience in Rome it had seemed best to keep her
+constantly busy, allowing as little time as possible for reflection or
+argument.
+
+Faithful to her word, Jacqueline Ralston had not seen Captain Madden
+since the afternoon of her talk with Ruth. At that time, it is true, she
+had promised to wait only until an answer could arrive from her own and
+Ruth's letters to her guardian, Jim Colter, but later she had made a
+further promise to Jim.
+
+Almost from the day of his arrival at the Rainbow Lodge, the overseer of
+the ranch and afterwards the girls' devoted protector and friend, had
+had a peculiar understanding of Jack's character. When she was a small
+girl, insisting on some order of hers being obeyed or angered because it
+had not been, Jim's "Steady, boss!" used always to help her control
+herself. For reasonableness was ordinarily one of Jack's strongest
+characteristics. Always she wished to be just and patient. Her
+wilfulness came not so much from original sin as because she had had too
+much her own way as a child and had had to depend too much on her own
+wisdom.
+
+Her mother had died when she was a very young girl and her father not so
+many years after. Why, when Jacqueline Ralston was fourteen, virtually
+she was, under Jim's guidance, the head of a thousand-acre ranch, and a
+kind of mother to little Frieda and Jean.
+
+So, though Jim Colter was more broken up by the news in Ruth's and
+Jack's letters than he had been by anything since Ruth's refusal of his
+love, he wrote to Jack with more tact than you could have expected from
+a big, blunt fellow like Jim.
+
+It took him almost one entire night, however, to write the letter.
+
+For one thing, he did not say that he believed just what Ruth Drew had
+written him of Captain Madden, nor did he mention Frank Kent's
+information, which painted an even worse picture of Jack's friend. Nor
+did he demand that Jack immediately break off her engagement or stop
+writing Captain Madden. He simply suggested, as he had in the old days
+at the ranch, that "the boss go slow" and would Jack agree not to see
+Captain Madden and not to think of him more than she could help, until
+Jim himself could find out something more about him? For of course Frank
+Kent might be prejudiced and Ruth might be mistaken. Jim would see to
+the whole matter himself, and Jack could surely count on his wanting to
+give every man a square deal.
+
+Jack had at once agreed to her guardian's request. She realized that
+Jim's efforts must take time, as he was a long way from proper sources
+of information. So she had meant to be and had been very patient,
+trusting that Jim would never believe Captain Madden the kind of villain
+that Frank Kent had declared him.
+
+Jack was reflecting on this now as the lights from hundreds of small
+houses along the line of the road blinked at her like so many friendly
+eyes. Probably Jim would let her hear what conclusion he had reached
+some time during their stay in England. She was rather dreading this
+visit to London. For not once had she seen Frank Kent since their
+interview in the hotel sitting room in Rome. Frank had come to say
+good-bye the next day, as he was leaving that evening for home; but
+Jack had excused herself from meeting him. Now there would be no way of
+escaping, for Frank was Ruth's and the other girls' devoted friend, as
+he had formerly been hers. They would want to be with him as much as
+possible. Jack glanced at Olive. Had she not imagined several years ago
+that Olive liked Frank better than any other young man of their
+acquaintance? Certainly she had seemed to prefer him to Donald Harmon,
+in spite of Don's devotion.
+
+Well, for the sake of her family, she must conquer her own unfriendly
+attitude. Candidly, she was sorry not to be able to like Frank herself
+as she once had. How much they had used to talk of her first visit to
+England! Then Frank had insisted that Ruth and the four Ranch girls were
+to make a long visit at his country estate in Surrey. He wished them to
+know his family intimately, as for several years he had been talking
+continuously of his western friends. Jack regretted the loss of this
+visit. Frank had made her almost love his beautiful English home in his
+homesick days in the west, when he was ill and had chosen her for his
+special confidante.
+
+Just in time, a sigh that was about to escape into their compartment
+was surreptitiously swallowed. Ruth was stirring and begging Frieda to
+wake up. Olive and Jean were dragging down luggage from the racks
+overhead. And where the twinkling lights outside had been hundreds, now
+there were thousands. They must have reached the outskirts of London and
+would soon be entering the Charing-Cross station.
+
+"I believe," announced Jack, who had not spoken for the past half hour,
+"that I have more real feeling about seeing London than any other city
+in the world. I think we have something more in common than just the
+language, baby." And she helped Frieda get into her traveling coat.
+
+Perhaps Ruth had been asleep, for she appeared more than commonly
+flurried. "I hope you girls understand just exactly what we are to do,"
+she began nervously. "I declare, I don't consider that I shall ever make
+a successful traveler, I do so hate the excitement and responsibility of
+arriving in places. I wish now I had allowed Frank to meet us. He was
+good enough to offer to come in from the country, but I declined."
+
+"But, my beloved Ruth, what have we to do but get ourselves and our
+belongings into cabs and drive to our hotel? I will manage if you prefer
+it," Jack proposed.
+
+Their train had stopped and a guard was opening the door. Several
+porters soon had their bags and steamer rugs, and almost before they
+were aware of what they were doing the five young women were following
+the men down the station platform, Jack in advance, Ruth and Olive
+together, and Jean and Frieda bringing up the rear.
+
+Once inside the gate, however, the four girls were startled past speech
+on seeing the usually dignified Jack stop for an instant, clasp her
+hands tight together, then stare and with a cry rush forward and
+positively fling herself into a tall man's arms.
+
+Their silence and stupidity only lasted for an instant. Ruth was next to
+run after Jack and seize the man's one disengaged hand.
+
+"Oh, Jim, oh Mr. Colter, why didn't you tell us you were coming to
+London? I never was so glad to see anyone before in my life!" And this
+from the former dignified "school marm." Probably Ruth had never
+forgotten her reserve so completely in her life as at this moment. Tears
+of delight gathered unheeded in her eyes.
+
+Jack and Ruth were both swept aside by the onslaught of Frieda, Jean and
+Olive.
+
+"How on earth did you decide to come? When did you come? Why did you
+come?" Jean demanded all in one breath and then stopped to laugh at
+herself.
+
+Jim was staring at the little party critically. He looked more western
+and unconventional than ever in his big, broad-brimmed, felt hat, his
+loose fitting clothes, with the tan of his outdoor life still showing on
+his strong, handsome face.
+
+Jim's deeply blue eyes suddenly crinkled up at the corners in a way they
+had when he wanted to laugh or to show any particular emotion.
+
+"Well," he drawled in his slowest and most exaggerated cowboy fashion.
+"I've been thinkin' lately that I was gittin' a bit tired of bein'
+everlastingly left at the post. Seems like you been acquirin' so much
+culture and clothes I was kind of afraid you might not want to know me
+when you got back to the ranch. I ain't so sure about the culture, but
+I'll capture the glad rags all right soon as you girls are able to go on
+a shoppin' party or so with me." And Jim, glancing at an Englishman just
+passing them, attired in a top hat and frock coat, pretended to wink.
+
+No one was deceived in the least by his poor pretense of a joke. Jim was
+really so much upset by the pleasure of seeing Ruth and the girls that
+he was talking foolishness to cover his emotion.
+
+Frieda's break, therefore, saved them all "Oh Jim, won't you look too
+funny, dressed like a gentleman!" she exclaimed, and in mock wrath Jim
+marched the five of them off to their cabs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+RELIEF OR REGRET?
+
+
+"TELL me what you have found out, Jim. I think I know why you have come
+all this way to London," Jacqueline Ralston said.
+
+The man and girl were seated on a bench in Kew Gardens, the wonderful
+park a few miles out from London, two afternoons after the arrival of
+the Rainbow Ranch party. Ruth and the three other girls had gone to view
+Westminster Abbey. But Jack, pleading a need of fresh air, arranged for
+a few quiet hours with Jim.
+
+The man rose and thrusting his hands deep into his pockets, started
+striding up and down. His blue eyes were curiously gentle, but his mouth
+was stern. Indeed, he represented a strange combination of anger and
+nervousness. Finally, before speaking, he placed himself on the seat
+next Jack again, but this time so that he could look directly into her
+face.
+
+Jack's eyes were down, her manner quiet and reserved. The man had no
+way of guessing how his news would affect her.
+
+"See here, boss," he began after a moment, "you and I've been pretty
+much on the level with each other _all the time_, haven't we? We ain't
+tried to keep things back 'cause they hurt." He took the girl's gloved
+hand, patting it softly. "Sometimes, maybe, I've seemed harder with you,
+Jack, than with the others. But I always thought you'd understand. You
+kind of like to face the music, to know the worst and have things
+settled quick. Well--"
+
+Possibly Jacqueline's face turned a shade paler; certainly her lips did.
+Nevertheless, they curved into a kind of a smile.
+
+"Well, we aren't getting them settled very quickly today, are we, Jim?"
+she returned. "You are right, though, I do like to know the truth. What
+have you found out about Captain Madden."
+
+"That he ain't no good," Jim replied, forgetting his grammar and all his
+carefully planned methods of breaking the unpleasant news to the girl.
+"Seems like the English know how to put it better than we do when they
+say a fellow is a _cad_. I tell you, Jack, this is honest. I've found
+out every thing I could from the time this man was a boy. He has never
+done an honest day's work in his life. Why, I even learned that he had
+written back to Wyoming to ask what the Rainbow Mine was worth. 'Course,
+I don't claim he don't care for you, child--most any man might be able
+to manage that. But to think of John Ralston's daughter and my old boss
+of the Rainbow Ranch marrying a man old enough to be her father, and
+such a man!" Jim had been trying his best to hold in, but now he swore
+softly under his breath. "Say, Jack, old girl, say you believe I'm
+telling you the truth. I hate to hurt you, the Lord only knows how much,
+but if you don't tell me you'll break it all off, I think I'll go plumb
+crazy." And Jim mopped the moisture from his brow, though it was a
+peculiarly cool day.
+
+Jack was so painfully silent. Could a girl not quite twenty suffer much
+over an interrupted love affair? Jim did not know. He remembered his own
+grief when Ruth refused him. It had been awful! He carried the ache
+inside of him to this day. Glancing at the girl near him, he saw that
+the tears, which came so rarely, were now in her clear gray eyes.
+
+"I believe you, Jim," she returned finally. "I believe you'd play fair
+with me and with Captain Madden even if you loathed the idea of my
+caring for him. Don't worry, old man. I promise this is the end. But,
+please, would you mind if I cried a while? No one is paying any
+attention to us and I think I'd like to very much."
+
+Without waiting for permission, Jack's shoulders shook, and she covered
+her face with her hands. But a few seconds later Jim sighed so miserably
+that Jack slipped one of her hands inside his and held it close.
+
+"I am not crying because my heart is broken, Jim dear," she explained;
+"I think I am crying because I am ashamed of myself. Sometimes I wonder
+how many lessons it will take before I learn not to be so self-willed. I
+have made things so hard for Ruth and for the other girls. Yet I
+believed what Captain Madden told me; I thought people were prejudiced
+against him just because he was poor. And I hate that. So when Ruth and
+Frank said such horrid things I told him I would marry him if you would
+give your consent. And, oh Jim, I have been so afraid lately--"
+
+Jack began crying softly again.
+
+"Been so afraid, poor little girl! If you only knew how I dreaded
+telling you this, I haven't had a good night's sleep in two weeks, and
+waiting for you to arrive in London nearly broke my nerve." Jim Colter
+probably had not shed any tears in almost twenty years, yet he looked
+perilously on the verge of them now.
+
+Jack pulled at his coat sleeve uncertainly. "But Jim, dear, you don't
+know what I have been afraid of! I have been afraid you would discover
+that Captain Madden was all right and that I would then _have_ to marry
+him. I had given him my word. It would not have been honest to go back
+on it. You see, when we were in Rome I did believe I cared for him. He
+was awfully kind and interesting and different from any one I had ever
+known. Then I suppose I was flattered in thinking a so much older, wiser
+man could care for a stupid girl like me. And Ruth and Frank were
+dreadfully dictatorial. But since we left Rome, I've been thinking--I
+feel I have not been doing anything else _but_ think. And I realized
+that I did not really love Captain Madden. I felt as if I should die if
+he took me away from my family. Still I didn't know just what to do. I
+was so frightened, Jim, until I saw you there at Charing Cross."
+
+Jim Colter took off his big western hat. The English sky of a June day
+can be a very lovely thing--soft fleecy clouds, floating over a surface
+of translucent blue. Jim looked up into it. "I thank Thee, Lord," he
+whispered reverently, and then, stooping over, kissed Jack.
+
+The next moment he was up on his feet. And though he failed to electrify
+Kew Gardens by giving his celebrated cowboy yell, he waved his sombrero
+and the yell apparently took place inside him.
+
+"Come on, Jack, let's do something quick to celebrate or I'm liable to
+bust with gladness!" he exclaimed. "This is a right pretty park we're
+in. I hear it's one of _the_ most famous on the map, with every known
+tree growing inside it. Wouldn't you like me to buy it for you, or maybe
+you can think of some other little remembrance?"
+
+Jack hung on to his arm and the man and girl started off on their
+sight-seeing expedition together, both feeling as though they were
+treading on air instead of the velvet softness of the English turf.
+
+"I should like to go back and tell Ruth at once and apologize for being
+a nuisance," Jack confided, "but I don't want any one to guess I have
+been crying, and then Ruth will probably be mooning over tombstones in
+the Abbey until dinner time. I tell you what, Jim, we will have a
+wonderful dinner party tonight to celebrate and you can wear the new
+evening clothes you bought yesterday. Then, afterwards, you must take
+all of us to the theater. Now I have got you to myself, we might as well
+see Kew and have some tea. I am dreadfully hungry. You can bring Ruth
+some time by herself and I will promise to keep the girls away."
+
+Jim did not answer. But, under the circumstances, it is perfectly
+certain that he could have refused Jack nothing in the world.
+
+For the next two hours he could hardly keep his eyes off her. And he
+seemed especially happy when she devoured three English scones and drank
+two cups of strong tea.
+
+"Ain't intendin' to pine away, are you, Jack?" he asked. And then, when
+the girl blushed, he laughed and held out his hand.
+
+"Shake on it once more, boss," he demanded, "and you can count on this,
+sure thing. You ain't going to make but one man happier than you've made
+me this day. And that is when you say 'yes' to the right fellow."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+RECONCILIATIONS
+
+
+LATER that evening the four girls and Ruth were dressed and waiting in
+their sitting room for Jim Colter to come to them, when Frank Kent's
+card was sent up to their room. By accident the man at the door gave it
+first to Jack. The girl's face flooded with color, but she turned at
+once to Ruth.
+
+"Frank Kent has come to see us," she explained, "and I want very much to
+see him by myself for a few minutes. If you don't mind, I will go down
+to meet him."
+
+And as Ruth nodded, Jack disappeared.
+
+Before she got near enough to speak to him, Frank realized that some
+change had taken place in his former friend since their last meeting in
+Rome.
+
+For one thing, Jack looked younger and happier. Then she had on some
+thin white girlish dress, and was coming forward with a smile to greet
+him.
+
+"I have been perfectly horrid to you, Frank, and I apologize with all
+my heart," she began immediately. "Yet you knew I had a bad disposition
+years ago, and still managed to like me a little. Please try again. Our
+dear Jim Colter is here from the ranch and has made me see things in the
+right light. But don't let's talk about my mistakes. We are having a
+dinner and a theater party tonight. Do join us. Olive and Ruth and
+everybody will be so glad."
+
+In the elevator on the way upstairs to their apartment, Jack looked at
+Frank critically for a moment. Not until now had she been willing to
+make a fair estimate of the changes the two years had wrought in him.
+
+In the first place she could see that Frank had grown a great deal
+better looking. He had lost the former delicacy which had sent him to
+the west, and seemed in splendid physical condition. He was six feet
+tall and had the clear, bright color peculiar to young Englishmen.
+Frank's expression had always been more serious than most young
+fellows', and this had been lately increased by his wearing glasses.
+Tonight, however, his clever brown eyes positively shone with relief.
+And though he could hardly dare express himself so openly or so
+eloquently as Jim Colter, Jack appreciated that he was unfeignedly happy
+over her escape.
+
+Possibly the Rainbow Ranch party and their two men friends had never had
+a more delightful evening in their lives. They were in such blissfully
+good spirits. Indeed, each one of the seven felt as though an individual
+load had been lifted. And particularly because Jack appeared to be the
+gayest of them all. And Jack _was_ happy in feeling herself released
+from an obligation which lately had begun to weigh upon her like a
+recurrent nightmare. Moreover, she was particularly anxious not to have
+her family regard her as broken-hearted.
+
+She whispered to Jean and Frieda before starting for the theater that
+they were to leave Ruth and Jim and Frank and Olive together as much as
+possible, for in so large a party it was necessary to make divisions.
+
+Olive and Frank did sit next one another at the play, but the three
+girls were not so successful with Jim Colter and Ruth. For there was no
+doubt but that Jim avoided being alone with Ruth whenever it was
+possible. He had always been perfectly polite to her, but not once since
+the night of their parting had he ever voluntarily spent an hour in her
+society, unless one of the Ranch girls happened to be present.
+
+Of course Ruth was aware of this. What girl or woman can ever fail to
+be? Nevertheless on their way back to the hotel Ruth turned to Jim.
+
+"Would you mind, Mr. Colter, staying in the sitting room with me for a
+little while after the girls have gone to bed. I am so anxious to talk
+to you?" And there was a gentleness and a hesitation in her manner that
+made it impossible for the man to refuse. Also, he understood what it
+was she wished to discuss.
+
+Although Jim's manner was gay enough as he told the four girls
+good-night, Ruth saw with regret that it altered as soon as the last one
+of them had disappeared. He did not even sit down, but waited by the
+door, awkwardly fingering his hat like an embarrassed boy who wished to
+run away but did not quite dare.
+
+Ruth did not ask him to have a chair. She, too, was standing by the open
+fire, with one foot resting on the fender and her head half turned to
+gaze at him. She looked a little unlike herself tonight, or else like
+her best self. For the Ranch girls had seriously objected to their
+chaperon's nun-like costumes, which she had had made in Vermont, and
+insisted on getting her some new clothes in Paris, while they were
+making their own purchases. Ruth had objected but Olive had solved the
+problem. Each one of the four girls had presented Ruth with a toilet
+shortly before leaving Paris. And so much care and affection had each
+donor put into her gift that she had not had the heart to decline.
+
+Tonight she was wearing Jean's offering, which had been voted the
+prettiest of the lot. Over an underdress of flame-colored silk there
+were what Jim considered floating clouds of pale gray chiffon. And at
+her waist, with a background of the chiffon, was a single flame-colored
+flower.
+
+Ruth had lost a good deal of her Puritan look; somehow the man thought
+she seemed more human, more alive. She had a vivid color, and her hair,
+which Jean had insisted upon dressing, was looser about her face. Jim
+remembered the moonlight ride they had had together when a lock of her
+hair had blown across his cheek. Then he brought himself sharply to
+task.
+
+Ruth had already begun speaking.
+
+"Mr. Colter," she said, "there are so many, many things I want to say to
+you I hardly know where to begin. I know how you must feel toward me,
+how you must feel that I have utterly failed in my duty toward Jack, and
+how nearly I have come to allowing her to wreck her life. There is
+nothing that you can think about me that I do not about myself. Of
+course, you know, I erred through ignorance, and yet ignorance is no
+excuse. A woman with so little knowledge, so little tact--" Ruth's face
+was crimsoning all over and she had to put her handkerchief to her eyes
+to wipe away her tears.
+
+Jim had stepped forward and stood towering above her so that he had to
+bend his handsome head to see into her face.
+
+"Miss Drew, you are not to go calling yourself bad names and then
+declare that I feel as you say I do. Honest Injun, Miss Ruth, I haven't
+had a single one of those feelings about you. Since I have known about
+this tragedy that poor Jack has nearly gotten us all into, I have been
+plumb sorry for you with all my heart. How could a little New England
+girl like you know anything about an accomplished rascal like this
+fellow Madden? Yet I guessed if Jack wouldn't give in (and she is
+usually a hard-headed customer), why you'd be blaming yourself for a
+thing you couldn't prevent until the end of your days. I tell you, Miss
+Ruth, that thought, besides my love for Jack, kept me hot on that man's
+trail. And it even helped me break the news to Jack today, which was the
+hardest part."
+
+Ruth looked up into the deeply blue eyes above hers.
+
+"Jim Colter," she announced quietly, "I believe you are the very best
+man in the world."
+
+But instead of being pleased, Jim drew back as though his feelings had
+been deeply hurt. "Don't say that, Miss Ruth," he begged. "And don't you
+go and believe because I don't mention it that I have forgotten that sin
+I committed a way back in my youth and the way it made you feel about
+me. You have been awfully good treating me so kind and polite whenever
+you have to meet me around with the girls. I've done my best not to
+worry you any more'n I could help."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Colter, oh Jim," Ruth faltered, "please don't say a cruel
+thing like that to me. Haven't you forgiven me after almost three years?
+You must have known that in a few months, as soon as I got away from the
+ranch, I realized how narrow and foolish and blind I had been. You are a
+good man; you are the bravest, kindest, most forgiving in the whole
+world. And I don't care, I know you have forgotten about me long ago,
+but I want you to know I love you. It seems to me sometimes a woman must
+have the right to say this just to prove she can be as generous as a
+man. But I don't care whether I have the right or not. I am just saying
+it because it is true."
+
+"For heaven's sake, stop, Ruth," the big man implored.
+
+But the little New England school teacher, who had hardly ever dared
+show her real feelings before in her life, would not be silenced.
+
+"Don't worry, Jim, I shall never regret what I have said, though I shall
+never speak of it again--and perhaps never see you after you sail for
+America."
+
+Jim swept the little woman off her feet and held her for a moment to his
+heart.
+
+"Don't you dare say a thing like that to me, child," he threatened. "And
+don't you believe you are going to lose sight of me more than a few
+hours at a time while both of us are living in this world. Why, you
+little white, New England snow-maiden. The very idea of your having the
+nerve to stand up right before my face and say you love a big,
+good-for-nothing, sinful fellow like me. But I kind of wish you'd wake
+Jack and the other three girls up and tell them we are going to get
+married tomorrow."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+AN ENGLISH COUNTRY PLACE
+
+
+TWO figures on horseback galloped rapidly across the English downs, the
+one a number of yards in advance of the other.
+
+A low stone fence divided the adjoining meadows. But at a slight touch
+from its rider the first horse rose easily in the air, clearing the
+fence without difficulty. On the farther side it stumbled, plunged
+forward until steadied by the hands on its reins and came gradually to
+the earth upon its knees. Then the rider slid off and talking quietly to
+the horse brought it up on its feet again, just at the moment that her
+escort jumped the fence and drew up alongside her.
+
+"Jacqueline Ralston, I take off my hat to you. You are one of the best
+riders I ever saw in my life. Goodness, but you gave me a nasty moment
+when you made that unexpected plunge forward and I had a vision of your
+going over head-foremost." Frank Kent's face was pale from the moment's
+alarm, but he tried making his voice as calm as possible.
+
+"Yes, it was stupid of me," Jack returned. "There evidently was a hole
+this side the fence and I managed to make straight for it. Look, will
+you, Frank, while I get my breath."
+
+Jack took the reins of both horses and waited for a moment, while the
+young man made the search. It required hardly a second, for the
+depression in the ground was only a few feet back of them. There it was
+a hole not more than twelve inches in diameter and half as many inches
+deep, yet of a peculiarly dangerous character for horseback riders.
+
+"Suppose I had broken your father's finest riding horse's leg!" Jack
+exclaimed, when her companion had made the report and pointed out the
+spot to her. "Gracious, I should have been so sorry, both because of him
+and because of the horse, too!" Jack added. Having now given up both
+bridles into Frank's keeping, she continued patting the quivering sides
+of the beautiful animal, which had not yet recovered from its moment of
+danger.
+
+"Let us sit down here a few moments and rest, Jack," the young man
+suggested. "I can tie the horses nearby and it will be a good idea to
+let them have a short breathing space. The others won't miss us for a
+while yet; we were too far ahead."
+
+Several yards beyond there was a clump of old chestnut trees, and Jack
+sat down in the shade of one of them, where Frank joined her a little
+later.
+
+Flinging himself down lengthwise on the ground, the young man rested his
+head in his hands, facing his companion.
+
+Jacqueline had taken off her riding hat and was adjusting the heavy
+braids of her hair, which had become loosened by her plunge.
+
+"I say, Jack, you do look awfully fit these days. You turned a bit pale
+a few moments ago, but now your color is as good as ever. I was afraid
+you might feel kind of used up. It was like you to start talking about
+the possible loss of a horse when you might have been smashed up," Frank
+began.
+
+Jack laughed rather faintly. "Oh, I had a bad moment too," she
+confessed. "What is the use of pretending to be a heroine when it is not
+true? But one can't be laid up for nearly two years as I was without
+even being able to walk and face the chance of another accident with
+altogether steady nerves. And just when I was feeling exactly like my
+old self. I tell you, Frank, this visit to your father and mother has
+been a beautiful experience for all of us. I can't tell you how grateful
+we are. I believe it has been this delicious outdoor life and the news
+of Ruth's and Jim's engagement that has made me absolutely well in a
+hurry, after taking rather a long time to get fairly started."
+
+"It can't mean to you, Jack, what it has to me," the young man answered
+in such a queer, constrained voice that the girl looked at him curiously
+from under her downcast lids.
+
+Jack wondered if he were going to tell her of his love for Olive.
+Earnestly she hoped that he would not--at least, not today. She hated
+this business of growing up. Perhaps her own unfortunate experience
+earlier in their trip had given her this foolish prejudice. That must be
+the reason why she had developed such an odd, choking sensation as soon
+as she believed that Frank intended making her his confidante. She
+wished that they might all remain good friends as they had in the past.
+How dreadful it would be to have to give Olive up--or Frank! Besides,
+think of Donald Harmon's feelings! A month ago Donald had joined them in
+England and since had been Olive's shadow. Indeed, the young man had
+not made the slightest effort to disguise his attitude. He was in love
+with Olive and did not seem to mind the whole world's knowing it.
+
+But Olive! Jack glanced carefully at Frank and was glad to see that he
+was not looking at her, but was still trying to reach a decision. There
+could be little doubt in Jack's mind that Olive must prefer Frank Kent
+to Donald. Not that Olive had ever confided in her. But there had always
+been something in her friend's manner to make Jack feel this
+unconsciously. She believed that she had noticed it particularly in the
+past two weeks while they had been the guests of Frank's parents, Lord
+and Lady Kent, at their wonderful country estate.
+
+Jack stirred. Then she must not be keeping Frank so long away.
+
+The entire house party from the castle was spending the day in the
+woods, and the others must have halted somewhere nearer home and would
+be expecting them to return and join them.
+
+"I think we had best go back now, Frank, please. I am not in the least
+upset by my near tumble," the girl announced. "But you will not mention
+it to Ruth or Jim or any of the girls? It did not amount to anything,
+yet I don't want Ruth and Jim to have the slightest shade of anxiety to
+spoil their beautiful time of being engaged. Poor Jim was desperate at
+first at the thought of waiting almost six weeks before his marriage,
+but now the ceremony is so near I think he would not have given up this
+time for a great deal. You see, he and Ruth are only going to take a
+week's honeymoon journey, as your mother has been good enough to promise
+to look after us. And then we are all going back to the ranch together.
+This time poor Ruth will be dreadfully well chaperoned."
+
+"Yes, I know, Jack, but please don't go just yet. There is something
+that--" Frank hesitated. Evidently, however, Jacqueline had not heard
+him, for she had gotten up as she finished speaking and was moving off.
+
+The young people found the rest of their party about half a mile back,
+where they had chosen their picnic grounds in the neighborhood of a
+brook. Jim and Ruth were not with them, but Olive and Donald Harmon,
+Frieda and Dick Grant, Jean and the young Italian, Giovanni Colonna,
+Lord and Lady Kent and Frank's two sisters, Marcia and Dorothy, were
+sitting in a great circle and in the center was evidently a gypsy woman.
+Frank had met Dick Grant in London and thinking him a nice American boy
+had asked him down to Kent castle for the day. Giovanni Colonna had been
+his guest for a week.
+
+Apparently the advent of the two newcomers had interrupted the flow of
+the fortune-teller's narrative, for she was standing perfectly silent
+with her big, rather impertinent black eyes fastened on Olive's face.
+
+"Please send the gypsy away, Lady Kent," Olive begged. "She seems to be
+making up her mind to say something to me. And years ago I had such a
+dismal fortune told me by a gypsy who stopped at the Rainbow Lodge that
+I have never been able to forget it."
+
+Frank was paying off the woman and telling her to be gone, so that he
+did not hear the next few moments' conversation.
+
+"What did she tell you, Olive?" Frieda asked. "I remember we thought it
+queer at the time, but I have forgotten what it was."
+
+Olive flushed. She had her old childish dislike of being the center of
+attention, and yet she had brought this upon herself.
+
+"Oh, she told me that I was going to find out my parentage some day, and
+I have. Then she told me that I would inherit a large fortune." Olive
+glanced a little nervously at Donald Harmon, adding, "but of course that
+will never come true. And--and I can't remember much else. The story was
+told in a kind of jingle."
+
+"Yes, and I recall it better than you do, Olive dear," Jack suddenly
+broke in. "The ridiculous woman suggested such abominable things about
+me. She said that without knowing it I was going to bring sorrow upon my
+best-beloved Olive. I don't know just in what way she meant it, but of
+course it was a ridiculous falsehood." And Jack flushed so hotly and
+spoke with such unnecessary intensity that her listeners laughed.
+
+At the same time a man servant appeared, announcing that luncheon was
+about to be served. And Olive and Donald, who had been informed where
+the lovers were to be found, went off together to summon Ruth and Jim.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+MIDNIGHT CONFIDENCES
+
+
+A FAINT knock at her bedroom door several nights after their picnic in
+the woods startled Jean. It was half-past twelve o'clock, and thirty
+minutes before all the guests in the castle had gone to their own
+apartments, an informal dance having made them more tired than usual.
+
+But Jean was not a coward, and, still brushing her hair, walked over to
+her door. Immediately she heard Jack's voice on the outside.
+
+"Please let me in, Jean dear, I hope I haven't frightened you." Then
+Jack slipped inside and stood irresolutely in the center of the big
+chamber. She was ready for retiring, clad in a pink dressing gown, with
+her hair hanging in two braids over her shoulders.
+
+"I was kind of lonely," she explained. "It is very grand for each one of
+us to have an apartment to ourselves, but I am not used to it."
+
+She sank down on a low cushion in front of the big open fire and in a
+few moments was staring into it, having apparently forgotten her
+cousin's presence in her own room.
+
+However, without speaking, Jean went on quietly undressing. Then, when
+she had finished, she too got into a kimona and piled her grate high
+with fresh logs. The next moment she had placed herself on another
+cushion by the side of her unexpected visitor.
+
+But Jean asked no questions.
+
+"I hope you are not very sleepy, dear," Jacqueline remarked finally. "Of
+course you know that I wouldn't have disturbed you at such an unholy
+hour except that there was something important I felt I must talk to you
+about."
+
+"It isn't--" Jean began. But to her intense relief Jack immediately
+shook her head.
+
+"No, it isn't and never will be again. And the sooner that all of my
+family forget my miserable mistake, the happier you will make me. It is
+something different and yet it is such a kind of intimate, personal
+thing, I can't decide whether I have the right to mention it even to
+you."
+
+"Ruth and Jim?" the other girl queried. For the second time Jack
+demurred.
+
+"No." But she kept on gazing at the fire rather than at her confidante.
+
+"See here, Jean," she inquired suddenly. "I wonder if it has ever
+occurred to you that Frank Kent cared, well, cared more than just an
+ordinary lot for Olive? Perhaps it does not seem exactly square of me to
+be prying into Frank's and Olive's feelings for each other, but on my
+honor I have a real reason for wishing to know."
+
+Jean's big brown eyes opened wide with amazement. Was there any question
+in the world farther from her imagination than this unexpected one?
+
+Notwithstanding, Jean gave the subject a few moments of serious
+consideration. "No," she replied at length, "I have been thinking over
+all the time I can recall from Olive's and Frank's first acquaintance
+with each other. And I don't remember a single occasion when he seemed
+more than just a good friend of hers. To tell you the truth, Jack, I
+personally should never have dreamed of Frank's being in love with Olive
+in a thousand years! Whatever put it into your mind? Why you and Frank,
+after you got over your first prejudice against his being the guest of
+our old enemies, the Nortons, were much more intimate than the rest of
+us. I always took it as a matter of course that he liked you best until
+you had that quarrel in Rome. Lately, though, you seem to have made up."
+
+Jack frowned. "Oh, certainly we were more intimate then. But in those
+days Olive was too shy to reveal her real self or her emotions to anyone
+except us. Besides, we were only children. Still, I used to notice even
+then that Olive grew more cheerful and animated when Frank was around.
+And afterwards in Rome and the last month since our arrival in England,
+why haven't you _seen_ the change in her? Please think, Jean dear, for
+it may be of the very greatest importance what you tell me. You see, I
+am so stupid and make such dreadful mistakes about people caring or not
+caring for each other; but somehow you are wiser. I feel I may trust to
+your judgment. Do you think Olive--" Jack stumbled a little bit over the
+fashion for putting her next question. "Do you think that Olive likes
+Frank Kent better than anybody else?"
+
+The silence was longer this time and Jean did not happen to catch a
+glimpse of her cousin's face, being too deeply concerned over her
+inquiry.
+
+"I should never have conceived of such a thing myself, Jack," she
+declared after pondering for two or three minutes, "but as you have put
+it into my mind, why, possibly Olive _may_ be interested in Frank. He
+has always been awfully good to her ever since their first meeting, and
+he thinks her wonderfully beautiful and charming. I can't say, though,
+that I am at all convinced that her feeling is serious. Oh, dear me, why
+can't you two girls be as frivolous over affairs of the heart as I am! I
+should like at least a dozen romances before I settle upon one."
+
+"Well, I presume you are in a fair way to have them, sweet cousin,"
+Jacqueline returned. "And tonight I feel as though I could almost echo
+your wicked wish. But, Jean dearest, I have _got_ to find out how Olive
+really feels. I can't tell you why now, yet it is of more interest to me
+to know than anything else in the world."
+
+And suddenly Jack's face flushed with such a wonderful, radiant color
+that Jean caught her breath.
+
+What she saw, however, made her turn her eyes away.
+
+"I will find out for you if I possibly can, Jack," she then replied
+quietly, without asking any further questions or attempting to probe
+the mystery of why Olive's attitude toward their host should be of such
+vital import to Jacqueline Ralston.
+
+"You know though that Olive is desperately shy and reserved," Jean
+added, "and has never confided in anybody except you and Miss Winthrop.
+Don't you think, after all, perhaps Olive likes Donald Harmon more than
+we guess? She and Don would be such a suitable match and her grandmother
+is so anxious for it."
+
+But Jack shook her head. "No, I am afraid not," she returned and was not
+aware of how much the word "afraid" meant to her cousin's ears. "Olive
+told me yesterday that Don had asked her to marry him and that she had
+refused him. She told him that she would take the whole responsibility
+for the refusal upon her shoulders, that she would write her grandmother
+and explain that Don had done his best. The opposition to the plan had
+been hers. So Madame Van Mater must do as she had threatened and leave
+Don the larger share of the fortune. Poor Don was dreadfully broken up
+over Olive's thinking that he had asked her on account of her
+grandmother's desire, or because of the money that they were to share
+if she accepted him. Don honestly loves Olive, I think, though I don't
+believe she returns it in the least. Indeed, Olive told me that she had
+never given up her old plan of going out west to teach the Indians as
+soon as she feels she has learned enough through her studying with Miss
+Winthrop at Primrose Hall. Actually she announced that she was going to
+take a teacher's place there next winter for the experience it would
+give her. But of course I don't think that Olive means this not if she
+cares--if she cares for Frank." Jack got up from the floor. "Dear, I
+won't keep you awake any longer. Only there is one more favor I should
+like to beg. Will you stay with me as much as possible until you can
+find out what I have asked you?"
+
+And Jean only nodded, as her cousin kissed her good-night and went away.
+
+She sat for some time gazing into the fire instead of getting into bed.
+Not a particularly good mathematician in her school days, still Mistress
+Jean had rather a talent for putting two and two together under certain
+circumstances. She had not felt it fair to ask questions of Jack, yet
+there could be nothing disloyal in trying to penetrate a mystery for
+herself. Especially as she should never betray her conclusions.
+
+Jean pondered. In the first place there was not the least doubt in her
+own mind that among the four Ranch girls Frank Kent certainly liked Jack
+best. He always had liked her and it was perfectly plain how much her
+unfortunate affair with Captain Madden and her unkind treatment of him
+had hurt him, although he was not the type of man to betray himself so
+openly as Donald Harmon had. Jack's feeling for Frank, Jean had believed
+until tonight to be merely friendly. They had many of the same
+interests, both loved horses, animals of all kinds, and the business
+that went with the running of a big place like their old ranch or the
+immense estate, which had been in the Kent family for many generations.
+However, since the last hour, Jean was no longer assured of Jack's
+impersonal attitude. There was no doubt that her cousin had in her mind
+at present two fears--one that Olive, her dearest friend, cared for
+Frank, the other that Frank, instead of returning Olive's affection, was
+beginning to fall in love with her. Something must have recently
+occurred to give Jack this impression. Jean did not believe that she
+would ever have attempted to probe Olive's emotions unless this had been
+the case.
+
+So here was the difficulty of the situation according to her train of
+thought. If Olive really did care for Frank Kent, Jean understood
+Jacqueline Ralston well enough to realize that nothing could induce her
+to accept his suit. For Jack would never accept her own happiness at the
+price of another's; and surely not when the other person was her dearest
+friend, for whom she had always felt a kind of protecting devotion.
+
+Yet if Olive did not love Frank, and Jack felt herself able to return
+his affection, it would be both cruel and unnecessary to refuse to
+listen to him.
+
+At last Jean tumbled into her big, four-posted bed; but even then she
+could not go at once to sleep. What a delicate mission she had taken
+upon herself and how ever was she to perform it? For Olive must never
+suspect any possible motive behind her questioning.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+OLIVE'S ANSWER
+
+
+JEAN BRUCE'S task did not prove any simpler than she had anticipated.
+For one thing, events at the castle left little time for leisure or for
+making individual plans of one's own. Almost every hour there were
+visits from the neighbors of surrounding country estates, calls to be
+returned, riding parties, dinners and dances. For the Kents seemed
+determined to give Ruth and the Ranch girls as agreeable an impression
+as possible of English country life. And the time was short, since Ruth
+and Jim were soon to be married.
+
+Undoubtedly Frank's family had taken a decided fancy to his American
+friends, but if one of the number was a greater favorite than the
+others, assuredly it was Jim Colter.
+
+At first Jim had strenuously resented becoming a visitor at Kent Castle.
+The idea of having to hobnob with titles, as he put it, was extremely
+distasteful. He was sure that he would turn out to be an embarrassment
+to Ruth and the girls, and that Frank would be sorry for having invited
+him. Nevertheless, when Ruth, and therefore the four Ranch girls,
+positively refused to leave without him, Jim was compelled to give in.
+And now, when there was no opportunity for the overseer of the Rainbow
+ranch to be with Ruth, he and Lord Kent were inseparable. The two men
+were as unlike as any two extremes could be, and yet they were alike in
+that each man was absolutely himself. Lord Kent represented all that
+money, education and a high position can do; Jim only what good sense, a
+strong heart and energy can accomplish. Yet so far had Jim Colter
+learned to forgive Lord and Lady Kent, that actually he had consented
+that his marriage to Ruth take place from their home and that the
+ceremony be performed at the little English church nearby. He and Ruth
+had both been unwilling to delay their wedding until their return home
+and had also objected to the strangeness of a wedding in London. So now
+everything had been delightfully arranged. They were to be married at
+high noon with the Ranch girls as their attendants and only a few
+intimate friends of their host and hostess present.
+
+Yet, in spite of their expressed wish to have "no fuss or feathers,"
+according to Jim's description, necessarily there were many reasons why
+Jean found it peculiarly hard just then to have her quiet interview
+alone with Olive. Especially when the interview must appear as an
+entirely accidental one.
+
+Nevertheless, Jean did manage to keep one of her promises to her cousin.
+She did very often succeed in interfering with any situation which would
+apparently throw Frank and Jack together without the rest of the party.
+And many times in the face of this, Frank would then seek out Olive's
+companionship. So that in the days of her watchfulness Jean herself
+became more and more puzzled and anxious. Finally, however, came her
+desired opportunity.
+
+Frank had begged as a particular favor that the house party ride or
+drive as they preferred to a famous old ruin in the neighborhood. And
+just as they were about to leave Olive had suddenly pleaded a headache,
+entreating to be left behind. To Jack's and Ruth's requests to remain
+with her, Olive had insisted that she would be far more apt to recover
+if she might stay alone. And as this was a perfectly sensible statement,
+both her friends agreed. Jean, however, made no such offer, said
+nothing of her own intentions, but simply, when the party started, could
+not be found. Nevertheless, she had left a proper explanation with one
+of the servants, so that no time was lost in searching for her.
+
+As Olive had looked really ill, Jean first went for a long walk, hoping
+to give her a chance to recover before having their talk.
+
+Tip-toeing softly in at about four o'clock in the afternoon, she found
+her friend lying on the bed with a shawl thrown over her. And even in
+the semi-light of the great oak chamber Jean could see that Olive's face
+was white, and that there were circles about her eyes.
+
+"I would not have let you come in if I had known who you were. I thought
+you were one of the maids," Olive protested querulously. And her manner
+was so unlike her usual gentle one that the other girl's heart sank.
+
+"I didn't know; I am sorry. I thought you were better or that I might do
+something for you," Jean explained hurriedly, making up her mind not to
+approach the subject she had anticipated for anything in the world.
+
+Then both girls were silent for a few moments. And finally Jean tried to
+slip quietly out of the room.
+
+A voice from the bed called her back. "Don't go, dear. I am sorry I was
+cross. I believe I am homesick today. I have been thinking a whole lot
+of Miss Winthrop and wanting to go back to my own country. Dear me, I am
+glad Ruth and Jim are so soon to be married and we shall then be sailing
+for home!"
+
+Jean smoothed Olive's dark hair back from her lovely Spanish face.
+
+"I am glad Jack is not hearing you say this, Olive child," she
+whispered. "Think how jealous it would make poor Jack feel to hear that
+you felt nearer Miss Winthrop than you do to her. I thought you used to
+love her best."
+
+"I did. I do," Olive replied faintly. "But Jean, haven't you or Ruth
+guessed that we are not going to be able to keep Jack at the old ranch
+always, much as she adores it. Frank Kent is deeply in love with Jack.
+And I believe Jack cares for him. Of course I know you will think this
+strange after the other affair with Captain Madden. But that is just the
+reason why Jack will be able to realize she is in love with Frank. Her
+feeling for him is so entirely different."
+
+Jean was glad that her own face was in shadow. This was her opportunity.
+But what could she, what should she say?
+
+"Why Olive, I don't believe for a moment old Jack cares a great deal
+about Frank," Jean protested, trying to make her manner appear as light
+as possible under the circumstances. "Indeed, I am almost sure of it. It
+must be a fancy on your part, for I am almost sure Jack thinks that
+Frank cares for you."
+
+"Then she is very foolish," Olive returned.
+
+"But why foolish? It seems to me Frank is always preferring to go off
+alone with you. And he always has been tremendously fond of you. Once he
+told me that he thought you quite the prettiest of the four of us."
+
+The other girl laughed. And Jean wondered if it was her imagination or
+if there was a sound in Olive's laugh which she did not like.
+
+"Frank has always cared for Jack. It would have been absurd of me ever
+to have failed to see it. Why, he began caring when we were almost
+children at the ranch. He has always been a good friend to me, but
+nothing else. And lately, if you have suspected anything because we have
+been alone together, it was only because poor Frank wished to talk to me
+about Jack. He does not believe that she cares for him in the least. He
+says that once when he began to try to tell her she stopped him
+immediately. Frank is afraid Jack may still have some feeling about the
+old affair. I have done my best to make him see things differently. And
+he has no right not to make Jack listen to him, even if he believes she
+may refuse him. Deep down in her heart Jack has always cared for Frank.
+Don't you think so yourself, Jean?"
+
+"I--oh, I don't know anything about it. I am so surprised!" Jean
+stammered.
+
+"Frank has asked me to talk to Jack, to find out if she would be wounded
+by his telling her of his love so soon after Captain Madden. But
+somehow, Jean," and here Olive's voice faltered, "I don't believe I know
+how to do it very well. Why, if I began poor Jack might think that I had
+believed Frank in love with me and was telling her this to prove to her
+I had no feeling for him. It would be like old Jack to get some such
+absurd fancy as that into her head. And then, of course, we both know
+that Jack would rather die than give poor Frank the slightest chance."
+
+"But don't you care for Frank?" It was on the tip of Jean Bruce's tongue
+to ask Olive this question. Yet just in time she stopped it.
+
+Never so long as she or any one else lived could this question be put to
+Olive Van Mater. By her own words and manner had she not chosen forever
+to silence it. And actually Jean herself did not know what to think. It
+was so easy in this world to receive a false impression.
+
+"Would you like me to tell Jack then, Olive dear?" Jean queried, for her
+own sake keeping her eyes away from her friend's. "Of course I should
+not dare say anything about Frank's feelings. But I could kind of
+intimate what you have just told me."
+
+Olive drew the cover a little closer about her. "You are awfully good,
+Jean. Yes, that will be best. Now, please, you won't mind if I ask you
+to leave me. And will you make my excuses to Lady Kent at dinner? My
+head really aches too severely for me to come down."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE WEDDING DAY
+
+
+IN England the roses bloom all the summer through. And nowhere are they
+more lovely and plentiful than in the county of Surrey.
+
+So the little English church on the Kent estate was filled one August
+morning with white, pink, red and yellow roses.
+
+Ruth wore a simple white tulle dress and hat. For she did not wish a
+wedding veil, and Jim announced that he did not intend having his Ruth's
+face concealed at the time he most desired to see it.
+
+Olive, Jean and Frieda were bridesmaids, and Jack maid of honor. Frank
+Kent was best man, Richard Grant, Giovanni Colonna and another friend of
+Frank's acted as ushers. Donald Harmon had returned to London,
+explaining that he felt compelled to join his mother and sister there.
+
+Since the bride would have no unnecessary adornments, the Ranch girls'
+toilets were of the same character--French organdies trimmed in Irish
+point lace, and big picture hats. The three bridesmaids wore white, and
+Jack, pale yellow.
+
+Of course Ruth carried a big loose bunch of white roses and the four
+girls yellow ones. Indeed, all the wedding arrangements were perfect in
+their simplicity. There was only one possible flaw in the success of the
+program and that was the behavior of the bridegroom.
+
+For Jim began by insisting in the early days of the preparations that he
+was more than likely to give a cowboy yell of triumph at the conclusion
+of the ceremony, and the day of the wedding rehearsal became so nervous
+and unreasonable that Frieda decided he would never be able to go
+through with the real thing.
+
+Jim did look white as a ghost as he came out into the chancel, supported
+by Frank, to wait for Ruth. The English vested choir was chanting, "Oh,
+Perfect Love;" the atmosphere of the church was heavy with the odor of
+flowers; the light through the old stained glass windows shone dimly
+golden.
+
+There was a moment when Jim Colter had a strange and incongruous
+sensation. What a queer setting this for _his_ wedding! Surely he would
+have felt more at home under a group of tall pines somewhere out in his
+western plains or under the roof of one of their homely neighborhood
+churches.
+
+[Illustration: RUTH STARTED UP THE AISLE ON LORD KENT'S ARM.]
+
+Nevertheless, when Ruth started up the aisle toward him on Lord Kent's
+arm and Jim caught the expression of her face, he did not know or care
+about anything else in the world. Frieda always insisted that he never
+answered the responses, since not a single sound was she able to hear
+fall from his lips. There were other witnesses though, Jack and Frank
+for instance, who agreed that the bridegroom did mutter "I will" at the
+critical moment after being prompted by the bride. So that Frieda was
+finally persuaded to believe that the ceremony was fairly legal.
+
+Back at the castle Ruth had entreated that they need have only the
+family to breakfast with them. Mr. and Mrs. Colter were leaving in
+little more than an hour for London to take the train to Harwich and
+cross on the night boat for Holland, where they meant to spend their
+week of honeymoon. And Ruth had also said that she wanted a few quiet
+moments alone with each one of the girls.
+
+The marriage was probably as satisfactory a one as had ever taken place,
+yet unquestionably the bride and the four Ranch girls were uncommonly
+teary all during the wedding feast. Indeed, Frieda actually sniffled
+when she drew the thimble from the cake proclaiming that she would be
+the old maid of the group, and only recovered when Olive insisted that
+some mistake had been made and exchanged the ring for the thimble.
+
+But Jim had entirely regained his spirits, and he and Frank devoted
+their best energies toward making the breakfast party as cheerful as
+possible. Nevertheless, both Jean and Olive guessed that Frank Kent was
+not so gay as he pretended to be. For his brown eyes had a way of
+looking grave, even while he was actually laughing. And at least one of
+the two girls believed that he had a definite purpose in his mind, which
+must be accomplished before the day was past.
+
+By and by Ruth slipped away to her room, asking that Jack be alone with
+her for the first five minutes, and then that each one of the other
+girls follow in turn, according to age.
+
+Because Jim liked her best in the colors that he had been used to seeing
+her wear in the old times at the ranch, Ruth's traveling costume was as
+Puritanical a gray as in her most nun-like New England days. But the
+hat was a coquettish Parisian creation with a pink rose under the brim.
+Besides, Ruth's expression had so changed in the last weeks that there
+was no chance of her ever again suggesting an old maid.
+
+She had only taken off her wedding gown, however, when Jack, putting her
+arms about her, stooped to kiss her.
+
+"Ruth, dearest," Jack announced, holding the older woman at a little
+distance from her, "I want to tell you again that nothing that has ever
+happened to me in my whole life had made me so happy as your marriage to
+Jim. I know I have always given both of you about twice as much trouble
+as the other three of us. Yet I kind of feel it has been made up to you
+by having known each other through your coming to teach us at the Lodge.
+But I am grown-up now, I think. And this last experience has taught me
+more than any of you can guess. If you and Jim can make up your minds to
+live on at the old ranch I will try my best never to be a nuisance
+again, not if I live to be a hundred years old!"
+
+"Do you expect to live always at Rainbow Lodge, Jack?" Ruth asked,
+smiling, but watching Jack's face pretty closely.
+
+Jack nodded. "I don't think I shall dare trust myself again."
+
+But Ruth shook her gently. "That is what I wanted to speak to you about
+alone, dear. It was a foolish fancy of mine, wishing to say farewell to
+each one of you this way. You must remember how much happiness I have
+kept from Jim and myself because of a mistaken idea. Don't repeat it, my
+dear. If ever you feel you can care a great deal for any one and that
+your love is returned, don't get any silly fancies in your head. Don't
+let your one mistake--"
+
+"But, Ruth," Jack interrupted, more seriously than the older woman had
+expected, "suppose your foolish fancy happened to be connected with some
+one else? Suppose you could only be happy at another's expense! You see,
+you never had a rival in Jim's affections."
+
+"And I never would have paid any attention to her if I had," Ruth
+replied so emphatically that her companion laughed. "If a man loves a
+woman and she loves him, that is the end of it. The third person I am
+afraid is the one that must suffer. For can't you see that she must
+suffer any way if her affection is not returned!"
+
+There was no thought in Ruth's mind at the present moment that Jack's
+words had any special bearing on her own case. For although Ruth and Jim
+had suspected Frank's feeling for Jack, their imaginations had gone no
+further. Indeed, they were both afraid that the girl had no more than a
+passing affection for her former friend.
+
+Ruth now walked over toward her mirror to fasten a diamond brooch in her
+dress, which had been the Ranch girls' engagement present.
+
+"I believe our time alone is almost up, and Olive will be appearing in
+another moment. But Jim and I have a gift for each one of you which we
+want you to keep always if you can in remembrance of our wedding day."
+
+And Jack noticed that there were four jewel cases side by side on Ruth's
+bureau, a white, a green, a blue and a scarlet one.
+
+Ruth opened the white one first and clasped a string of pearls about
+Jack's throat. Then before the oldest of the Ranch girls could thank
+her, she gave her a gentle push toward her bedroom door.
+
+"Go now, Jack, I hear Olive outside. And promise not to let any one shed
+a single tear when Jim and I drive away."
+
+Olive flung her arms about the bride with more emotion than Ruth had
+ever seen her show. "I wish I could say things like the other girls!"
+she exclaimed. "But oh, Ruth, you do understand how grateful I am to you
+and Mr. Colter for all you have done for me? Because, however kind the
+girls wanted to be, they could not have succeeded without your aid and
+Jim's."
+
+"You are as dear as the other girls to me, Olive, I know no difference
+between you," Ruth answered, choking a little over Olive's unusual
+display of feeling. And as she clasped an emerald chain about her neck
+she whispered, "I can hope in return that some day you may be as happy
+as I am."
+
+Olive said nothing; only shook her dark head quietly, but before Ruth
+could speak again, Jean danced into the room.
+
+"Jack stayed so long there won't be any good by turns for Frieda and
+me," she pouted, "unless Olive comes away at once. Jim is already raging
+up and down the veranda like a bear, saying that he is sure you will
+miss the train."
+
+Jean's gift was a necklace of sapphires set with tiny diamonds in
+between. And Ruth had only a chance to kiss her favorite Ranch girl
+(for Jean was her favorite, though she would never have admitted it) and
+whisper:
+
+"If you don't leave Giovanni alone while we are away, I will make Jim
+lock you up alone in your stateroom for the entire voyage home."
+
+Then Frieda, with a slice of wedding cake in her hand, made her
+appearance. "I didn't have a chance to eat hardly any at the table," she
+defended immediately, answering Jean's teasing glance. "Jim says you
+must say what you have to say to me when you get back from your trip,
+Ruth; you simply must come on down now right away."
+
+So Ruth had only time to push the scarlet jewel case into the hand
+Frieda did not have occupied with cake. And begging her to be a good
+baby and not eat too many of Dick's chocolate drops in her absence, she
+hurried off to her impatient bridegroom.
+
+Faithfully the four girls kept their promises and not a tear followed
+the departing carriage. However, when the last sounds of the wheels had
+rolled away they stared at one another as though the world had suddenly
+come to an end.
+
+"Well," Frieda remarked, as she held her pretty chain of rubies in her
+hand, "I must say I never supposed that Ruth and Jim would ever want to
+get married. They _knew_ each other so well. Now take the rest of us.
+Nobody would ever want to marry any one of us except a stranger. Jack is
+too high-tempered and wants her own way too much, Jean is a perfectly
+horrid tease, Olive goes and stays by herself and cries when her
+feelings are hurt--"
+
+The day was saved! The three Ranch girls burst into laughter instead of
+tears, in which Frank and his sisters, who were standing near, joined.
+
+"And what about you, Frieda Ralston?" Jack demanded, pulling at one of
+Frieda's blond curls. "Could anybody ever know you and love you? Tell
+us, because a good many times we have felt the strain."
+
+Frieda blushed slightly. "Oh, I suppose I have some faults," she
+conceded. "But though I suppose Ruth's wedding has made you forget it, I
+would like to mention that I have been cross fewer times than any one of
+us on our European trip. Ruth showed me the record and I am to have the
+prize when she gets back."
+
+In the face of this evidence there was no chance for a dispute, so
+within a few minutes the girls disappeared to their rooms. They were
+tired, and each one of them wanted to be alone and to rest in her own
+particular way.
+
+To Jacqueline resting meant being out of doors, now that she was strong
+again. So within an hour, after the bride and groom's departure, their
+maid of honor slipped down the big oak staircase, arrayed in a very
+different toilet. She wore a short brown corduroy skirt, leather boots
+and leggings, and a soft hat, much the same style of costume that she
+had been accustomed to wearing at the Rainbow Ranch.
+
+Five minutes later she was off across the fields on the riding horse
+which her host had designated for her especial use during her visit. It
+was not a customary thing for an English girl to ride alone;
+nevertheless Jack refused the services of the groom. She knew the
+English roads and lanes in the neighborhood thoroughly well by this
+time. All afternoon she rode, sometimes galloping across an open stretch
+of meadow, often walking her horse along a narrow, wild rose-bordered
+lane.
+
+The English country was fascinating to Jack, perhaps because of its
+utter unlikeness to her own broad, open country. She had been amused at
+first by its smallness, its trimness and look of dignified old age. Yet
+she had since learned to love the wonderful greenness of the English
+landscapes, the quantities of exquisite flowers and trees, such as she
+had never seen in her own land.
+
+Certainly the scenery on this special afternoon must have been unusually
+fascinating, for suddenly Jack realized that the darkness was coming
+down and that she was some distance from the castle. She must not allow
+Lord and Lady Kent to become uneasy on account of her absence. Her horse
+was comparatively fresh; she would enjoy a hard gallop home.
+
+So Jack paid little attention for the first half mile or so to the sound
+of another horse's hoofs pounding after hers. Finally, however, Frank
+got within calling distance. "Look here, Jack," he said, "this style of
+riding after you reminds me of our first meeting on the Norton ranch.
+Remember how you rushed off without allowing me to show you the trail. I
+was pretty well out of breath when I caught up with you then, and I am
+now."
+
+Jack laughed and slowed her horse down a trifle. "No such thing, Frank;
+you look cool as a cucumber. You English people never seem to get upset
+and disheveled as Americans do. But it is awfully jolly, Frank, that you
+are perfectly strong these days. You used to look pretty sick sometimes
+when we first knew you."
+
+"Wyoming gave me two great gifts, Jack; it gave me back my health and it
+gave me my love for you."
+
+Frank said this so quietly and so simply that Jack felt she must have
+been mistaken. Surely she had not understood him! He ought to have given
+her some warning, allowed her a few moments of preparation. She could
+never have imagined that a man could declare his love in such a
+matter-of-fact tone of voice. Jack hardly knew what to do or say.
+Surreptitiously she made a movement of her bridle so that her horse
+quickened his pace.
+
+But Frank's hand reached out and caught hold of hers firmly. "You must
+not run away from me, Jack," he protested. "For you would not like to
+have me ride after you shouting out my love for you for all the
+neighborhood to hear. And if you won't listen to me quietly, that is
+exactly what I will do. Why is it you have been unwilling to listen,
+Jack? If it is only that you don't love me in return, I understand that.
+But a girl like you has got to get used to refusing men."
+
+"Oh, Frank," Jack protested, "please don't say such foolish things."
+
+Nevertheless, she slowed down her horse, seeing that Frank was
+determined that she should listen this time.
+
+"I have loved you always, Jack, from the first day of meeting you. I
+have never cared for any one else. I think it only fair to let you know
+that I mean to make you love me in return some day."
+
+Frank's tone was so quiet and so positive that Jack smiled. She was not
+accustomed to being spoken to in this fashion, but she was not at all
+sure she disliked it.
+
+"Why don't you answer me?" Frank asked a few moments afterwards. "By and
+by, when you have gone back to the ranch, I suppose you know I shall
+follow you. Will you give me my answer then?"
+
+Just for a moment Jack's face turned the warm, radiant color Jean had
+seen there once before. Bending slightly from her horse she took Frank's
+hand that was now hanging at his side and an instant held it close.
+
+"Don't think, Frank, I don't appreciate what you have told me, or that I
+am so cold and unfeeling, as you seem to think I am. It is only that I
+don't know, that there is something I may be mistaken about, that I
+can't trust to any one else's judgment except my own. But, Frank dear,
+if you think I am worth coming across the water and the land to far off
+Wyoming to see, why then, then I shall know what to say."
+
+Frank kissed the hand that had held his the moment before. They were now
+riding up the avenue within a short distance of Kent castle.
+
+"There is no land and no water that can divide us, Jack," Frank
+answered, "if ever there is a chance of my hearing you say you love me
+on the other side."
+
+The fifth and closing volume of the well-known Ranch Girls Series will
+be known as "The Ranch Girls at Home Again."
+
+In this volume the love stories of the four girls will be finally
+concluded. It will also introduce old and new characters at the Rainbow
+Ranch.
+
+
+
+
+Eclipse Series of the Lowest Price Alger Books
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+This low-priced series of books comprises the most popular stories ever
+written by =Horatio Alger, Jr.= As compared with other low-priced
+editions it will be found that the books in this series are better
+printed, on better paper, and better bound than similar books in any
+competing line. Each volume is handsomely and durably bound in cloth
+with new style colored inlay, assorted designs, and stamped in three
+colors of ink. New and attractive colored jackets. 12mo. Cloth. 40
+Titles.
+
+ Adrift in the City
+ Andy Grant's Pluck
+ Ben's Nugget
+ Bob Burton
+ Bound to Rise
+ Boy's Fortune, A
+ Chester Rand
+ Digging for Gold
+ Do and Dare
+ Facing the World
+ Frank and Fearless
+ Frank Hunter's Peril
+ Frank's Campaign
+ Helping Himself
+ Herbert Carter's Legacy
+ In a New World
+ Jack's Ward
+ Jed, the Poorhouse Boy
+ Lester's Luck
+ Luck and Pluck
+
+ Luke Walton
+ Only an Irish Boy
+ Paul Prescott's Charge
+ Paul, the Peddler
+ Phil, the Fiddler
+ Ragged Dick
+ Rupert's Ambition
+ Shifting for Himself
+ Sink or Swim
+ Strong and Steady
+ Struggling Upward
+ Tattered Tom
+ Telegraph Boy, The
+ Victor Vane
+ Wait and Hope
+ Walter Sherwood's Probation
+ Young Bank Messenger, The
+ Young Circus Rider
+ Young Miner, The
+ Young Salesman, The
+
+Price per volume, .60 cents
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO., _Publishers_
+ WINSTON BUILDING PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+EVERY CHILD'S LIBRARY
+
+
+Books "That Every Child Can Read" for Four Reasons:
+
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+ lasting popularity.
+
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+ written.
+
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+ children's reading has been eliminated.
+
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+
+=This Series of Books= comprises subjects that appeal to all young
+people. Besides the historical subjects that are necessary to the
+education of children, it also contains standard books written in
+language that children can read and understand.
+
+=Carefully Edited.= Each work is carefully edited by Rev. Jesse Lyman
+Hurlbut, D.D., to make sure that the style is simple and suitable for
+Young Readers, and to eliminate anything which might be objectionable.
+Dr. Hurlbut's large and varied experience in the instruction of young
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+
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+
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+
+ * * * * *
+
+LIST OF TITLES
+
+ DICKENS' STORIES ABOUT CHILDREN. Every Child can read
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+ STORIES OF OUR NAVAL HEROES. Every Child can read
+ STORY OF JESUS, THE. Every Child can read
+ STORY OF OUR COUNTRY, THE. Every Child can read
+
+(Others in preparation)
+
+ =CATALOGUE MAILED ON APPLICATION=
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO., _Publishers_
+ WINSTON BUILDING PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+NEW EDITION OF ALGER'S GREATEST SET OF BOOKS
+
+ --THE--
+ Famous Ragged Dick Series
+
+NEW TYPE-SET PLATES MADE IN 1910
+
+
+In response to a demand for a popular-priced edition of this series of
+books--the most famous set ever written by =Horatio Alger, Jr.=--this
+edition has been prepared.
+
+Each volume is set in large, new type, printed on an excellent quality
+of paper, and bound in uniform style, having an entirely new and
+appropriate cover design, with heavy gold stamp.
+
+As is well known, the books in this series are copyrighted, and
+consequently none of them will be found in any other publisher's list.
+
+RAGGED DICK SERIES. By Horatio Alger, Jr. 6 vols.
+
+ RAGGED DICK
+ FAME AND FORTUNE
+ MARK, THE MATCH BOY
+ ROUGH AND READY
+ BEN, THE LUGGAGE BOY
+ RUFUS AND ROSE
+
+Each set is packed in a handsome box
+
+12mo. Cloth
+
+ Sold only in sets Price per set, =$6.00=. Postpaid
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RECOMMENDED BY REAR ADMIRAL MELVILLE, WHO COMMANDED THREE EXPEDITIONS TO
+THE ARCTIC REGIONS
+
+
+ --THE--
+ New Popular Science Series
+
+BY PROF. EDWIN J. HOUSTON
+
+=THE NORTH POLE SERIES.= By Prof. Edwin J, Houston. This is an entirely
+new series, which opens a new field in Juvenile Literature. Dr. Houston
+has spent a lifetime in teaching boys the principles of physical and
+scientific phenomena and knows how to talk and write for them in a way
+that is most attractive. In the reading of these stories the most
+accurate scientific information will be absorbed.
+
+ THE SEARCH FOR THE NORTH POLE
+ THE DISCOVERY OF THE NORTH POLE
+ CAST AWAY AT THE NORTH POLE
+
+ Handsomely bound. The volumes, 12mo. in size, are bound in
+ Extra English Cloth, and are attractively stamped in colors and
+ full gold titles. Sold separately or in sets, boxed.
+
+ Price $1.00 per volume. Postpaid
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO., _Publishers_
+ WINSTON BUILDING PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+Harry Castlemon's Books for Boys
+
+
+NEW POPULAR EDITION
+
+[Illustration]
+
+This series comprises thirty titles of the =best stories= ever written
+by =Harry Castlemon=. But few of these titles have ever been published
+in low-priced editions, many of them are copyright titles which will not
+be found in any other publisher's list. We now offer them in this =new
+low-priced edition=. The books are printed on an excellent quality of
+paper, and have an entirely new and handsome cover design, with new
+style colored inlay on front cover, and stamped in ink. 12mo. Cloth. 30
+titles.
+
+ =A Sailor in Spite of Himself=
+ =Buried Treasure=
+ =Carl, the Trailer=
+ =Floating Treasure, The=
+ =Frank, the Young Naturalist=
+ =Frank Among the Rancheros=
+ =Frank Before Vicksburg=
+ =Frank in the Mountains=
+ =Frank in the Woods=
+ =Frank on a Gunboat=
+ =Frank on Don Carlos' Rancho=
+ =Frank on the Lower Mississippi=
+ =Frank on the Prairie=
+ =Haunted Mine, The=
+ =Houseboat Boys, The=
+ =Mail Carrier=
+ =Marcy, The Refugee=
+ =Missing Pocketbook, The=
+ =Mystery of the Lost River Canyon, The=
+ =Oscar in Africa=
+ =Rebellion in Dixie=
+ =Rod and Gun Club=
+ =Rodney, the Overseer=
+ =Rodney, the Partisan=
+ =Steel Horse=
+ =Ten-Ton Cutter, The=
+ =Tom Newcomb=
+ =Two Ways of Becoming a Hunter=
+ =White Beaver, The=
+ =Young Game Warden, The=
+
+=THE VOLUMES IN THIS SERIES COMPRISE SOME OF THE BEST WRITINGS OF THIS
+POPULAR AUTHOR=
+
+=Price per volume, .75 cents=
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO., _Publishers_
+ WINSTON BUILDING PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+ ROD AND GUN CLUB SERIES
+ By HARRY CASTLEMON
+ Price 75 cents per volume
+
+ Don Gordon's Shooting Box
+ Rod and Gun Club
+ The Young Wild Fowler
+
+
+ DEERFOOT SERIES
+ By EDWARD S. ELLIS
+ Price 75 cents per volume
+
+ Hunters of the Ozark
+ Camp in the Mountains
+ The Last War Trail
+
+
+ NEW DEERFOOT SERIES
+ By EDWARD S. ELLIS
+ Price 75 cents per volume
+
+ Deerfoot in the Forest
+ Deerfoot in the Mountains
+ Deerfoot on the Prairie
+
+
+ BOY PIONEER SERIES
+ By EDWARD S. ELLIS
+ Price 75 cents per volume
+
+ Ned in the Blockhouse
+ Ned on the River
+ Ned in the Woods
+
+
+ LOG CABIN SERIES
+ By EDWARD S. ELLIS
+ Price 75 cents per volume
+
+ Lost Trail
+ Camp Fire and Wigwam
+ Footprints in the Forest
+
+
+ RAGGED DICK SERIES
+ By HORATIO ALGER
+ Price 75 cents per volume
+
+ Ragged Dick
+ Fame and Fortune
+ Mark, the Match Boy
+ Rough and Ready
+ Ben, the Luggage Boy
+ Rufus and Rose
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO., _Publishers_
+ WINSTON BUILDING PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+Universally APPROVED BOOKS for Boys
+
+[Illustration]
+
+A collection of books by well known authors that have been generally
+approved by competent critics and library committees as safe books for
+young people.
+
+=WORLD FAMOUS BOOKS FOR BOYS=
+
+
+ JACK HAZARD SERIES
+ By J. T. TROWBRIDGE
+ Price $1.25 per volume
+
+ Jack Hazard and His Fortunes
+ A Chance for Himself
+ Doing His Best
+ Fast Friends
+ The Young Surveyor
+ Lawrence's Adventures
+
+
+ FRANK NELSON SERIES
+ By HARRY CASTLEMON
+ Price 75 cents per volume
+
+ Snowed Up
+ Frank in the Forecastle
+ The Boy Traders
+
+
+ SPORTSMAN CLUB SERIES
+ By HARRY CASTLEMON
+ Price 75 cents per volume
+
+ The Sportsman Club in the Saddle
+ The Sportsman Club Afloat
+ The Sportsman Club Among the Trappers
+
+
+ ROUGHING IT SERIES
+ By HARRY CASTLEMON
+ Price 75 cents per volume
+
+ George in Camp
+ George at the Fort
+ George at the Wheel
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+LAUNCH BOYS SERIES
+
+ Launch Boys' Cruise in the Deerfoot
+ Launch Boys' Adventures in
+ Northern Waters
+
+
+ARIZONA SERIES
+
+ Off the Reservation
+ Trailing Geronimo
+ The Round Up
+
+
+FLYING BOYS SERIES
+
+ The Flying Boys in the Sky
+ The Flying Boys to the Re
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+CATAMOUNT CAMP SERIES
+
+ Captain of the Camp
+ Catamount Camp
+
+ 12mo. Cloth. Illustrated.
+
+ Price per volume, 45 cents
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE JOHN C. WINSTON CO., _Publishers_
+ WINSTON BUILDING PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+ NOTABLE NOVELS _and_
+ GIFT BOOKS OF VERSE
+
+ _BY_ JOHN TROTWOOD MOORE
+
+
+JACK BALLINGTON, FORESTER
+
+The story concerns the fortunes of Jack Ballington, who, on account of
+his apparent lack of fighting qualities, seems to be in danger of losing
+his material heritage and the girl he loves, but in the stirring crisis
+he measures up to the traditions of his forefathers.
+
+ "Will captivate by its humor, set all the heart
+ strings to vibrating by its pathos, flood one's
+ being in the great surge of patriotism ... a story
+ that vastly enriches American fiction."--_Albany
+ Times-Union._
+
+ =12 mo.= =Cloth.= =341 pages=
+ =Price= $1.20 Net. Postage 13 cents.
+
+
+THE BISHOP OF COTTONTOWN
+
+A STORY OF THE TENNESSEE VALLEY
+
+Love, pathos and real humor run through the book in delightful measure.
+Over all is shed the light of the "Old Bishop," endearing himself to
+every reader by his gentleness, his strength and his uncynical knowledge
+of the world which he finds so good to live in. 31 editions have already
+been sold.
+
+ =12mo.= =Cloth.= =606 pages=
+ =Price= $1.50 Postpaid.
+
+
+UNCLE WASH: HIS STORIES
+
+A book of stories centering about the character of "Uncle Wash," which
+even in the brief time since its publication has achieved a large and
+notable success among all classes of readers. Many editions have already
+been sold.
+
+ "One of the few great books."--_Rochester Union
+ and Advertiser._
+
+ "A mine of humor and pathos."--_Omaha
+ World-Herald._
+
+ =12mo.= =Cloth.= =329 pages=
+ =Price= $1.50 Postpaid
+
+
+A SUMMER HYMNAL
+
+A ROMANCE OF TENNESSEE
+
+The story of Edward Ballington and his love affairs with two delightful
+girls in charming contrast, forms the plot of this captivating love
+story. On the threads of
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Note: Two different copies of this book were searched and
+both end in the middle of the final ad.
+
+Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
+
+Page 80, "rock" changed to "Rock" (historic Rock)
+
+Page 85, "along side" changed to "alongside" (anchoring alongside the)
+
+Page 166, "chaperone" changed to "chaperon" to match rest of usage
+(turned to her chaperon)
+
+Page 201, "to night" changed to "tonight" (theater party tonight)
+
+Advertising page, Harry Castlemon's Books, "the" changed to "The"
+(Houseboat Boys, The)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Ranch Girls in Europe, by Margaret Vandercook
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RANCH GIRLS IN EUROPE ***
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