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diff --git a/19318.txt b/19318.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d60142c --- /dev/null +++ b/19318.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6084 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Outdoor Girls in the Saddle, by Laura Lee +Hope + + +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 Outdoor Girls in the Saddle + Or, The Girl Miner of Gold Run + + +Author: Laura Lee Hope + + + +Release Date: September 18, 2006 [eBook #19318] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OUTDOOR GIRLS IN THE SADDLE*** + + +E-text prepared by Marilynda Fraser-Cunliffe, Emmy, and the Project +Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net) + + + +Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this + file which includes the original illustrations. + See 19318-h.htm or 19318-h.zip: + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/9/3/1/19318/19318-h/19318-h.htm) + or + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/9/3/1/19318/19318-h.zip) + + + + + +THE OUTDOOR GIRLS IN THE SADDLE + +or The Girl Miner of Gold Run + +by + +LAURA LEE HOPE + +Author of "The Outdoor Girls of Deepdale," "The Outdoor Girls at Wild +Rose Lodge," "The Moving Picture Girls," "The Bobbsey Twins," "Bunny +Brown and His Sister Sue," "Six Little Bunkers at Grandma Bell's," Etc. + +Illustrated + + + + + + + +New York +Grosset & Dunlap +Publishers +Made in the United States of America + + + * * * * * + + +BOOKS FOR GIRLS + +BY LAURA LEE HOPE + + * * * * * + +12mo. Cloth. Illustrated. + + * * * * * + +THE OUTDOOR GIRLS SERIES + + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS OF DEEPDALE + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS AT RAINBOW LAKE + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS IN A MOTOR CAR + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS IN A WINTER CAMP + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS IN FLORIDA + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS AT OCEAN VIEW + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS ON PINE ISLAND + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS IN ARMY SERVICE + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS AT THE HOSTESS HOUSE + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS AT BLUFF POINT + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS AT WILD ROSE LODGE + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS IN THE SADDLE + + * * * * * + +THE MOVING PICTURE GIRLS SERIES + + THE MOVING PICTURE GIRLS AT OAK FARM + THE MOVING PICTURE GIRLS SNOWBOUND + THE MOVING PICTURE GIRLS UNDER THE PALMS + THE MOVING PICTURE GIRLS AT ROCKY RANCH + THE MOVING PICTURE GIRLS AT SEA + THE MOVING PICTURE GIRLS IN WAR PLAYS + + * * * * * + +THE BOBBSEY TWINS SERIES + +(Fifteen Titles) + + * * * * * + +THE BUNNY BROWN SERIES + +(Twelve Titles) + + * * * * * + +SIX LITTLE BUNKERS SERIES + +(Eight Titles) + + + * * * * * + + +Grosset & Dunlap, Publishers, New York +Copyright, 1922, by Grosset & Dunlap + + + * * * * * + + + +THE OUTDOOR GIRLS IN THE SADDLE + +[Illustration: A LANDSLIDE--AND THEY WERE DIRECTLY IN ITS PATH! + +_The Outdoor Girls in the Saddle._ _Frontispiece_--(_Page_ 96)] + + + + +CONTENTS + + CHAPTER PAGE + + I A SUMMER IN THE SADDLE 1 + + II GREAT HOPES 9 + + III ENTER PETER LEVINE 22 + + IV AN IMITATION HOLD-UP 33 + + V THE HANDSOME COWBOY 43 + + VI AT THE RANCH 52 + + VII A SUDDEN STORM 62 + + VIII ALONG THE TRAIL 72 + + IX DANGER AHEAD 81 + + X THE LANDSLIDE 88 + + XI IN THE CAVE 97 + + XII IN THE DARKNESS 106 + + XIII THE LURE OF GOLD 112 + + XIV A DISCOVERY 120 + + XV ALLEN ARRIVES 129 + + XVI A TIP 137 + + XVII THE NET TIGHTENS 145 + + XVIII IN THE SHADOWS 154 + + XIX THE NEW MINE 165 + + XX THE VIOLINIST AGAIN 173 + + XXI A STARTLING TALE 180 + + XXII THE PLAN 188 + + XXIII GREAT DAYS 198 + + XXIV THE END OF PETER LEVINE 202 + + XXV INNOCENT 210 + + + + +THE OUTDOOR GIRLS IN THE SADDLE + + + + +CHAPTER I + +A SUMMER IN THE SADDLE + + +"Hello, hello! Oh, what is the matter with central!" + +The dark-haired, pink-cheeked girl at the telephone jiggled the receiver +impatiently while a straight line of impatience marred her pretty mouth. + +"Oh dear, oh dear!" + +"At last! Is that you, Mollie Billette? I've been trying to get you for +the last half hour. What's that? You've been home all morning twiddling +your thumbs and wondering what to do with yourself? Of course! I knew it +was central's fault all the time! Now listen! Goodness, what are you +having over at your house? A jazz dance or something? I can hardly hear +you speak for the noise." + +"No, it isn't a dance," came back Mollie's voice wearily from the other +end of the wire. "It's just the twins. They want to talk to you. Hold +the wire a minute while I shut them in the other room." + +Followed a silence during which Betty Nelson could distinctly hear the +wails of Mollie's little brother and sister as they were ushered +forcibly into an adjoining room. Then Mollie's voice again at the phone. + +"Hello," she said. "Still there, Betty? Guess I can hear you a little +better now. Mother's out, and I've been taking care of the twins. Just +rescued the cat from being dumped head down in the flour barrel." + +"Sounds natural," laughed the dark-haired, pink-cheeked one, as she +visualized Mollie's little brother and sister, Dodo and Paul. They were +twins, and always in trouble. + +"Anything special you called up about?" asked Mollie's voice from the +other end of the wire. "Want to go for a ride or something?" + +"Not the kind of ride you mean," said the brown-eyed, pink-cheeked one, +with a knowing little smile on her lips. + +At the lilt in her voice Mollie, at her end of the wire, sat up and +stared inquiringly into the black mouth of the telephone. + +"Betty," she said hopefully, "you are hiding something from me. You +have something up your sleeve." + +"You're right and wrong," giggled Betty. "I'm hiding something from you, +but I can't get it up my sleeve, it's too big!" + +"Hurry up!" commanded Mollie in terrific accents. "Are you going to tell +me what's on your mind, Betty Nelson?" + +"When will you be around?" countered Betty. + +"In five minutes." + +"Good!" + +"Betty, wait! Is it good news?" + +"The best ever," and Betty rang off. + +She twinkled at the telephone for a minute, then called another number. + +"That you, Gracie?" + +The fair-haired, tall, and very graceful girl at the other end of the +wire acknowledged that it was. + +"Please suggest something interesting, Betty," she added plaintively, as +she took a chocolate from the ever-present candy box and nibbled on it +discontentedly. "I woke up with the most awful attack of the blues this +morning." + +"What, with a whole summer full of blessed idleness before you?" mocked +Betty. + +"Too much idleness," grumbled Grace. "That's the trouble." + +"Enter," said Betty drolly, "Doctor Elizabeth Nelson." + +Grace digested this remark for a moment, staring at the telephone in +much the same manner as Mollie had done a few minutes before. Then she +swallowed the last of her chocolate in such haste that it almost choked +her. + +"Betty," she said, "I have heard you use that tone before. Is there +really something in the wind?" + +"Come and see," said Betty and a click at the other end of the wire told +Grace that the conversation was over. + +"Oh bother!" she cried, her pretty forehead drawn into a frown. "Now I +suppose I've got to get dressed and go over there before I can find out +what she meant." + +In the hall she nearly ran into her mother, who was dressed to go out. +Mrs. Ford was a handsome woman, prominent in the social circles of +Deepdale. She was kindly and sympathetic, and all who knew her loved +her. + +So now, as she regarded her mother, a loving smile erased the frown from +Grace's forehead. + +"I declare, Mother, you look younger than I do," she said fondly. +"Whither away so early?" + +"The art club, this morning," replied Mrs. Ford, her eyes approving the +fair prettiness of her daughter. "Are you going out? I thought you were +deep in that new book." + +"I was," said Grace, with a sigh for what might have been. "But Betty +called up and said she wanted me to come over. There's something in the +wind, that's sure, but she wouldn't give me even the teeniest little +hint of what it was. I wasn't going at first, but I----" + +"Thought better of it," finished Mrs. Ford, with a smile. "Better go," +she added, as she opened the door. "My experience with Betty Nelson is +that she usually has something interesting to say. Good-by, dear. If any +one should 'phone while you are here, will you tell them that I shan't +be back till late afternoon?" + +Grace promised that she would and moved slowly up the stairs. + +Meanwhile Amy Blackford, the last of the trio to whom the dark-haired, +pink-cheeked little person who was Betty Nelson had telephoned, had +stopped merely to remove the apron from in front of her pink-checked +gingham dress and was now flying along the two short blocks that +separated her house from the Nelsons'. + +As for poor Mollie Billette, she was nearly distracted. Torn with +curiosity, as that young person very often was, to know the facts that +had prompted Betty's early call, she yet could not satisfy that +curiosity. When she had told Betty that she would be around in five +minutes she had fully meant to make that promise good. But--she had +forgotten the twins! + +Upon entering the room where she had locked them while she talked to +Betty, she found a sight that fairly took her breath away. + +Unfortunately, some one had left an open bottle of ink on the table. One +of the twins, deciding to play "savages," had pounced upon the ink +bottle as a means of making the play more realistic! + +"Oh, Dodo! Oh, Paul! How could you be so naughty?" moaned Mollie, +sinking to the floor, while the tears of exasperation rolled down her +face. + +"Paul did it," accused Dodo, waving a pudgy, ink-stained little fist in +the direction of her brother. "He said, 'let's use this ink and play +we're savagers----'" + +It was upon this scene that Mollie's little French-American mother, Mrs. +Billette, came a moment later. + +"Oh! Oh!" she cried, raising her hands in the French gesture all French +people know so well. "What is this? Mollie, have you gone quite mad?" + +Whereupon Mollie shook the tears of woe from her eyes and explained to +her mother just what had happened. + +"And I was in such a hurry to get to Betty's," she finished dismally. "I +just know she has something exciting to tell us. And now I don't suppose +I will get there for hours." + +"Oh yes, you will," said Mrs. Billette, with the delicious, almost +imperceptible, accent she had. "The ink has not yet dried, and luckily +there is not much about the room. Run along, dear. I fully realize," she +added, with the smile that made Mollie adore her, "that this, with you, +is a very important occasion." + +"And you are the most precious mother in the world!" cried Mollie, +flinging young arms about her mother and giving her a joyful hug. "I +might have known you would understand." And before the words were fairly +out of her mouth she was flying up the stairs. + +When she reached Betty's house at last, out of breath but happy, she +found that Grace and Amy were there before her. She found them all, +including Betty, up in Betty's room, a pretty place done in ivory and +blue, awaiting her coming as patiently as they could. + +"Betty wouldn't tell us a thing until you came," was the greeting Grace +flung at her. + +"So don't be surprised if you aren't very popular around here," laughed +Betty, sitting very straight in her wicker chair, feet stretched out and +crossed in front of her, hands tightly clasped in her lap. Her face was +a pretty picture of animation. + +"Who cares for popularity?" cried Mollie, as she flung her sport hat on +the bed and turned to face Betty. "Betty Nelson, bring out that +surprise." + +"Who said it was a surprise?" asked Betty tantalizingly, but the next +minute her face sobered and she regarded the girls gravely. + +"Girls," she said, "I think I see a chance for the most glorious outing +we have had yet. How would you like----" she paused and regarded the +expectant girls thoughtfully. "How would you like a summer _in the +saddle_?" + +"In the saddle?" repeated Grace wonderingly, but Mollie broke in with a +quick: + +"Betty, do you mean on horseback?" + +"Real horses?" breathed Amy Blackford. + +"Yes," said Betty, nodding. "That's just exactly what I mean." + + + + +CHAPTER II + +GREAT HOPES + + +"But where are we to do all this?" asked Grace skeptically. "Is somebody +giving away steeds for the asking? Wake me up, somebody, when Betty gets +through dreaming." + +"Keep still, you old wet blanket," cried Mollie. "Can't you see Betty is +really in earnest?" + +"Never mind them," said Amy, leaning a little breathlessly toward Betty. +"Let them fight it out between themselves. What is the great news, +Betty?" + +"It _is_ great news," said Betty radiantly. "Listen, my children. Mother +has received a legacy from a great uncle that she had almost forgotten +she had." + +"Money?" queried Grace, interested. + +"No, that's the best part of it," said Betty. "Oh, girls, it's a ranch, +a great big beautiful ranch in the really, truly west!" + +"Honest-to-goodness, wild and woolly?" queried Mollie, beaming. + +"Better than that," answered Betty with the same lilt to her voice that +the girls had heard over the telephone. "I shouldn't wonder if we should +find the real old-fashioned, movie kind of cowboys there--sombreros, fur +leggings, bandannas, and all." + +"But where," interrupted Mollie, who had been waiting with more or less +patience for Betty to come to the point, "do we come in, in all this? I +fail to see----" + +"Oh hush," cried Betty, her eyes dancing. "You interrupt entirely too +much. Where do we come in, she wants to know," she paused to bestow a +beaming glance on Grace and Amy. "That's the biggest joke of all. Where +do we come in? Why, honey dear, we're the whole show!" + +"The whole show," they murmured, beginning to see the light. + +"You bet," said the brown-haired, rosy-checked one slangily. "Now +listen. I think I've about argued mother and dad around to the point +where they'll agree to let us have the use of this wild and woolly +rancho for a real outdoor adventure. How does that idea strike you?" + +"Listen to the child," cried Mollie pityingly. "Such a question!" + +"It would be heavenly!" raved Grace. "Think of riding around all day in +fur leggings and a sombrero. Wide hats are always becoming to me," she +added musingly. + +The girls laughed and Betty threw a pillow at her, missing her by a +hair's breadth. + +"You needn't worry about your hat," laughed Betty. "Reckon there won't +be anybody around there to admire you but Indians and broncho busters." + +"Oh, aren't the boys coming?" Grace asked, her disappointment in her +voice. + +"They haven't been asked, silly," Mollie interrupted impatiently. "Tell +me, Betty," she cried, turning to the Little Captain. "Is it really +certain that we'll have this chance?" + +"No, it isn't," admitted Betty, her bright face sobering. "That's why I +don't want you to get too excited about it. You see," her voice lowered +confidentially, "dad might decide to sell it." + +"Sell it!" they cried in dismay, and Grace added, with a decision that +made the girls laugh: + +"Oh, he mustn't do that until the fall, anyway." + +"All right, Gracie," said Betty, with a chuckle. "I'll give dad his +orders." + +"But why does he want to sell it, Betty?" Amy questioned. + +"We-el," said the Little Captain slowly. "You see mother has already +received an offer of fifteen thousand dollars for it. There's a ranchman +out there, I think his name is John Josephs, or some such name, who +seems to want to get hold of our ranch. So his lawyers have offered +mother fifteen thousand for it." + +"That's a pretty good lot of money," said Amy thoughtfully. + +"Yes, it is," agreed Betty. "And dad seems to think that the best thing +mother could do would be to take the money and get rid of the ranch. He +says it will be a sort of white elephant on our hands, since there isn't +very much chance of our going out there to live," she ended, with a +chuckle. + +"Well," said Grace, with an injured air, "I don't see why you called us +all over here just to disappoint us. If your father is going to sell the +place, then we certainly sha'n't be able to make ourselves beautiful +with bandannas and picturesque hats----" + +"Ah, but you did not let me finish," hissed Betty, melodramatically. "We +have one ally--my mother." + +"Your mother!" cried Mollie, eagerly. "Then she doesn't want to sell the +ranch?" + +"Right, the first time," cried Betty hilariously. "I think mother has a +sneaking notion that she might look pretty good in a cowboy make-up +herself. You see," she added, with a twinkle, "mother has never had a +chance to own a real honest-to-goodness ranch before." + +"Oh, isn't she sweet!" cried Mollie fervently, adding, as one to whom +inspiration had come: "I tell you what, Betty, we'll take her with us!" + +"How sweet of you," drawled Grace. "Especially since the ranch belongs +to her!" + +The other girls chuckled and Mollie looked rather sheepish. + +"Oh, well," she admitted, "I guess it would be a case of her taking us +along." + +"And I don't envy her the job," said gentle Amy unexpectedly, while the +girls gazed their reproach. + +"Betty," said Mollie, "there is one very important thing that I would +like to know." + +"Well, I'm the original little information bureau," Betty assured her. +"What will you have?" + +"Does your dad really want to sell the ranch? Or is your mother likely +to win out?" + +"Oh, mother always gets her way," said Betty confidently, adding: +"Besides, the ranch was left to mother, you know, and not to dad. So +really she has the say about it." + +"Yes, but she might change her mind," said Grace pessimistically. +"Fifteen thousand dollars is a lot of money, you know. She might decide +to sell the ranch, after all." + +"Well," said Betty, with an air of importance that the girls were quick +to notice, "there is another reason why mother will probably hold on to +the property, for a little while at least." + +"Yes?" they queried eagerly. + +"You see," Betty continued thoughtfully, "mother has an idea that this +John Josephs is a little too anxious to buy the ranch. It's right up in +the gold region, you know----" + +"Gold!" shrieked Mollie. "You never said a word about gold, Betty +Nelson! Do you mean there may be gold----" + +"Now she _is_ getting interesting," admitted Grace, shaken out of her +usual calm. + +"How romantic," murmured Amy, breathing fast. + +"Yes," said Betty ruefully. "That's what dad says mother is--romantic! +He says there isn't a chance in a thousand that there is real gold +anywhere near that ranch----" + +"Stop, woman, stop!" cried Mollie, with her most tragic scowl. "Wouldst +put an end to all our dreams in one fell swoop----" + +"Probably that is all we shall do--just dream," said Betty, insisting +upon being practical. "It's an idea of mother's, that's all. But she is +really determined to see the ranch, at least, before she makes up her +mind whether to sell or not. In fact," she hesitated, colored a little, +then went on bravely, "dad has decided to send Allen out there to look +up the title. There is some trouble about that, I think----" + +"Oh, now we know why she is so anxious to be a little cow girl," teased +Grace, while the others regarded Betty's pretty color gleefully. + +"Oh, Betty, Betty!" cried Mollie, shaking her head dolefully, "you are +altogether hopeless!" + +For Allen Washburn, of whom Betty had spoken in connection with the +ranch, was a very promising young lawyer. Also this promising young +lawyer was very fond of Betty Nelson. And while the girls are shaking +their heads over this fact a little time will be taken to describe the +Outdoor Girls to those readers who have not already met them and to +review briefly the many and varied adventures they had had up to this +time. + +Betty Nelson, dark-haired, dark-eyed, and rosy-cheeked, was the natural +leader of the four Outdoor Girls, a fact which had led to her being +dubbed "Little Captain" by the adoring girls. Betty's father, Charles +Nelson, had made a good deal of money in his manufacture of carpets, +and Betty's mother was a very sweet lady whom the name of Rose fitted +exactly. + +Next came Mollie Billette, dark-haired and with snapping black eyes, who +was almost as French in her manner as her very French mother. + +Readers of the present volume must already feel very well acquainted +with Grace Ford. Grace was the Gibson type, tall and slender and +fair-haired and very pretty, with a decided liking for looking in +mirrors. + +Last of the quartette came Amy Blackford. Amy was the ward of John and +Sarah Stonington, and for a long time she had thought her own name was +Stonington. The mystery of her past had been cleared up, however, and +Amy had come into her own. Shy, gentle, sweet, she was beloved and +protected by the more hardy and active Betty and Mollie. And Amy, as shy +girls sometimes will, had begun to think very much of Grace Ford's +attractive brother, Will--which is a reminder that it is time to +introduce "the boys." + +Allen Washburn and his open fondness for Betty have already been spoken +of. Allen was tall, nearly six feet. Sunburned and handsome of face and +quick of action, Allen attracted every one wherever he went. And, truly, +Betty was no exception to this rule! Allen had been one of the first to +volunteer his services to the good old army of the U. S. A., and while +he had gone over only a buck private, he had come back a lieutenant. + +There was Will Ford, Grace's brother, whom Grace and Amy both adored. +Will had been in the secret service when our country entered the war, +and because of this he had been the victim of considerable +misunderstanding. Afterward he had joined the army with the other boys. +This was after some skillful secret service work that won the praise of +the government, as well as the fervent admiration of the boys and girls. + +The other two boys were Frank Haley and Roy Anderson who had come into +the little group because of their friendship for Will and Allen. They +were fine, clean-cut, likable boys, who had come through the war with +colors flying. + +The young folks had lived all their lives in Deepdale, a thriving little +city with a population of about fifteen thousand people and situated in +the heart of New York State. Deepdale was situated on the Argono River, +a beautiful and romantic stream where pleasure craft of all sorts +disported themselves. A branch line of the railroad connected with the +main line directly to what the four Outdoor Girls believed to be the +most wonderful of all cities, New York. + +The name of "Outdoor Girls" had come to the quartette from the fact +that they invariably spent their summer vacations, and winter holidays +also, in some sort of outdoor sport. They could ride, swim, play tennis, +drive, and, in fact, do everything that is expected of the athletic +young girl of to-day. + +They would never forget that first tramping tour when they had tramped +for miles over the country, meeting with a great many unusual adventures +on the way, as related in the first volume of this series, entitled, +"The Outdoor Girls of Deepdale." Nor those other times at Rainbow Lake, +in Florida, at Ocean View, and later at Pine Island, where they had come +across that marvelous, mysterious gypsy cave. + +Then had come the war with the boys on the other side, and the girls +doing their "bit" at a Hostess House. And a little later what black +distress overwhelmed them, when Will Ford was reported wounded and +Allen's name was among the missing! This all happened while they were at +Bluff Point taking a much-needed vacation from their work at the Hostess +House. + +In the volume directly preceding this, entitled "The Outdoor Girls at +Wild Rose Lodge," the girls had had same very exciting experiences. An +old man, Professor Dempsey, by name, who had retired to a little log +cabin in the woods to recover his health, had chanced to do the girls a +very great favor. Of course the girls were grateful to him and were very +much interested when he told them of his two sons who were in the war. +Later, when the girls read of the death of his two sons in the paper, +they went to the old man's lonely cabin in the woods, but found +themselves too late. According to a friendly neighbor, the old man had +become temporarily insane at the terrible news, had wrecked his cabin in +an insane frenzy, and disappeared. + +Later, at Wild Rose Lodge, the girls were frightened several times by a +strange apparition lurking in the woods around the lodge and Moonlight +Falls, a beautiful fall of water not far from the cottage where the +girls were staying. Later the boys came home from France and helped the +girls solve the mystery. + +And now here was Betty proposing another outing that promised to be more +fun than any the Outdoor Girls had had yet. No wonder that in the clamor +of their excited questions and answers no one heard the telephone +ringing noisily in the hall. + +Finally the Nelsons' maid came trudging up the stairs to answer it +herself. + +"If I can hear myself think," she grumbled, as she took the receiver +from the hook. "With all them girls a-gabberin' an' a-talkin' at the +top o' their lungs. Hello--I can't hear you--you'll have to talk +louder--you don't know the noise they is in this house. Miss +Betty?--jus' a minute----" + +"A gen'leman to speak to you, Miss Betty," she announced a moment later, +looking in on the hilarious girls. "An' le's hope you can hear him +better'n I could, that's all," she grumbled, as Betty pushed by her in +the doorway and gave her a friendly pat on the shoulder. + +"Oh, they'll keep quiet now, all right," she said, with a laughing +glance over her shoulder at her chums. "They'll want to hear what I have +to say." + +At which taunt the girls started such a dreadful clamor that she really +had all she could do to hear Allen at the other end of the wire. Oh, +yes, it was Allen! + +"Sech a noise," grumbled the maid, as she trudged down the steps again. +"I never did see sech wild uns!" + +"Hello, hello, Allen," called Betty into the telephone. "The girls are +here and--what's that? At Walnut Street? All right, that will be fine. I +can't talk now. Tell you why later. Yes, we'll be there. Don't be silly. +Good-by!" + +Her face was flushed when she confronted the girls again. + +"The boys have a half holiday--it's Saturday, you know," she told them, +while they regarded her mischievously. "And they want us to pick them up +in the car, get some lunch somewhere, and make a day of it. I told him +we would." + +"By 'him' I suppose you mean Allen," said Mollie, to which Betty ducked +her a bow and the other girls giggled. "I like their nerve wanting us to +pick them up. Why doesn't Frank come for us in his big car?" + +"Allen figured it would take too long for them to come home and get it." + +"My, they must be in a hurry to see us," said Grace, with a simper that +sent the girls off into gales of laughter. + +"Well," said Betty finally, "are you coming, or are you not?" + +For answer Mollie jumped up, pressed a hat upon Grace's indignant head, +handed Amy her coat, and crushed her own sport hat down on her dark +hair. + +"Be this our answer," she said dramatically. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +ENTER PETER LEVINE + + +It is to be feared that the boys did not have as pleasant a time on that +Saturday afternoon motor drive as they had hoped to have. For, whereas +the girls should have showered their attentions upon them, the boys, +they insisted upon talking about nothing but Gold Run Ranch, which was +the name of the property left to Mrs. Nelson by her great uncle. + +"You aren't very complimentary to us," Frank grumbled, as he hunched +himself over the wheel of Mollie's car. "You seem mighty glad to go out +to this forsaken old ranch where you won't see us for the whole summer." + +"I guess we can stand it if you can," Mollie responded lightly, which +only caused him to glower the more. + +"Now I'll say Allen knew what he was doing when he studied law," +remarked Roy Anderson gloomily, as he glanced over his shoulder at young +Allen Washburn, who was driving Betty's neat little roadster with Betty +herself beside him. "He sure falls in soft on this job." + +"Meaning, I suppose," drawled Grace, "that he will have the pleasure of +our company at Gold Run Ranch. Never mind, old boy, you needn't look so +dreadfully gloomy. Have a chocolate and brace up." + +"You give it to me," said Roy, laughing. Grace obediently popped a large +juicy one into his mouth. It may be remarked that after this performance +he really did look more cheerful. + +"Anyway, we'll be back sometime, I suppose," said Mollie, continuing on +the subject that was uppermost in her mind. + +"Yes, if we don't run away with some of those handsome cowboys," put in +Amy, with a chuckle. "Betty says they abound around Gold Run Ranch." + +The girls giggled, but Will looked fierce. + +"You had better not," he said, and though his look was for all the +girls, Amy knew that the words were for her. She colored prettily and +promised with her eyes that she wouldn't. + +Grace caught this by-play as she munched a chocolate grumpily. Adoring +her brother Will as she did, she had always been a little jealous of his +fancy for Amy. + +"Anyway, they don't have to be so silly in public," she told herself +resentfully. As she roused herself from her musing, she heard Mollie +say, with a laugh: + +"Don't be surprised if we come home with our pockets full of gold. Mrs. +Nelson thinks there is some of it about there." + +"Oh, are you still talking about that silly old ranch?" Grace broke in +petulantly. "I don't know why you are getting so excited about it when +there is more than a chance that we sha'n't go at all." + +"Hooray!" cried Frank, and stepped on the accelerator. + +Mollie, beside him, turned to look at him coldly. + +"I'm glad you feel that way about it, Frank Haley," she said primly. +"But I'm very sorry to say we don't." + +"Now, I have put my foot in it," cried Frank ruefully, turning his +irresistible smile full upon her. "What shall I do to make up, Mollie? +Hold your hand or something?" + +His free hand closed over hers, but she snatched her own away with +indignation that ended in a chuckle. + +"Tend to your knitting," she warned him. "Didn't you see that we almost +ran over that dog?" + +But however much they might joke about the possibility of their not +realizing their dreams for the summer, the Outdoor Girls were really +worried about it, and the next few days were anxious ones for them. + +Suppose Mrs. Nelson should yield to her husband's arguments and resolve +to sell the ranch after all? For awhile it almost seemed as though she +were about to do this very thing, and the suspense nearly drove the +girls frantic. + +Then something happened to turn the tide in their direction. And how the +girls afterwards blessed that loud-necktied, check-suited man! + +It was Betty who came to the door to admit this angel in disguise, it +being the hired girl's day out. Her first glance at the stranger served +to stamp him as one of those loud-voiced, flashily dressed persons +commonly referred to as "sports," and at this first glance Betty took a +violent dislike to him. + +However, being accustomed to treat every one with kindliness, she asked +him gravely whom he wished to see. + +"Is Mrs. Nelson at home?" he asked ingratiatingly. + +"Why, yes," hesitated Betty, then her natural courtesy getting the +better of the dislike she felt for this person, she added politely: +"Won't you come in? I will call mother." + +With blandly murmured thanks the owner of the checked suit stepped over +the threshold, his eyes still on Betty to such an extent that she was +glad to be able to slip upstairs out of his sight. + +"Mother," she explained hurriedly, finding that lady in her pretty +dressing room, "there's a horrid person downstairs who wants to see you. +I don't like his looks, and if you don't want to see him I can tell him +you aren't at home----" + +"Heavens, Betty, is he as bad as all that?" asked Mrs. Nelson, as she +rose hastily and gave an automatic pat to her hair. "I hope he doesn't +steal the silver. You shouldn't have left him alone, dear----" and with +these words she swept out of the room and down the stairs. + +Betty heard her greet the man, and then slipped off to her own room and +picked up some half-finished embroidery. + +"I hope he doesn't bother mother too much," she mused aloud. "I never +saw a more unpleasant looking person in my life. I wonder what he can +want, anyway." + +It was fully half an hour later that she heard the closing door +downstairs that told her their unwelcome visitor had left. A minute +later her mother herself opened the door of Betty's room, looking so +troubled and unsettled that Betty jumped to her feet in quick alarm. + +"Mother, did that man say anything to make you feel bad?" she cried. +"Because, if he did----" + +"No, no, dear," said Mrs. Nelson, sinking into a chair, while her eyes +sought the window thoughtfully. "I am worried, that's all." + +Betty drew a low chair over beside her mother, and, sitting down, took +Mrs. Nelson's hand in both her own. + +"Tell me, dear," she urged. + +Mrs. Nelson drew her troubled gaze away from the window and looked at +the Little Captain intently. + +"Betty," she said, "there is something strange about this Gold Run Ranch +of ours. This man----" + +"Yes?" prompted Betty, as her mother paused. + +"This man who called this morning wanted to buy the ranch for a western +client of his. It seems this client is willing to pay me my own +price--within reasonable limits of course. He seemed so strangely eager +to make a deal with me----" + +"Yes?" prompted Betty again, beginning to look worried herself. + +"Well," continued Mrs. Nelson, "I decided then and there that I +wouldn't sell to anybody." + +"Oh, Mother!" Betty was all eagerness now, "do you really mean it?" + +"Yes, I do," said Mrs. Nelson, determination replacing uncertainty. +"There must be something unusual about Gold Run or John Josephs and this +man, too, wouldn't be so anxious to get it away from me. I am certainly +not going to let them drive me into selling, until I see my property at +least." + +"Good for you, Mother!" cried Betty enthusiastically. "I've been +fearfully worried for fear you wouldn't see it that way. Did you tell +the man in the check suit that?" + +"No, I didn't," said Mrs. Nelson, smiling as she pressed Betty's hand. +"Now you will see what a schemer your mother is, my dear. I told him I +hadn't definitely decided yet on any course, that I had already had a +very good offer for my ranch, and that he would have to see Allen +Washburn, our attorney. I wanted Allen to have a chance to size this man +up and see if he has the same impression of him that I had." + +"Mother," breathed Betty admiringly, "I think you are wonderful." Then +after a little pause, she added shyly: "You really think a great deal +of--of Allen's ability, don't you, Mother?" + +"I do, dear," said Mrs. Nelson, stroking the brown head gently. Then she +added with a hint of mischief in her voice: "Your father and I have come +to feel toward him almost as if he were our son." + +"Oh--" murmured Betty, very faintly. + +Two days went by--anxious ones for the girls. In the Nelson home, this +time in the pretty living room, Allen Washburn was now a guest. + +"Well," Mrs. Nelson said, with more than a hint of eagerness in her +voice, "what did you think of our loudly-dressed friend, Allen?" + +"Was he as bad as Mrs. Nelson's description makes him out to be?" asked +Mr. Nelson, smiling genially through a cloud of cigar smoke. + +Betty, in a corner of the lounge, was trying her best to be calm while +she waited eagerly for Allen's reply. + +"I don't know just how Mrs. Nelson described this fellow to you, I'm +sure," he answered, with a smiling glance toward Betty's mother. "But +I'm quite sure that she didn't say anything bad enough." + +"Then you didn't like him either?" asked Mrs. Nelson quickly. + +"I neither liked him nor trusted him," Allen replied decidedly, adding +with a wry smile: "He calls himself Peter Levine, but I'm willing to +wager about anything I have that that isn't his real name." + +"You think he's a sharper then?" Mr. Nelson interjected. + +"Yes, sir," responded Allen, his young face earnestly intent. "He looks +to me like one of these confidence men who abound in the western boom +towns--men who can talk the other fellow into putting his last cent into +some 'sure thing.' 'Sure thing,'" he repeated disgustedly. "The only +sure thing about most of those schemes is the certainty of 'going bust' +and losing every penny you have in the world." + +"And yet," Mr. Nelson commented, "these sharpers, 'confidence men,' as +you call them, often manage to keep just within the law." + +"Oh yes," said Allen, "they manage to keep the letter of the +law--sometimes. But that is just a caution to save their own necks. It's +the spirit of the law that they violate. But we are getting away from +the point," he added, pulling himself up short with an apologetic smile +toward Mrs. Nelson. "We were speaking of this Peter Levine. My summing +up of him is that he is entirely untrustworthy." + +Mrs. Nelson shot a triumphant glance at her husband. + +"You see?" she said. "I was sure Allen would agree with me." + +"Of course I may be mistaken," Allen continued, rather hesitantly. "But +I have a very distinct impression, a sort of seventh sense we fellows in +the law game call it, that this Levine is in league with John Josephs, +the man that offered you fifteen thousand for the ranch." + +"Oh!" said Mrs. Nelson, startled. "How can you know that?" + +"I don't know it," Allen told her. "I only suspect." + +"Then what would you advise us to do?" + +"Hold tight and not sell till you have had a chance to look matters over +on the ground--not from a distance." + +"Well," said Mr. Nelson rising resignedly and knocking the ashes from +his cigar, "I suppose that settles it. I shall have to leave my business +to go to smash," he added, with a chuckle, "while I take my family into +a barbarous land where every second man you meet has designs on a +well-filled pocketbook----" + +But he got no further, for Betty had run over to him and turned him +imperiously around till his smiling eyes looked down into her gleeful +ones. + +"Daddy," she cried, "do you really mean it? We can all go to Gold +Run--you and mother and the girls? We'll have to have the girls, you +know!" she ended on a pleading note. + +"Oh yes, of course," said Mr. Nelson resignedly. "We will have to have +the girls." + +It was a very radiant Betty who, a few minutes later, saw Allen Washburn +to the door. + +"And to think," she murmured, while Allen smiled down at her, "that I +didn't like that perfect angel, Peter Levine, at first. Why, I should +have welcomed him with open arms!" + +"Why?" asked Allen, taken by surprise. + +"Don't you know?" asked Betty, mischievously wide-eyed. "If he hadn't +happened along just when he did our glorious adventure would have +dwindled into a might-have-been. Why, I could love him for it." + +"Good-night, I'm going!" ejaculated Allen, and before Betty could gasp +he had flung out of the door. + +"Where are you going?" she called, laughter in her voice. + +"To kill Peter Levine," growled a voice out of the darkness, and Betty, +closing the door very softly, chuckled to herself. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +AN IMITATION HOLD-UP + + +It was all over. The bustling days of preparation for the long trip, +during which the girls had hardly had time to give vent to their +excitement, had passed, and here they were actually finding their places +in the puffing, western bound train. + +"Here's number five," Grace said, as she slid into a velvet-covered seat +with a sigh of thankfulness. "Who is coming in here with me?" + +"Guess I'm elected," laughed Betty. "And here's number seven for Mollie +and Amy, and mother and dad are in six right across the way. That +completes the family party." + +They were hardly settled when there was a last warning cry of "All +aboard" and the train began to move ever so slowly from the station. + +The girls peered out to wave good-by to the boys and some of their other +friends who had come to see them off. The young fellows looked rather +gloomy--all except Allen. The latter shouted something that they took to +be "See you later!" and then the train swept around a curve, hiding the +station from view. + +"Well," said Grace, with a sigh, as she opened her grip to fish for the +inevitable candy box, "the boys seemed to take our flitting pretty hard. +They looked as if we were already dead and buried." + +"Far from it," murmured Betty happily, her eyes on the ever changing +view from the window. "I feel as if we were just beginning to live." + +The hours of the morning passed like minutes to the girls, and they were +surprised when the porter came through with his "Foist call fo' dinnah!" + +The afternoon passed uneventfully, and they amused themselves by making +up stories about their fellow passengers. There was the quaint little +man in number four who reminded them of Professor Arnold Dempsey and who +might very easily have been a professor, judging from the number of +books he carried. + +Then there was the freckled-faced small boy in number three whose antics +kept his mother in a continual state of "nerves." Once when he bounced +one of those implements commonly known as "spit balls" off of the +bookish little man's bald head, the girls thought they would die trying +to stifle their merriment. + +Then there was the very pretty, but much be-powdered and rouged girl +behind them in number nine. Grace embarrassed Betty very much by turning +around to look at her every five minutes or so. + +"She's a moving picture actress or something, I'm sure of it," Grace +confided in Betty's unsympathetic ear. "I wonder if I could fix my hair +the way she does. She fascinates me." + +"She seems to," Betty retorted dryly, adding with a twinkle. "You may be +able to fix your hair like hers--though I doubt it--but please remember +that your mother doesn't want you to use rouge." + +"Well, you know I wouldn't do that," said Grace in a huff, adding +maliciously, "I guess you are just jealous, that's all." + +"Uh-huh, that must be it," said Betty, with an unruffled good-nature +that made Grace secretly ashamed of herself. + +"I'm sorry, Betty," she said after a rather long pause, adding +generously: "You don't need to be jealous of anybody." + +"Thanks," Betty answered, with a smile. "I knew you didn't mean it, +dear." + +And so the long hours of the afternoon wore away, dusk came, shrouding +the swiftly moving landscape in a veil of mystery. So engrossed were +the girls in contemplation of the changing beauty of nature that it +seemed almost sacrilege when the blatant lights of the train flashed +forth, bringing them violently back to a realization of time and place. + +"Don't you want any supper?" Mr. Nelson was asking, in his pleasant +voice. "It isn't like the Outdoor Girls to overlook meal time." + +"Far be it from us to spoil our good reputation," cried Mollie +buoyantly, and away they rushed to the dressing room to wash for supper. +Though dining on a train was no novelty to the girls, they never lost +the keenness of their first delight in the experience. + +"It's fascinating," Mollie remarked once, spearing desperately at an +elusive potato as the train jerked and jolted over the rails at sixty +miles an hour, "to see how often you can raise your coffee cup without +spilling the coffee all over your food!" + +On this night at supper Mollie was so screamingly funny that the girls +had all they could do to keep their hilarity from making them +conspicuous. + +Mr. and Mrs. Nelson at a table for two across the aisle smiled +indulgently at their charges, and once Mrs. Nelson met her husband's +glance and chuckled fondly. + +"Pretty nice set of girls?" she said softly. + +"Pretty nice!" Mr. Nelson agreed. + +"I'm beginning to wish we were at Gold Run now," confided Mollie, after +dining. She and Amy had slipped into the seat opposite Betty and Grace. + +"Oh, I think it's all fun," cried Betty, for she was always the last of +the Outdoor Girls to feel tired. "We change at Chicago to-morrow +afternoon," she added. "And then two more nights on the train, and then +Gold Run!" + +"Oh, that sounds good," cried Mollie, adding eagerly: "Tell me, Betty, +shall we be able to choose any horse we want for our own particular +mount?" + +"Oh, yes," said Betty, adding with a smile: "It will be interesting to +see the kind of horse each one of you will choose. Amy will like the +gentle one, Grace will choose hers for its looks and yours will be the +most vicious one in the pack, Mollie." + +"Well, I like that!" said Mollie unperturbed. "She wants to kill me off +even before I get there." + +"Pack?" murmured Amy. "Is a 'pack' of horses right?" But no one answered +her. + +"I wonder," mused Grace dreamily, "if there will be a tan one--all tan, +you know, without even a spot of any other color----" + +"Oh, of course," laughed Betty. "If we haven't an all tan one in the +corrals at Gold Run, we'll send to the nearest ranch and have one +imported for you. Don't worry your little head about that." + +A little while after that they stopped at a water station, and most of +the passengers got off to stretch their cramped limbs. And, as the +conductor informed them that they would be there for fifteen minutes at +least, the girls followed the general example. + +However, in their enthusiasm at finding the good old solid earth under +their feet once more, they wandered too far, and the warning toot of the +starting train found them quite a distance from the platform. + +They had not earned the title of Outdoor Girls for nothing, however, and +by sprinting for all they were worth they were able to make the last car +just in the nick of time. + +"Whew, that was a close call," said Betty as they made their way, +panting, through to their own car, where Mr. and Mrs. Nelson were +looking frantically for them. "No more water stations for us." + +Darkness fell, and the porters moved about, making up berths and +answering the hundred and one insistent calls of the passengers. + +The girls went to bed with no protest whatever and were soon sleeping +the sleep of healthy youth. It was toward midnight that they were rather +rudely jerked out of this beautiful sleep by a sudden and almost violent +stopping of the train. + +Betty, who was sleeping in a lower berth, she and Grace having decided +to take turns, sat up and peered out of the grimed window into the +gloom. No station lights greeted her, as she expected confidently they +would. Nothing but inky, startling blackness. + +That she was not the only one roused was proved by the subdued sound of +voices raised in sleepy protest. + +"They ought to put that engineer in prison for stopping like that," said +a man's voice. + +"Gee! I thought it was a wreck, sure," came another surly voice. + +At this moment a couple of legs dangled themselves over the side of +Betty's berth and in another minute the owner of them slid down beside +Betty. Betty giggled nervously, but Grace clutched her arm and shook it. + +"Listen!" she said. "There's nothing to laugh about. This is a hold-up, +that's what it is! You know what your father said about there being a +lot of them around this place." + +That this conclusion had been reached by some one else in the car was +proved by a woman's voice that rose shrilly above the rest. + +"It's a hold-up, that's what it is!" she cried, adding, with what seemed +to Betty ridiculous panic: "Oh, what shall I do, what shall I do?" + +"Better stop making a fuss, first off," growled another masculine voice, +and again Betty giggled nervously. + +"Goodness, I hope I don't have to get out in my nightie," she said, and +poked her head out through the curtains. + +"Look out," warned Grace, pulling her back. "You may get shot or +something." + +"Don't be silly," retorted Betty, not altogether decided whether to be +frightened or amused by the situation. "There isn't anything out there +but a lot of funny looking heads sticking through the curtains." + +"I don't see how you can laugh about it," said Grace, through chattering +teeth. "I don't think it would be any j-joke to have all our m-money +taken from us----" + +"Sh-h--be quiet," warned Betty, peeping again through the slit in the +curtain. "Somebody's coming. Listen!" + +Grace listened, and so, evidently, did every one else in the car. No +wonder that, scared though she undoubtedly was, Betty found humor in +the situation. Heads of every kind and description stuck through the +curtains, women's, some in boudoir caps, some without, men's heads, +either bald or with hair grotesquely ruffled by sleep, and on every face +depicted every one of the varied emotions which have disturbed the human +race since time began. And there they were, all frozen to immobility by +the sound of two men's voices raised in heated discussion. + +Then the owners of the voices came into view, and the expression on all +the faces changed to bewildered amazement. Instead of the masked bandit +which they had half expected to see there was a very portly and very +excited gentleman and with him was a conductor, not so portly but just +as excited. + +"I tell you," the conductor was saying, his face red with wrath, "you +are violating the rules of the company by flagging this train for a +personal matter----" + +"You have told me that before," roared the portly gentleman, waxing +almost apoplectic. "And I've told you I don't care a hang for the rules +of the company. What I want to find is my daughter and that young scamp +she ran away with. And if you don't help me, I'll wring your neck!" + +"I tell you there is no couple answering your description on this +train," rasped the conductor, as the two made their way, shouting and +gesticulating, through the two rows of amazed heads and so on into the +next car. + +"Well, I'll be blowed," commented the voice belonging to one of the +heads; and as if that were a signal, all the other heads promptly +withdrew to the accompaniment of exclamations and laughter. + +In the darkness of the berth Betty chuckled. + +"Oh, they did look so funny, Gracie," she said. "All those people with +their heads stuck out into the aisle. You should have taken a peek." + +"Humph," grunted Grace, unsympathetically, as she prepared to climb into +her berth again. Then she said: "I hope if that man's daughter takes a +notion to run away again, she won't do it on our train, that's all!" + + + + +CHAPTER V + +THE HANDSOME COWBOY + + +Next morning the girls were hilarious over the mirthful episode in the +train the night before. Betty and Mollie "took off" the expressions on +the faces of their fellow passengers till Amy and Grace shouted with +glee. + +"Oh, stop it, you two," gasped Grace, finally. "I'm sore from laughing. +I think you would make a hit as clowns in a circus." + +"My, isn't she complimentary?" lisped Mollie, and the girls went off in +fresh gales of merriment. + +"I wish," said Grace, after a pause, "that we were going to reach Gold +Run this afternoon, instead of Chicago. I'm half afraid to spend another +night in the sleeper after the scare we got last night. It might be a +_real_ bandit this time." + +"Oh, what would we care?" said Betty carelessly. "I'd rather like to +meet a train robber, myself." + +"About all a bandit could do would be to take our money," added Mollie. + +"All!" cried Grace indignantly. "Yes, that's all. And what would we do +without any money, I'd like to know!" + +"Goodness, we could always sell the ranch," said Betty, so +matter-of-factly that the girls chuckled. "We have Peter Levine to fall +back on, you know." + +"'Peter Levine,'" repeated Amy, then added quickly: "Oh yes, he was the +man who wanted your mother to sell the ranch." + +"Yes, and it was too bad of you to keep him all to yourself, Betty," +said Grace reproachfully. + +"You might at least have shown him to the rest of us." + +"He wasn't anything to show," said Betty, experiencing again the feeling +of distaste she had had for the man. "He was one of the most unpleasant +looking men I ever saw. Just the same," she added lightly, "we owe him a +lot. If it hadn't been for him we probably wouldn't be sitting in this +beautiful train, speeding to our great adventure. I told Allen I could +almost love Peter Levine for it." + +"You did?" queried Mollie, her eyes dancing. "What did he say?" + +"He left me rather suddenly," said Betty, with a chuckle at the memory. +"He said he was on his way to kill Peter." + +"Poor Allen," laughed Grace. "It must be awful to be that way. When is +he coming out to Gold Run, Betty?" + +"As soon as he finishes this case he is on now," answered Betty, +flushing in spite of herself as she thought of Allen. "There is really +no great hurry about it, you know. Dad has made up his mind to take a +regular vacation while he's about it, and I imagine mother won't care if +she never gets home." + +That afternoon they changed trains at Chicago, bemoaning the fact that +they had not time to see something of the great city before they +traveled farther west. There was only half an hour between trains and, +as every one knows, there can be little sightseeing done in that limited +space of time. As it was, for some reason they could not ascertain, the +outgoing train was over an hour late in starting. If they had known this +fact in advance they might have managed to spend their time more +profitably than in cooling their heels in the station waiting room. + +As it was, it was a rather disgruntled set of girls who boarded the +train for Gold Run and allowed Mr. Nelson and the porter to find their +seats for them. + +"I don't see why trains can't be on time," grumbled Mollie, as she +peered at the rather distorted image of herself in the narrow mirror +between the windows. "Here it is nearly seven o'clock and I'm as hungry +as a bear." + +"Well," said Betty, cheerfully, "something tells me they have a diner on +this train. Come on, girls, let's wash our hands and get something to +eat." + +The girls hardly knew which they enjoyed the most, their dinner or the +novel scenery that slipped past them so swiftly. It was their first +venture into this part of the world, and they found the initiation +fascinating. + +"The trouble is," complained Amy, "it will be dark before long and we'll +have to miss all this," with an expressive sweep of her hand toward the +car window. + +"It is too bad," said Betty, regretfully adding, with a light laugh: "If +we were only like the princess in the story, the members of whose royal +house never slept, we would probably see more of the scenery." + +That night the girls proved that Grace was not alone in her fondness for +sleep. There being no more interruptions in the shape of fuming +gentlemen on the trail of runaway daughters, they slept soundly through +the long hours while the train plunged onward through the inky +blackness of the night. They did not stir until the sun, shining on +their faces, roused them to the realization that another beautiful day +had dawned. + +That is, it was beautiful up to noon. Then it clouded down, and they ate +lunch while the rain dashed furiously on the windows of the dining car. + +"I am thankful we are under cover," said Betty. + +"Fancy riding on the ranch in this rain," put in Amy. + +"No life in the saddle for me when it rains," broke in Grace. + +During the afternoon the girls napped and read. When the time came to +get supper they were glad to see that they had run away from the storm +and the sun was setting clearly. + +"Funny, how sleepy one gets," drawled Grace, about nine o'clock. "I'll +not stay up late." + +No one wanted to do that, and in less than an hour all were sleeping +soundly while the long train rumbled along on its trip westward. + +"And this is the day," breathed Mollie the next noon, as they made their +way from the dining car through some half dozen other cars to their own. +"Betty, I feel as if I couldn't wait to see your beautiful ranch." + +"I wonder," said Grace as they dropped into their seats once more, "if +those cowboys are really as good-looking as you say, Betty. I must +admit," she added, as she viewed the rather monotonous landscape +petulantly, "I haven't seen anything that looks like a cowboy yet." + +"Goodness, hear the child!" cried Betty airily. "She hasn't been near a +ranch, yet she expects to see whole droves of cow-punchers----" + +"Look," Mollie interrupted, grasping her arm. They were slowing down at +a station and there were no less than three picturesque looking young +fellows loitering about the place. One was astride an extremely nervous +horse that shied as the train puffed to a standstill and rose on his +hind legs as though trying his best to shake his rider off. "There's a +real show for you," Mollie cried joyfully. "How does that look to you, +Gracie? True to life?" + +"Um, that's better," admitted Grace, while the girls craned their necks +for a better view of the horseman. "Now if they only have that sort of +thing at Gold Run----" + +"Well, we'll have a chance to find out pretty soon whether they do or +not," broke in Betty, the thrill of suppressed excitement in her voice. +"Dad says we ought to get there in an hour." + +"An hour!" wailed Amy, as the train jolted on its way once more and the +romantic group on the station were lost to view. "And I thought we were +almost there!" + +But the hour passed more quickly than the girls had anticipated, for the +view from the car windows, becoming more and more interesting, absorbed +their attention. As a general rule the country was flat, but now and +then in the background could be caught glimpses of heavily wooded +mountain ranges that would offer chances for all sorts of adventures to +the four eager Outdoor Girls. + +"I wonder if there are wild animals in those woods," said Amy, her eyes +widening at the thought. "Real ones." + +"You don't suppose they import stuffed ones, do you?" asked Grace dryly. + +"Of course there are wild animals--lots of 'em," said Betty, feeling +more and more gloriously excited as they neared their destination. +"Maybe we can borrow a gun or two from the cow-punchers and have a shot +at 'em--animals, I mean, not cow-punchers," she explained, with a +giggle. + +On top of these rather wild imaginings came Mr. Nelson, telling them it +was time to get their things together, for they were within a few +minutes of Gold Run. + +"I know how long it takes you girls to put a hat on," he laughed. "So I +think you had better start right away." + +Then--Gold Run! with the dash for the door and Grace running back to +rescue a half-empty but still precious candy box and Mollie wanting to +know if Amy would please stop pressing her suitcase in the middle of her +back---- + +Someway, Mr. Nelson managed to get them all safely to the station +platform, whereupon he breathed a sigh of relief. + +"Whew! that's the hardest job you ever gave me, Rose," he remarked to +his wife, with a chuckle. + +Here, as at most of the other stations, was a handful of cowboys who had +come to meet the train. One of these, a handsome young fellow, detached +himself from the rest and approached Mrs. Nelson, sweeping off his +sombrero as he did so. + +"Mrs. Nelson, ma'am?" he asked in a soft drawl that captivated the girls +immediately. + +Mrs. Nelson smiled assent and the young fellow indicated a buckboard +drawn up to the station. + +"I brought the wagon," he said, with a grin that showed a beautiful set +of white teeth. "An' some saddle hosses, thinkin' you might like to +ride----" + +However, the ladies decided on the buckboard, which was driven by a +shy-eyed, sandy-haired young fellow who gave the girls one frightened +glance and looked swiftly away again, for all the world, Mollie said +afterwards, as if he expected them to bite him. + +Mr. Nelson elected to ride horseback with Andy Rawlinson, which was the +name of the good-looking cowboy. + +As the driver chirruped to the horses and they clattered over the bumpy +road, Grace turned to Betty with a smile. + +"I have realized the ambition of a life time!" she said dramatically. "I +have seen one handsome cowboy!" + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +AT THE RANCH + + +To the girls, that jolting ride was like an adventure straight from the +Arabian Nights. The fact that they were squeezed four in a seat which +was meant to accommodate only three, served to dampen their enthusiasm +not a trifle. Mrs. Nelson, riding in front with the bashful driver, +vainly sought to engage him in conversation. After repeated failures she +settled down to enjoy the ride in silence. + +A dozen yards or so ahead of them Andy Rawlinson and Mr. Nelson cantered +up the dusty road, their horses' hoofs making the dust fly in a white +cloud. + +"Goodness!" sneezed Betty, extracting a small handkerchief from her +pocket and applying it to her nose, "I do hope those two keep their +distance. We'll be simply choked with dust." + +"I wonder," said Grace, as she rubbed her dust-filled eyes, "if they +don't have any rain in this part of the world." + +"Of course they do; only this happens to be the dry season," said +Mollie, instructively, from the heights of her superior intelligence. At +least, that is what she called it. + +"I'll say it's dry," grumbled Grace. + +"Ooh, look," Amy interrupted ecstatically. "Isn't that a cactus over +there? Oh, I've wanted all my life to see some real cacti. Now I know +we're in the West." + +The girls were silent for a moment, gazing out over the rolling plain--a +plain studded with stunted trees and sickly-looking bushes with here and +there a cactus plant for variety's sake--out to the hazy mountains +beyond, serene, calm, majestic, jutting jaggedly into the dazzling blue +of a cloudless sky. + +"The mountains!" murmured Betty, half to herself. "How I love them. The +plains are fascinating in a cruelly romantic way, but somehow the +mountains make one think of hidden springs rushing swiftly into noisy +foolish little brooks, of bird songs, and the smell of cool damp earth, +of the crackling of dry twigs under one's feet, and the pungent woodsy +smell of camp fires--but there," she broke off confusedly, as she +realized the girls were regarding her with fond amusement. "I didn't +mean to wax so poetic." + +"It's all right, honey," said Mollie, giving her hand a warm little +squeeze. "You rave right along. I know just how you feel, for I get that +way myself sometimes." + +"There _is_ something mighty wonderful about the mountains," added Grace +softly. + +"Oh, I love them, too," broke in Amy, adding with such earnestness that +the girls looked at her wonderingly. "They are everything that Betty has +said. And yet when Betty spoke of the plains as being cruel I couldn't +help wondering if the mountains weren't sometimes like that, too." + +"What do you mean?" they queried, with quick interest. + +"I was thinking," Amy continued slowly, "that the mountains might not +seem so kind to one who was lost in them--without a gun perhaps. I have +heard Will say that a person who had no knowledge of woodcraft would +find it almost impossible to recover his path, once he had lost it. +And," she added, with a shudder, her eyes fixed steadily on the distant +mountain range, "there are wild animals in those forests." + +"Of course there are," agreed Betty lightly, as she saw how serious the +girls' faces had become. "Oodles of foxes and bears and raccoons and +things. Why, how would you expect to get pretty furs when you wanted +them if those things didn't exist? Cheer up, Amy dear. We're a long way +from being lost in the woods without a gun!" + +A minute later the girls lost interest in everything but the immediate +present. For, in the distance, but distinctly visible, loomed a long low +ranch house which the silent driver beside Mrs. Nelson deigned to admit +was on Gold Run Ranch. + +"You see it, girls?" cried the lady, turning a beaming face to the +girls. "You know, I feel just like a little girl with a beautiful new +toy." + +"And we're awfully glad you've got the toy, Mrs. Nelson," said Grace, +fervently. + +"Look," cried Mollie suddenly. "Your father and that cowboy are turning +off from the main road. That must be where the ranch begins. Oh, girls, +oh, girls, I'm glad I came!" + +A few minutes later their jolting buckboard turned in after the two +horsemen, and since the new road proved to be nothing but two deep ruts +worn in the grass and as the ponies attached to the buckboard showed +considerable excitement at coming near home, the girls found themselves +holding on to each other convulsively to keep from being thrown out on +the stubbly grass at the side of the road. + +"Whew, I'm glad that's over!" exclaimed Mollie, as the driver drew in +the rearing horses and spoke to them soothingly. "Come on, girls," she +added, making ready to jump out. "I'm going to remove myself from this +buckboard before one of those horses decides to sit in my lap." + +The girls laughed and followed her with alacrity. + +"Oh," cried Betty, hugging Amy ecstatically, simply because she happened +to be the nearest one to hug. "There are the horse corrals over there! +And, oh, girls! look at the cows, dozens and dozens and dozens of 'em. +Mother," she cried, turning wide-eyed to the latter, "do all those +'anymiles' really belong to you?" + +"I presume they do, dear," said Mrs. Nelson, her own face flushed with +excitement. "I can't quite take in the amazing truth of it yet." + +They were standing beside the first of a long line of low buildings that +seemed little more than glorified sheds and which the girls decided must +be the "bunk houses" for the ranch hands. + +And while they were wondering if it would be possible to slip over to +the corrals for a closer look at the horses, Mr. Nelson sauntered up to +them, with handsome Andy Rawlinson keeping diffidently a little in the +rear. + +"It's nearly supper time," he informed them smiling. "And Andy here," he +indicated young Rawlinson, who grinned an acknowledgment, "says that +everybody has supper sharp on the minute of six. So what do you say if +we go up to the house and have a little refreshment?" + +The girls were not altogether reluctant to obey, much as they desired a +closer look at the bronchos, for they realized that they were pretty +hungry. + +The ranch house was one of those quaint old structures which had begun +as a tiny, one-story frame cottage and had gradually been added to until +now it seemed, Betty said, to "spread all over the landscape." It had +porches and doors in the most unexpected places, but the whole house was +painted such an immaculate white and the shutters were such a friendly +green that the effect of the place was indescribably charming. + +"If the house is as clean inside as it looks outside," whispered Grace +to Betty as Andy Rawlinson led them up on to one of the many porches, +"I'll never dare go in. I never felt so mussy and dirty in all my life." + +"Never mind, we're all in the same boat," said Betty encouragingly, and +then they stepped into one of the pleasantest rooms they had ever seen. + +It was big and cool and airy, in spite of the fact that supper +preparations were going on at one end of it. Rough picturesque looking +chairs were scattered about, and over near the windows a long table was +invitingly set for six. And oh, the delicious odor of cooking things +that was wafted on the air! + +At sight of them a stout but immaculately neat and rosy-faced woman left +whatever she was doing with a frying pan on the stove and came over to +them, wiping her hands on her apron, her face wreathed in smiles. + +"Go long with you, Andy Rawlinson," she cried as the youth lingered +rather awkwardly in the doorway. "There's no need for you to tell me who +these folks are, for I already know them for the new master and his lady +and the young ladies, bless their pretty sweet faces. Come right in, all +of you, and Lizzie here," turning to a wholesome-looking, mouse-haired +girl who had come in from the other room, "Lizzie will take you to see +the rooms and you can have your pick. But don't be long," she cautioned, +as they started to follow Lizzie and she turned back to her frying pan +on the stove, "for supper is all ready and you must be nearly famished." + +If the girls had been impressed by the quaintness of this quaint old +house from the outside, they were even more delighted by its interior. + +They passed down a rather dark and narrow hall at the end of which were +three low steps leading to such a series of rooms as the girls had never +seen before, each furnished neatly but plainly, the only touch of color +being the gay cretonne curtains at the windows. The rooms all seemed to +be connected by doors and to reach these doors one was obliged to go up +two steps or down three or up one, as the case might be. + +"Goodness," cried Betty, when Lizzie had led the way through three of +these quaint little rooms and the open doors seemed to reveal several +others, "I wonder if all these rooms were really occupied." + +"Yes, miss," said Lizzie, halting and speaking unexpectedly. "They was a +time when these rooms wuz all filled. Old Mr. Barcolm"--this being the +name of Mrs. Nelson's great uncle--"had a many children and +grandchildren an' seemed like he was sot on 'em all livin' with him. But +they got to quarrelin' and all left th' old man an' he was so mad he cut +'em all out o' his will. At least," she finished, as though warned by +the intent look of her listeners that she had said more than she had +intended to, "that's what they says. But mebbe it ain't the truth, fer +all I knows." + +Then she led them on again through the maze of rooms while the girls +thought amazedly of what she had told them. Finally she came to a stop +in a room, larger than the rest, and turned her rather stolid gaze upon +Mr. and Mrs. Nelson. + +"Miz Cummins," she announced, dully--the girls were afterward to find +out that Cummins was the name of the rosy-faced woman who had met them +so cordially at the door and who seemed to be general housekeeper for +the place--"Miz Cummins thought as how this would be a good room fer the +mister and missus. They is some nice rooms back of these fer the young +ladies. She sed, if you liked any of the other rooms better, to take +your pick. They's fresh water in the pitchers," indicating a washstand +with a bowl and two pitchers of gleaming water upon it, "an' if you want +anythin' else, you wuz please to tell me." And with these words, uttered +so precisely that it sounded like a rehearsed speech, which, in fact, it +was, Lizzie disappeared, leaving the travelers to themselves. + +"Come on, girls," cried Betty, pushing them before her into the next +room. "Let's see what kind of rooms 'Miz Cummins' has picked out for +us." + +They were not at all unusual rooms, being both about the same size and +nearly square and furnished about as simply as they could possibly be. + +"If it weren't for the different colored cretonne at the windows," said +Mollie, with a chuckle, "these rooms might be twins. You and Grace can +have the lavender cretonne, Amy, and Betty and I will take the blue." + +"Don't those beds look heavenly?" sighed Grace, as she pulled off her +hat and threw herself upon the big, snowy-sheeted bed. + +"Goodness!" cried Amy, in dismay. "She's flopped. Get her up, somebody, +before she gets the bed so dirty I can't sleep in it to-night." + +For answer Betty made a dash for Grace, pulled her to her feet, and +pushed her over to the washstand. + +"See that water, Grace Ford?" she cried sternly. "Now use it!" + +"And make it snappy," added Mollie slangily, as she and Betty +disappeared into the adjoining room. "I can smell 'Miz Cummins'' cooking +clear in here!" + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +A SUDDEN STORM + + +The girls spent the rest of that day getting acquainted, at which +agreeable task Andy Rawlinson, the head cowboy, assisted pleasantly. The +latter introduced them to several others of the ranch hands, all of whom +were as picturesque and good-natured as Andy himself. + +Escorted by Rawlinson and followed by the admiring glances of the other +cowboys, the girls were introduced to the interior of the bunk houses +which, with their rude wooden cots built into the side of the walls, +their scanty and rather severe furniture, and the romantic looking +trophies fastened to the bare boards of the walls, filled the girls with +curiosity and interest. + +Then on to the corrals, where some spectacular broncho busting was +staged for the sole benefit of the visitors. In this dangerous business +Andy himself took a part, and the girls gasped with dismay and later +with admiration as the boy ran alongside a vicious looking animal for a +few paces, then flung himself recklessly upon the beast's back and +clung there, seemingly defying all the laws of gravitation. + +"Oh, he surely will be killed!" cried Amy, clutching Betty in terror. +"That horse will throw him----" + +"Keep quiet, can't you, Amy?" cried Mollie impatiently, beside herself +with excitement. "Don't you suppose he has ever done this sort of thing +before?" + +Then followed such an exhibition of sheer grit and skill and dauntless +courage as none of the girls would ever forget. + +The vicious brute raced madly around and around the corrals, cruel head +upflung, nostrils dilated, but still the man upon his back clung with +maddening persistence. Then he stopped so suddenly that the man was +almost flung over his lowered head and the girls held their breath, but +Andy recovered himself and touching the spurs to the beast's belly, sent +it flying round the corral once more. There was sweat on its body and +the flaring nostrils were blood red with the effort, but the spirit of +the beast was still unbroken. + +Around and around the ring he plunged, the other horses galloping wildly +from his path, then suddenly as though the thing on his back had +maddened him past bearing, he began to buck and to plunge and to rear +himself on his hind legs in a desperate effort to throw himself +backward, until it seemed to the fascinated, terrified girls that Andy +Rawlinson surely must be killed. + +[Illustration: HE CLUNG TO THE HORSE'S BACK AS THOUGH HE HAD BEEN A PART +OF HIM. + +_The Outdoor Girls in the Saddle._ _Page 64_] + +But Andy Rawlinson had not spent his twenty-eight years in the saddle +for nothing. He clung to that horse's back as though he had been a part +of him, and when the outraged beast tried to throw himself over backward +for the second time, Andy evidently decided that he had played enough. + +A cruel blow of his spurred heel brought the beast almost to its knees +with a whinny of pain. Then it jumped high in the air, and once more +began its furious race with this mysterious and horrible being that +clung so tenaciously to his back. + +Andy rode him hard, cruelly hard, and when the beast, panting, sweating, +beaten, would have stopped he dug the spurs in and drove him on, on, +until the broncho's breath came in sobbing gasps and his legs trembled +under him. + +Betty, who could never bear to see anything hurt, shouted to Andy +Rawlinson as man and beast came abreast of her: + +"Isn't that enough?" she cried. "You've beaten him. Stop! Please +stop!" + +And Andy Rawlinson, flashing his pleasant smile, flung himself from his +mount, while the beautiful horse stood there, quivering, head hung in +shame---- + +"Game hoss, that," said Andy, as he vaulted the low railing and +approached the girls. "Fought like a thoroughbred." + +"And you were wonderful," cried Betty, with her warm impulsiveness. "I +never saw finer riding. We were all afraid you were going to be killed." + +Andy was pleased, but he looked at Betty rather quizzically. + +"Strange," he drawled, with a smile on his face, "strange what +impressions you get sometimes. Now I kind o' thought you was mad at me, +the way you called out to stop. Anyways, you looked mad." + +"I was only sorry for the horse," Betty explained gravely. "He was game, +as you say, and I hated to see his spirit entirely broken." + +Andy Rawlinson looked at her with admiring approval in his nice eyes. + +"There speaks the real lover of animals," he cried enthusiastically. "I +hate to break a good hoss myself, but you see it has to be done--for the +sake of the hoss. A hoss that's a bad actor is mighty like a mad dog. +It has to be killed--or broke. So we break 'em. But now," he said, +glancing toward the corrals, "I reckon you young ladies would like to +pick out some nice gentle hosses to ride while you're here." + +The girls nodded and crowded forward eagerly while Andy called to some +of the cowboys who had been lingering enviously near. + +"Bring out the sorrel and Nigger, will you, Jake?" he said to one of +them. "I'll corral Lady and Nabob." + +The girls watched with interest while the boys corraled the four horses +Andy had selected and led them forth for the visitors' inspection. + +They were splendid specimens of horse flesh, and for a moment the girls +were simply lost in admiration. Nigger, as his name implied, was a +magnificent coal-black animal without a speck of white upon him +anywhere. He and Betty seemed to form a mutual admiration society on the +instant, for with a gentle whinny he cantered up to the girl and began +nosing inquisitively in her pocket in search of sugar. Luckily Betty had +brought some with her, and she fed a couple of lumps to the beautiful +animal, thereby definitely sealing their pact of friendship. + +"Oh you, Nigger!" crooned Betty joyfully, as she rubbed the velvet +muzzle. "You and I are going to be great little pals, aren't we? You +perfect old darling!" And Nigger whinnied again and nosed about for more +sugar. + +"Well, I like that," cried Grace, breaking the silence in which they had +all been enjoyably regarding the little scene. "Betty doesn't have to +choose her horse--it chooses her." + +"Oh well, Betty always did have a way with her," laughed Mollie, and +promptly turned her attention to the remaining three horses. + +"Lady" was a lovely white filly with whom Amy fell in love immediately. + +"This one's mine," she cried, putting a possessive hand on Lady's flank +while the latter turned her dainty head and regarded the girl out of +softly-wistful brown eyes. "I wanted her as soon as I saw her." + +Her claim was not disputed, for Grace was raving over the horse called +Nabob, who was, by a strange coincidence, that very light tan color +which she most adored. + +"How did you know I always wanted a horse just like this?" she cried, +turning joyfully to Andy Rawlinson who, with the other "boys" had been +looking on amusedly. + +"Well," drawled Andy, with a grin, "seems like you are all suited pretty +well." + +For Mollie, whose adventurous spirit craved a spice of the dangerous in +everything, had taken immediately to the sorrel, who had apparently been +given no name. He was a skittish horse, gentle, as Andy explained, but +"pow'ful nervous--had to be sort o' coaxed along." + +"You're my horse, all right," Mollie declared, stroking the animal's +muzzle fearlessly, unmindful of rolling eyes and nervously twitching +ears. "I don't like 'em too tame, old boy. And by the way," she added, +struck by a sudden inspiration, "I've thought of just the name for you. +I'm going to call you 'Old Nick.'" + +And so, when the selection had been made, to everybody's satisfaction, +nothing would do but the girls must try their mounts that very evening. +They had brought their riding tags in preparation for their summer in +the saddle, and when they had slipped into the tight breeches, and +leather leggings, tailored coat, and snug fitting hat, they looked like +what they were--four thoroughly modern and very pretty Outdoor Girls. + +Later, when they rode proudly about the ranch on their splendid mounts, +the ranch hands were lost in admiration of them. + +"Gosh," said one, removing his hat and fanning himself with it, for the +evening was warm, "when Andy said they was four girls comin' from the +city to visit us I was plumb skeered. But these here girls, they ain't +no ordinary kind, no siree. An' they sho' does know how to ride." + +However, the girls were satisfied with a rather short ride that evening +for they were out of practice and they knew that sore muscles would be +the price of over-exertion. + +In the days that followed they took longer and longer rides, even +venturing along the rough forest trails when Andy Rawlinson was with +them as guide and protector. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson rode, too, but, not +being as strenuous as the girls, they were glad to have any one as +capable as Andy Rawlinson to look out for their charges. + +But one day, much as they liked him, the girls got a little tired of +Andy's chaperonage, and at Mollie's suggestion they decided to "give him +the slip." + +"Anybody would think he was our granny, the way he dictates to us," she +complained, as she flicked a fly from Old Nick's side, thereby causing +him to shy wildly. "We know our way about all right now, and I'm sure we +Outdoor Girls never needed anybody to look out for us, anyway." + +"Hear, hear," laughed Betty, half way between conviction and protest. "I +don't like to have Andy around all the time, any more than you do, +Mollie, but I'm not sure that we know our way about as well as we might. +If we should get lost----" + +"Oh, don't be an old wet blanket," cried Mollie impatiently, and as Amy +and Grace seemed for once to be of her mind, Betty had nothing to do but +to surrender as gracefully as she could. + +It was after lunch that the girls managed to slip away without being +observed to where their mounts were tethered at the edge of the +woodland. And oh, what a glorious sense of freedom when they were +mounted and cantering down a cool forest trail--alone! + +They had been this way with Andy before, so they had no fear of losing +their path and they urged their horses to more and more speed, +intoxicated by the sense of freedom. + +What they did not notice was that the sun had disappeared behind an +ominous bank of clouds and the wind was rising threateningly. And so +they were caught fairly and squarely by the deluge that swept upon them +with a bewildering suddenness. + +Where to go? Where to turn for shelter from the driving rain and moaning +wind? They checked their horses while they gazed at each other wildly. + +Suddenly Betty's straining eyes made out what seemed to be the outline +of a little shed or cabin, half hidden by surrounding foliage. + +"There's a house over there," she cried, hastily dismounting and tying +Nigger to a tree a little off the path. "Maybe whoever lives there will +let us in till the rain stops." + +The girls followed her example and hurriedly made their way on foot +toward their one hope of refuge. When they reached the house Betty +started to knock, then paused uncertainly, her hand uplifted. For above +the beat of the rain and the shrill whine of the wind came a strain of +music, mournful, yet exquisitely beautiful. Amazed, forgetful of their +discomfort, the girls listened while the throbbing, haunting melody +wailed itself to a close. + +"I--I've heard that music before," Betty murmured, then rapped gently, +almost timidly, on the door. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +ALONG THE TRAIL + + +Betty's knock had to be repeated twice before the occupant of the cabin +responded. + +"Knock harder, Betty, if----" Mollie was beginning when the door opened +at last and a very strange person stood upon the threshold. Tall, with +stooped shoulders and a head bent a little as though he had spent +countless hours over his violin, with long, curly hair, and with the +visioned eyes of the musician, the man was a figure that would have made +people turn to stare at him anywhere. + +"I--we--we are very sorry to trouble you," said Betty hesitatingly, as +the musician made no effort to break the silence. "But it is raining +hard, as you see, and we thought----" + +The man started and frowned. + +"Ah yes, of course," he said, moving aside and motioning them into the +room. "You will find shelter here, but very little else, I fear." + +As the girls entered rather hesitantly the man turned from them +abruptly and, lifting the violin that lay upon the rough board table, he +began with the utmost gentleness to put it in its case. The girls had +the rather uncomfortable impression that the man was forcing himself to +be polite to them--that if he had been any other than a gentleman he +would have refused them admittance. + +They looked uneasily at each other and then toward the one window in the +room, and one thought was in the minds of all of them--to escape from +the enforced hospitality of this man. + +"I think the rain is letting up a little," said Grace softly. + +"I reckon we won't have to stay more than a few minutes," agreed Betty, +then, as their long-haired host put down his case and turned toward +them, she ventured a shy compliment. + +"We heard you playing as we came along," she said. "It was very +wonderful." + +"Thank you," said the man gruffly, and turned away so abruptly that +Betty felt as if some one had struck her. + +Mollie looked indignant and Amy put an arm about Betty as she whispered: + +"The rain has nearly stopped, honey. Don't you think we had better go?" + +So, with half-hearted expressions of thanks from the girls and no +expression of regret at all from the man, the new acquaintances parted, +the girls hurrying down the dripping path to where their horses were +tethered. + +Once Mollie looked back toward the cabin, and her indignation burst +forth. + +"Look, he could hardly wait for us to get outside to shut the door," she +said. "Of all the ill-mannered----" + +"Oh, I don't think he meant to be ill-mannered," interposed Betty +mildly, as she reached Nigger and he whinnied a welcome. "He was just +distantly polite, that's all. He didn't want to be bothered, probably, +and he had a hard time to keep from showing it." + +"Huh," grunted Mollie, as she flung herself upon Old Nick's back and +patted him soothingly. "I'm sure he has some real reason for not wanting +folks around. He acted mighty funny to me," she said. + +"Goodness, hear the child!" cried Grace, as they rode swiftly back the +way they had come through the fine drizzle. "She never can resist making +a thief or something out of a perfectly ordinary person." + +"Seems to me he is anything but ordinary," interposed Amy thoughtfully. +"No ordinary person could play the violin the way he was playing it +when we came up to the house. That sounded like the work of a master." + +"Yes," agreed Betty, a faraway look in her eyes. "He plays exquisitely, +if he does live in a little house away up in the woods. And I can't +shake off the impression that I have heard that same selection played in +just that same way somewhere before." + +Though this first excursion had been somewhat of a failure, the girls +were by no means discouraged and in the days that followed they rode +almost constantly. Finally they began to know their way about like the +natives. + +Their rides were taken mostly in the open country, however, for in the +woods they knew lurked very real dangers. But these they avoided more to +save Mrs. Nelson worry than from any personal fears. + +But one day, feeling more than usually adventurous and growing more and +more confident of their ability to find their way around alone, they +dared venture along a rocky trail that offered wonderful romantic +opportunities. + +"Oh, this is the life!" cried Grace, as Nabob stepped daintily over the +rocks and underbrush that almost completely overgrew the narrow path. "A +peach of a horse under you, the whole day before you, and nothing to do +but enjoy yourself. Whoa-up there, Nabob. What's the matter with you?" +for the horse had whinnied softly and shied almost imperceptibly to the +side of the trail. + +At the same time the other horses seemed to catch some of Nabob's +uneasiness, and the girls were kept busy for the next few minutes +soothing them and coaxing them back into a normal mode of progress. + +"Something scared them," said Amy nervously. "Don't you think we had +better go back, girls? This trail seems to be getting narrower and +narrower. I don't believe anybody comes along here very often." + +"Well, what of it?" cried Mollie sharply. "That's what we are here for, +isn't it? If we wanted people, we could have plenty of them right back +on the ranch." + +"Stop quarreling, girls," said Betty, matter-of-factly. "We'll eat +pretty soon and that will make everybody feel better." Kindly Mrs. +Cummins had put up an appetizing lunch for the girls. + +"Look!" she cried a moment later, as the trail broadened out and they +reached a rather open space in the woods through which they could look +straight down--for they were on a considerable elevation--into the +thriving little mining town of Gold Run. "I didn't know you could see +Gold Run from here." + +"Doesn't it look funny and tiny?" cried Mollie, reining in beside her. +"It must be an awfully long way off." + +"Wouldn't this be a good place to eat?" queried Amy hopefully, and the +girls laughed at her. + +"We aren't hungry enough yet," said Betty, as she turned her horse to +continue down the trail. + +They rode on, following the trail as it wound deeper and deeper into the +woodland, catching glimpses now and then of the mining camp down in the +hollow. + +It seemed as if they were really getting closer to Gold Run and, +fascinated by the new game they were playing, forgetting their fears in +the new sights and sounds all about them, the girls rode farther and +farther into the heart of a forest, whose smiling face often served to +hide some hideous danger. + +But to the girls all was beauty and sunshine and they conversed merrily +as they cantered along. + +"When is Allen coming, Betty?" asked Grace. "I had an idea he would be +here before this." + +"Why, dad has written, asking him to come as soon as he can," answered +Betty, striving to look unconscious. "You know what that girl Lizzie +said about mother's relatives--she never knew she had them till she came +here--and dad thinks some of these people may make up their minds to +contest the will. They haven't made trouble yet--but you never can tell. +Listen, girls," she added suddenly. "Will you promise not to breathe a +word of it if I tell you a big secret?" + +"Hope to die," they chorused piously. + +"Well, our old friend Peter Levine has been around pestering mother +again." + +At this news, Grace, who was riding ahead, checked her mount so suddenly +that Betty had all she could do to keep Nigger from swallowing Nabob's +tail. + +"For goodness' sake, put out your hand when you do that next time," +laughed Betty. + +"Well," said Grace as she gave Nabob a gentle slap that started him on +again, "Peter Levine must want that ranch very badly, to be following us +all over the continent this way." + +"He seems to be rather anxious," said Betty dryly. "He has offered +mother twenty thousand for it this time." + +"Going up," cried Mollie, with a chuckle. "If your mother holds on much +longer, Betty, she will be a millionaire." + +"Well, mother is more certain than ever that there is something unusual +about Gold Run Ranch," went on Betty, as she urged Nigger up a gentle +slope. "She confidently expects to discover a gold mine, and so that's +another reason why she thinks Allen ought to be here." + +"Goodness, let's all get out and dig," cried Mollie. + +"Can we have all we find, Betty?" called Amy, with a laugh. + +"Every last gold brick," answered Betty happily, and then they came upon +another open space, and there, lying not more than half a mile below +them, was the mining town of Gold Run. + +"Now here's the place to have some lunch," said Betty, slipping to the +ground and leading Nigger off a little way into the woods where she +tethered him securely. "We can look right down into the town and eat our +lunch at the same time." + +The girls followed suit, and it did not take them long afterward to +discover that they were very hungry. So out came the lunch basket, and +never did biscuits and cheese and fried chicken taste more delicious +than they did to the girls right there in that romantic little spot in +the woods. + +"I hope it doesn't rain the way it did the other day," said Mollie, as +she lazily surveyed a cloudless sky. + +"We haven't even a cabin in the woods to go to this time," said Grace, +adding, as the thought brought up a picture of the long-haired musician +who had been so painfully polite: "I wonder what our friend, Long Hair, +lives on, anyway. Maybe he goes out and kills bears and things. They say +bear meat is very good eating," she added reflectively. + +"Maybe we can catch one ourselves and take it home for dinner," +suggested Mollie, and the girls looked as if they did not like her +suggestion at all. + +"Methinks the bear would be more likely to catch us," Betty was saying +when a chorus of low whinnyings and stampings coming from where the +horses were tethered caused them to jump to their feet in alarm. +Suddenly the nervousness of the animals changed to panic and they began +to rear and plunge, straining madly at the tethering straps, snorting +and screaming with terror. + +"Look!" cried Mollie, her voice shrilling above the noise. "There! In +the woods! Oh, run for your lives, girls! Run!" + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +DANGER AHEAD + + +Coming toward the girls through the trees, crouched low, sinister eyes +fixed upon them, were two great timber wolves. The girls, terrified as +they were, saw at a glance that it would be of no use to run, the +movement would only infuriate the beasts and precipitate their attack. + +"The trees!" gasped Betty, feeling herself in the grip of the deadly +inertia that one experiences sometimes in a nightmare. "Make for the +trees, girls; they are our only chance." + +Luckily, the branches of the trees swung low to the ground, or the girls +could never have saved themselves. As it was, they had barely time to +swing themselves free of the ground when the great beasts darted into +the open, fangs bared, snarling hideously. Then---- + +Bang! Bang! Two sharp reports from the direction of the woodland and one +of the wolves sprang clear of the ground, then slunk into the +underbrush, while the other staggered, fell, struggled to its feet, +fell again, and after one convulsive movement, lay still. + +While the girls stared, unable to follow this swift turn of events, +there was the sound of running feet coming in their direction and the +next moment two figures broke through into the cleared space. + +One was a little wizened man who seemed, for all his apparent age, +extremely agile. The other was a girl, a splendid, big creature, who +stood as tall as the man, and who, like him, carried a rifle. + +The two ran to the fallen animal, talking excitedly, and turned it over +to be sure it was dead. They were so absorbed that they did not notice +the girls, who dropped down quietly from their perches in the trees. The +sight of the guns carried by the newcomers had had a tremendously +reassuring effect upon them. The wonderful sensation of relief that +swept over them as they realized their almost miraculous escape, was so +keen as to be almost pain. + +Still, they were not quite free from fear as they approached the +prostrate body of the big beast, over which their rescuers were still +bending. It was the girl who first discovered them. + +"Hello!" she cried, straightening up and turning upon the girls a frank +regard. "You was the ones this old boy was after, eh? Look, Dad," she +added, pointing to where the four horses were still bucking and snorting +in fright. "There's the hosses we heard, but I reckon 'twas these gals +the wolves was after." + +"I guess you're right," said Betty, trying to smile through a shiver. +"It wasn't very much fun while it lasted, either." + +At this the old man, who had very kindly, keen blue eyes in his seamed +and wrinkled face, turned and spat upon the ground meditatively. + +"You don't mean to tell me," he said, looking from one to the other of +the girls, "that you purty young girls was out hyar all alone, without +even a gun to protect yourselves with?" + +"I guess we were." It was Mollie who spoke this time, and her tone was +rueful. "We aren't used to this part of the world, you see, and so we +didn't know what a risky thing we were doing." + +"They are most as bad as the Hermit of Gold Run, aren't they, Dad?" +asked the big girl, her eyes twinkling. "He goes about everywhere +through the woods without a gun and only his violin for company; and, +somehow or other, the beasts never molest him. Some says he charms 'em +with his violin, but I think it's just luck," she added, with a wise +shake of her head. + +The girls, whose curiosity had revived as their fears subsided, listened +with interest to this rather long speech of the mountain girl. + +"Has this--er--hermit, as you call him----" Betty interrogated eagerly, +"has he long curly hair and is he tall----" + +"With stooped shoulders?" finished Amy. + +The mountain girl looked amazed. + +"Why yes. Do you know him?" she asked, adding, as though to explain her +surprise: "He doesn't like to see people, you know, and folks round here +don't know much about him 'cept that he plays the violin. That's why +they calls him the hermit, 'cause he lives alone an' hates everybody." + +"All except Meggy, here," interposed the old man, a look of pride in his +eyes as he gazed at his daughter. "He likes her fust rate. She says it's +'cause she takes him grub an' good things to eat. But I know better." + +"Pshaw, Dad," cried the girl, flushing with embarrassment. "It's jest +one of your idees that people like me better'n most when they don't at +all." As though to change the subject, she touched the stiff animal at +her feet with the toe of her stout boot. + +"What you aim to do with this one, Dad?" she asked. "It was your bullet +got him. Mine went wild, an' I jest injured the other feller." + +"Waal," said the old man, his gaze fixed speculatively on the big beast, +"he's not wuth the trouble o' skinning an' his meat ain't much good, so +I reckon we'd better leave him, daughter. Time I was gettin' back to the +mine." + +He turned to go, but Betty was before him, hand outstretched +impulsively. + +"Oh, but you must let us thank you," she cried. "If you and your +daughter hadn't happened along just then I don't know what we should +have done." + +"Oh, thet's all right, thet's all right," said the old miner, too +embarrassed to meet her eye. "Glad we could be some use to you, ma'am. +But ef you'll take an old man's advice," he added, as he and his +daughter started through the woods in the direction of Gold Run, "you +won't go roaming around in these parts without a gun onto you. 'Tain't +safe, noways." + +"We won't," they promised. + +Once their protectors were gone they were wild with impatience to get +out of this place of dangers. Their fingers trembled as they untied the +horses, and it was as much as they could do to get the animals to stand +still long enough to mount them. + +However, once in the saddle, they galloped along that narrow trail at +full speed, regardless of rocks and old stumps of trees and treacherous +holes, their one thought to reach the open road--and safety. + +When at last the plain stretched before them, level and red hot in the +blazing afternoon sun, they all uttered a silent prayer of thankfulness. + +"You were right, Amy," said Betty suddenly, as Amy came up abreast of +her, "when you said the mountains could be cruel too." + +"We'll not ever dare tell the folks," said Grace, shuddering at the +memory of their close escape. "They would never let us out of their +sight again." + +"It was mighty lucky for us that Meggy and her father happened along +just as they did," said Mollie. "I know I couldn't have held on very +long where I was, and once on the ground I'd have made a lovely tender +morsel for the little wolves." + +"You flatter yourself," retorted Grace, and Amy shivered. + +"I don't know how you girls can joke about such a thing," she said. "I +was about frightened to death." + +"I suppose you think the rest of us enjoyed it," said Mollie, and at +this point Betty thought it was about time to interfere. + +"Wasn't it odd--Meggy's speaking of our friend the musician and calling +him the Hermit of Gold Run?" she said. "I'm glad the poor lonely fellow +has a nice girl like Meggy to befriend him." + +"Huh, he didn't seem to want befriending very much when we saw him," +said Mollie. "We couldn't have been frozen more completely if we had +dropped on an iceberg." + +"Oh, well, he has 'ze temperament,'" said Grace, with an elaborate +gesture. + +"Seems kind of strange, his living up there all alone," said Amy +thoughtfully. "You would think any one who could play the way he can +would hate to bury himself in the wilderness. Unless----" she paused, +and Mollie jumped joyfully into the opening. + +"Unless there is some reason why he has to," said the latter, adding +with an I-told-you-so air, "I thought there was some mystery about that +man, and now you are beginning to think so yourselves. You just keep +your eyes open and watch for a surprise!" + + + + +CHAPTER X + +THE LANDSLIDE + + +After their perilous adventure, the Outdoor Girls shunned the forest +unless they were accompanied by one or more of the cowboys at the ranch. +Andy Rawlinson escorted them whenever he could, but his duties as +foreman of the ranch kept him very busy and he sometimes appointed one +of the ranch hands to take his place. + +However, these excursions became less and less frequent as the girls +became more interested in the booming mining town of Gold Run. + +This they had visited with Mr. and Mrs. Nelson and Andy, and the whole +thing made them feel more than ever as if they were living some motion +picture drama. + +There was the regulation general store and the inevitable dance hall +where the lucky miners came to spend their golden nuggets and the +unlucky tried to drown their misery in the companionship of others. + +Their eyes wide with interest and pleasure and their tongues busy with +questions, the girls cantered down the narrow, crooked wagon road called +"Main Street." They read the names over the doors of the dingy little +shops, commenting gayly upon their queerness. + +"Peter Levine, Attorney," read Betty aloud from a sign just a little +dingier than the rest. Then she drew rein and waited for her mother, who +was riding more slowly with Mr. Nelson. The other girls, who had ridden +on ahead, suddenly missed her, saw that she had stopped, and came back +curiously. + +"Look, Mother," Betty was saying as they came up. "This is where dear +Peter Levine hails from. His checked suit and loud tie must look funny +in that dingy little shop," she added, with a chuckle. + +"Well, let's ride along," suggested Mrs. Nelson nervously. "He might see +us and take it into his head to come out. And I don't want to have +anything more to do with him until Allen comes." + +"Allen," thought Betty, as they turned and cantered on again. "I wish he +would hurry a little. He seems an awfully long time coming." + +After they had seen all that there was to see of the town itself, Andy +led them to some of the important mines on the outskirts. They listened +with lively interest while the young fellow explained to them how the +ore was extracted from the mountain side where it had lain unmolested +for thousands of years. + +"It almost seems a shame to disturb it," said Amy at this point, and the +girls laughed at her. + +"Just give me a chance at it, that's all," said Mollie longingly. + +At one of these mines they met the old man and his daughter, Meggy, +whose timely arrival a few days before had saved their lives. The two +were in the midst of their work, the girl lifting and hauling with all +the strength of a man, and they scarcely looked up as the party passed +them, although the old man responded with a wave of his hand when Andy +Rawlinson called to him. + +"How's it goin', Dan?" asked the former. + +"Oh, well enough, well enough," responded the man, with what seemed to +the girls enforced cheerfulness. "We'll strike gold afore to-morrow, +sure." + +"Poor old Dan Higgins," said Andy, with a sobering of his good-natured +face. "He's always goin' to strike gold 'to-morrow.' Sure, there's no +one I'd rather see strike it rich than Dan an' that girl of his. But I'm +'fraid they're jest plumb unlucky. Funny thing, luck--and gold," he went +on to soliloquize. "Some young fellers they come out here, thinkin' they +can get back to the girl at home in a couple o' years with their +pockets plumb full o' nuggets, an' instead, they toil their lives away +till their hair grows white an' their skin gets crackly like parchment, +an' never even a glimpse o' yellow. An' mebbe the feller next to him +drills a hole three feet deep and he strikes a vein. Yes siree, if ever +there was a real thing in this world, that thing is luck." + +The girls were impressed and their hearts ached for Dan Higgins, his +years of hope and work and his profitless mine. As for the girl, his +daughter, Meggy---- + +"Are you sure Dan Higgins hasn't any chance of striking gold?" asked +Betty, gravely. + +"Not a bit of it," returned Andy Rawlinson quickly. "There's gold all +around here--everybody thought Dan was mighty lucky when he staked out +his claim. He may find gold yet. But," he added, and there was a +fatalistic quality in his tone that chilled the girls, "you always have +to reckon on luck." + +In the days that followed it became quite the usual thing to see the +Outdoor Girls, mounted on their splendid horses, galloping along the +open road or cantering through the town of Gold Run. It was not long +before they became general favorites in this country where girls of +their type were scarce, and the girls knew most of the rough but +good-hearted miners by name. But perhaps of them all, their best and +staunchest friends were old Dan Higgins and his daughter, Meggy. + +The girls often visited the mine and were always greeted with the utmost +heartiness by its owners. Once Betty had caught Meggy looking longingly +at Nigger as he was trying his best to get some nourishment from the +stubbly grass, and with the quick impulsiveness that was hers, she asked +the girl if she would like a ride. + +At the sudden radiance that flooded Meggy's face, Betty turned away +abashed. She felt as though she had been given a glimpse of the girl's +soul. + +Meggy had her ride, and in the days that followed she had many others +and the girl's fondness for Betty became almost worship. She liked the +other girls, for they were always kind to her, but Betty was her idol. + +"I have wanted all my life to own a horse," she confided to the Little +Captain one day, as she stroked Nigger's shining coat with almost +reverent fingers. "It would be the first thing I would buy for myself if +dad should strike it rich." Her tone was brave, but the eyes that sought +her father's toiling figure were sad. "Poor old dad," she said softly, +"I don't think he would keep on any longer, if it wasn't for me." + +On one of their visits to the mine the girls were astonished to find +their mysterious musician there ahead of them. He seemed to be trying to +help, but from where the girls watched unobserved, it looked as though +he were more in the way than anything else. + +Meggy was the first to discover them, and as she called out a greeting, +the Hermit of Gold Run rose quickly to his feet and disappeared into the +woods. + +"Poor fellow," said Meggy, looking pityingly after him. "We let him try +to help us because it seems to amuse him, but he really doesn't know how +to work with his hands. His fingers were made for the fiddle." + +"I certainly would like to find out more about that man," said Mollie, +her forehead puckered into a puzzled frown. "He sure does act pretty +funny." + +"We'll have to visit him again some day," said Betty lightly, and then +turned to question Meggy on the progress of the mine. + +On their way home they took up the subject of the strange musician whose +queer comings and goings had begun to be of more than usual interest to +them. + +"He acts--in a--a stealthy way," said Grace, striving for the exact +words to express her meaning. "He positively sneaked away from us this +morning. It seems to me people don't act like that unless they are +afraid of something." + +"He might just be afraid of people," Betty reminded her. "Or he may +dislike people and want to be left alone. That would account for the +name of 'hermit' that the natives around here have given him." + +"But an ordinary hermit wouldn't be able to play like a virtuoso," +objected Amy. + +"Well, nobody said he was an ordinary hermit," retorted Mollie. + +"To change the subject before you girls get to the hair-pulling stage," +laughed Betty, as she turned Nigger's head toward the ranch, "I wish we +could do something for Dan Higgins and Meggy. It's a shame for that +splendid, loyal girl to have to spend all her youth, when she might be +having good times like other girls, in doing the kind of work that's +only fit for a man to do." + +"And she's so brave about it, too," added Grace admiringly. "She keeps +her head up like a thoroughbred." + +"I've asked her to come over to the ranch," Betty went on thoughtfully. +"She has a passion for horses, you know, and I told her we'd have Andy +Rawlinson pick her out a beauty from the corrals. I could see that she +was awfully tempted, but she said no, she couldn't leave her father." + +"Probably the real reason she refused was because she hadn't decent +clothes to wear," said Mollie sagaciously. "The poor girl is almost in +rags." + +"I wish we could help," sighed Betty. "But she and her father are proud, +like most of the other people around here. They just have to stand on +their own feet." + +"I wonder if they have enough to eat," mused Amy. "It would be dreadful +to think of them actually hungry." + +"Oh, I guess there's no danger of that," said Mollie. "As long as there +are wild animals in the woods and Dan Higgins and Meggy have guns they +won't starve to death." + +"And maybe they really will find gold, anyway," said Grace hopefully. + +They rode along silently for a while. In their abstraction they had +taken the long way home, instead of cutting directly across the ranch in +the direction of the house. They were on a rather narrow trail, so +narrow, that they could not ride two abreast but were strung out in +single file, Indian fashion. On one side of them rose the mountain, huge +and majestic, and on the other was a sheer drop of a hundred feet or so +into a rocky canyon. + +The girls had always loved this ride because of the wonderful view it +afforded them of the surrounding country. But that very morning Dan +Higgins had warned them not to go that way. + +"The mountain is pow'ful oncertain," the old man had told them. "Part of +it is apt to fall on you any time if you get too close to it." + +Betty thought of this warning, but too late. An ominous rumbling jerked +her eyes upward and she saw a sight that almost froze the blood in her +veins. It seemed indeed to her terrified fancy as if the whole mountain +were falling upon them. A great mass of dirt and brush and rock was +hurtling down upon them with sickening velocity. A landslide--and they +were directly in its path! + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +IN THE CAVE + + +Luck was with the Outdoor Girls that day--or fate--call it what you +will. In the side of the mountain close to where they were, had been +drilled a hole forming a large, artificial cave--probably the work of +some miner who had abandoned operations almost at the beginning either +from lack of funds or ambition. + +Into this hole the girls dashed, driven on by their frightful peril. Amy +was the last to enter, and she had barely urged her nervous little filly +into the opening when, with a terrific rumbling and rattling, the mass +of earth and stones fell, covering the mouth of the cave and leaving +them in such absolute darkness that it seemed as if they must suddenly +have been stricken blind. + +"Oh! oh!" moaned Amy, her trembling hand striving vainly to quiet the +frightened animal under her. "We're buried alive, girls, we're buried +alive! We'll never get out of this--never!" + +"Please stop that, Amy," Betty's voice came out of the darkness, harsh, +unnatural, like the crack of a whip. "The only danger we're in is the +danger of losing our heads. Whoa, there, Nigger, old boy. Take it easy, +beauty--there's nothing to be frightened about--there--there----" and +she crooned to the big beast soothingly. + +Someway, the other girls managed to follow her example, enough at least +to quiet their restless mounts. Grace was sobbing, more from nervousness +than fright, but she managed to say with a catch in her breath, "Stand +still, Nabob--don't be such a s-silly. Isn't your Auntie Grace here with +you?" + +But it was Mollie who had the real problem. For while "Old Nick's" +skittishness was more amusing than dangerous in the open, here, in this +small place, with the other horses already difficult to manage, any real +panic on his part would be more than likely to precipitate a real +tragedy. + +In the dark, unable to see a foot before their faces, only the power of +their wills to prevent a stampede of their panicky horses which would +mean death to them all and, worst of all, the possibility of smothering +or starving to death in this walled-in cave! This was the appalling +situation which confronted the four Outdoor Girls. + +Mollie, her teeth grimly set, her knees dug into Old Nick's sides, was +doing her best to keep him from trying to climb on the back of one of +the other horses. + +"Oh, Mollie, make him stop it," cried Amy frantically. "He'll kill poor +Lady. Make him stop!" + +"What do you suppose I'm trying to do," gritted Mollie between clenched +teeth. "Do you think I like riding the side of a wall? Get down there, +Old Nick, you wicked beast. Just wait till I get you outside." + +Although this threat was uttered sternly, Mollie had never been nearer +to crying in her life. Luckily, a cruel dig of her spurs in the horse's +side brought the big beast to his senses. He dropped to the ground and +stood there, quivering in every muscle and nickering plaintively. + +"Good work, Mollie, old girl," cried Betty's voice encouragingly, and +Mollie, wiping a tell-tale drop from the corner of her nose, answered in +a voice that held never a quiver: "I couldn't fail you, Little Captain. +Not at a time like this," and then she felt very brave and heroic. + +The horses were quiet, huddled together at the farther end of the cave +as though they found comfort in company, and thus one great danger was +passed. But the girls had still the other and greater one to face. + +"We'd better dismount," said Betty's voice, surprisingly calm and +matter-of-fact. It was this ability of Betty Nelson's to keep her nerve +and her head in any difficulty, to see almost at a glance the best thing +to do and the best way to do it, that had led the girls to call her +their Little Captain. And now as they listened to her cool voice, +directing them as always in an emergency, some of her self-control +communicated itself to them and they followed her leadership without +question. + +"The horses will stand quietly now, I think," she said, and swung +herself cautiously from Nigger's tall back and felt her way slowly past +the horses, out to the small open space between them and what had once +been the mouth of the cave. + +The girls followed her example, the horses making no protest, save to +whinny anxiously and crowd a little closer together. + +"Where are you, Betty?" cried Grace plaintively, stubbing her toe on a +stone and emitting an injured "ouch." + +"I'm over here," responded Betty reassuringly. "Stretch out your hand +and I'll grab it." + +"Oh, for a match, my kingdom for a match!" said Mollie, brushing her +hand across her eyes as though to relieve them of the weight of that +terrific darkness. "Why aren't we men so we could carry 'em in our +pockets--the matches I mean, not the men," she added with a chuckle that +ended in a sob. + +"Well, here we are," said Grace, when they had found each other in the +inky blackness. "Now you've got us, Betty, what are you going to do with +us?" + +"I don't know--yet," responded Betty honestly. "I guess we've got to +talk it over and decide what it is best to do." + +Amy groaned. + +"Meanwhile we smother," she said. + +"Nonsense," retorted Betty briskly. "There's enough air in this place to +keep us alive for twenty-four hours at least." + +"Twenty-four hours," protested Amy, the panic she had felt at the first +threatening to overwhelm her again. "But, Betty, there isn't a chance in +the world that anybody will come along here in the next twenty-four +hours." + +"That's right, too," agreed Mollie, a prickly sensation of pure fright +tickling the roots of her hair. "Dan Higgins said this trail was +practically never used because of the danger from the mountain. This is +a pretty pickle, this is!" + +"And even if anybody should come along," Grace pointed out gloomily, +"they couldn't be expected to guess that there are four girls and four +horses buried in this hole in the wall." + +"And I don't believe we could ever in the world make ourselves heard +through that mass of rocks and dirt," added Mollie. "Looks as though we +had just about come to the end of our rope, I should say." + +Amy began to cry again softly, and Betty, who had been listening with +increasing irritation to this conversation, burst forth indignantly: + +"Of all the silly things I ever heard!" she denounced them hotly, "I +think you girls are the worst. You seem to forget that you are Outdoor +Girls and that we have been in a good many tight places that were almost +as bad as this. Why, we can't expect to have good times and adventures +without once in a while getting the worst of it. If this is the way you +are going to take a little bad luck," she finished her tirade in a fury +that whipped the girls like a lash, "then I'm through, that's all. I +refuse to be one of four Outdoor Girls that don't deserve the name." + +She paused, and the girls were silent for a moment, feeling a little +dazed. The tongue-lashing had been just what they needed, as Betty very +well knew. It made them angry. + +"Oh well," said Mollie sullenly, "if you are so much better than the +rest of us, Betty, perhaps you can tell us what to do. I'm sure we would +be just as glad to get out of this as you." + +"Then help me think of some way to do it," Betty retorted, more quietly. +"Surely we can't accomplish it by making up our minds ahead of time that +we are doomed." + +"Suppose you suggest something, yourself," said Grace resentfully. + +"All right," said Betty, whose quick mind had been working busily. "I am +as sure as you girls are that the possibility of rescue from anybody +outside is slight. Of course," she added breathlessly, "when we don't +come home dad and mother would become worried and start a search party." + +"They wouldn't miss us before night though," said Grace. + +"Exactly," Betty caught her up. "And at night they wouldn't be as apt to +discover the landslide as they would in the daylight. They would +naturally think of the woods first. But the next day, anybody familiar +with the trail would be sure to notice that there had been a landslide +and they would be almost sure to connect it with us----" + +"But Betty," wailed Grace, forgetting that a moment before she had been +angry with the Little Captain, "all that is just supposition, and you +know as well as we do that we are likely not to be discovered +until--until----" + +"It's too late," finished Mollie. "Why don't you say it? It's the +truth." + +"And since it is the truth," Betty took her up briskly, "there is all +the more reason why we should take things in our own hands and work out +our own salvation." + +Betty impatiently cut short Amy's discouraged "How?" + +"Now listen," she said. "There are plenty of stones in this cave----" + +"My toes cry aloud that they know it," interjected Grace, but no one +laughed--they were too intent upon Betty. They were beginning to realize +what she had in mind, and the realization brought a thrill of hope. + +"If we could find any sharp enough--stones I mean," Betty went on, "we +might use them as a sort of shovel and try to dig our way out. Of +course," she added, as the girls began to grope eagerly among the dirt +and debris at their feet for stones sharp enough to answer the purpose, +"the mouth of the cave may be choked up too solidly with dirt and +underbrush and things for us to get through. But in that case we'd just +have to think up some other way, that's all." + +"I've got a peach," cried Mollie slangily, as her hand struck a big +stone sharp enough to serve her purpose. "I ought to be able to dig my +way through the side of a house with this fellow." + +"And here's the very one that got too familiar with my toe," said Grace, +as she picked up another serviceable stone. "I'm going to get even with +it now. I shall make it work as it never worked before." + +After much groping and knocking of heads together, Betty and Amy also +armed themselves with imitation shovels, and so the work began. + +And it was work indeed. For what seemed hours to the anxious girls they +toiled, digging sometimes with the stones, sometimes in desperation with +their hands until it seemed to them they must have dug their way half +through the mountainside. And still that blank wall of dirt, that +impenetrable darkness, that stubborn barrier between them and the +blessed sunshine. Amy was the first to give way. + +She sank back on the dank floor of the cave and buried her face in her +dirt-stained hands. + +"We'll never get out of here!" she sobbed. "And I'm st-starving to +d-death!" + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +IN THE DARKNESS + + +Now the girls had been hungry before the accident occurred and, it being +several hours since then, they were, by this time, as any one could +readily see, in a rather bad state. Therefore, Amy's complaint was very +unfortunate and, had it not been for Betty, it might have ruined the +morale of the girls completely. + +"Good gracious, Amy, don't talk about starving to death," cried Mollie, +dismayed. "That's coming too near the truth for comfort. Oh, this +miserable stone. It's cutting clear through my hand!" + +"And my back is nearly broken," said Grace, adding, as she turned +ferociously upon the still-sobbing Amy: "Stop that crying, Amy +Blackford. Don't you know it is catching?" and a suspicious break at the +end of her sentence, proved the truth of the assertion. + +"Girls, please don't," begged Betty, still digging automatically at the +stubborn wall of stones and dirt. "If you all begin to cry, then we +might just as well throw up our hands and say we are beaten." + +It was not long after that that the girls found what they called their +"second wind." They forgot that they were ravenous, that their backs +ached and that their hands were scratched and torn. They worked +furiously in the darkness, their goal the out-of-doors they loved so +well. + +For a long time they did not notice that the air was becoming very close +and oppressive and that the perspiration that bothered them so was +caused not alone by their exertion. And when the realization did come it +had the effect of goading them on to more furious effort. + +That the horses also felt the change in the atmosphere, was attested to +by their increased nervousness. The trampling of their hoofs sounded +ominous to the girls--they made queer little puffing noises as if they +were getting their breath with greater and greater difficulty. + +In one terrible instant the girls realized what might happen when what +was discomfort to the animals now, should become torture. Maddened by +pain and fright, it would be no longer possible to quiet them. And +then--and then---- + +"Don't you think we'd better stop and try to quiet the horses?" asked +Mollie once, as the champing and snorting in the blackness behind them +became more marked. + +"I don't think it would do any good," Betty answered between clenched +teeth as she scooped and dug, scooped and dug. "Better keep on working, +girls. It's the one chance we have." + +Oh, the horror of it, the nightmare of it! The heavy air, the hideous +dark, the nervous trampling of those death-bearing hoofs---- The girls +spoke no longer. They were beyond speech. Almost maddened by terror +themselves, they scooped and dug, scooped and dug---- + +Once they thought they heard voices outside, and shrilly they cried to +their imaginary rescuers. No answering "hallo" reached them, and the +only effect of their cries seemed to be to add to the fright of their +horses and so endanger themselves still more. + +On, on, on--while their aching muscles seemed to grow numb with the +strain and their lungs nearly burst with the pressure upon them. + +At last they gave in--it seemed that they had to give in. All except +Betty, who kept on desperately, doggedly, her muscles barely able to +respond to the last call she was making upon them. + +"I can't go on any more. I'm all in," said Mollie, a desperate quiet in +her voice. "My arms are like lead and my hands are so numb I can't feel +the stone. I guess this is the last adventure of the Outdoor Girls. We +have just had one too many, that's all." + +"Oh, Mollie!" Betty drew in a labored breath that caught on a sob. +"Please don't give up--please! I've counted on you----" she paused, +jerked her head up, her attention turned on the spot where her hand +still automatically dug at the earth. + +She sniffed, experimentally, sniffed again, stilling the wild throb of +hope that was almost a pain at her heart. + +"What is it, Betty, what is it?" cried Mollie, sensing something +strange. Amy and Grace fought off the dizziness that was stealing over +them and leaned forward. + +But Betty had jumped to her feet, had dropped the stone and was tearing +with her bare hands at that thin place--that thin place---- It gave +under her mad onslaught, and suddenly her hand slipped through into the +air--the air---- A breath of it swept into her tortured lungs, and she +leaned there, laughing, crying, the tears of sheer weakness running down +her dirt-stained face. + +"Girls!" she babbled, "out there is the air--the good old air--enough of +it for all of us! We're saved, do you hear? We're saved!" + +Exhausted as they were, the girls tore at the tiny hole that Betty had +made until there was an opening big enough for them to crawl through. + +And oh! the indescribable ecstasy of it, the joy of it, just to lie +there, trembling with weakness, and drink in great drafts of that +life-giving air, thinking of nothing, caring for nothing but that they +were alive there in their great out-of-doors. One never comes really to +appreciate life until one has been close to death. + +It was a long time before they ventured to go on. They had not realized +how near exhaustion they had been until the tension had relaxed. When at +last they did start for home, on foot, they were still trembling and +they dared not glance down the canyon at their right for fear of +becoming dizzy. + +They had been long hours in the cave, and when they finally left the +trail and cut across the plain toward the ranch it was nearly dark. They +did not realize the startling sight they must present to any one who +might not know of their plight until they met Andy Rawlinson and some +other boys from the ranch starting out to search for them. + +At sight of the mud-stained, blood-stained Outdoor Girls, Andy Rawlinson +fairly tumbled from his pony and came running toward them while the +other boys stood agape. + +"What in the world----" began Andy, but Betty stopped him with a weary +gesture. As briefly as she could she told him what had happened and +asked him to go back and get their horses. + +"It's getting pretty dark now, you know," she reminded him, when he +seemed inclined to linger and ask questions. "Soon you won't be able to +see what you're doing. Won't you please hurry?" + +"Surest thing you know," responded the boy quickly, his nice eyes full +of sympathy for them. "Some of the boys will see you home--your folks +are getting awfully worried about you, you know--and the rest of us will +go on and dig out the poor bronchos. So long. We'll be back pronto." + +"And now home," sighed Betty, as she looked at the ranch house just +visible in the distance. "And a bath--and something to eat. What does +that sound like, girls?" + +"Heaven!" they answered. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +THE LURE OF GOLD + + +The task of releasing the imprisoned horses was not such an easy task as +the girls and even Andy Rawlinson had thought it would be. + +In the first place, it took Andy and his company some time to discover +the place along the trail where the landslide had occurred, for Betty's +account had been hasty and excited and she had overlooked several +details that might have helped them in their work. + +And when they did reach the scene of what might have been a tragedy the +ranch hands were appalled by the immensity of the landslide. There had +been several small ones in that vicinity, but this was what Andy termed +a "humdinger." + +There was a stamping and snorting from inside that dirt-choked cavern +that, there in that lonely spot on the very edge of night, seemed +positively uncanny to the men who stood and listened. + +"Better get busy, boys," said Andy suddenly. "Those hosses ain't goin' +to get any easier in they minds an' it's about time we dug 'em out of +there. Back to Gold Run as fast as we can get there for the right kind +of tools from the miners. We may need some more men, too. Gosh, but I +didn't know it was as bad as that," he added with a glance over his +shoulder as he turned his pony and dashed back down the trail in the +direction of Gold Run. "Reckon 'twas just plain grit that got those +girls out." + +Back in Gold Run they found several miners who were willing to offer +both themselves and their tools toward the work of liberation, and soon +the cowboys returned, accompanied by men with lanterns, and fell to work +with a will. + +Two hours later, Andy Rawlinson ventured into the blackness of the cave, +swinging his lantern before him, and led forth the first of the +frightened horses. + +Meanwhile the girls had bathed away the stains of their adventure, and +after a hearty meal cooked by an over solicitous "Miz Cummins" and +served by a frankly envious and inquisitive Lizzie, they felt +considerably more like their old self-confident selves. + +However, they begged not to have to go to bed, as Mrs. Nelson anxiously +suggested, until the boys had returned with their horses. + +"I'm beginning to get dreadfully worried," Betty confessed after an +interval of staring out into the darkness. They were on the biggest of +the many porches boasted by the quaint old ranch house, waiting eagerly +for the first sound that would announce the return of Andy and the +others with their horses. + +"I'd never get over it if anything happened to Old Nick," said Mollie, +taking up Betty's theme. "Maybe we'd better borrow some other horses +from the corral and follow them." + +"You'll do nothing of the kind," said Mr. Nelson, his voice sounding +unusually stern there in the darkness. "I am going to keep my eye on you +for the rest of to-day, at least!" + +And so they contented themselves as well as they could with waiting and +finally were rewarded by the regular beat of galloping horses in the +distance. + +"They're coming!" cried Betty, springing to her feet, then turned to her +father pleadingly: "You won't mind if we go down to meet them, will you, +Dad?" she asked. "They are our chums, you know--the horses, I mean." + +Mr. Nelson nodded, and down the steps the girls sprang, racing out to +meet that sound of galloping hoofs which was coming ever nearer. A few +minutes later they were caressing the nervous animals that had gone with +them into the very shadow of death, rubbing their noses, laughing and +crying over them and calling them endearing names till it's a wonder the +cowboys, who stood by, grinning sympathetically, did not turn green with +envy. + +"Some anymiles do have all the luck," said one of them. + +After that the girls and their horses were almost inseparable. If left +to themselves, the latter would follow the girls around like dogs. Even +"Old Nick," who had been the most difficult to understand and win, now +was devoted to Mollie. She was the only one who could quiet him, and +though there were some who did not care to ride him because of his +skittishness, he was never anything but gentle and docile with her. + +As the days passed the girls became more and more interested in Meggy +Higgins until the longing to give her one good time, in spite of her +pride, became almost an obsession with them. + +One day Betty begged so hard that the girl finally consented to take a +holiday and go out with them for a day's fun. But Meggy surrendered +reluctantly, in spite of the fact that this invitation of the girls had +been like a glimpse of wonderland to her. + +"I reckon dad can get along one day without me, specially as the hermit +can do part of my work. Pa's broke him in so he can be real helpful +now----" + +But she got no farther, for Betty threw her arms around the surprised +girl and hugged her happily. + +"I'm awfully glad!" she cried, adding with eyes that sparkled: "I tell +you what I'll do. I'll let you ride Nigger. There's a darling little +brown colt over at the ranch that I've been just dying to try out." + +Sudden tears sprang to Meggy's eyes, and with the disgust of all +mountain folk for the expression of sentiment, she turned away +impatiently to hide this tell-tale sign of weakness. But Betty had +glimpsed the tears and she was satisfied. + +The day was all that even Meggy Higgins' starved imagination could have +expected of it. The miner's daughter was so beatifically happy that the +girls found a new and most satisfying thrill in her enjoyment. + +All her short, work-driven life Meggy Higgins had wanted a horse, a +beautiful, sleek animal with supple limbs and shining coat like the one +that she was riding now--Betty's Nigger. Many have desired a fortune, +some political fame, others social position, but Meggy merely desired a +horse. And even this had been denied her because her father had been +dazzled by the lure of gold, a fortune always just before his eyes, but +never to be grasped. + +The girls were sorry for old Dan Higgins and his thwarted hopes. But +they were infinitely more sorry for this girl of his to whom hardship +was a daily reality and pleasure a golden vision to be indulged in only +by girls whose fathers did not own a worthless claim. + +"Sometimes," spoke up Mollie, as she reined Old Nick into a walk, "I +wish I had the courage to rob somebody else's mine, Meggy, and plant the +gold in yours. It doesn't seem fair for you to work all the time and get +nothing for it." + +The girl smiled sadly. + +"I'm used to that," she said, with a grim philosophy far beyond her +years. Then she added, with a quick loyalty that made the girls' hearts +warm to her: "I don't mind. I'd do anything for dad an' I guess if he +thought I was gettin' discouraged he'd jest plum up an' quit. He's +gittin' old, he is, an' he ain't that spry like he used to be. All he +has is his hope in that mine--an' me. Ef you killed that you might as +well kill him." + +After a while they stopped in the shade of some stunted trees and had +lunch. The girls could tell from Meggy's popping eyes that the +delicacies they drew forth from Miz Cummins' lunch basket had never +been dreamed of in all her hum-drum, joyless life. + +Tongue sandwiches, buttered corn-bread, fried chicken that you were at +perfect liberty to take up in your fingers and nibble to your heart's +content, jelly and olives and hot cocoa in the thermos bottle with rich +cream already in it--truly a feast even worthy of the Outdoor Girls! + +After lunch the girls strolled around a bit, leaving their mounts to +graze lazily. They talked of many things, the adventures they had had, +the curious people they had met in their adventuring, while Meggy +listened to it all, drinking it in thirstily. + +"To think of all the things you've seen," she breathed at last. "An' +I've spent all my time sence I was able to toddle, I reckon, betwixt our +cabin an' the mine--back an' forth, back an' forth----" + +After that they rode on again and it was quite late in the day when they +decided it was time to be going back. + +"I don't see," said Grace, as they neared the ranch, "why we don't lay +out some claims and start digging ourselves, girls. The north end of +this ranch is quite near the other mines. We might strike gold." + +The words were spoken laughingly, but Meggy took them seriously. + +"Mebbe there's some truth in that," she said soberly. "Dad allus +reckoned they might be gold on Gold Run Ranch." + +A short time later they left her at the mine and Betty mounted Nigger, +leading the brown colt by the reins. Meggy had tried to stammer some +words of thanks, but the girls would have none of it. They waved to her +gayly and started for home. + +After an unusually long and thoughtful silence, Amy spoke up softly. + +"Betty," she said, "if Meggy is right about the ranch, there being gold +here, I mean, then what your mother had thought all along may turn out +to be the truth." + +"Well," said Betty, a joyous lilt to her voice that the girls knew well, +"Allen will be here in a few days and then we'll start our gold hunt. +Gold!" she repeated softly. "There is something romantic in the very +sound of it!" + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +A DISCOVERY + + +Up to this time the weather had been remarkably fine, but on this +particular morning the Outdoor Girls woke to find that the sky was +overcast and there was every indication of a stormy day. + +"Oh bother," grumbled Mollie, as after their breakfast she gloomily +surveyed the landscape from the cretonne-curtained window. "Just as I +was about to suggest a real adventure, too!" + +"What do you mean--'real adventure?'" queried Grace, lazily. The day +before she had bought a new box of candy and a magazine, and so it +happened that she was the only one of the four of them who really did +not care whether it rained or not. + +Mollie turned from the window and regarded them resentfully. Then she +looked more hopeful as her eyes rested on Betty, who was sorting the +contents of a too-crowded dresser drawer. + +"You are with me, anyway, aren't you, Betty?" she asked, almost +wistfully. "We'll leave these other two at home, and you and I will go +on our adventure." + +"All right," said Betty, with a lack of enthusiasm that fell with a +dampening effect upon Mollie's ears. The disastrous quality of their +last adventure had had a dampening effect on the girls' enthusiasm for +this form of entertainment, and for the present they preferred the +safety of the ranch to the lure of the great unknown, as it were. +However, this condition of mind was only temporary. They would soon be +as eager as ever for new experiences. "I'm game for anything, Mollie +dear, as long as you keep away from land-slides and wild animals." + +"Just hear the child!" said Mollie disgustedly. "As if an adventure +would be an adventure without a little danger mixed in!" + +"Just what is your great idea, Mollie?" asked Betty mildly. Mollie was +beginning to glower. And if somebody did not stop her at the beginning, +there was sure to be a fracas. Betty knew this from experience. "Suppose +you tell us about it and get it out of your system. As I said before, +I'm willing to do anything if it isn't hunting lions and tigers." + +Mollie grunted disgustedly. + +"Well, there isn't a thing really exciting about it, if that's what you +mean," she said. "I just thought that since we had nothing special to do +to-day we might visit the Hermit of Gold Run again. We might be able to +solve the mystery about him in some way," she added as a special +inducement, since the girls still seemed unenthusiastic. + +Grace laughed indulgently. + +"Just how do you expect to solve this mystery?" she asked, with a +giggle. "You certainly can't do it by looking at him." + +"Oh well, if that's the way you feel," retorted Mollie, feeling very +much abused, "I'm sorry I spoke about it. Only I thought we had already +decided to pay him a visit." + +"And so we had," said Betty, closing the dresser drawer with a bang and +coming unexpectedly to her aid. "And I, for one, am with you in that, +Mollie. I have felt from the first," she went on earnestly, while Mollie +regarded her with growing hope, "that I had not only heard the selection +that that man played but that I had seen him somewhere before--quite a +long time ago." + +Impressed by Betty's earnestness, Grace had laid down her magazine and +Amy was becoming interested. + +"I know it's ridiculous," Betty continued, as though to justify +herself, "but I can't help feeling that way, just the same." + +"That thing he played sounded familiar to me, too," Grace admitted, now +entirely abandoning her magazine and sitting up. "It has been haunting +me ever since we heard him playing that day, and yet I can't think of +the name of it." + +Softly Amy began to hum a popular song, but Mollie interrupted her +impatiently. + +"Well then, since you all feel that way about it," she said eagerly, "I +don't see why it wouldn't be fun to scout around his cabin a little bit +and see if we can't pick up some information. I'm really curious about +him." + +"All right, let's," said Betty, with the decision for which she was +famed. "Get your riding togs on, girls, and we'll play detective." + +This time it was Mollie who held back. + +"How about the weather?" she demurred. "Looks as if we were likely to +get wet." + +"Who cares?" said Betty airily, adding, as she stopped at the door to +make them a little bow: "It would give us an excuse to see His Highness +again." + +Half an hour later they had saddled their ponies and were cantering off +briskly to visit the Hermit of Gold Run. + +"Aren't you a little bit afraid to go in there?" asked Amy, reining in +as they reached the narrow trail through the woods that led near the +musician's cabin. "We might run into some wolves, as we did that other +time." + +"We were much further in the woods than the Hermit's cabin," said Mollie +impatiently. "And it was in an entirely different direction, too. Go +ahead, silly, or I'll ride right over you," and as she was urging Old +Nick forward until he crowded uncomfortably against the little white +filly, Amy had no other course but to do as she was bid. + +Nevertheless, she was not the only one who was uneasy, and it might have +been observed that the girls glanced often into the shadows of the +underbrush on either side of the narrow trail. + +There were wild animals in that forest, as they had good reason to know, +and though they seldom ventured this close to civilization, still there +was no use in tempting fate! + +"I didn't know it was as far in as this," said Grace, after they had +ridden some distance in silence. "Are you sure we haven't passed the +cabin, Betty?" + +"Why, we aren't nearly there yet," was Betty's discomforting reply. +"It's quite a way beyond that next turn in the trail." + +Grace said nothing, but she gripped the reins harder in her hands. She +had made up her mind that at the first sign of danger she would turn +Nabob and make a dash back down the trail for safety. + +After that the silence became so pronounced that Mollie noticed it and +laughed nervously. + +"Why all the noise?" she asked jocosely. "It nearly breaks my ear +drums." + +"Hush," cried Amy warningly. "I thought I heard something." + +"That was your own heart hammering against the tree trunks," retorted +Mollie dryly, at which the girls giggled and the tension relaxed. + +"Let's talk about something nice," Betty suggested. "Gold, for +instance." + +"Or Allen," teased Grace. "I reckon you won't be glad or anything when +he gets here." + +"I guess mother will be gladder than any of us," replied Betty promptly, +trying to shift the spotlight from herself. "She was so excited when I +told her what Dan Higgins said about the possibility of there being gold +on the ranch that she hardly closed her eyes all night. I told her she +was getting to be a regular adventuress." + +"Like her daughter," said Mollie, with a chuckle. + +"Just think of the story we can tell the boys when we get home," said +Amy rapturously, adding apologetically as the girls glanced at her: "If +we find the gold, I mean." + +"Listen to the child!" cried Betty gayly, while the other girls laughed. +"And we haven't begun to dig yet. Hold your horses, Amy dear, hold your +horses." + +They did this very thing literally the next moment, for they came in +sight of the queer little cabin of the man whom the natives called the +Hermit of Gold Run. + +Quickly they jumped down, tethered the horses as they had done before on +the day when they had first made the acquaintance of this remarkable +man, and started rather hesitantly down the path toward the house. + +As they came nearer the haunting strains of the music that had puzzled +them before once more floated out through the open windows and they +paused, lost once again in the spell of it. + +The music stopped, and they went on, hardly knowing what their next move +was to be, yet drawn irresistibly by their curiosity. Then once more +they heard the violin, but evidently the mood of the player had changed. +The melody fraught with pathos, wailing, pleading, no longer reached +them. The theme had changed--light, airy, sparkling, it reminded the +girls of fairies dancing on the grass in the moonlight. + +Mollie grasped Betty's arm. + +"I know that!" she cried excitedly. "It's something of Chopin's, a +nocturne, I think. Girls, I know where I heard that selection played +just that way before." + +They gazed at her, their eyes asking the question before their lips +could form it. + +"At the Hostess House!" cried Mollie. "Don't you remember that concert +we gave with some of the great artists?" + +"That big benefit!" cried Betty excitedly. "You've got it, Mollie! +That's what I was trying to think of!" + +"Sh-h," said Grace, a finger to her lips. "He has stopped playing. He +may hear us." + +"All right," said Betty. "Let's get back to the trail where we can talk +this thing over." + +They did not stop at the trail, however, for some memory of the danger +lurking in the woods drove them out on to the main road where they might +talk in peace. + +"Now then," said Betty eagerly, as they reached the road, crowding their +horses close together and reining them in to a walk. "What do you make +of this, girls? If this man is really one of those artists that played +at that big concert, then he is famous and there is something more than +strange in his hiding up here in the woods." + +"Goodness, we don't need anybody to tell us that," said Grace. "He +certainly must be in hiding for something he's done--unless he has been +disappointed in love," she added sentimentally. + +"I don't believe he was ever in love with anything but his violin," said +Mollie. + +"Can't somebody think of the name of the violinist that played at the +benefit?" asked Betty, who had been trying for some minutes past to +accomplish that very thing. + +"It was something like Croup, I think," said Mollie, wrinkling her +forehead. + +"Goodness, how romantic," said Grace, with a laugh. + +"I tell you how we can find out the name," said Amy suddenly. + +"How?" they questioned. + +"I think I have a program, and I can send home for it," said Amy. + +"Good girl!" cried Mollie, slapping her on the back with a violence that +nearly threw her from Lady's back and caused that gentle little animal +to turn her head inquiringly. "We little thought we had a genius in our +midst!" + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +ALLEN ARRIVES + + +Amy was delighted with the praise she received from the girls and the +first thing she did after they returned to the ranch was to write home +to her guardian for the concert program she had so luckily saved. + +Naturally the girls were more curious than ever after this second trip +to his little cabin in the woods and longed to find out about this +strange musician who hid himself so persistently from the world. + +"Of course," Grace said, during one of the many times when they talked +the matter over, "we're not at all sure that the Hermit is the same man +who played at our benefit." + +"Of course we're not," Mollie agreed with her. "There must be a great +many musicians who can play those same selections that we heard him +play." + +"That's all very true," said Betty argumentatively. "But if he is really +this same musician that played at our benefit, then that explains the +queer hunch I've had of having seen him somewhere before." + +"Well," said Mollie resignedly, "I guess all we can do for the present +is to wait until Amy gets her program. When we find out the name of the +violinist that played for us then we can decide what to do next about +the Hermit." + +Reluctantly they admitted that what she said was true, and for the time +being let the discussion rest there. + +Then came the day when Betty received a letter from Allen announcing +that he would reach Gold Run the following afternoon on the +four-thirty-five train. The letter ended by begging her to meet the +train herself and please not to send any one else, for no one else would +do! + +Betty's pretty face flushed a deeper pink and her eyes shone brighter as +she read this passage--and two or three others--several times over. Then +she went to find the girls and tell them the good news. + +They also had received mail from the other boys and some of the folks at +home, and she found them all together on the eastern porch having the +time of their lives. Mollie and Amy were perched on the railing while +Grace and a box of candy reposed in a hammock. + +"Well, have you finished reading yours already?" Mollie greeted the +Little Captain as she swung up the steps. "It was such a fat one I +thought it would take you till lunch time at least to get through with +it." + +"Speak for yourself," retorted Betty, too happy to mind being teased. +"Guess what, girls!" she added, unable to keep the news to herself for +another minute, "Allen arrives via the Western Limited at four-thirty or +thereabouts to-morrow afternoon." + +"Hooray!" cried the girls, and momentarily forgot their own letters in +very real delight. Allen Washburn was a favorite with all of them. + +"Will you let us all go to meet him, Betty dear?" asked Grace, with a +twinkling smile. "Or does he insist on seeing you alone?" + +"Don't be silly," retorted Betty good-naturedly. "I know he would take +it as a personal slight if you weren't all there to welcome him." + +"Well, I don't know," Mollie commented ruefully. "Something tells me he +would manage to live through it even if we weren't there. But go on, +Betty," she added. "Tell us what else he has to say." + +"That's pretty nearly all," said Betty truthfully. "He said he would +save all the news until he saw me--us. One thing he did say," she +added, dimpling: "The boys are simply wild with jealousy. They say it is +all a deep dark scheme on Allen's part to get out here with us." + +"Us!" repeated Grace, with a giggle. "Much he cares about the rest of +us." + +Be that as it may, they certainly all turned out that following +afternoon to meet the Western Limited which was bearing Allen swiftly +toward them. + +There was the usual gathering of picturesquely garbed miners and +cow-punchers on the platform, and for most of these the girls had a +smile and a nod. + +"Seems funny to think how strange everything looked to us when we first +came," remarked Grace, as they waited for the train. "Now we feel as +much at home as if we had lived here all our lives." + +"The people are all so nice and friendly, too," said Amy. "It's +wonderful how soon you come to know them." + +"It is a nice atmosphere," Betty agreed. "At home in the East we want to +know pretty much all there is to know about people we make our friends. +But out here they take you for granted. Nobody seems to care where you +came from or who your relatives are----" + +"Huh," grunted Mollie. "I guess in a good many cases it wouldn't do to +be too curious," she said cynically. "If you believe the stories you +read and the movies you see everybody who has committed a crime anywhere +from petty larceny to murder skips out West to escape just punishment." + +"Then at this moment," drawled Grace, glancing around at the rather +harmless looking crowd on the station platform, "we are surrounded by +thieves and murderers. Though I must say they are a pretty nice looking +set," she added, and the girls giggled. + +"Grace could forgive a man anything, if he was only good-looking +enough," remarked Amy. + +"Here comes the train!" cried Betty suddenly, as the Western Limited +thundered around a curve in the distance and steamed toward them. +Immediately she forgot everything but that Allen was on that train and +that in a moment more she would see him---- + +Then Allen himself, handsome as ever, eagerly scanning the faces on the +platform as he jumped from the train the instant the porter opened the +door. + +It took him barely a moment to discover the group of girls, and he came +toward them, hand outstretched, eyes alight with greeting. + +"Well, if this isn't great!" he cried in his hearty voice, shaking +hands with all of them but looking mostly at Betty. "Knew I could trust +the Outdoor Girls to turn out for a rousing welcome. How's everything?" + +"Just fine," they assured him, and then Betty took him in hand. + +"We've brought a wagon along from the ranch to carry your luggage," she +said, dragging him over to the wagon beside which two of the boys from +the ranch were waiting bashfully. "Come over and meet a couple of our +cow-punchers, and they will help you load your trunk on board." + +All this accomplished, the cowboys and Allen having formed an immediate +and staunch friendship, Betty introduced the latter to the horse she had +brought for him to ride. The pony was a magnificent animal, dark brown +in color with a curve to his graceful neck and a flash to his eye that +proclaimed his thoroughbred ancestry. + +"Say, you old peach of a horse," said Allen, fondly stroking the soft +muzzle, "you're just about the most perfect thing of your kind I've ever +seen. It seems almost a sacrilege to ride you." + +"His name is Lightning," Amy volunteered. "The boys call him that +because he can outrun almost any other horse on the ranch. Though," she +added loyally, "I shouldn't wonder if Lady could beat him if they +should give her a head start." + +This characteristic speech brought a laugh, and Allen regarded the four +other beautiful horses in the group. + +"You girls seemed to have picked winners yourselves," he said +admiringly. He studied them a moment, then his eyes narrowed quizzically +as he turned to Betty. + +"I'll bet you a box of candy against a pair of gloves," he said, "that I +can tell which horse belongs to which. Do you take me?" + +"Of course," said Betty. "Go ahead." + +He guessed them nearly right, except that he gave Nigger to Mollie and +Old Nick to Betty. + +"Almost does not avail," sang Betty gayly. "You owe me a box of candy, +Allen Washburn." + +He looked at her for a moment laughing, and suddenly her gaze faltered. +There had been something new and forceful about Allen ever since he had +come back from the war that had made Betty a little afraid of him. But +she did not think any the less of him--oh, no indeed! + +"I'll give you a dozen of them if you'll take them," he was saying +ardently--evidently in reference to the candies. + +"And if she won't take 'em, I will," said Grace, with a gusto that made +them all laugh. + +On the way home the girls, with what they thought was great +consideration, cantered along in front, leaving Allen and Betty to bring +up the rear. Allen blessed them for it, but Betty was furious and kept +up such a running fire of comment and laughing narrative that Allen had +no chance to say the things he had wanted to say. + +Only once as they neared the ranch she paused a moment, pointing out +over the dazzling plains to the purple tipped mountains in the distance. + +"Isn't the country beautiful, Allen?" she asked breathlessly. "I've +fallen dead in love with it." + +"It looks too good to be true," Allen agreed seriously, then added +boyishly, with a glance that took her in, as well as the scenery: "Just +now, I don't care if I never go home!" + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +A TIP + + +For the next few days the girls took possession of Allen, showing him +the sights with a will and showering him with details of their +adventures till the poor fellow's head was in a whirl and he could +hardly tell whether it was the wolves or the landslide that had +frightened the girls into the cave on that memorable afternoon. + +"Seems to me," he said, as the girls showed him the cave--at a safe +distance from the mountain, one may be sure--"that you young ladies need +a chaperone pretty badly." + +"Do you think you're it?" teased Mollie. + +"Great guns! I should hope not," said Allen, with a flash of his white +teeth. "I would rather face a dugout full of Boches than try to keep +tabs on you girls. See here," he added, suddenly serious. "Do you mean +to tell me that you were really caught in that cave with your horses and +nothing to dig your way out with but your hands?" + +"And a few sharp stones that we found," Betty nodded soberly. + +Allen whistled softly. + +"No, I should think not," he said slowly. "It's a wonder that with you +and your horses, too, in that small space, you didn't smother before aid +could reach you." + +"We should have," spoke up Amy quickly, "if it hadn't been for Betty. +She was the one who kept us at it when we were ready to give up." + +"Yes, and she was the one that kept at it when the rest of us _had_ +given up," Mollie reminded her. "She was the one who kept digging until +she forced the hole through. If it hadn't been for her we would have all +given up and just died there, I guess." + +Betty, who had been getting redder and redder through this recital of +her heroism, found it hard to meet Allen's eyes as he turned to her with +all his heart in his own. + +"The girls give me altogether too much credit," she protested. "Anybody +will fight when he has his back against the wall. And now let's take +Allen to see Dan Higgins' mine," she added lightly. "Dan Higgins and his +daughter Meggy are great friends of ours, Allen, and I know you will +love them as much as we do." + +"Your friends will always be mine," Allen assured her gallantly, and +they rode off gayly toward Gold Run. + +On the way they told him a good deal of Dan Higgins and Meggy, and Allen +listened with sympathetic interest. + +"That surely is tough," he said boyishly. "But of course his case is no +different from that of hundreds of others who have come out here to +'God's Country' in the hope of beating the daily grind and jumping to +fortune at one fell swoop. That sounds rather Irish, doesn't it?" he +added, with his contagious grin. + +"You're right about that, I suppose," said Betty gravely. "As you say, +Dan Higgins is just one of a hundred others in the same pitiful fix. But +at least he has had his dreams and the excitement of gambling. He chose +this sort of life, and so we don't feel so awfully sorry for him. But it +is his daughter Meggy that we pity. She is really a wonderful girl, +Allen, and to condemn her to a life of work and poverty is really a +crime." + +"Well, I didn't do it," said Allen plaintively, adding quickly as +Betty's face clouded: "I beg your pardon, little girl, I didn't mean to +be flippant. But, like her father, there are many others in the +position of this girl. A man can't choose to live a life like that +without dragging his family into it too." + +"Then he shouldn't have a family," said Mollie hotly. "He should make up +his mind to be an old bachelor--though I don't think there is anything +worse under the sun," she added, with such emphasis that the girls +giggled. + +"I agree with you there," said Allen, adding whimsically: "But what a +man should do and what he does do are often very different things." + +"But you speak of Dan Higgins and Meggy as if they were just ordinary +people," Grace objected, as she flicked the reins gently on Nabob's +arching neck. "You seem to forget that they saved our lives--probably." + +"No, I don't forget that," said Allen gravely. "And I respect your wish +to do something in return. I also owe them a debt of gratitude." His +eyes unconsciously sought Betty's, and a quick glance passed between +them that was more eloquent than words. + +"Then you will help us to help him?" said Betty quickly. + +"I'll do anything I can," Allen answered, adding, rather dubiously: "But +I don't see what any one can do for them. If the old man hasn't struck +gold yet and is short of funds to finance further search, I don't see +what any one can do for him. Do you?" he added, looking at her. + +"No-o," admitted Betty reluctantly. "I haven't thought of a way yet. But +I'm sure I shall," she added so bravely that the girls wanted to hug +her. + +They reached the Higgins' mine soon after this, and at the sound of +their approach Meggy ran eagerly out to them, as she always did. But +when she saw Allen, looking to her unsophisticated eyes like some hero +out of a story book, handsome and city-bred, she halted and turned red +with embarrassment. + +However, Allen, by his own gracious and friendly manner, soon set her at +ease, but her eyes continued to follow every movement of his as though +in amazement that such a perfect creature could live. + +"Better look out, Betty," Grace whispered to the Little Captain when +nobody was looking. "Meggy thinks Allen is pretty nice. Just watch her, +she's hypnotized." + +But Betty only smiled. Somehow, she felt pretty sure of Allen. + +The latter struck up a great friendship with old Dan Higgins right +away--wonderful how everybody took to Allen, thought Betty proudly--and +soon they were talking like old friends. In five minutes Allen had +found out more about Dan Higgins' mine and his prospects than the girls +would have learned in a year. + +Toward the end Allen managed to put a few adroit questions concerning +Gold Run Ranch and the possibility of there being gold upon it. + +"Waal now," drawled Higgins, spitting upon the ground reflectively, +"folks here'bouts used to wonder why old Jed Barcolm didn't get busy and +find out if there was gold on thet property, but somehow th' old man +never seemed to get interested. Conservative old fellow, Jed Barcolm, +anyways--allus said he'd made enough raisin' cattle and didn't aim to do +no prospectin' at his time o' life." + +"But you think there is a good possibility of there being gold on the +ranch?" insisted Allen, and the girls held their breath. + +Dan Higgins gave him a shrewd look and spat once more. + +"You thinkin' of doin' a little prospectin' on your own hook, Son?" he +inquired. + +"Heavens, no!" answered Allen with convincing sincerity, adding with a +smile: "It is barely possible that my client might, though." + +The old man started and stood upright, squaring his thin shoulders +belligerently. + +"You don't mean to tell me you're one o' those ornery lawyer cusses," +he said, with a disgusted emphasis that angered the girls but apparently +left Allen unmoved. + +"A lawyer--but not ornery, I hope," he said pleasantly. "And my client +is Mrs. Nelson, the new owner of the ranch. Is there anything else you +would like to know about me?" + +But the old man's anger had departed and he regarded Allen with a shrewd +twinkle in his kindly blue eyes. + +"Sorry, Son," he said. "I reckon there are some honest lawyers, though I +never ain't met one yet--not round here leastways." + +"Thanks for a rather doubtful compliment," laughed Allen. It was evident +that he was enjoying the old man extremely. "I assure you, though I am +not always honest, there are times when I try very hard to be." Then he +suddenly added: "By the way, do you happen to know a man around +here--one of those ornery lawyers--by the name of Peter Levine?" + +Again Dan Higgins spat disgustedly. + +"Know him!" he answered with a wealth of scorn in his voice. "I reckon +most everybody round here knows him--an' they's mighty few knows any +good o' him. Take my advice, Son, an' keep away from him." + +"Thanks," said Allen dryly. "But the problem seems to be to keep him +away from us. He is representing a client who wants to buy Gold Run +Ranch." + +The old man started and a gleam of excitement shot into his eyes while +Meggy, seeming to share his emotion, crept closer to him. + +"Peter Levine wants you to sell," he repeated eagerly, then relaxed once +more into his drawl, though his eyes reflected a strange inward turmoil. +"Listen, Son," he said. "Ef you let that snake in the grass argy you +into sellin', you're a bigger fool 'n I take you to be. An' what's +more," his voice lowered and the girls leaned forward eagerly, "if Peter +wants that there property of yourn there's gold on it, you can bet your +last dollar onto it. Pete ain't no angel, an' he don't work for +nothing." + +Burning with excitement themselves, the girls marveled that Allen could +take this statement so calmly. + +"Thanks for the tip," he said, in his ordinary voice. "I had some such +idea myself, but it certainly helps to have my judgment backed by +somebody who knows the people in the case." + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +THE NET TIGHTENS + + +Allen learned much about Peter Levine and his associates and about Gold +Run itself in the following conversation, and when he and the girls +finally said good-by to the old man and his daughter and started off +down the trail again, he was more than satisfied. + +As for the girls, they could hardly wait to get out of earshot of the +mine before letting loose a flood of excited comment. + +"Well, I don't see anything to get so excited about," said Allen, after +they had rattled on for several minutes. "Dan Higgins didn't tell us +anything we didn't already know--or suspect, anyway. He simply confirmed +our suspicions, that's all." + +"Seems to me that's enough," retorted Mollie. "It's one thing to think a +thing yourself and an entirely different thing to find out somebody else +thinks it too." + +"Don't be an old granddaddy, Allen," Betty said, adding threateningly: +"If you don't look out we won't let you have any of that wonderful gold +we are going to find--not one little tiny nugget." + +"That's gratitude for you," said Allen reproachfully. "Not one little +nugget for a fellow who finds her a fortune." + +"You haven't found it yet," Amy reminded him. + +"No," said Allen suddenly animated, "I haven't found it--not yet--but +I'm pretty sure I'm on the right track. Look here," he appealed to them: +"It seems reasonable to me to suppose that if Peter Levine and the +people above him are so anxious to get the property they know pretty +well where they stand. They don't want the ranch simply because they +_think_ there is gold on it." + +"Then you think----" Betty was beginning breathlessly, when Allen +interrupted her with a rush of words. + +"Yes, that's just what I think," he said. "I've been pretty well over +the whole of this ranch since I came, and I've noticed that this extreme +northwest portion of it, the only part where there would be any +possibility of finding gold, is pretty well deserted most of the +time--absolutely so at night----" + +"Then you think," Betty burst forth, "that these people, whoever they +are, may have made actual tests? That they are sure there is gold here?" + +Allen nodded. + +"That is my theory," he said gravely. "But of course the only way to +prove the truth of it is to keep my eyes open and catch them, if that is +possible, in the act." + +"But how could one conceal such a thing?" Grace objected. "A big thing +like a mine can't be hidden away in the daytime like a rag doll. There +must be some signs about the place to show that people have been +here----" + +"Exactly," said Allen. "There probably are signs--only nobody has had +the incentive--or the interest, maybe--to hunt for those signs up to +this time. Although," he added thoughtfully, "there are many ways of +camouflaging the entrance to a mine so that a casual observer, even an +interested one, possibly, would be fooled--branches, leaves, a rock or +two." + +"But wouldn't there be noise?" It was Amy who put the objection this +time. "I should think they would make enough disturbance to rouse +suspicion at least." + +"They might not," Allen contended. "Remember, they are right in the +mining territory, so that if any of the miners heard an unusual noise +they would think it was one of their neighbors working late. Anyway," +he finished, "their operations would necessarily have to be small, and +they might be so small as not even to arouse suspicion. Sometimes," he +added, and the girls hung on his words as though they were prophetic, +"there need be no actual digging to ascertain that there is gold in a +certain region. Sometimes the bed of a spring if sifted to get rid of +pebbles and other debris will reveal gold enough to make the finder +certain that there is a rich gold vein close by." + +"Goodness, let's go and hunt up some springs!" cried Mollie +irrepressibly. "What's the use of leaving all this gold finding to Mr. +Peter Levine?" + +"I remember seeing an old broken sieve around the ranch house +somewhere," Grace suggested helpfully. "Don't you suppose we can go back +and get it?" + +"But, Allen," Betty asked anxiously, "how do you expect to find out +about these men? I suppose you intend to show them up?" + +"I most certainly do," responded Allen cheerfully. "It would give me the +greatest delight to land Mr. Peter Levine and his associates in jail." + +"Well, you'd better look out you don't get landed yourself," said Mollie +sagely. "I imagine these particular gentlemen are pretty handy with +their guns--like most of the other people around here--and I reckon they +wouldn't be very backward about using them." + +"It would be fifty-fifty, at that," said Allen, adding grimly: "I'm not +so very unhandy with a gun myself. But the war's over and I haven't any +idea of staging a tragedy," he added lightly, anxious to banish the +cloud that had come over Betty's bright face. "I shall keep out of sight +till I have them just where I want them, and when they find themselves +caught I don't think they'll do much fighting. All crooks are more or +less cowards, you know." + +"But what are you going to do in the meantime--while you are waiting for +a chance to show them up?" Betty persisted. She did not half like the +way things were going--even if there was a chance of finding a fortune +on the ranch. It seemed to her that Allen was putting himself into too +great danger. And if anything happened to him, what would all the gold +in the world be worth? + +"'In the meantime?'" Allen was answering her question lightly. "Why, in +the meantime I intend to keep my eyes and ears wide open and do a little +scouting around Gold Run until I get a line on the doings of Peter +Levine and his crowd--if he has a crowd. He may just be in partnership +with one other rascal like himself, for all I know. That's one of the +first things I want to find out. After the information of our friend, +back there at the mine," he added, "there is no longer any doubt in my +mind that this Levine is a crook." + +"Humph," said Betty, "I was sure of that the first time I laid eyes on +him." + +"And yet you said you could almost love him for making your mother +decide to come out here," Allen reminded her quizzically. + +"And you said you were on your way to kill him," said Betty, adding with +a chuckle: "What made you change your mind?" + +"I didn't change my mind," retorted Allen, with a grin. "I just didn't +happen to meet him, that's all." + +They had nearly reached the ranch house before Betty thought to ask +Allen if he had talked his plans over with her mother. + +"No, I haven't," he admitted. "As a matter of fact, I hadn't made any +definite plans until I had this confab with Dan Higgins. He made me see +the whole thing straight, so to speak. I'll have a talk with your mother +and father to-night," he promised. + +He kept his promise and had the satisfaction of knowing that both his +clients were backing him heartily. + +"Go to it, Allen," Mr. Nelson said at the end of the conference. "Seems +to me that you have gotten the correct angle on this thing, and if you +need any help from me just call on me. Only," he warned, "don't run +yourself into unnecessary trouble." + +"I've found, sir," said Allen, with that straight-forward look that made +every one like and admire him, "that it's usually the fellow who runs +away from trouble who gets the most of it. I'm not worrying about that +end of the business." + +But if he did not worry, Betty certainly did in the days that followed. +She had dreams at night in which she saw Allen riding about in the +shadows. There would be a report, two reports, and he would topple over +backwards to lie crumpled up and motionless. No wonder that she became +pale and lost her appetite and made her mother worry even in the midst +of the excitement over this double hunt--the hunt for men and gold. + +One night after dinner Allen asked her to ride with him a little way, +said it would do him a lot of good just to talk to her. Betty agreed, +and they cantered off in the twilight, their bodies swaying to the +rhythm of the beautiful animals under them. + +For a long time they were silent, just enjoying the rapid motion, the +sweet scented air that fanned their faces, the beauty of the hazy +mountains in the distance. Then, suddenly Allen spoke. + +"Betty," he said, swinging round toward her, "you aren't letting this +thing get on your nerves, are you?" + +"Wh-what do you mean?" she asked faintly. "What thing?" + +"This gold business--the excitement of it all," he said, waving his hand +largely as though to take in the whole landscape. "I've noticed you +looked tired lately," he went on gently, "and I've worried about it, +little Betty. I--I have almost dared to hope," he leaned toward her, but +Betty was looking the other way, "that you were a little anxious about +me. Were you?" + +"Why--I--yes--no--why--I don't know," cried Betty wildly, then, meeting +his eye, she laughed, a twinkling little laugh. "You shouldn't ask +questions like that, not so suddenly, anyway," she said primly. "It +isn't fair." + +"Never mind, I got my answer," said Allen jubilantly, and again Betty +found it a little hard to look at him. "You mustn't worry though, +little girl," he went on gently. "There isn't any danger--really. I'm +just playing a delightful little game--and I'm going to win. Went to see +Levine to-day, representing your mother," he added, and his tone +suddenly became grim. "He made me feel, or at least he tried to make me +feel, that he had as much respect for my ability as he would for a +little speck of dirt." + +"The very idea!" cried Betty indignantly. "I'd just like to tell him +what I think of--your ability----" she faltered on these last words, for +Allen was gazing at her with a most disconcerting light in his eyes. + +Suddenly she whirled Nigger's head about and urged him to a gallop. + +"Race you home, Allen!" she challenged. "Winner gets the other fellow's +piece of cake." + +"Who cares for cake!" cried Allen, but it might have been noticed that +he followed her just the same. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII + +IN THE SHADOWS + + +Allen was acting in two capacities at this time--that of lawyer and that +of private detective. He probably would not have taken this role for +anybody but Betty and her family, but in order to serve them he was +willing to do pretty nearly anything. + +So he had taken to scouting around the northern end of the ranch after +dark, in the hope that he might possibly discover something that would +help him in his theory that there was really gold on the ranch and, +also, that Peter Levine and his cronies, whoever they were, knew of it. + +However, as the days passed, bringing no new developments, the young +fellow began to think that he had let his imagination run away with him. +He even began to formulate plans by which he could lure the unsuspecting +Peter Levine into telling what he knew. + +And then--just when he was beginning to despair of being any help at all +to Betty and her family--fate or luck, or whatever one wishes to call +it, chose to smile upon him once more. + +He was prowling around when quite unexpectedly he found himself +confronted by Andy Rawlinson. He had struck up quite a liking for the +head cowboy, and the two walked along together. + +Gradually they neared a patch of timber near the northern boundary of +the ranch. The cowboy said he was looking for two calves that had +strayed away. + +"And it ain't no use to follow 'em into the woods on hossback," he +explained. + +"I have an object in coming here," declared Allen, at last. "I am +watching out for Peter Levine." He felt he could trust Rawlinson. + +"I thought as much," replied the head cowboy, with a chuckle. "Believe +me, I wouldn't trust Levine out o' my sight, if I was the boss. I've +seen him prowlin' around here several times." + +"Then you think he has some secret motive in getting hold of the ranch?" + +"Sure as shootin'. That feller is a bad one--take it from me." + +"Please don't make too much noise around here," went on Allen. "I was +thinking he might come again in the dark some night--to do a little +prospecting, or something like that." + +"I get you. It would be just like him. Quiet it is." And after that the +pair spoke only in whispers. + +Nothing was seen of the calves, and presently Rawlinson was on the point +of going back, when, all at once, something occurred to make him remain. + +The night was intensely dark; not a star twinkled through the storm +clouds that scudded across the sky. Allen had just stubbed his toe on a +projecting root and had muttered something uncomplimentary to the +darkness of the night when an unusual sound caught the ears of the two +young men and stopped them dead in their tracks. + +Some one was coming through the brush. Some one, like Allen, had +stumbled and was muttering under his breath. + +"Shut up, can't you?" a second voice growled, and Allen's hand +instinctively went to Rawlinson's arm to quiet him. + +"Two of them," he thought exultantly, as he held himself and the cowboy +against the trunk of a tree. "There may be some action after all." + +The two strangers passed close enough to Allen and Rawlinson to have +touched them. But they did not notice the young men. + +Allen and the cowboy, their blood tingling with excitement, followed the +pair, and when, some hundred yards on, the strangers stopped, they +stopped too, keeping within the shadow of the trees. + +The strangers were bending over some sort of paper which they were +examining by the light of an electric torch. + +"Here's the place, Jim," one of the men said, pointing first to the +paper and then into the shadow of the woods. "There's gold running wild +around here, man. I've tested the bed of the creek that runs down there, +and it's chock full of yellow men. Why, if we can get hold of this ranch +we're rich men--rich over night, I tell you!" + +"Huh!" grunted the other, noncommittally. "How are you goin' to get hold +of this ranch? Ain't done it yet, so's any one could notice it." + +"No, that's where you come in, Jim," replied the other, and as he turned +eagerly to his companion Allen and Rawlinson recognized the features of +Peter Levine. "This woman, this Mrs. Nelson who owns the place, won't +sell. I'm afraid she may have an idea that there's gold here. And she +suspects me, for some reason." + +The other man laughed unpleasantly. + +"'Tain't hard for most of us to guess the reason for that, Pete." And +at the sneer Levine gave a grunt. + +"You must have your little joke, Jim," he said. "But now let's get down +to business. The woman distrusts me and she has sent for this insolent +cub lawyer--Washburn, his name is. He's been to see me already, the +unwhipped pup," he went on, while in the shadows Allen's hands gripped +themselves into fists, "trying to find out more about my client and John +Josephs. Say, that's a good joke, Jim. Here they are after that +imaginary ranchman, John Josephs, and my client who they think are +crooks, when all the time little Peter Levine is their meat and they +don't know it." + +"You didn't let on you wuz the one that wanted the place?" questioned +Jim, who was evidently able to appreciate this joke. "You wuz just the +lawyer, and so nowise interested except jest in the fee?" + +"Righto!" chuckled the other. "And a good-sized fee it will be if once I +can get my hands on it." + +"Which you ain't--yet," the other reminded him. "Get busy, Pete, and +tell us your scheme. I don't want to be standin' around here all night." +He gave an uneasy glance over his shoulder, and Allen and Rawlinson +shrank still further into the shadows. They were not yet ready to make +their presence known. + +"All right," said Peter Levine, speaking hurriedly. "If you'll agree to +my suggestion, you're in for easy money, Jim. All you have to do is to +approach this Mrs. Nelson and make her an offer for the ranch--for +yourself, you understand. She doesn't know you, and she may have become +tired of mooning around here by now, and there's just a chance that +she'll take you--that is, if you handle the cards right. No eagerness, +you understand--just sort of offhand and careless, as if you didn't care +much whether she took you or not." + +"Huh!" said the other, with his noncommittal grunt. "Sounds easy, don't +it? But what do I get out of it, ef I pull this deal off, eh?" + +"Half of all the gold we find, Jim," said the other, waving his hand +largely. "You'll never regret it if you put this thing through. You'll +be a rich man." + +"All right, I'm on," said Jim. + +"Then I guess it's about time we got back," returned Peter Levine, and +the two men moved as if to leave that vicinity. + +"We don't want them to get away," Allen whispered excitedly to +Rawlinson. "I want to get hold of that paper if possible." + +"I reckon that will be easy, Washburn," returned the head cowboy. "I'm +armed, you know, and I'll take my chances against those two rascals any +time. Just follow me." + +Without waiting for Allen to reply to this, Andy Rawlinson ran forward +swiftly and silently, and in a few seconds had confronted the rascally +pair. He had drawn his pistol, but he did not raise the weapon. + +"Halt, both of you!" he cried, sharply. "Hands up there!" + +"Hi! what's the meaning of this?" cried Levine, in astonishment. "Who +are you?" + +"It's Rawlinson, the head man here," muttered the man called Jim. + +"Right!" answered the cowboy. "And here is a particular friend of yours, +Levine," he added, as Allen stepped closer. + +"Washburn!" muttered the rascally lawyer from Gold Run. And then he +added quickly: "Have you been spying on us?" + +"If we have, that's our affair," answered Allen coolly. "You'd better +keep those hands up," he went on quickly, as he saw the two rascals +making a move as if to start something. + +"They'll keep 'em up all right enough," broke in Rawlinson. "I reckon +you know me," he went on sternly. "And I'll stand for no foolin'." + +"We haven't been doing anything wrong," came from Levine, lamely. + +"Oh, no! Of course not!" said Allen sarcastically. "Only trying to get +hold of a bonanza for next to nothing!" + +"Wait a minute, Washburn," came from the head cowboy. "Just relieve 'em +of their weapons first. Then maybe we'll be able to talk with more +satisfaction." + +With Rawlinson confronting them, Levine and his companion did not dare +offer any resistance, and quickly Allen took their weapons from them and +handed the firearms to Rawlinson. + +"Now I'll thank you, Levine, for that paper you were examining so +carefully just a few minutes ago," went on the young lawyer. + +"This is robbery!" fumed Peter Levine. "I'll have you before the courts +for this." + +Allen eyed him steadily. + +"Do you represent the law in this place?" he asked. "If so, I am sorry +for the inhabitants. But there is no use in prolonging this discussion, +Levine. I want that paper. Hand it over at once." + +The rascally lawyer from Gold Run attempted to argue, but the sight of +Rawlinson's weapon subdued him, and presently he handed over the +crumpled sheet, which Allen seized with much satisfaction. During this +transaction Jim remained sullenly silent. + +"Now I guess that's about all," said Allen to the cowboy. + +"If that's the case I guess we can bid you skunks good-evening," came +quickly from Rawlinson. "Both of you beat it. And don't ever let me +ketch you around here again." + +"What about my gun?" came feebly from Jim. + +"I'll send the guns over to Levine's office to-morrow," answered the +head cowboy. "Now clear out, and be quick about it." And a moment later +the two rascals stumbled away through the darkness. + +"This is certainly what I call luck," cried Allen excitedly, as he gazed +at the scrap of paper Levine had passed over. "Rawlinson, you have +certainly helped me do a good night's work. If what that scoundrel said +is true, this will mean a fortune for Betty and her mother." + +"I'm glad I chanced along, Washburn," answered the head cowboy. "After +this I think I'll set a guard. If it leaks out that there is gold on +this ranch there will be all sorts of fellows beside those skunks trying +to locate claims around here." + +"Will you go up to the house with me?" + +"No. I'll stick around here a while and see if those fellows come back. +Besides, I want to see if I can get any trace of those strayed-away +calves. You go ahead. You can tell me about it later. You can take their +guns with you if you will." + +Half running, half stumbling, in his eagerness, Allen reached the house, +took the steps of the porch three at a time, and burst into the big +homelike kitchen, where he found the family assembled. + +"We've got 'em, folks!" he cried, waving the scrap of paper over his +head, while they stared at him as though they thought he had gone mad. +"I've been out hunting and brought home a prize. Come look at it." + +He went over to the table beside which Mr. and Mrs. Nelson were sitting +and laid the two captured pistols upon the table. Infected by his +excitement, the girls crowded around, demanding an explanation. + +[Illustration: THE GIRLS CROWDED AROUND, DEMANDING AN EXPLANATION. + +_The Outdoor Girls in the Saddle._ _Page 163_] + +"Pistols!" cried Betty, her eyes wide with dislike of the things. "Where +did you get them, Allen?" + +"Oh, just picked them off the trees by the roadside," said Allen airily. +Then, suddenly becoming serious, he laid the scrap of paper beside the +weapons on the table. "There," he said, dramatically, "is the key that +may open your door to a fortune." + +"A map," said Mrs. Nelson, her eyes glistening. "Oh, Allen, you've found +out something wonderful. Tell us about it, please." + +And so Allen recounted what had taken place during that fruitful half +hour in the shadows of the trees. His audience listened breathlessly. + +"Then this thing," said Mr. Nelson, taking the bit of paper which was +crossed and criss-crossed with a number of lines and dotted with numbers +until it seemed more like a jig-saw puzzle than a map, "is supposedly a +map which will point out the probable location of gold." + +"Yes, sir," said Allen. + +"Then," said Mr. Nelson, feeling the thrill of adventure in his own +blood, "we'll begin to look for this gold to-morrow. That is--" He +paused and looked quizzically about at the group of tense young faces. +"If everybody is willing." + +"Oh-h," was all that they could say--just then. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX + +THE NEW MINE + + +The next day much excitement filled the ranch house. Betty declared that +she had not slept a wink the night before, worrying for fear her father +had not meant what he said. + +But Mr. Nelson had meant what he had said, and there was Mrs. Nelson as +eager as the girls to keep him to his word. + +"The ranch is mine, you know," she laughingly reminded the girls. "And +if there are gold mines on it I certainly intend to find them." + +It was settled, and Mr. Nelson and Allen set out for town to make +arrangements for the enterprise. The girls wanted to go too, but Mr. +Nelson pointed out that he and Allen could probably do the work more +quickly if they were alone, and it was upon this point and this point +only that the girls consented to let them go. + +"But that needn't keep us from the saddle," Mollie decided, as they +watched the two men canter swiftly away. "I don't know about the rest +of you, but I'm just longing for action." + +"Ditto," cried Betty, then added with bright eagerness: "Girls, I know +what we can do! Let's go down to the place where Allen found those two +men last night. That's where the mines are, you know, and we might stake +out claims or something." + +"Your mother might have something to say to that," said Grace, making a +funny face. "It isn't quite the thing to stake out claims on somebody +else's property." + +"Oh well, you needn't be so particular," cried Betty airily. "Come on, +girls, who's with me?" + +It seemed they all were, and, fairly dancing with excitement, they made +their way to the corrals where Andy Rawlinson saddled their horses for +them. + +The horses seemed to catch some of the girls' excitement, and it was all +that the latter could do to hold the animals in. + +"It must be in the air," laughed Grace, as she pulled in Nabob sharply. +"We've all got the gold fever." + +"Let's give them their heads," said Mollie suddenly. "I'd like a regular +gallop this morning." + +"All right, let's go," sang out Betty, and in another minute they were +off, the horses galloping like mad and the girls laughing and shouting +in utter abandonment to their high spirits. + +At this rate it took them only a few minutes to reach the spot where +Allen had had his adventure the night before. + +They reined in sharply, and Betty jumped down, throwing the reins over +Nigger's neck and giving him a fond little pat on the flank. + +"There, old boy," she said. "Go and eat some grass for yourself while we +do a little prospecting. Girls," she added as they in turn dismounted +and ran up to her, "from Allen's description, it must have been just +about here that he stood." She indicated the bent tree with the great +bowlder behind it that Allen had described to them. "And the two men +must have stood in there among that heavy shrubbery somewhere." + +"Then this is where they will begin work," cried Amy, a faint flush +warming her face. "Oh, Betty, it all seems like a fairy story." + +"Fairy story, nothing!" exclaimed Mollie. "This is a real, +honest-to-goodness adventure story. My, it's a wonder Allen didn't get +shot up last night," she added thoughtfully. "It must have taken nerve +to stand here, listening to those old scoundrels and not knowing what +minute they might find him out and fire upon him." + +"I think Allen is perfectly wonderful, anyway," said Grace, and Betty +thrilled at the tribute. "He never seems to know what it is to be +afraid. And he always gets what he wants, too." + +"And to think that 'John Josephs' never existed!" chuckled Betty. "Peter +Levine must have quite a good deal of imagination." + +"Well, what's the use of standing here?" said Amy, after a moment of +silent musing. "Let's look around a little bit and see what we can see." + +So for a while they thrashed around in the bush, accomplishing very +little besides scaring some rabbits and woodchucks into their holes. +They found the tiny creek Peter Levine had spoken of, and they gazed +with interest at its muddy, sluggish water. + +"Who would ever think there was gold in the bottom of that?" whispered +Mollie. + +When they finally became convinced that there was nothing more to be +seen they started reluctantly home again. + +"Let's go around by the mine and see how Meggy and her dad are coming +on," suggested Betty, and so they changed their course a little to +include the mine. + +Meggy was glad to see them as usual but they could tell by the weariness +of her bearing that there was no good news as far as she was concerned +and they had not the heart to tell her their own. + +"Can't you come over to the ranch for a little while?" asked Betty, +eager to do some little thing toward cheering the girl. But Meggy shook +her head. + +"I can't leave father--even for a little while," she said sadly. "He +ain't feeling well, and I'm afraid if his luck doesn't change pretty +soon I--I--won't have any dad----" she choked and turned away. Betty was +beside her in a moment, her arm about the girl's shoulders. + +"We're awfully sorry, honey," she said compassionately. "We didn't know +that your father was feeling bad. Is he--is he really sick?" + +"Sick of life, I guess," said Meggy, conquering her emotion and +instantly ashamed of it. "I've heered of people dyin' of a broken heart, +an' that's what dad's doin', I guess. Bad luck can kill you if it keeps +up long enough." + +The girls rode home saddened by this brief encounter. It seemed almost +wrong for them to be happy when Dan Higgins was "dyin' of a broken +heart" and Meggy, brave, splendid girl that she was, had almost lost +hope. + +"If only everybody in the world could be happy," said Grace plaintively. +"It just spoils all your fun when you know that other people are +miserable." + +"The worst of it is," said Betty soberly, "that with all this luck +coming our way we can't pass on a single little bit of it to that poor +girl and her dad. If only they weren't so proud----" The sentence +trailed off into a sigh, and she gazed pensively out over the plain. + +"Well, there's no use of crying over it," said Mollie briskly. "We may +find a way of being useful to Meggy yet, and until then, as my mother +says, 'let's be canty with thinking about it.' Oh, look, girls, here +comes Allen. I wonder what kind of news he has." + +They galloped gayly to meet him, and Allen thought they made a very +pretty picture as they swept up to him. + +"Well," he said as they surrounded him, "everything is settled and they +are to begin work to-morrow morning. Our news has aroused great +excitement in town, and there's a rush to establish claims near that end +of our ranch. Better give your friend, Dan Higgins, a hint, so that he +can get in first. So long. I'm on to the house for the map, and then I'm +going to join Mr. Nelson again in town." + +So he dashed off in the direction of the ranch and the girls wheeled and +galloped back in the direction they had come--back toward Dan Higgins' +mine to warn him to stake a new claim before others reached the spot. + +They were so excited that it was hard to make their purpose clear at +first, but when the old man and Meggy comprehended what they were trying +to tell them, they were immediately galvanized to action. + +"I'll show you the best place," Betty eagerly volunteered. + +Mollie offered to stay behind and give the old man her horse, and in a +minute Betty and Dan Higgins were galloping over the plain to that part +of the ranch where the new gold mines were to be. They had not far to +go, and they saw with relief that they were the first on the spot. + +Betty pointed out the place where Peter Levine had said there was gold +running wild, and old Dan Higgins staked his claim as near to the place +as he could without actually encroaching upon the ranch itself. + +With trembling fingers he printed on two big placards the exact +dimensions of his claim, and, with Betty's help, nailed them to two +trees at the two extreme ends of his new property, and began to dig. + +"Thar," he sighed, after a few moments, taking off his hat to mop the +perspiration from his forehead, "I've made another bargain with luck, +an' mebbe this time I'll win." + +"I'm sure you will," cried Betty, with conviction. "If there is gold on +our ranch, and we are sure there is, then there is almost certain to be +some on your property also. Oh, Mr. Dan Higgins, I so dearly hope that +there is!" This was so evidently a cry straight from her earnest young +heart that the keen eyes of the hardened old miner filled with tears and +he patted Betty's head with an unsteady hand. + +"You're a mighty fine little gal," he said finally. "Ef an old man's +gratitude means anything to you, you sure have got it. I've a sort of +sure feelin' you've changed the luck for Meggy and me." + +They were silent on the ride back to the mine, but as they reached the +last stretch of the trail that led down to it the old man shifted in his +saddle and looked at Betty earnestly. + +"An' ef Meggy's mother was alive," he said simply, "she would thank you, +too." + + + + +CHAPTER XX + +THE VIOLINIST AGAIN + + +As Allen had predicted, there was a general rush on the part of the +miners to establish claims on the property adjoining the ranch, and the +girls congratulated themselves over and over again that they had reached +Dan Higgins with the glad tidings in time for him to secure the best +location. + +All day long the girls were in the saddle, hovering about the new gold +diggings, fascinated at the way new mines seemed to spring up over +night. + +Next to those on their own property, they were most interested in Dan +Higgins' mine and in their hearts they would really rather have had him +find gold than to find it themselves. + +"They need it so much more than we do," Betty said anxiously. "If Dan +Higgins and Meggy have drawn another blank I don't know what they will +do." + +In the midst of all this confusion and excitement, Amy received the +program of the benefit concert given at the Hostess House for which she +had sent home some time before. They had almost forgotten the hermit and +it was with a shock of surprise that they remembered they had not seen +him since the new mining operations. Before that they had run across him +quite often attempting to help Meggy and Dan in his rather eccentric +way. + +"Guess he must have been scared off by the crowd," said Mollie. "Too +much excitement for the old boy." + +The four of them were sitting on the large front porch of the house, +still in their riding habits, while their horses, at the foot of the +steps, stamped their impatience to be off again. Nothing but the arrival +of the mail could have drawn the girls from the fascination of the new +gold diggings. They hardly took time to eat; and as for sleep, well, +they took that in between times! + +Now Grace called to Amy, making room on the step beside her. + +"Come over here and show us your program," she said, extracting a bit of +candy from some hidden recess somewhere about her person and popping it +into her mouth. "I'm anxious to see what that violinist's name was." + +Amy obeyed, and as Grace opened the program Mollie and Betty drew closer +and peeped over her shoulder. + +"Concerto--Liszt," read Grace, her finger pointing down the page. "No, +that isn't it. That's for the piano. Hold on, here we are. +Chopin--Nocturne--Paul Loup, violinist. There he is. Now will you please +tell me how that helps us to find out anything about the hermit?" She +paused with her finger still pointing to the name and looked up at them +inquiringly. + +"We-el," said Betty thoughtfully, "it doesn't help very much, I must +admit. It doesn't prove that Paul Loup is our Hermit of Gold Run. Only +that funny feeling I have of having seen him before and heard him +play----" + +"I tell you what we'll do!" Mollie snapped her fingers decisively. "It's +a long chance and it may not work at all but--are you game to try it?" +She paused and regarded the expectant girls eagerly. + +"Maybe," said Betty, noncommittally. "You might tell us the idea first." + +"Listen," cried Mollie. "My idea is that if we take the hermit by +surprise, call him by his name of Paul Loup. Why--" She paused, and the +light of inspiration filled her eyes. "I could even speak to him in +French----" + +As the girls caught her full meaning they looked at her admiringly. + +"I shouldn't wonder if that plan would work," said Betty swiftly. "Why +can't we go now? Dinner won't be ready for a couple of hours." + +"Right you are," cried Mollie, taking the four steps at one jump and +springing upon her astonished horse. "Come on, girls, are you with us?" + +"We'll have to lead 'em a merry pace," said Betty to Mollie a moment +later as they galloped abreast up the road. "If we don't get them there +in a hurry they're apt to get cold feet and think we're crazy." + +"Maybe we are," chuckled Mollie, urging Old Nick on to even greater +speed. "I've had a suspicion that way several times before." + +It was Betty's turn to chuckle. + +"So have I!" she said, adding with a sigh of resignation: "But oh, it is +so much fun. Look behind, Mollie. Are they still coming?" + +"Strong," reported Mollie, with a glance over her shoulder. Then, as +they reached the trail that led through the woods, she reined in a +little, motioning for Betty to take the lead. "You know the trail +better," she said. + +Over the rough woodland trail their progress necessarily became slower, +a fact which the girls did not relish at all. It gave them time to +reflect on what a really rash adventure they had embarked, and any but +the Outdoor Girls might have turned back even at this last minute. + +However, curiosity, together with some vague hope that they might become +of service to this strange sad fellow, urged them on. If Paul Loup and +the Hermit of Gold Run were really one and the same person, then surely +there was a real mystery which they might in some way help to unravel. + +They did not linger any longer on the way than was absolutely necessary, +for the terrible experience they had had with the timber wolves soon +after their arrival had made them suspicious of the forest, and try as +they would they could not suppress an uncomfortable desire to search +every shadow for some sinister, lurking presence. + +In vain had the cowboys on the ranch assured them that wolves were very +scarce in this part of the forest, especially in the summer, and that +they had had an unusual and unique experience. As Amy had said, one +experience like that was enough to last a lifetime. + +They came in sight of the cabin without mishap, however, and they +tethered their horses a little farther from the house than usual, so +that their stamping and neighing might not frighten the hermit away. + +Then they made their way with as little noise as possible along the +narrow path. + +"Suppose he isn't at home?" whispered Mollie to Betty. + +"Then we're out of luck, that's all," returned Betty cheerfully. + +But the hermit was at home. They could see him moving about, and as they +came nearer they smelled an appetizing odor of frying bacon, as though +he were cooking his dinner. + +"Hope he asks us to stay to lunch," said Grace, and the girls giggled +nervously. + +"We'll be lucky if he doesn't slam the door in our faces," said Amy +pessimistically. + +It was Mollie who knocked this time--and it was no timid little rap +either, but a good, hearty rat-at-tat, that brought the occupant of the +cabin to the door in a hurry. He had the frying pan still clutched in +his hand and on his long narrow face was such a look of dread that the +girls felt sorry for him. + +"Well," he said, the emotion within him making his voice sound stern and +forbidding, "what is it you wish? It is not raining to-day as it was +that other time." He gazed significantly up at the cloudless sky seen in +little blue patches through the trees, and the girls flushed, partly +from embarrassment and partly from anger. Somehow, they had not been +prepared to have him take this attitude, and they resented it. + +For a moment they stood miserably tongue-tied. Even their usually +quick-witted Little Captain seemed suddenly to have been stricken +speechless. They were just about to turn and run when Mollie saved the +day for them. + +Pushing forward through the group she confronted the man on the door +step. + +"_Vous etes Paul Loup, n'est-ce pas, monsieur?_" she said in a clear +voice, gazing up at him fearlessly. + +While the girls gasped at her temerity a most astounding thing happened. +The man dropped the frying pan and it clattered to the floor, its +contents spilling out greasily. While they looked he seemed to crumple, +shrivel, and his eyes stared at them glassily out of his white mask of a +face. + +"_Mon Dieu!_" he cried hoarsely, staggering back into the shack. "You +have found me! But I swear to you I did not kill him. _Mon Dieu_, I +could not kill my brother!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXI + +A STARTLING TALE + + +Hardly able to believe that they were actually living this weird thing, +the girls crowded into the shack after the stricken man and found that +he had sunk upon a bench and covered his face with his hands. + +Strangely enough, though it had been Mollie who had precipitated this +thing, it was Betty who now took the lead. Softly she went over to the +shrinking man and put a gentle hand on his shoulder. + +"You say you did not kill your brother?" she questioned in so calm a +voice that the girls marveled at her. "You are sure you did not?" + +"No! no!" cried the man again raising his haggard face, deep-lined with +the marks of suffering, "No--I am not sure. Can you not see? It is that +that is killing me. Yet in my sane moments I know that he was dead. He +lay there, so white, so still, with only that red, red stream of blood +to mar his whiteness. I leaned down, I listened to his heart----" The +man had evidently forgotten the presence of the girls, engulfed as he +was in the horror of the incident he related. Once more he was living +the tragedy, and the girls, tense, strained, horrified, lived it with +him. + +"I listened to his heart," the man repeated, his arms stretched out +before him, his long, delicate hands gripped with a fierceness that made +the knuckles go white. "There was no beating. I put my face close to his +mouth to see if there was breath. But he had stopped breathing--forever! + +"My heart went cold. I seized him by the shoulders. I called him by his +name--that brother that I had loved! Oh, how I had loved him. I begged +him to come back to me, to open those gray lips that a moment before had +been beautiful with life--to speak to me--and all the time----" his hand +relaxed and pointed to the floor and the girls followed the movement +fascinated--"there kept spreading and spreading on the rug a deep red +stain--my brother's blood! _Mon Dieu!_ And when I staggered to my feet I +found that the horrible stuff had clung to my fingers--they were dark +and sticky--the fingers of a murderer! I went mad then, I think. I +rushed from the house, from the place. One thing only was in my mind. To +get away--to get away from Paris, that accursed city----" He paused, +staring at the floor, and the girls waited, hardly daring to move for +fear they would break the spell. + +"The rest is like a bad dream to me," the man continued in a weary +voice. "Ghost-ridden, haunted, I came to this country incognito--under +what you call an assumed name. For a short time I stayed in New +Orleans----" + +"But your violin!" Betty interrupted in a voice that amazed her, it +seemed so little and weak. "Surely you were under contract." + +The man turned on her what was almost a pitying look from his sunken +eyes. + +"I could not play," he said, with a shrug of his shoulders. "To have +gone to my manager would have been like going to the hangman--the +electric chair, what you have in this country. No, mademoiselle, I was a +murderer, a man hunted by his fellowmen. There was but one thing for me +to do--to hide, to dodge about like a rabbit from a pack of baying dogs. +Hide!" he added bitterly. "I could not hide from myself. + +"Always when the night grows dark and the wind it makes to howl around +this place I can hear my brother's voice uplifted in anger. We quarreled +over something my uncle had said--a foolish quarrel. He called me liar, +and I--something snapped in my brain, I think, and for a moment +everything went red. There was a wine bottle on the table--we had been +drinking--blindly I struck out with it---- Now, when the darkness comes +and the wildcat calls into the night with a scream like a soul in +torment, I hear again the tinkling of that bottle as it shattered, the +short groan, the falling of a heavy body. + +"It is a wonder that I have not gone mad," he said. "Many a time I have +prayed that I might or that I might find courage to end this miserable +life and go to join my brother. But I am a coward, a coward----" His +voice lowered till it was almost inaudible and tears trickled through +the long white fingers. "I have not the courage even to die. There is a +tribunal above that I should have to face, more just, more awful, than +any man-made law. There you have what Paul Loup has become." + +"But you must not speak that way," said Betty, whose quick mind had been +forging ahead while the man had been speaking. "It is one thing to kill +a man deliberately, and quite another to kill in hot blood, blindly. +Besides," she added eagerly, "you are not even sure that you did kill +your brother. Did you--have you seen the papers since--since you ran +away?" + +"No," said the man. His tone was dead, hopeless. "I was afraid of what I +might find there. He was dead, Mademoiselle," he added wearily. "When I +say that there is a doubt of that it is simply to give myself one little +excuse for continuing to live. He did not move, he did not breathe. Ah, +yes, he was dead, quite dead." + +There was silence for a moment while Betty thought rapidly. Amy and +Mollie and Grace stared wide-eyed with the feeling that they were +witnessing some tremendous, swift-moving drama. + +"Of course," said the man, breaking the silence abruptly, his somber +eyes upon Betty, "there is but one thing left for me now to do. I shall +surrender to the authorities--a thing which I should have done long ago. +Or," he added grimly, "you might rather go with me now. If you left me I +might attempt to escape--so you will think, Mademoiselle?" + +There was a lift at the end of the sentence that made it a question and, +startled, the girls looked at Betty to see what she would say. + +The Little Captain herself was startled. Evidently the man thought they +had been tracking him, had used their knowledge to trap him. + +"Oh, it isn't as you think!" she cried impulsively. "We never had the +slightest little wish to harm you. And please, please," she added +earnestly, "don't give yourself up to the authorities, or do anything +rash until you hear from me again. You may not believe me--I wouldn't +blame you if you didn't----" she went on shyly, for the man had risen +and was staring at her, "but all we want to do is to help you if we +can----" she broke off confusedly for the look in the man's eyes +silenced her. + +"You know I am Paul Loup," he cried hoarsely. "You have heard my story, +my confession from my own lips, and still you say that you wish me no +harm! Who are you? what are you? what do you want of me?" He had +advanced toward them, and in a panic the girls moved back toward the +open door. Only Betty stood fearlessly in his path. + +"We are the Outdoor Girls, and we are living just at present on Gold Run +Ranch," she said quietly. "We found out who you were because you were +good enough to play for us at a benefit we gave at the Hostess House at +Camp Liberty some time ago. And we came up here because we thought that +you were in trouble and that we might help you. If we can't help you, +I'm sorry." And with head bravely uplifted Betty turned toward the door. + +She had almost reached it when he called to her. + +"You are a brave girl," said Paul Loup slowly, his eyes intent on +Betty's pretty face, "How do you know that I--the murderer--will not +kill you also for this knowledge you have of me?" + +Betty heard the frightened gasp of the girls behind her, but, strangely +enough, she herself felt no fear. + +"You wouldn't do that," she said, her clear gaze holding his burning +one. "You could not wish harm to a friend." + +"Is that what you wish me to consider you--a friend?" asked the strange +man, feeling suddenly as though something warm and vital had closed +about his heart. + +"If you will," replied Betty, reaching out her hand. "I would like very +much to be." + +But Paul Loup, for all he was a murderer and an outcast, was also a +Frenchman. With a quick gesture, ignoring her outstretched hand he +caught her in his arms, held her there for a minute, then, releasing +her, kissed her gently, first on one cheek, then on the other. + +"I had forgotten there were kind hearts in the world," he murmured +brokenly, turning from her. "You have restored my faith. _Au revoir_, my +friend." + +Someway, somehow, the girls found themselves outside that little cabin, +making their way blindly down the path to where their horses were +tethered. In a daze they mounted and rode off down the trail. + +When they came to the open trail they found that Betty was crying, +openly, unashamed. Mollie pushed a handkerchief into her hand, but the +Little Captain did not seem to notice it. She stared straight ahead, her +cheeks burning, the tears rolling unchecked down her face. + +"Never mind, honey," said Mollie, trying to steady her voice. "It was +hard for you, I know; but I would give anything I own to have made him +feel that way about me. I don't care if he did commit murder. I'm for +him--strong." + +"To be all alone," said Betty as though Mollie had not spoken, "and so +heart-hungry that a little sympathy from a stranger----" A sob choked +the rest of her sentence. But a moment later she faced the girls with a +light of resolve shining in her eyes. + +"Girls," she said, "I don't believe Paul Loup is a murderer, and some +way or other I'm going to prove it. A man like that just couldn't commit +murder. I know it!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXII + +THE PLAN + + +Certainly the girls had never expected such startling developments from +Mollie's simple little ruse to find out who the mysterious Hermit of +Gold Run was. In the beginning it had been something of a lark, and they +never dreamed that their interest and curiosity would uncover such a +tragedy. + +However, they were not at all in sympathy with Betty's conviction that +Paul Loup had not really killed his brother. + +"I don't see how you get that way, Betty," Grace argued hotly. "We all +feel as sorry for the hermit as you do, but we have his own word for it +that he really killed his brother." + +"He did seem to be pretty sure of it," said Amy, with a quaver in her +voice. "When the wind rose last night and wailed around the house, I got +all creepy thinking of him alone up in that dreary little shack, living +that whole horrible thing over again." + +It was the next day, and the girls were in the saddle, as usual. They +had visited the new gold diggings and found everybody excited and +optimistic, though no gold had been uncovered as yet. And now they were +trotting slowly along the open road, their thoughts busy with the +startling happenings of the day before. + +"It's a wonder he doesn't go crazy," shuddered Mollie, taking up the +thread where Amy had dropped it. "I know I would. What was it he said +about being 'ghost-ridden?'" + +"I don't believe he is ghost-ridden at all, except by his imagination," +said Betty positively. "I think if he had taken the trouble to look at +the newspapers before he decided that he was a hunted man he might have +saved himself a lot of trouble and unhappiness." + +"Goodness, how do you get that way, Betty?" Grace said irritably. "The +man ought to be the best judge of whether he killed anybody or not." + +"Well," said the Little Captain stubbornly, "it seems to me it would +have had to be a pretty heavy bottle with a pretty strong arm behind it +to kill a man with one blow. And a scalp wound bleeds horribly, you +know." + +The girls looked a little thoughtful, and for the first time since Betty +had advanced her theory they began to think that there might possibly +be something in it after all. + +"That's right," said Amy, and then went on to relate an experience she +had had when skylarking with Sarah Stonington. + +"She had hold of that heavy rocking chair we have in the library," Amy +said. "She was trying to pull it away from me, and I was hanging on to +it for dear life. + +"Then suddenly I let go, and Aunt Sarah--she's pretty heavy, you +know--lost her balance as the chair swung forward, and fell over +backward, striking her head on the sharp edge of the piano." + +"Goodness, you must have been scared," commented Mollie. + +"'Scared!'" echoed Amy. "Why, I was struck dumb with terror. I thought I +had killed her. She lay there all white and funny, and her head was +bleeding dreadfully----" + +"There's your scalp wound for you," Betty pointed out. "Just a little +scratch will make the whole place look like a shambles." + +"But what happened to your aunt Sarah, Amy," pursued Mollie +interestedly. "We know she didn't die." + +"Well, I should say she didn't!" said Amy roundly. "She was as good as +ever in ten minutes and laughing at me for being so frightened. But we +had to have the rug sent away to get the stain out," she added +significantly. + +"Huh," said the girls, and once more became thoughtful. + +"But suppose you were right, Betty?" said Mollie, after a while. +"Suppose our poor musician is torturing himself by thinking he has +committed a crime that he hasn't? What could you possibly do about it?" + +"I don't just know," Betty admitted truthfully. + +"We might ask your father," Grace hazarded, but Betty turned on her, +startled. + +"That's just the thing I don't want to do!" she said hurriedly. "Dad is +just the best and most easy-going father in the world, but he has a +terribly stern sense of justice. I'm not sure he wouldn't think we were +making ourselves--oh, what do you call it----" + +"Accessories after the fact?" suggested Mollie, helpfully. + +"That's it," said Betty. "He might argue that we were committing a crime +ourselves by helping to hide a criminal----" + +"Well, maybe we are, at that," said Grace, uncomfortably. + +"They can put you in jail for that sort of thing, can't they?" added +Amy, a suggestion which certainly did not add to the cheerfulness of the +atmosphere. + +"I don't care," said Betty stoutly. "I'd rather go to jail than deliver +a man to a doubtful justice--especially when he may really be innocent. +Anyway," she added, reasonably: "who is there to know that we went to +Paul Loup's cabin the other day? I'm very sure no one saw us go in or +come out, and if we keep quiet no one will have to know. That's why I +didn't even want to take dad into our confidence." + +"But if our musician is, as you think, innocent," Grace insisted, "then +your father could do more for him than we." + +"But we don't know that he is innocent. That's only my idea," said +Betty. "And dad would probably think it was a very foolish one. Maybe it +is, for all I know," she added dubiously. + +"How about Allen?" said Grace suddenly after another rather long +silence. "He would certainly sympathize with our poor hermit and, being +a lawyer, he would probably be able to think up some way that we might +establish the man's innocence or guilt without giving away his +whereabouts. There, how's that for a brilliant idea?" she finished +proudly. + +"I had already thought of that," admitted Betty, while the girls turned +amused eyes upon her. "But I was almost afraid to suggest it." + +"Maybe Allen would agree with your father that we, ought to turn him +over to justice," said Mollie, but Betty shook her head vigorously. + +"Never! Not Allen!" she declared fervently. "He believes the other +fellow innocent until he is proved guilty." + +"So does the law," said Amy wisely. + +"Yes, but the law has sent many an innocent man to prison nevertheless," +retorted Mollie. "We don't always find justice in the courts." + +"Hear, hear," cried Grace. "Get a soap box, Mollie." + +"Then it is settled that we are to tell Allen, is it?" said Betty +eagerly. "I'm sure he will find some way to help us." + +"If we can pry him loose from the mining outfit," laughed Mollie. "He +seems to have gold fever worse than any of them." + +But Allen had been busy, during the intervals when he could tear himself +away from the fascination of the mining operations, on some legal +matters. + +Mrs. Nelson, and her husband also, had feared that these numerous +relatives of her great uncle, of whose existence she herself had +scarcely been aware, might see fit to contest the old man's will +especially when it became apparent that his property at this time was +far more valuable than it had been at the time of his death. + +Allen, after considerable investigation, was able to set their fears at +rest upon this point, however, by asserting that the old gentleman had +made only one will and that he thought it very doubtful under the +circumstances that the relatives would take the case into the courts. +They were not Mr. Barcolm's children and grandchildren, as Lizzie had +supposed, but distant relatives whom at one time and another the old man +had befriended and gathered about him, but who had later quarreled with +their benefactor. + +"Anyway," Mrs. Nelson decided happily, "if we really do find some gold I +will give each one of them a share of it, even to the littlest." + +On this particular afternoon the girls found Allen, not at the mines as +they supposed they would, but at the ranch house busy with some papers. + +When they besought him to come out for a ride, he hesitated at first, +saying that he ought to get his work done before night. But they finally +persuaded him not to let duty interfere with pleasure. + +"All right," he surrendered at last. "If you will get one of the boys +to saddle Lightning for me I will be with you in ten minutes." + +He kept his promise, and in a short time was listening to the strangest +tale he had ever heard. As he listened his face became more and more +serious. + +"But, girls, this thing sounds impossible!" he burst forth, finally. +"Are you telling me that you, alone and unprotected, managed to inveigle +this murderer into confessing his crime to you? Gee, it's--it's +unbelievable! The four of you would be a great help to me in my +profession," he added, with a chuckle. + +"I didn't think you would take it as a joke," said Betty, reproachfully. + +"It isn't a joke," returned Allen, his face grave again. "It's a mighty +serious business, if you will excuse my saying so. It makes me sick when +I think of the chance you took." He was speaking to all the girls, but +his look of concern was for Betty. + +"Oh, we don't want to think about ourselves," said the latter, +impatiently. "We've done a good deal more dangerous things than that in +our lives. We thought--we hoped--you might help us to prove his +innocence----" + +"But the man's guilty," said Allen, surprised. "We have that by his own +confession----" + +With a glance of despair at the others, Betty interrupted him. + +"Listen to me, Allen," she said. "This is what I think----" And she went +on to tell him her idea while he listened, at first with a smile of +faint amusement on his lips which gradually changed to grave admiration +as he realized Betty's unfailing faith in the basic goodness of human +nature. + +"I hope you are right, little girl," he said at last, when she had +finished and was looking at him earnestly. "I'd like to believe you were +right----" + +"But you can't?" she finished for him, trying to stifle the +disappointment in her heart. + +"No, I can't," he answered truthfully. "When a man is so sure of his +crime that he flees his own country, gives up money and fame to escape +the law, you may be pretty sure that his crime was a real one." + +"But, Allen, you don't know the man," Betty pleaded, pretty close to +tears in the bitterness of her disappointment. "No one could make the +kind of music he does and be truly wicked. I wish you could have met +him. I think you would have tried a little harder to help him." + +"I'm willing to help him, if I can," Allen answered gently, feeling that +he would be almost willing to step into this poor musician's place if +he might have Betty plead for him as she had just done for the other. +"What is it you would like me to do?" + +Then suddenly the great idea popped full grown into Betty's head. + +"I have it!" she cried. "Why not write to Paul Loup's manager in New +York and ask him for particulars?" + +"Capital!" replied Allen approvingly, while the girls looked at their +Little Captain admiringly. "If anybody ought to be able to give us +information, he surely is the one." + +"And, Allen," begged Betty, reining her horse close to Allen and laying +a timid hand on his arm, "you won't even whisper a word of what we've +told you--not for your foolish old law, or anything else?" + +"Of course not," said Allen, smiling at her. "We have to give the poor +fellow his chance." + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII + +GREAT DAYS + + +That very afternoon Allen composed a letter to Paul Loup's concert +manager--advised and censored by the girls, of course--and they all rode +off to town to mail it in time to catch the four o'clock outgoing mail. + +"Now," said Mollie, as, this duty well performed, they started back to +the ranch, "I feel better. We've started something, anyway." + +"Let's hope that we can finish it," added Grace, dubiously. + +They did not expect an answer to this epistle within ten days, and in +the meantime they found plenty to keep them busy around the ranch. + +Progress at the mines was swift, and almost any minute now they might +expect to hear the glorious tidings that some one had "struck it rich." + +Nothing had been seen of Peter Levine since that memorable night when +the map had been taken from him, and it was rumored that the rascally +lawyer had left town. + +"And the longer he keeps away the healthier it will be for him, I +reckon," Allen said, adding with a laugh: "Gee, but it makes me happy +every time I think of how sore that chap may be." + +Betty had dimpled sympathetically. + +"You have an awfully mean disposition, Allen," she chided him. + +Meggy and Dan Higgins were working furiously at their mine, but after a +few days Betty was quick to see that they were not progressing as well +as some of the others. After all Meggy, though unusually strong and +robust for her age, was only a girl and her father was an old man who +had just about worn out his energies in a fruitless search for fortune. + +Betty had besought her father to send help to these good friends of +hers, and Mr. Nelson had immediately complied. + +There had been some trouble with Dan at first--with Meggy too, for that +matter. + +"We can't take nothin' thet we can't pay fer, sir," the old fellow +assured Mr. Nelson positively. But the latter reminded him that he and +Meggy had saved his daughter's life, as well as those of the other +girls, and that this put him, Mr. Nelson, deeply in the others' debt. +In view of this the old fellow finally surrendered. In his heart he was +deeply, fervently thankful for the help of the young, able-bodied man +whom Mr. Nelson provided and for whose services he paid. + +"But ef I strike thet thar gold vein, sir," Dan assured Mr. Nelson +earnestly, "I'm goin' to make it up to you, sir, every cent of it." + +"All right, we can talk about that later," Mr. Nelson said, and laughed +and walked on to view his own operations, feeling that he had done a +very good day's work. + +One morning, as the girls mounted their horses and turned their heads in +the direction of the gold diggings, they heard what seemed to be wild +cheering and shouting in the distance and with one impulse they urged +their horses to a gallop. + +"Somebody's found something!" shouted Mollie, as the cheering and +shouting became more distinct. "Oh, girls, I wonder who it is." + +"Maybe a mine has caved in, or something," Grace called back, +pessimistically. "You'd better not get too happy, all at once." + +"You old wet-blanket!" cried Betty, as she leaned forward and whispered +in Nigger's ear, urging him to greater speed. "That kind of mine doesn't +cave in very often. Oh, Nigger, hurry, old boy! Don't you know we've +got to get there quickly?" + +As they approached the noise became tumultuous, and as they topped a +small hill that brought them in full view of the new diggings they saw a +sight that they would never forget as long as they lived. + +They gazed on what seemed to be a mob gone wild. Men grasped each other +around the waists, performing some kind of crazy dance that looked like +an Indian cakewalk. Others tossed their hats in the air and shot holes +through them as they fell to the ground. And all were laughing, crying, +shouting, waving arms and head gear in a sort of wild, feverish, primal +jubilation. + +The girls caught the thrill of it and they tingled to their finger tips. +Putting spurs to their horses, they galloped down into the thick of it. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV + +THE END OF PETER LEVINE + + +The crowd scattered as the Outdoor Girls came whirling down into its +midst, but in an instant it had closed about them again. They +dismounted, leaving their excited horses to go where they would, and +pushed their way through to the group that seemed to be the center of +all this wild demonstration. + +And when they saw Meggy, fairly weeping with joy, and old Dan Higgins, +holding a handful of precious golden nuggets, they nearly went mad +themselves. + +They kissed and hugged Meggy till she cried aloud for mercy. They kissed +and hugged old Dan, and he took it as though he had been used to being +made much of by pretty girls all his life. + +Twenty years had fallen from the old man's age. No matter that he had +wasted the best part of his life in a vain hunt for gold. His dream had +been realized at last. There was a fortune in his grasp, and he felt +again the thrill that had coursed through his veins when, as a young +man, heart high with aspirations, he had started on his quest. + +He was young again! Young! It seemed as though the sight of those golden +nuggets--his own--had renewed the fires of youth. + +Nimbly he sprang upon an empty powder keg and addressed his frenzied +audience. + +"Friends and fellow gold hunters," he yelled, and there was a roar of +appreciation. "They is a few words I'd like to say afore we go back to +wrestlin' some more gold outen them rocks. An' these is them. Ef I'm a +happy man to-day an' a rich one, then it's all due to these four young +gals here. They set me on the trail o' this new thing when I was purty +near tuckered out. You all knows 'em an' loves 'em. Now give 'em a +cheer. Hearty, now, hearty----" + +Then arose such a roar that the Outdoor Girls' hearts swelled near to +bursting and they felt the tears sting their eyes. That moment would be +something to remember all their lives. + +The roar gradually subsided and the miners wandered back to their own +operations again, followed by scattered groups of curious onlookers. +They worked with redoubled energy, with redoubled hope. Gold had been +found. More gold would be found. It was a thrilling, glorious race to +see who would be the next to announce good fortune. + +Left to themselves, the girls crowded around Meggy, questioning her, +congratulating her, demanding to know how it had all happened and when. + +"My--my mouth is so dry I can hardly speak," said Meggy, quivering with +nervous reaction. "I--I can't jest make up my mind that it has happened +yet." + +"We know," said Betty, soothingly. "You needn't tell us about it if you +don't want to." + +"But I do--I've got to!" cried Meggy tensely. "Why, it seems like a +dream. But I'm so happy, so wildly happy----" A sob caught in her throat +and she paused for a moment, then went on swiftly, the words tumbling +over each other in her eagerness: "It was jest this morning that it +happened, jest a little while ago. You know we have been workin' awful +hard the last few days, an' I was getting worried over dad again. He was +gittin' that thin an' weak an' kind o' discouraged, too. Seemed like +he'd jest made up his mind that there wasn't no luck fer him nowhere's. + +"Then----" she leaned forward, her eyes black as coals, her fingers +clasped convulsively in front of her. "Then we uncovered it, that first +little narrow vein o' gold runnin' through the rocks. I thought dad +would go plumb crazy when he seen it. Honest, I was skeered for a +minute, till I recollected thet joy never killed nobody. + +"Then I began to be skeered fer myself. I felt so kind o' queer an' +wobbly inside o' me. Then dad came runnin' out to show the other fellers +what he'd found, an' seemed like they went crazy too. + +"Then you come an'--an'--I guess thet's 'bout all." + +The girls drew a long breath. + +"All," repeated Grace, softly. "I should think it was about enough for +one day!" + +"An' now," said Meggy, in a small little voice, "poor old dad an' me, +we're rich--rich! Think of it--Meggy an' her dad! Now I can buy a hoss +like--like--Nigger, mebbe----" + +"You funny girl," cried Betty, hugging her fondly. "Of course you can +buy a horse--a dozen of them if you want to. But wouldn't you like +anything else? Pretty clothes, a beautiful house to live in----" + +"Yes," agreed Meggy, but without any special enthusiasm. "I used to +think when you gals come around lookin' all pretty an' stylish in your +nice clothes thet I would like to dress thet way myself ef I wasn't as +poor as dirt. An' I would like to live in somethin' besides a shack an' +have sheets enough to your beds so's you could change 'em every day ef +you wanted to. Sure, I'd like them things. + +"But a hoss----" Her voice lowered almost to a reverential pitch. "Ever +sence I grew to be a long-legged gal, seems like all I've really wanted +was a hoss. I s'pose," she turned dark, rather wistful eyes on the +girls, "it's purty hard for you gals to understand what I'm talkin' +about. You never longed fer a thing so's your heart ached till it seemed +like it was dead inside of you. So you might think I was foolish to take +on so 'bout only a hoss." + +"We don't think you're foolish, Meggy," said Betty, gently. "We think +you're wonderful, and you deserve every bit of the splendid luck that +has come to you. And I expect," she finished gayly, "that you will have +the most beautiful horse in all Gold Run." + +Meggy's eyes lighted with joy. Then they misted suddenly as she looked +at the girls. + +"It's jest like dad said," she murmured. "We wouldn't 'a' had nothin' ef +it hadn't been fer you girls. You don't know how we feel about you, +'cause we jest never could tell you." + +The days that followed seemed like a beautiful fairy tale to the happy +girls. Peter Levine had known what he was talking about when he had +asserted that "gold was running wild" about the northern end of the +ranch and its environs. + +It was as though the finding of gold in the new Higgins' mine had been +the key that unlocked the door to a steady stream of it. + +Every day brought glad tidings of a new find, and, as some of these were +on the ranch, Betty began to realize that the Nelson family was becoming +very wealthy. They had always been well-to-do, for her father had +prospered in his business, that of carpet manufacturer in Deepdale. But +now it seemed that they were to know what it felt like to be really +rich. + +The girls realized this, and once Mollie put the new idea into words. + +"This is a wonderful thing for you, Betty dear," she said soberly. "You +can have about anything in the world that you want now. I--I--hope you +won't forget your old friends." She said the last laughingly, but Betty +was deeply hurt and showed that she was. + +"If--if you ever dare say such a horrid thing to me again, Mollie +Billette," she cried, half way between tears and anger, "I'll never, +never forgive you! You--you--ought to know me better." + +And Mollie, heartily ashamed of herself, succeeded in placating the +Little Captain only after having apologized most abjectly. + +Then one day something happened that amused them all mightily. They had +all turned out to the gold diggings, Mrs. Nelson, Mr. Nelson, the four +girls, and Allen. Mrs. Nelson and Allen were engaged in the joyful +pursuit of trying to figure out how much her profits would be, when +Betty edged up to Allen and, pulling his sleeve, pointed out a man some +distance from them. The latter was standing alone, and he seemed to be +regarding the operations rather morosely. + +"Peter Levine, by all that's holy!" murmured Allen. "Just hold tight for +a minute, folks, and watch me chase him." + +With an elaborately casual air, Allen sauntered over to the morose +individual. The man looked up as he approached, and the scowl on his +face deepened. + +"Howdy," said Allen, loud enough to cause those near by to turn to look +at him. "How's my old friend Levine this morning?" + +"None of your business," snarled the other, with a black look. "Lay off +me, do you hear?" + +"Oh, yes, I hear," said Allen, loudly and cheerfully. "I'm quite +exceptionally good at hearing. Shall I tell these friends of ours what +Andy Rawlinson and I happened to hear the other night, beneath these +very trees? Why, Levine, where are you going?" he asked with feigned +surprise, as the other started to take his leave. "Don't you want to +hear----" + +"Shut your mouth!" snarled Peter Levine, furiously, then turned and +slunk off, followed by the jeers and catcalls of the crowd. + +"You shore hev got his number, boy," said one old timer, admiringly. "He +loves you like the fox loves a trap." + +Allen grinned boyishly. "Suits me!" he said cheerfully. + + + + +CHAPTER XXV + +INNOCENT + + +"That was good, Allen," said Mr. Nelson appreciatively, as the young +fellow rejoined the group. "You've licked him in fine shape." + +"And we want to thank you for the way you have handled things for us, +Allen," added Mrs. Nelson, warmly. "We might have got into all sorts of +trouble if it hadn't been for you." + +The young lawyer was tremendously embarrassed by this praise, though +Betty was aglow with it. It was splendid to have her family so fond of +Allen. + +The latter noticed her silence, and under cover of the general +conversation commented upon it. + +"How feels the millionairess this morning?" he asked lightly, though +Betty felt that there was a deeper meaning hidden behind the words. + +"I'm feeling splendid," she answered, her voice vibrating with the joy +of living. "Who wouldn't be--with all this?" and she waved her hand over +the bustling scene. + +In spite of the excitement of all these wonderful happenings, the girls, +especially Betty, had thought almost constantly of the poor musician +whom his neighbors called the Hermit of Gold Run. + +He never came down to help Dan Higgins and Meggy any more, probably, +Grace said, scared off by the bustle and confusion of the new gold boom. +Meggy had mentioned casually once or twice that she still took food to +the desperate man. + +"If he only doesn't give himself up to the authorities before we get +news from the East!" Betty, worried, exclaimed over and over again. + +Then one day, along with the other letters in the mail, there arrived an +important looking document from New York addressed to Allen. + +The latter was out at the gold diggings at the time, and the girls +fairly lassoed him, bringing him home protesting but helpless. + +"I say, what's the row?" he demanded, and for answer Mollie thrust the +important missive into his hand. + +"Read!" she commanded dramatically. "And tell us what lies within." + +Allen tore the envelope open and read the letter hastily through while +the girls crowded around him and tried to read over his shoulder. + +Then he jumped to his feet and waved the paper at them excitedly. + +"By Jove!" he cried, "this proves that Betty was right. The man didn't +kill his brother--simply injured him. He was taken to the hospital and +he recovered long since. The manager says he has been trying to locate +Paul Loup for weeks. He is losing a fortune every day----" + +But Betty could wait no longer. She snatched the letter from him and +read it through aloud while the girls gaped at her. + +"Come on," she cried, reaching for her sailor hat and pushing it down on +her shapely little head. "Don't stand there like wooden Indians. We've +got to take this news to Paul Loup." + +Bent on their joyful mission, the girls approached the lonely little +cabin in the woods swiftly. As they came near they heard again that same +hauntingly sweet melody that had so moved them the first time they had +heard it. + +Yet now that they understood the pain that prompted the rendering of +that exquisite harmony, it seemed too bitterly sad to be beautiful, and +their hearts ached dully in sympathy with Paul Loup's despair. + +Tears were in Betty's eyes, but there was a smile on her lips, as she +pushed open the door of the little shack and stood waiting on the +threshold. + +The musician saw her, ended the throbbing melody with a crash of +discord, and gazed at her mutely. In all his tall, gaunt body only his +glowing eyes seemed really alive, but in those eyes there was a welcome +that gave Betty courage. + +"Look!" she cried, holding out the paper to him. "This is from your +manager. Read it--and see that you are innocent." + +Slowly the man laid down his violin and bow, slowly he took the paper +from Betty's trembling fingers. Like a man in a daze he read it +through--then read it through again. + +"I did not kill him--my brother," he murmured aloud. "My brother--that I +love--I did not kill him. He is alive--he is well. _Mon Dieu_, then I am +free! Paul Loup--he is not a murderer--a hunted thing. He is again the +artist--free--_free_----" His voice, which had been gradually rising as +the truth bore in upon him, rose to a jubilant shout and he threw out +his arms passionately as though to encompass them all in his newly found +love of life. "The world----" he said brokenly, "the world is very +beautiful!" + + * * * * * + +Silently the girls rode through the sunshine and shadow-filled forest, +their hearts filled with a happiness so poignant it seemed almost pain. + +"What a wonderful, wonderful summer!" breathed Mollie. "I don't believe +we have ever had one like it, girls." + +"I wish we didn't have to go home," sighed Amy. "I shall miss my +beautiful Lady so," and she laid a loving hand on the little animal's +arching neck. + +"What about me?" wailed Grace. "I know I shall cry myself to sleep, +longing for Nabob. He's one of the best chums I ever had." + +But the Little Captain did not hear them. Over and over again, like an +echo, her mind was repeating those words of Paul Loup: "The world is +very beautiful." + +"Girls," she murmured dreamily, "everybody is so happy--and I'm so +happy--oh, please, don't wake me up--anybody!" + +And so, at the end of a wonderful outing, with life stretching +gloriously before them, we will once more sadly, reluctantly, wave +farewell to the Outdoor Girls. + + +THE END + + + + +THE OUTDOOR GIRLS SERIES + +By LAURA LEE HOPE + +Author of the "Bobbsey Twin Books" and "Bunny Brown" Series. + + * * * * * + + 12mo. BOUND IN CLOTH. ILLUSTRATED. UNIFORM STYLE OF BINDING. + + * * * * * + +These tales take in the various adventures participated in by several +bright, up-to-date girls who love outdoor life. They are clean and +wholesome, free from sensationalism, absorbing from the first chapter to +the last. + + + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS OF DEEPDALE + Or Camping and Tramping for Fun and Health. + +Telling how the girls organized their Camping and Tramping Club, how +they went on a tour, and of various adventures which befell them. + + + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS AT RAINBOW LAKE + Or Stirring Cruise of the Motor Boat Gem. + +One of the girls becomes the proud possessor of a motor boat and invites +her club members to take a trip down the river to Rainbow Lake, a +beautiful sheet of water lying between the mountains. + + + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS IN A MOTOR CAR + Or The Haunted Mansion of Shadow Valley. + +One of the girls has learned to run a big motor car, and she invites the +club to go on a tour to visit some distant relatives. On the way they +stop at a deserted mansion and make a surprising discovery. + + + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS IN A WINTER CAMP + Or Glorious Days on Skates and Ice Boats. + +In this story, the scene is shifted to a winter season. The girls have +some jolly times skating and ice boating, and visit a hunters' camp in +the big woods. + + + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS IN FLORIDA + Or Wintering in the Sunny South. + +The parents of one of the girls have bought an orange grove in Florida, +and her companions are invited to visit the place. They take a trip into +the interior, where several unusual things happen. + + + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS AT OCEAN VIEW + Or The Box that Was Found in the Sand. + +The girls have great fun and solve a mystery while on an outing along +the New England coast. + + + THE OUTDOOR GIRLS ON PINE ISLAND + Or A Cave and What it Contained. + +A bright, healthful story, full of good times at a bungalow camp on Pine +Island. + + * * * * * + + GROSSET & DUNLAP, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK + + + + +THE GIRLS OF CENTRAL HIGH SERIES + +By GERTRUDE W. MORRISON + + * * * * * + + 12mo. BOUND IN CLOTH. ILLUSTRATED. UNIFORM STYLE OF BINDING. + + * * * * * + +Here is a series full of the spirit of high school life of to-day. The +girls are real flesh-and-blood characters, and we follow them with +interest in school and out. There are many contested matches on track +and field, and on the water, as well as doings in the classroom and on +the school stage. There is plenty of fun and excitement, all clean, pure +and wholesome. + + + THE GIRLS OF CENTRAL HIGH + Or Rivals for all Honors. + +A stirring tale of high school life, full of fun, with a touch of +mystery and a strange initiation. + + + THE GIRLS OF CENTRAL HIGH ON LAKE LUNA + Or The Crew That Won. + +Telling of water sports and fun galore, and of fine times in camp. + + + THE GIRLS OF CENTRAL HIGH AT BASKETBALL + Or The Great Gymnasium Mystery. + +Here we have a number of thrilling contests at basketball and in +addition, the solving of a mystery which had bothered the high school +authorities for a long while. + + + THE GIRLS OF CENTRAL HIGH ON THE STAGE + Or The Play That Took the Prize. + +How the girls went in for theatricals and how one of them wrote a play +which afterward was made over for the professional stage and brought in +some much-needed money. + + + THE GIRLS OF CENTRAL HIGH ON TRACK AND FIELD + Or The Girl Champions of the School League + +This story takes in high school athletics in their most approved and +up-to-date fashion. Full of fun and excitement. + + + THE GIRLS OF CENTRAL HIGH IN CAMP + Or The Old Professor's Secret. + +The girls went camping on Acorn Island and had a delightful time at +boating, swimming and picnic parties. + + * * * * * + +GROSSET & DUNLAP, PUBLISHERS, NEW YORK + + + + * * * * * + + + +Transcriber's Notes: + + Obvious punctuation errors repaired. + + Page 122, "draw" changed to "drawer". (dresser drawer) + + Page 153, "get's" changed to "gets". (Winner gets) + + Page 191, "Accessaries" changed to "Accessories" (Accessories + after the) + + Page 204, "too" changed to "to". (I've got to!) + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE OUTDOOR GIRLS IN THE SADDLE*** + + +******* This file should be named 19318.txt or 19318.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/9/3/1/19318 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project +Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you +charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. 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