Dorothy on a Ranch Part 24
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By this time the men from the Barracks had reappeared, well armed; but as the grizzly climbed upon the veranda floor again they hesitated to fire because the low windows opening upon it were full of peeping faces.
Silent Pete, alone, dared approach the creature as near as the other end of the veranda. This man had been a mighty hunter in his youth, when Colorado was an almost unknown country with few settlers and big game plentiful. His old blood had warmed to the conflict now, though he was silent as ever and paid no heed to the warnings called to him by his ranch mates. Creeping stealthily forward toward the encounter he watched his grizzly enemy with exultation, his thought being:
"He's tough! He's an old one! His hide's thick--I must make no mistake.
When I get nigh enough to hit him through the heart--wish he'd rise up again--queerest actin' grizzly I ever met--likely my last one--so anxious to meet me he come a-visitin'--he, he, he! Ah! he's risin'--I'll--"
Out on the electric lighted grounds the men were grouped with their rifles, all anxious to fire and all eager to delay till the last moment, watching this wild beast so uncommonly near at hand. Why, from its movements it might almost have been a tame animal escaped from some menagerie. Besides, the trophy belonged to Silent Pete. He was first and hardiest to face the brute and only if his famously sure shot failed would they fire to the rescue. Yes, the bear was the old hunter's legitimate prize--they'd wait, guns ready--
"Don't shoot! Oh! men, don't shoot! DON'T SHOOT!"
To the utter amazement of everyone, up flew Dorothy's window and out she leaped, so close behind the creeping grizzly that she almost touched him: she was gesticulating wildly and her repeated cries of "Don't shoot!" startled old Captain Lem almost to numbness.
What was that she was saying?
"He isn't a bear! I see his feet! Bears don't wear--SHOES!"
Alas! Her cry came too late. As bruin reared himself old Peter's shot rang out. An instant later, with such a cry as never issued from the throat of any bear, he dropped to the veranda floor and lay there motionless. The great bear hunt was over.
Five minutes later the grizzly rug was back on the floor of Leslie's room and the lad who had masqueraded in it to frighten a few girls, the over-zealous Mateo, lay on his own little bed with Doctor Jones probing for the bullet which had entered his shoulder.
Fortunately, it had not lodged there but pa.s.sed straight through leaving a clean flesh wound which would promptly heal, the doctor said, but that would keep unhappy Mateo in bed for a few days. He had feigned sickness when there was none, dreading to act the part he had just so unfortunately done. But the young master's will had been too strong and the suggestion had been Mateo's own.
"The punishment, for once, has fallen upon the guilty person. You'll have time to reflect, Mateo, that frightening timid people is scarcely a manly pastime. I trust there'll be no more skylarking till Mr. Ford is home. You will be kept upon a rigid diet till I order otherwise, and good night."
So said the doctor, leaving his patient to his own thoughts and a.s.suring himself that all the young folks had retired to their rooms again. He had administered no further reproofs--nor needed to do so. It was an exceedingly crest-fallen trio of lads who disappeared from view, when once the extent of Mateo's injury was learned, and a very quiet one.
But the excited girls were not so quiet. They had to talk it over, simply had to!
"I thought it was queer all the boys were in their day clothes," said Helena, with her arm about Molly, who was still shaking with fright, now and then, despite the fact that the affair was all over.
"I noticed, too, but I thought they'd just dressed awful quick. But suppose it _had_ been a real one--would it have eaten us up?" she begged to know.
To which Alfy replied from her own room:
"No, Molly Breckenridge, don't be a goose. _We'd_ have eaten _him_ up, course. We'd have had bear steak for breakfast--Some say it's good. Don't s'pose with all them men around they'd have let it live very long? No, indeedy. But Matty did it real cute, after all, didn't he? Must ha' been terrible hot, trampin' around under all that skin.
Well, we ought to go to sleep, but seems if I'd never catch another wink. I wonder what became of Wunny! Last I saw him he was lyin' flat on the ground--thinkin' he was et up, I guess. Dolly--My heart! Dolly Doodles is asleep a'ready. Did you ever see such a sleepy head, Nell?"
There was no answer from the room across the hall, so Alfy curled down among her pillows and composed herself to sleep. But her mind wasn't at rest. She kept seeing, in her fancy, the prostrate figure of Wun Sing, and hoped some of the men from the Barracks had looked after him. She felt as if she must get up again and go to see for herself. But--out of doors at night didn't seem quite the same, even to this sensible girl, as it had done before the bear scare. Besides--something really was the matter with her eyes. They felt as if they were full of sand--she'd just shut them a minute to--
She was asleep at once. A body simply could not stay awake after bedtime, in that Colorado air! And it was well she could not. Else, the warm-hearted girl would have suffered fresh alarm.
It was a belated household which struggled out of heavy slumber the next day, and as Dorothy lazily yawned and stretched her arms above her head it seemed as if all the exciting events of the night must be part of her dreams. Alfy woke, too, as reluctantly as her mate and just as Helena appeared from her own room, looking a little heavy-eyed but fully dressed. She bade them good morning, but waited for no response before she added:
"The house seems unusually still, and I don't smell coffee. I generally do, the first thing. I sometimes think it's the odor of that wakes me. I wonder if Wun Sing's fright and his worry about his poor hen has made him ill! I'll go and see; and if the boys aren't up I'll call them."
The lads answered sleepily to Helena's summons, yet were not long in appearing on the porch, where the other girls promptly joined them. As if by common consent n.o.body mentioned the escapade of the night, though it was in the minds of all and all were really longing to discuss it.
The boys because they wished to "explain," and the girls thinking that to treat the "joke" with silent contempt would be their severest punishment. n.o.body even mentioned unlucky Mateo, who had lent himself to the furtherance of the affair, only to be the one to suffer most from it.
"Hmm. Isn't it past breakfast time?" asked Monty, at last.
Herbert looked at his watch, and exclaimed:
"Ten minutes to nine! Who'd have believed it? Horses to be groomed before drill, and time up already. I wonder--But here's Nell. She's coming from the kitchen and looks important. What's up, Sis?"
"Several things. First, the hen of Wun Sing lies dead in her coop."
"O-oh!" "Ah!" "Unwise, ambitious hen!" were the exclamations which responded; and Molly added:
"That isn't all. There's something worse on Helena's mind than the death of a bewitched hen! Out with it, child! After--I mean--my nerves won't stand any more."
"Didn't know you had nerves," laughed Alfy. "What's happened, Helena?"
"Wun Sing has disappeared."
"W-h-a-t?"
"It is true. He has gone, n.o.body knows where. There's a man from the Barracks, the one who does the cooking over there, getting breakfast.
Captain Lem is flying around in a terrible state of mind. He's angry with you boys, says there'll be neither drill nor rifle practice to-day, but the horses _must_ be groomed just as soon as we get our breakfasts.
He's sent a half-dozen men looking for the cook, now, and they expect to find him soon."
"So they did Jim! Seems if there wasn't anything doing on this ranch but just getting lost," wailed Alfaretta, turning a little pale; while Molly nervously begged:
"Somebody tie me fast! Tie me fast! It'll break my father's heart if I get lost, too!"
Captain Lem came up at that moment. He looked so stern and unlike himself that the young folks were all of them awed by his manner. Even light hearted Monty slunk back, "shaking in his shoes," while Leslie dropped his eyes and lost all his bravado.
"Hark to me, Squad! Every mortal son an' gal of ye! I'm riled--I'm mad.
Here am I left in charge, so to speak, of your doin's, and of the work on the ranch, anyways. Your smart-aleck work has turned everything topsy-turvy. Men took from their reg'lar jobs to go hunt worthless Chinamen, and take his place a-cookin'. Hens dyin' to right an'
left--pizened by some your doses, likely--"
"Oh, no! Captain, I'm sure n.o.body would do such a cruel thing as poison helpless creatures!" protested Dorothy, running to clasp his hand.
He had on his "specs," which they had already learned he used mostly when he was angry, and they were very glittering just then. But Dorothy would not be put aside. She clung to him till his mood softened and removing the menacing "specs," dropped them in his blouse pocket. Then he smiled upon her, rather shamefacedly, though he felt that he still had good cause for offence.
"Well, Little One, you've got ways to win a feller, 'spite of himself.
If they was all as good as you--"
"Oh! they are, and even lots better! 'Twas just lads' foolishness that they mistook for smartness. And they, we, all of us will do all we can to help. Where can we look for Wunny? He's the first one to be thought of. And I'm sorry he was so scared. Also, he'll be sorry himself over the poor hen. What can I do?"
"Go along an' eat what breakfast you can get. Then tend to your horses.
Likely, they're hungrier 'n you are and I'll go see 't they're fed. But hear me! Not another mite o' foolin' with serious things till Dan Ford gets back an' takes the reins into his own hands. 'Twas the mercy of Providence--nothin' else--that that jabberin' shallow-pate Mateo wasn't killed plumb out. Silent Pete's used to grizzlies. He's used to _killin'_ 'em. It's his trade, a deal more 'n 'tis to tend horseflesh. I wouldn't like to stand as nigh hand to his gun as that Greaser did last night. Now, hurry up and eat. Then report for duty. I'm off to mine."
"Where do you suppose Wun Sing is?" asked Helena, of anybody who chose to answer.
n.o.body did: it may be stated right here that he was never again seen at San Leon. The "bewitched dead fowl" was duly buried in her own courtyard, the little gate to this locked, and its key hung up in the cook's wall-cupboard. But Wun Sing came no more. Everything belonging to him was left as if he meant to return at any minute, but he did not come.
They searched the pebbly bottom of the lake, thinking he might have drowned himself in his superst.i.tious fear, but he was not there: and after days had been wasted in the fruitless search, Captain Lem had his belongings packed together and sent to his relative, Der Doo, in San Diego. Whence, at the very end of the summer word came back that he had reappeared in that city, a wreck of himself, but it was hoped that with time and good Chinese cooking he would recover his scattered wits and his own culinary skill.
Meanwhile, many messages came from the travellers in the east. The expected old aunt had duly arrived but in no fit condition to travel further for the present. Gray Lady sent dearest love and hoped all her big, new family would find San Leon the happiest place in the world, and the most peaceful. She had lived long enough to understand that peace and harmony were the most precious things in life. She longed to be with them and would be as soon as it was right. Meanwhile, let all be patient as possible over her enforced absence and just feel that she was with them in spirit all the time.
Dorothy on a Ranch Part 24
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Dorothy on a Ranch Part 24 summary
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