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Title: The Little Lady of the Horse
Author: Raymond, Evelyn
Language: English
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HORSE ***



THE LITTLE LADY OF THE HORSE


[Illustration: I told thee so, señor! See! she is leading him as gentle
as a lamb.--Page 152.]



THE LITTLE LADY OF THE HORSE

BY EVELYN RAYMOND

❁

BOSTON ROBERTS BROTHERS 1898



_Copyright, 1894_, By Roberts Brothers.

University Press: John Wilson and Son, Cambridge, U.S.A.



THE LITTLE LADY OF THE HORSE.



CHAPTER I.


[Illustration]

Old Sutro and young Steenie were where they might have been found on
almost every day at the same hour,--down on the beach, where the great
cañon cut through the _mesa_ to the sea.

A group of rocks, roughly piled, and a few evergreen shrubs clustering
about them, made a pleasant break in a long, monotonous stretch of
coast, and the coolness of the spot was always refreshing after their
canter in the sunshine. Their horses had been unsaddled and set free
to browse upon the herbage up the cañon; and these moved here and
there, lazily, as if--like the old _caballero_ himself--they felt the
languor of that midday hour.

“Sutro, what makes the water so bluey-green?” asked the little girl,
who had been sitting silent for full one minute and gazing dreamily at
the shining waves.

“_Caramba!_ How can I tell?”

“But you should know, shouldn’t you? Doesn’t everybody keep learning
things all the time? If I were a’most a hundred, like you, I should
know everything, I think. In verity, I should be able to answer a
simple question such as that. And so I tell you.”

“_Si?_ Thou wouldst find thou knew nothing at all, maybe; and thou
wouldst not trouble if it were so. Because, if the good _Dios_ wished
to make us wise He would put wisdom into our heads without labor to us,
wouldn’t he? Why not?”

“Fie, my Sutro! Do I learn reading that way? But no. I should wait a
long time first, my father says. Well, then, if you do not know what
makes the water green, I s’pose, at least, you can tell what lies
beyond the water?”

“Ah, that I can! Beyond the water lies the sky. Thou canst see that
for thyself,” answered the old man, with a chuckle of delight, and
pointing to the horizon, where, in truth, the sky and ocean seemed to
blend.

“No, that is a mistake, begging your pardon, dear Sutro, though it
looks so. For my father says that it is only seeming; and that if I
were to sail ’way, ’way over ever so far, it would be just as it is
here,--the water so low down and the sky so high up above my reach.
But, dearie me, I s’pose you will never tell me anything, Sutro! I must
find out all things for myself. I wish my father wasn’t so busy. I wish
my mother hadn’t died when I was a baby. I wish I knew what makes the
road-runners such silly birds. Why should they keep always in front of
one in a chase after them? Why don’t they fly up out of the way? But,
of course, you can’t tell. And I wish--I wish--What makes people grow
wrinkley when they get old? You can’t help being wrinkley, I know that,
dear Sutro, but what makes it?”

“_En verdad!_ It may be answering thy idle questions, Little Un; yet
there is one thing I would have thee know, and remember it. My soul! if
thou dost not, I will be--”

“Not angry, please, Sutro!” cried Steenie, in sudden alarm.

“Maybe no. Not angry, truly. But wilt thou remember? I cannot be a
hundred till the _Natividad_ (Christmas) comes round five-and-ten times
more. When I am a hundred years, thou wilt be a woman. This I know,
because I asked Father Antonio when I was last at his house. My father
was a hundred and ten when he died; and his father even more than that.
The Vives’ family lives long in this world, and--_Guay!_ wouldst thou
lie down without thy blanket?”

For Steenie had thrown herself full length on the mass of sea-pink
vines, and would have been asleep in another moment; but kind old Sutro
spread his gay Navajo blanket further up, under the shelter of the
rocks, and, after the child had curled herself upon it, arranged with
utmost care the branches of the chaparral till she was wholly screened
from sunlight. Next, he whistled for the horses, who came obediently
back to the mouth of the cañon; and then he went speedily to sleep,
as Steenie had done. But for himself he made no screen, save his arm
across his eyes, nor any bed softer than the warm sand.

During the next half hour these two odd comrades slumbered so
peacefully that the teal in the pool beyond the rocks, and the
sand-pipers in the rushes, went on about their business as fearlessly
as if no human intruders were near; but when the half-hour was up, the
girl awoke as suddenly as she had slept. Sitting on her blanket, she
pushed her brown curls from her blue eyes, and looked mischievously
around at old Sutro, whom she began to pelt with the crimson-rayed
pinks, aiming so deftly that one gold-hearted blossom landed plump in
the open mouth of the sleeper. “_Hola! hola!_ that was well sent!”
shouted she.

Sputtering the flower from his lips, the Spaniard retorted, “In verity,
I--”

But if he meant to scold his darling he was not allowed; for she leaned
over him, patted his brown cheeks, and kissed him squarely on the
forehead, in the very thickest tangle of the wrinkles she so disliked.
“There, there, that will do, Señor Sutro Vives! If I was rude, you will
forgive me; and if I hurt you, the wound will heal.”

“Thou hast healed it already, Little Un, and hast gladdened the heart
of thy slave!” answered the other, with the extravagance of expression
to which his tongue was prone.

“Pooh, my Sutro, you my slave,--the proudest of proud on all Santa
Felisa ranch! My father says that the blood of three races runs in
your veins, and that you have kept the best part of each. What does he
mean by that? I heard him talking thus, once, with some strangers, who
came to see the place. It was when you rode away on Mazan´, there; and
one of the gentlemen said you were a very picture-y, or something, kind
of a man, and--”

“Ten thousand pardons, Little Un, but it is false!”

“Why, Sutro, what do you mean? Isn’t it fine to be picture-y? I’m sure
the stranger thought so, for he noticed everything about you,--your
buckskin leggings, your sombrero, your big saddle, your lariat, and
all. He said you were a most int’resting kind of a ‘type,’ and an ‘old
Californian,’ and so on. I didn’t like the ‘old’ part of the talk,
though, ’cause if you have to be called old, I’d rather do it myself,
wouldn’t I?”

Sutro vouchsafed no reply. His brow had grown moody, and his movements
betokened anger; for he picked up the blanket, and folded it with
unusual precision, and, if it were possible, threw his shoulders
back more squarely than ever. At that moment, from the snap of his
black eyes and the rigidity of his upright figure, he might have been
eighteen instead of eighty-five, which was the number of years Father
Antonio’s reckoning accorded him.

Steenie became silent, for the one thing she feared was anger; but when
the _caballero_ whistled for Mazan´, she puckered her own red lips into
a summons for Tito, who answered by a loving neigh and an immediate
approach.

Not so the brown mare, Mazan´, to whose sensitive ears Sutro’s whistle
had conveyed the information that her master was cross; and when that
was the case, it were well that all tender-hearted creatures kept out
of his way. So, instead of trotting forward to be mounted, pretty
Mazan´ trotted off up the beach, and at a distance of a few rods broke
into a wild gallop toward home.

Then Steenie laughed; she couldn’t help it, though she trembled
instantly, fearing she had made matters worse.

But no. There was something so merry and infectious about that laugh
that doting old Sutro was not the one to withstand its influence;
his frown relaxed to a smile. “Well, well, _En verdad!_ Mazan´ knows
something after all! For she would be a foolish thing to come back for
a beating she did not deserve, would she not, _mi niña_ [my little
one]?”

“So I should think, indeed! But what fun! You shall mount with me, and
we will chase her. She’ll not stop to think that Tito can run her two
to one, will she?”

“No, no!” assented the _caballero_, vaulting up behind his young
favorite, and making ready for use the lariat which had been wound
around his waist while he rested; also, for once, accepting without
challenge Steenie’s declaration that Tito was the fleeter animal.

Such a race as that was! Save themselves and the fleeing mare, not
a moving thing was in sight; for, leaving the _mesa_ bluff and the
cañon, they left also the teal and the sand-pipers and the few creeping
creatures which lived in the chaparral. To the west glittered the
rich-hued Pacific Ocean; before them and behind them lay miles and
miles of yellow beach, while far eastward towered the mountains which
formed the boundary of the great Santa Felisa rancho.

Lonely? Why, yes, it may have been; but so free, so roomy, and so
sunny, that these two who darted athwart the picture never thought of
loneliness. Besides, why should they? Santa Felisa was home to them;
and during the few short years that Steenie Calthorp had lived she had
viewed just such wide stretches of this lovely world, and no other;
for a city, or even town, she had never seen.

As they rode they talked,--the girl asking and her attendant parrying
questions without number, till he cried out, impatiently, “If thou wilt
chatter always, Little Un, how can Tito win the race? Be quiet now,
for just two minutes, and my lady Mazan´ shall feel the rope about
her throat, if Sutro’s hand has not lost its cunning, with all this
tiresome talk of ‘old,’ ‘old’!”

“_Ce, ce, ce!_” echoed Steenie, softly, in her eagerness using the
familiar Spanish injunction to silence, and bending low to whisper a
few encouraging words in Tito’s ear. Like an arrow he shot forward, and
in a brief space had gained so close to Mazan´ that Sutro made ready to
throw.

“Whiz-z! Swish!” The rope had cut the air in shining circles above the
runaway’s straining head, and descended with unerring exactness to her
steaming neck; who, at the first touch of the cord, understood its
meaning, and stood stock-still,--a throbbing, beautiful, but wholly
conquered thing.

“_Caramba!_ Señ’rita Mazan´! Wouldst serve thy master so? Take that--”

But the uplifted hand was stayed, as suddenly as the mare’s flight
had been, by Steenie’s clutch of Sutro’s wrist, and her rebuke: “What!
would you strike her, really,--Mazan´, who never knew stroke or blow!
Or has this been your habit, and I s’posing you so gentle! For shame to
you, Sutro Vives! and shame ten thousand times! What is she but--”

“A vixen! so I tell thee, who must be broken of her evil tricks.
_Caramba!_ Thus I will have it. ‘Women and mares and a spaniel dog--’”

“Sutro! Leave your dirty Spanish jabbering, and listen to me. If you
strike her you shall not ride on the beach--for--one--whole--week! And
‘so I tell thee’! I will take--let me see--maybe Nicoloso Barbazon,
instead.”

“_Si?_ but thou wilt not, Little Un! What does the stupid Nicoloso know
of what a señorita’s body-servant should be? Answer me that. _Caramba!_”

“Ah, ha, my Sutro! Somebody is silly still; but it isn’t Mazan´, nor
Tito, nor me! And you make me think you are not well: you are so very,
very cross. Never mind, poor thing! Get upon your pretty beast, who
stands so quiet now, and let us go on. I am as hungry as hungry; aren’t
you?”

“But--Nicoloso?”

“Pooh! for Nicoloso! He needn’t come if you are good, need he? Sutro,
what makes one so uncomf’table to be hungry? If it weren’t for that
queerness inside of me I could stay out all day, and maybe all night.”

“Ten thousand pardons, Señ’rita, but thou couldst not. What would thy
father do if dinner came but not his little daughter?”

“Sure--what could he? He couldn’t live without me, could he? And
there’s the house. Another race, ’tween Tito and Mazan´ this time, not
Tito catching her. To the house. I’ll beat you, my Sutro!”

They struck into it briskly; but, as they neared the goal, both
riders slackened pace at sight of a strange carriage standing before
the ranch-house door, with several of the household servants grouped
excitedly about it.

“More strangers!” cried Steenie, regretfully. “It is nothing but
comp’ny all the time, nowadays; and I get no more nice times with papa,
because he must always attend to them. I wish they wouldn’t come; don’t
you, Sutro?”

But she received no answer; for the old _caballero_ had muttered two
words, “The master!” then had dashed around the building toward the
kitchen court.

“The master? Who can he be? Isn’t my father the master? Except, of
course, that great rich lord who owns Santa Felisa, and never comes
near it at all,--not once in all my life, my father says; and I’m sure
I hope he hasn’t now, for I should be dreadfully afraid of a lord who
wore a gold cornet on his head, as Suzan´ says ‘every lord does who is
any ’count at all.’”

But he had indeed come; and the little girl, who had trotted slowly up
to the verandah, was lifted from her saddle, and duly presented by her
father, the manager, to a stout, red-faced old gentleman as, “My Lord,
my daughter.”

“So? Hm-m. Let me see. Wife died. Only one? So, so. Nice child.
Run along, Sissy. Hm-m. I’d like dinner now. Great country for
appetite--California. Afterward, business.”

Mr. Calthorp bowed gravely and respectfully; and, loosing Steenie’s
hand, bade her make herself ready for the table as soon as possible.
She held up her face for a kiss, then sped away, thinking she had never
seen her father look so serious, and wondering why. “Was he afraid of a
lord, too? And was the cor’net under the man’s hat?”

Customs were simple at Santa Felisa; for, till now, the household had
been practically that of the manager alone, and, in default of an older
person, Daniel Calthorp had liked to have his little daughter preside
at table. So it seemed strange to none but Lord Plunkett himself when,
a little later than usual, she entered the dining-room and took her
usual place. Feeling she must honor such a wonderful occasion, she had
taken uncommon pains with her toilet; and, fortunately, the guest was
too indifferent to such matters to be shocked by the rather striking
combination of a red sash, a blue throat-knot against the white frock,
and a mass of reddish-brown curls bound into a stiff little knot by a
band of green velvet.

Sutro followed her. As the oldest resident of the rancho, he felt
that he fully understood the requirements of the hour; and he had
also hastily arrayed himself in his gayest apparel, to take his
place solemnly behind his little “señorita’s” chair. There he stood,
perfectly motionless, apparently not noticing anybody,--even Steenie
herself,--and reminding the amused Lord Plunkett of nothing in the
world save one of the wooden figures outside a tobacconist’s shop.

A Chinese waiter, instructed and assisted by the valet, Dorsey, served
the unexpected guest, and the housemaid attended to the others. But
nobody ate very much except the stranger; for Mr. Calthorp was too busy
answering his lordship’s questions, and Steenie too curiously regarding
his lordship’s appearance.

Suddenly that gentleman looked up. “Well, Sissy! What d’ye think? Seem
to be staring sharp. Children read folks. Hope you’ll like me. Fond of
children. If they don’t talk. You don’t talk. Look as if you wished to.
Out with it! Don’t be afraid.”

“Oh, no! I’m not afraid, now. Ought I to be? But, will you please tell
me where you keep it? And why don’t you wear it?”

“Eh? How? Keep it? Wear it? What?”

“Your cor’net. Suzan´ says you can’t be a real lord, ’n’ess you have
one.”

“Steenie!” reproved Mr. Calthorp, smiling in spite of himself.

“Good. Good. Let her alone. Hm-m. Coronet. Suzan´ ought to know. Well.
Didn’t bring it.”

“Oh!” In a tone of deep regret.

“No. Sorry now. If I’d imagined disappointment--might.
But--inconvenient. Don’t wear it often.”

“Oh,” said Steenie again, surprised by the twinkle in the nobleman’s
eyes. “I didn’t know. I s’posed you had to. But I should think it would
be uncomf’table; ’cause gold is so heavy, and your head so smooth and
shiny. I s’pose it would slip off.”

His lordship’s manners certainly were peculiar. He nearly choked
himself trying to suppress a laugh and to eat at the same time; but
finally yielded to a real guffaw, as noisily as any cow-boy on the
_hacienda_.

“Steenie!” said the manager once more, this time with real severity,
and comprehending for the first time how sadly neglected the child had
been.

But, fortunately, Lord Plunkett was very good-natured, and wisely
divined that his small new acquaintance was rude from ignorance,
not intention. Dinner over, he made friends with her directly, and
explained away the mistaken notions with which the housemaid had
filled her head; while Steenie listened eagerly, delighted to find at
last somebody who had both leisure and patience to answer “foolish
questions.”

Lord Plunkett did this without waste of words; and at the same time
went poking about the place, enjoying the novelty of all he saw, and
gaining from Steenie’s talk a pretty fair idea of the daily life at
San’ Felisa. “Hm-m. So I see. Brought yourself up, my dear. No mother.
Father busy. Servants ignorant. No church. No school. Well, well. Good
thing for you, bad for me. Pity about his eyes. Bad, bad. Hope he won’t
be blind. Permanently.”

“I hope so, too; though I don’t know who you mean,” said the little
girl, sweetly.

“Good child. But--don’t know? Why--father. Your father, of course.
Hope he’s the only one losing eyesight and going away. Hate new men.
Old ones invaluable. Hope he’ll get better. Come back. Bad country for
eyes. Too much sunshine. Not enough green.”

Steenie stopped short on the path. “What was that, sir, please?
My--father--blind? My father--going away? Oh, dear Lordship, is that
what you said?”

“Yes. Yes. Certainly. What? Not know it? Why else should I come? Hm-m.
Queer. Starts in few days. Operation--maybe cure--”

But he did not finish his sentence; for the child had suddenly darted
away from him, and to the side of the “tobacconist’s sign,” who was
crossing the court at that moment. “Sutro! O my Sutro! My father is
blind--and--going--away!”

“It is false!” cried the old Spaniard, with his ready and angry
defiance of all things unpleasant.

“No, no--it is true! ’Cause the cor’net man said so!” And clinging to
her ancient playfellow, Steenie buried her face in his blanket, and
sobbed bitterly.



CHAPTER II.


[Illustration: KENTUCKY BOB.]

“There, she’s found it out! And it’s a deal worse than if her papa had
told her first off!” said Suzan´, at the kitchen door. “I never saw
Miss Steenie cry about anything before, and I wish now that I’d a broke
it to her myself.”

“My, my! the poor lamb!” echoed Ellen, the cook, joining the housemaid.
“No, she haint never been one fer cryin’,--not even fer bumps er
scratches. Sunshiny’s what she’s been, an’ so I say. Does seem’s if
I couldn’t stay to cook fer no new manager’s folks after that sweet
angel. Good mind ter give notice myself.”

“Oh, wait! Maybe it won’t be so bad as we think. Master don’t look
blind.”

“How can ye tell how he looks, ’hind them great goggles o’ his’n? I
guess it’s bad as it can be, er he wouldn’t give in to it. He’s clear
grit, an’ so I say. That’s where Miss Steenie gets her’n. See! she’s
spied her father comin’ back from the valley! He rid away to call the
boys together, ’cause his lordship wants to see ’em, I suppose. Well,
he’s right peart-lookin’ yet; but man’s born to troubles, an’ he’ll hev
to take his share.”

The women watched Steenie run with outstretched arms to meet Mr.
Calthorp; saw him check his horse suddenly, when he had almost ridden
her down, and bend low to lift her to his saddle. They saw the child’s
arms clasp close about his neck, and fancied they could hear her wild
outburst of grief. Then, with moistened eyes, but in true delicacy,
they turned away from witnessing a child’s first sorrow.

“Papa, is it true?”

“My darling, why do you cry? What true?” The well-trained horse stood
still while the rider folded his little daughter close to his own heavy
heart.

“About your eyes. Are you--blind?”

Mr. Calthorp shivered. Even to himself he could not yet acknowledge
what seemed so plain to almost everybody else. “No, sweetheart, I am
not blind--yet; but for a long, long time there has been something
wrong with my eyes, and I dare put off no further the treatment which
they require. So I wrote to Lord Plunkett and asked him to relieve
me of my duties here, and I meant to tell you as soon as it seemed
necessary. He came before I had expected that he could. He wishes to
make a thorough examination of all Santa Felisa affairs, and to be
fully informed concerning what has and has not been accomplished. I was
glad, yet sorry, to see him; for our going away means leaving what has
been my home for many years, and the only one you have ever known.” He
continued talking for some time, till he had given a very quiet and
clear explanation, which soothed the excited child; besides, the words
“not blind--yet” were quite enough to fill her buoyant heart with a
hope that seemed certainty.

“Oh, how glad I am! And I s’pose the lordship didn’t understand. I’m
quite--quite sure he didn’t mean to tell a wrong story, and I’m sorry I
snatched my hand away from him. I’ll go and ’xplain it now, if you will
put me down, Papa, dear!”

Smiling, Mr. Calthorp complied; and chirruping to his horse, continued
his course stableward, while Steenie sought the “cor’net man” to make
her naïve apology.

“I guess I didn’t behave very p’lite, Mr. Plunkett, but I hope you
won’t be angry; I don’t like folks to be angry; but you see I didn’t
think of anything ’cept my father,--not then. And I want to ’xplain
it,--he isn’t blind--yet; and he’s going to see a treatment; so he’ll
prob’ly get them fixed over all right. And if there’s anything I can do
to int’rest you I will; for I like you very much.”

“Eh?--So?--Thank you. I like you, too. Bright--bonny--worth a fortune.
Hm-m! Better than coronets. Stick to it. Sit down? Orange-tree, yonder.
Now, then, talk.”

Laughing at his mirthful manner and odd sentences, Steenie led her new
friend to the seat he designated; and folding her hands in her lap,
said politely: “I’ll talk what more I know. ’Tisn’t much, I guess; only
’bout horses; I haven’t told you ’bout them yet, have I?”

“No. Horses? What? Whose? Go on.”

“Oh, ours!--No, yours, I s’pose they are. Maybe they’re the ‘boys.’
We’ve trained them beautifully. Tomaso and Connecticut Jim both say it
can’t be beat. It’s great fun!”

“Don’t understand.”

“No, I s’pose not. But--this way, like a ‘circus,’ my father says.
They’s thirty-three, all counted; and every man of us has tried to
teach our horse something better ’n each other; and they’re just too
cunning for anything! Bob’s kept the ‘cup’ for ever so long now; but
I’m going to win it away from him some time,--see if I don’t! Oh, I
forgot!” The eager little face suddenly drooped at memory of that
terrible “going away,” which would be even earlier than the anticipated
“some time.”

“Why, why!--delightful! Never heard anything like it! See it, can
I,--eh?” demanded his lordship, whose love for horses was very great.

“I hope--I s’pose so. I don’t know. Kentucky Bob’s the head of us. We
all have to mind him; and sometimes he don’t be very pleasant. But he’s
very nice and honest, my father says; and I love him dearly. Then we
can’t have a ‘circus’ till he gets over it again. My father says, too,
it’s ’cause he has a ‘crank’ in him somewhere. I s’pose that’s what
hurts him and makes him unpleasant. Don’t you?”

“No doubt. Bad complaint; quite general; touch myself. No, don’t go!
All right to-day. But--where’s Kentucky Bob? Walk him out! Won’t
refuse,--not me.”

“No, I don’t s’pose he would, on ’count of your being a lordship. If
you don’t mind staying alone, I’ll run and ask him. I saw him cross the
_arroyo_ just a minute ago.”

“Trot; but come back.”

Steenie departed; and while she was gone Mr. Calthorp walked
gropingly toward the bench where his employer sat. He could still see
sufficiently to guide himself about, and his knowledge of places and
voices aided him. His eyes were screened by close-fitting goggles of
dark glass; but he had worn these so long that Steenie had almost
forgotten how he had ever looked without them. Few men in his condition
would have held to his post as long as he had done, nor was this course
wise in him; but he was not a rich man, and he had been anxious to earn
and save what he could for his little daughter’s sake.

“Hm-m! Get around--first-rate. Little girl’s smart; like her.”

“Thank you. She is, indeed, a brave, sunny child. In some ways her
leaving Santa Felisa will be better for her. She should go to school
and mingle with women. Here she has no company but myself and the
‘boys.’ Old Sutro has devoted himself to her since her infancy, and
loves her jealously. Indeed, they all love her; but that is not
strange, for she loves them. Has she gone upon an errand for you?”

“Yes; Kentucky Bob. Circus; like to see it. Says maybe he won’t;
‘crank.’”

“Well--he is--very peculiar. However, he has a wonderful gift with
horses; it seems almost like magic; and he has imparted much of his
skill to Steenie. She is perfectly fearless. But I won’t anticipate.
Are they coming?”

“Yes. Hm-m! how old--she?”

“Ten years. I’ll leave her to negotiate matters.”

Steenie approached the orange-tree, leading by one hand a great fellow,
whose face at that moment wore its most forbidding expression, and who
seemed inclined to break away from his small guide; yet determined, in
his own words, “to bluff her out.” Catch him, a free-born American,
truckling to anybody, even if that body were a genuine “lord,” and,
what was more, his own employer! He guessed he wasn’t a going to get up
no shows unless he wanted to! And he evidently did not so incline.

However, when he came quite near, and saw the small, dumpy, red-faced
old gentleman sitting beside Mr. Calthorp, his astonishment conquered
every other sentiment. He a lord! Whe-ew! he might be anybody! and
of no great account either. Plain suit of clothes, no rings, no
watch-chain, no scarf-pin even; bald-headed, good-natured, sensible. As
his observations reached this happy climax, Bob ceased tugging at his
feminine guiding-string, and marched frankly forward. Her father could
not see the action; but Steenie was amazed when the refractory ranchman
doffed his hat and made a respectful, if somewhat awkward, bow. She had
never witnessed such a concession before on his part.

“Good evenin’, sir; hope I see you well.”

“Quite, thank you. Hear you’re wonderful. Horses. Like to see, if
suits.”

“Well, sir, I’d like to ’blige; but, you see, it’s against the rules.
Once a week, an’ no oftener, is what we agreed. No use o’ rules if you
don’t stick to ’em. Exercise every Sunday; no other times in public.
If I ’lowed the ‘boys’ to go it rash, say on odd days, they’d get the
upper hand in no time; then where’d I be?”

From the tone of his voice, Mr. Calthorp judged that Bob “wanted
coaxing;” but this was not his affair. From the moment of Lord
Plunkett’s arrival he had practically resigned all authority, so he did
not interfere.

Now, my lord was, as has been said, very good-natured; but, like many
other good-natured and unassuming people, opposition, or imposition,
made him a little testy. Moreover, he was accustomed to command, not
to sue; and he considered that he had already conceded as much as was
necessary to this rough specimen of American manhood. His choler and
color rose together; and he opened his lips with a very decided and
undignified snort: “Woo-oo! Eh? Hey?”

But, fortunately for all parties, Steenie’s bright eyes had telegraphed
alarm to her loving heart; and with a quick little “’Xcuse me!” she
pulled Bob’s surly face to the level of her lips, and whispered
something in his ear.

Then, as if there had been a spring in his back, his head rebounded
to the upright, his cheek actually paled beneath its tan, and he
ejaculated fiercely, “Great--Huckleberries!”

It was the nearest approach to an oath which this strange man ever
allowed himself; for, though he thought nothing of breaking the Sabbath
by racing or gaming, he neither gave way to profanity nor indulged
himself with a drop of spirituous liquor. He used to describe himself
as “half marm, half pop;” and to attribute his sobriety and general
uprightness to the “marm” side, all to the contrary, “pop.” Years
before, when, a hot-tempered lad, he had run away from “pop’s” wrath,
he had solemnly promised his weeping “marm” that he would “never drink
nor swear;” and, to the honor of Kentucky Bob, be it said that he had
loyally kept his word.

“Huckleberries! Little Un, you don’t mean it! You wouldn’t, would you?”

“I--I’ve got to, dear old Bob! But--there--there--there--I won’t cry! I
will not. And you’ll do it, won’t you?”

“Well--I reckon! But--little missy--the boys won’t believe it.
An’--Say, Boss, is it true? Are you a goin’ to light out?”

“Yes, Bob,” answered Mr. Calthorp, sadly; “but from necessity, not
choice.”

“An’ the Little Un--why must she go? Ain’t nothin’ the matter of her
eyes, is they?”

“No, no; thank God!”

“Well, then; leave her here. We’ll take care of her. Square.
Why--what--in huckleberries--’ll San’ Felis’ be ’ithout our little
missy? Ain’t she lived here ever sence she was borned? Ain’t we be’n
good to her? We’re rough, we be. We ain’t no lords, ner nothin’ but
jest cow-boys er sech. But we’re men. An’ Americans. An’ I ’low there
ain’t one of us but would fight till he died fer the Little Un, afore
harm should tetch her. No! It mustn’t be. An’ that’s square.”

Even Mr. Calthorp, who had had abundant proof, heretofore, of the
“boys’” devotion to Steenie, was surprised at the depth of feeling
betrayed by Bob’s words; for he could not fully know all that the
child had been to these men, separated, as most of them were, from
home and its associations. Since the hour when they had been permitted
to carry or amuse her, a tiny baby in long clothes, they had adopted
her in their hearts, each in his own way finding in the frank, merry,
friendly little creature an embodiment of his own better nature. They
had even, with the superstition of their class, accepted her as their
“mascot,” sincerely believing that every enterprise to which she lent
her presence or approval was sure to prosper.

To what other human being would Kentucky Bob have imparted the secret
of his wonderful power over the equine race? Indeed, to none other;
and to her only because he loved her so, and was so proud of her
cleverness. And now his big, honest heart ached with a new and bitter
pain, as he faced the danger of her loss.

“Why, Robert! Why! Eh, what? Tut, tut. Good child. Understand.
But--father. First claim. See?”

Angry Bob cast one scorching, contemptuous glance upon the nervous
little lord; and if looks could annihilate, the British peerage
would then and there have been short one member. Stooping, he swung
Steenie to his shoulder, and strode away toward the great group of
out-buildings which made the home-piece of Santa Felisa rancho seem
like a village in itself. In the thickest crowd of the employees who
had been summoned to meet their newly-arrived employer he came to a
sudden halt.

“Hello, Bob! What’s up?”

“I--The--I wish to sizzle! Sho, I can’t talk. Tell ’em, Little Un.”

“Yes, Bob,” answered Steenie, gently, patting the great head around
which she clung for support. “But s’pose you put me down. I’m heavy.
I’m such a big girl, now.”

“No, you ain’t. Hold you forever, if you’ll stay.”

“Stay? stay where?” asked somebody.

“Tell ’em,” again commanded the Kentuckian; and waving her hand, she
hushed them by this gesture to hear her words.

Yet, somehow, the words wouldn’t come. For the second time that day
the self-control of the child failed to respond to her needs. Her eyes
roamed from face to face of those gathered about her, and there was not
one on which she did not read an answering love for the great love she
bore to it. Rough faces, most of them. Sun blackened,--sin blackened
too, perhaps; but gentle, every one, toward her. Odd comrades for a
little girl, and she a descendant of “one of the first families in Old
Knollsboro;” still the only comrades she had ever known, and therefore
she craved no other.

Twice she tried to speak, and felt a queer lump in her throat that
choked her; and at last she dropped her face upon Bob’s rough mane, her
sunny curls mingling with it to hide the tears which hurt her pride to
show.

An ominous growl ran round the assembly, and the sound was the tonic
she needed. “Hmm! who’s a makin’ ther Little Un cry?”

“Nobody, boys! dear, dear boys! Not anybody at all! I’m not crying now;
see?” Proudly her head was tossed back, and a determined smile came to
the still quivering lips, even while the tears glistened on the long
lashes. “You see, it’s this way. I didn’t know it till this very day
that ever was, or I’d have told you. ’Cause I’ve always been square,
haven’t I?”

“You bet! Square’s a brick!”

“But all the time my father’s been getting blinder an’ blinder, an’
I didn’t even s’pect anything ’bout it. I thought he wore goggley
things ’cause he liked ’em; but he didn’t: it was ’cause he had to.
And now, if he don’t go away quick, he can’t get his poor eyes fixed
up at all. So he is. He’s going ’way, ’way off,--three thousand miles,
my father says, to a big city called New York, where a lot of doctors
live who don’t do anything but mend eyes. My grandmother lives in a
little town close to New York, and we’re going to her house to stay;
and--and--that’s all. I have to do it, you see. I’m sorry, ’cause I
love you all; but he’s my father, and I have to love him the biggest,
the best. And I hope you don’t mind.”

“No, no, no! Three cheers for the ‘boss’!”

Given with a will; and by the time the noise had subsided, Steenie’s
smile had become as bright as ever, and that without any effort of her
will.

“Good enough! Thank you, dears! And now we’ll have an extra circus,
won’t we? I’d like to ’blige Mr. Plunkett; and besides, you know, I--I
sha’n’t have you, nor the horses, nor any more fun--in that old New
York!”

“Hold on, Little Un! Where’s your grit?” asked Kentucky Bob, passing
Steenie from his shoulder to a convenient wagon-box.

His sudden change of tone astonished her.

“Hain’t I allays fetched ye up to do the square thing? If your dooty
calls you to N’ York,--to N’ York you’ll have to go; but, fer the honor
o’ San’ Felis’, an’ the credit o’ your boys, do it colors flyin’--head
up--shoulders back--right face--march!”

“I will, Bob! I will! I will!” cried Steenie, impulsively. “You sha’n’t
ever have to be ashamed of your Little Un, and so I tell you!”

In the midst of the rousing cheers which followed, Lord Plunkett
appeared. He could restrain his curiosity no longer.



CHAPTER III.


[Illustration: SUTRO.]

There was some suspicion among the other dwellers at Santa Felisa that
Kentucky Bob had once been employed about a real circus, else how had
he acquired that intimate knowledge of the “rules and regulations of
the ring” which he so constantly quoted for their benefit or reproval?

Into this “ring” of theirs, the boxes, hurdles, and other such things
which the riders had been accustomed to use were soon gathered, and
the labor of arranging these gave a wholly pleasant diversion to their
feelings. A card of invitation, beautifully engrossed by a vaquero who
had passed from the halls of Harvard to the great solitudes of the
Sierras, was issued to Lord Plunkett, and a seat of honor erected for
him on the southern side of the campus, while a spreading canvas wall
on the north was to serve as a screen for the preparatory operations of
the various actors.

Needless to say, maybe, that having once been won over to the project
of an “extra show,” an enthusiastic determination was roused among the
Santa Felisans to make this farewell entertainment of their beloved
“mascot” eclipse everything which had ever gone before.

Nor did the interest end at this ranch; for mounted messengers were
dispatched to invite the people of the neighboring estates to be
present at the exhibition, and the invitations were as generally as
promptly accepted.

But, of course, all this preparation took time to accomplish, so the
hour had been appointed for one o’clock of the following day; and
during the interval Steenie’s thoughts were so full of the matter, her
tongue so busy discussing it, that she neither felt the time long nor
permitted others to do so.

Indeed, so affected was everybody by the pleasant excitement of
“getting ready,” that evening came before Lord Plunkett and his manager
were finally seated with their books before them and a secretary at
hand, to examine into the business which had brought them together.
Even then his lordship would gladly have waived the matter, had he been
allowed. “For ten years. No, twelve. Ship-shape. Paid well. Prompt.
What more, eh? I’m satisfied. Why not you?”

“But, my lord, I cannot be. Any new manager will have enough to learn,
even without all that I can do for him. It is a great responsibility;
and, my lord, I would respectfully suggest that in the future you visit
this part of your property oftener than once in a dozen years.”

“Hm-m! maybe; don’t know. Planned to stay a year now. Girl going away.
Give it up. Consider. She comes back; so ’ll I. Like her. Credit to
you; so’s the ranch.” Then the nobleman looked up as Sutro entered,
bringing the “new manager’s” card. “Hello, Mexican! Well, where?
Indigestion? Missed you. Say you’ve character? Born here? Eh? What?”

Sutro bowed profoundly, but a malicious grin overspread his wrinkled
face. “_En verdad!_ Thy Excellency honors his humble servant. Ten
thousand thanks. But the señor stranger is arrived.”

Mr. Calthorp rose and advanced carefully in the direction of the
door, extending his hand toward the new-comer, whom he immediately
presented to Lord Plunkett; and, while these gentlemen were exchanging
civilities, he turned sharply upon old Vives, whom he could hear
rustling about near him. “Where have you been so long, Sutro? We have
not seen you since dinner. His lordship has inquired for you several
times.”

“_Si?_ He does the least of his household too great respect,” answered
the Spaniard, with haughty accent.

“Come, come, Sutro, don’t be foolish! It would be wiser of you to
conciliate both him and the new ‘boss.’ They can easily turn you
adrift, and you are an old man. From the tone of your voice, I judge
that you are angry. That is senseless, and I am sorry. I wish to feel
that one as fond of my little daughter as you are will be quite happy
and comfortable when we are gone.”

“I bow myself in obligation to thee, Señor Calthorp,” responded the
old Castilian, servilely. But his mood was neither servile nor happy;
and, as the retiring manager turned once more toward his successor, he
sought the cozy corner of the office which Steenie called her own, and
where she sat by her pretty shaded lamp, sorting her picture-books.

“_Hola_, my Little Un! But I have put a thorn in his shirt, no? Trust
old Sutro!”

“How? What do you mean? And surely I can trust you to do ’most anything
hateful when you look such a way! What have you done now, Sutro Vives?
Tell me that!”

“Hi, hi, hi! maybe no. _Si?_ Dost thou wish to go from San’ Felisa to
the land of snow and ice and no sunshine? Answer thou me that!”

“You know I don’t wish it; but I must, that is all. But, wait, how do
you happen to know anything at all about it? You ran away directly
after dinner, and now you’ve just come in!”

“Pouf! thinkest thou an old caballero knows nothing but what a baby
tells him? I have known for--this--long--time all that has been planned
for the little señ’rita. _Si! Lo dicho dicho_ [what I have said I have
said].”

For a moment Steenie was silent, unable to answer this argument. Then
she cried triumphantly: “But you need not tell me that. A ‘long time’
may be from this very mid-day that ever was, but from no longer. Does
anybody at San’ Felis’ ever tell Sutro Vives secrets? In verity, no;
for Suzan´ says you are a sieve that holds nothing. At the _Natividad_,
poor dear old caballero, with a word they don’t want spoken? Why,
nobody. And if you’d known about my father’s eyes and all, you’d have
told me the very first minute! You would so, my Sutro, you couldn’t
have helped it!” clapping her hands.

It was the señor’s turn to look crestfallen. What his little lady
declared against him was quite true; but this had never prevented his
adopting an air of great mystery and secrecy whenever the slightest
occasion offered. Poor old Sutro Vives was not the only one in this
world bigger in his own estimation than in that of anybody else.

But he rallied as swiftly as she had done. “_Tente!_ what of that? He
will not stay at San’ Felisa--yes? In verity, no; I have taken care
about that.”

“Sutro, you look, you truly do look, naughty! What badness have you
been doing now, señor? Answer me that.”

“Is the truth badness? Then have I been bad,” retorted the other,
bridling. “I have told him the truth, this not-wanted, unmannerly,
new director-manager. Thou belongest to us,--to the vaqueros and
caballeros, and everybody who dwells at San’ Felisa. It is in thee the
‘good luck’ lives; and thou wilt never be allowed to go away from us,
so I tell thee! There will be mutiny, uprising; what Connecticut Jim
calls ‘strike.’ But go from Santa Felisa, thou? No!--a thousand times
_no_!”

Unperceived by them, Lord Plunkett had forsaken the other table and
the business talk, which he found tiresome, for that of the pair in
the cozy corner, which appeared to be interesting; and he had thrown
himself upon a lounge which the back of Steenie’s big chair hid from
view, to play the part of eavesdropper; only in this case it seemed
not ignoble, for the two animated disputants spoke quite loudly enough
to be heard by anybody in the room who had chosen to listen. He had,
therefore, enjoyed the whole dialogue, and he now leaned forward to
watch Steenie’s bright face and to catch her reply.

“But I answer you and Jim and everybody--yes! Where my father goes I
will go, and all this silly talk won’t stop me! Next Saturday morning,
Sutro Vives, the noisy black engine will stop at San’ Felisa station,
and Papa Calthorp and I will get into one of those big cars, and will
go whizz, away, away!--where you nor Bob nor Jim nor nobody can do
wicked, hateful things to the Little Un, never again!”

Wrought up by the pathos of her own picture, Steenie’s self-control
gave way at this juncture, and bounding toward her father, who seemed
at that moment to be a cruel enemy, and yet her only friend, she
astonished him by a torrent of tears and embraces which effectually
stopped all further conversation.

“Sutro!” called Mr. Calthorp, sternly.

“_Si_, señor; how can I serve thee?”

“Here, go with Miss Steenie and find Suzan´. Daughter, let me see no
more of this childishness. Such rebellion is unworthy of you and most
distressing to me. Good-night.”

Poor Steenie! her tears ceased instantly, and her grief turned to
anger. At that moment she felt that she had not a friend in the world,
and her proud little heart resented the apparent want of sympathy
she met with everywhere. With a very decided stamp of her little
boot-heels, she marched out of the room,--“eyes front, right face,” as
Bob would have commanded, though not in a spirit to be commended.

“_Lastima es_ [it is a pity], my Little Un!” cried old Sutro, hurrying
after his darling, only to have her turn fiercely upon him, and
order him to “keep his pity to himself. And I want no Suzan´! I want
nobody,--nobody at all!”

Ten minutes later a very wet and heated little face was buried in
the white pillows, and Steenie Calthorp had settled herself in bed,
convinced that she was the most ill-treated child in the world, and
resolved to enjoy her misery to the utmost. Only unfortunately for her
doleful plans, she was by nature very sunny and hopeful, and she was
also perfectly healthy. In about two winks she happened to think of
the next day’s “circus,” and before she knew it she was asleep, with a
smile upon her lips.

Suzan´ entered softly and stood by the bed for a moment, shading her
lamp with her hand and lovingly regarding the little maid. “Bless her
dear heart! she’s shed more tears this day than in all her little life
before. But she’s happy now,--happier ’n anybody else at San’ Felisa.
My, my! what’ll ever we do without the Little Un? But master, he’s
worried about her crying; though, sure, if he’d bothered less about
books and business, and more about his own pretty flesh and blood,
maybe his eyes’d a been better the now, poor man!”

Then she went away as gently as she had come; and when next Steenie
awoke, the brilliant California sunshine streaming in at her window was
not brighter than that within her own heart.

“Such a day, such a day! Will it ever come noon!”

“True. And all too soon, Miss Steenie, for that I’ve to do. Because,
what has his lordship done but give orders for a big feed for all the
people who are coming to see you show off?”

“To see--me, Suzan´? Why, not me, but all the boys. I’m not to do a
thing till the very last, Bob says; and then only just ride and drive
a little. Maybe they will get tired, and won’t stay till the end, so
I won’t get a chance to do anything; ’cause Bob says he’s ’ranged a
dreadful long program. I think that’s what he called it.”

“In verity, _querida_ [my darling]! I believe you are the only one
worth seeing, Lord Plunkett says. I heard one of the fellows giving
him some talk about you, and he kept rubbing his fat little hands,
and saying things so odd. Sounds like water coming out of a bottle.
‘Wonderful!’ ‘Strange!’ ‘Hm-m!’ ‘What?’ till I had to laugh. Think
of--him--for a lord! Much I care to read stories about ’ristocratics
any more! He hasn’t any ‘raving locks,’ nor ‘coal black eyes,’ nor
nothing. Isn’t half as handsome as a’most any of the boys.”

“Well, well! Never mind him! Hurry up with my hair, won’t you, please?
My! how you do pull! I wish my father’d let me wear it short, like his;
don’t you?”

“_Caramba!_ No. Your hair is the prettiest thing about you, except your
eyes, and maybe--”

“Stuff! who cares for pretty? If I had to twist my hair up in rags
every night, like you do, dear Suzan´, I’d be mis’able. But I s’pose
you can’t help it. You’re grown up. It must be dreadful to get grown
up, and as old as you are, poor, nice Suzan´!”

“_Si?_ Humph! And me only twenty-five my last birthday. If it was
Ellen, now--”

“Never mind Ellen. And I love you, dear Suzan´, if you are old; and
I’m sorry ever’ time I’m fidgety ’bout my hair. You won’t ’member it
against me, will you, after I’m gone? ’Cause I don’t mean any badness;
it’s only this quick temper and can’t-keep-stillness of mine. I just
want to run, run, or something, all the time. And keeping tidy, like my
father says, is a bother. There! you’ve done, haven’t you? Can I go?
Kiss me, Suzan´!”

Away danced Steenie, leaving her kind attendant feeling already
heavy-hearted in anticipation of the time when there would be no
restless little creature for her fond fingers to attire, and no little
outbursts of impatience to correct.

But presently, all other thoughts save those connected with the
immediate affairs of the day were banished by the tasks which Suzan´
found to do. There were chickens to roast, cakes to bake, biscuits by
the hundred to be made, and pies--such rows of pies! that the arms of
cook Ellen and her assistants, Win Sing and Lun Hoy, ached with the
rolling of pastry.

But they were not dismayed. Not they! Didn’t they always cook just as
much when the sheep were sheared, or the feast after the “roundup” was
held? A pity if Santa Felisa couldn’t respond to any demand made upon
her larder,--especially by order of her owner, a real live British lord!

So the great ovens were fired, both in the house-kitchen and in
the old adobe cooking-sheds outside; and a corps of white-aproned
helpers attended the roasting and stewing and baking of all the good
things which Mistress Ellen and her aids prepared. While under the
eucalyptus-trees bordering the arroyo, Suzan´ gayly directed the
spreading of the long tables that would seat, if need be, full two
hundred guests.

“Oh, isn’t it fun!” cried Steenie, darting about from one point to
another of the gay and busy scene; and always having in tow the
perspiring Lord Plunkett, who found no breath left for even his short
sentences, but contented himself by beaming graciously upon each and
every one he met.

“Tug an’ a canawl-boat!” said Bob, regarding the pair somewhat
jealously. “Don’t see why the Little Un need stick to him so closet,
even if he is a bloated lord!”

“Never you mind, Bob! Let the Little Un alone. Ain’t she happy? Ain’t
she a purty sight? Brim full o’ smiles an’ chipper as a wren? What more
do ye want?”

“Nothin’. But ’pears ter me she needn’t be so powerful glad ’bout
leavin’ us. I--don’t feel much like laughin’. And she’d oughter be
practisin’.”

“Don’t worrit. It’ll be all right. Little Un’s square. She won’t
ferget us, you bet! An’ she’ll do the ‘great act’ all the better fer
bein’ light-hearted. Land! I only hope them cold-blooded Easterners’ll
make her half as glad as she’s always be’n at San’ Felis’! But--ain’t
it gittin’ nigh dinner-time? Folks air beginnin’ ter come a’ready.
Understan’ the spread, general, ain’t ter be till afterwards?”

“No. An’ the one ’t carries off first prize is ter perside. Well. I
hope it’ll be our ‘Mascot.’ Do me prouder ’n if it was myself.”

“Me, too,” echoed his comrade, and departed to snatch a hasty luncheon.

At the same moment, Lord Plunkett announced, breathlessly: “I--I
can’t. Stop. Wait. Hungry. As--a--grizzly. Ever since--I came. Beats
everything. Appetite. Come. Eat.”

“Oh, you dear, funny man! However can you think about eating--now? Why,
I just want one o’clock to come so much I can’t wait!”

“Eh? What? Not afraid? Ride--same’s nobody here?”

“Why--yes,” answered Steenie, slowly, as this new idea presented
itself. “Why shouldn’t I? Indeed, I ought to do a great, great deal
better; ’cause I wouldn’t like to dis’point dear old Bob. Nor you,” she
added politely.

“Hm-m. Bob first. Then--me. Hm-m. You’re no--Anglomaniac. See that.
Plain.”

“Wh-a-t, sir?” asked the little girl, astonished by the long, strange
word he had used.

“No matter. Nice child. Spunky--but good. The way I like them. See
here?” He held up a small purse in which were displayed six glittering
double eagles. “Prizes. Eh? Win ’em? Highest--three; next--two;
last--one.”

But Steenie was a little California girl, and her eyes were not dazzled
by the sight of gold. Of its intrinsic value she had no idea; for in
the course of her short life she had had no occasion to use any money.
The prizes, therefore, represented nothing to her beyond themselves;
and as playthings she did not care for them.

“Are they? Then I hope the boys will get them all. ’Specially Jim. He’s
got a mother, an’ she’s got a consumption, or something. And he’s going
to bring her out to live in California, sometime. It’s ter’ble cold
where she stays now, my father says; and he ’vises Jim to fetch her.
They’re money; and they would help, wouldn’t they?”

“Hm-m. Yes. And you--don’t want them?”

“If he can’t win them I do. I’d rather he’d get them himself, ’cause
he’s so pleased when he beats anybody; but if he can’t--why, I will--I
hope. Now I know ’bout them, he must have them.”

“Hm-m,” said Lord Plunkett again, grimly. “Oddest child. Like her.
Immensely.”

“Steenie!” called Mr. Calthorp; and she darted toward him. “Are you
sure that you wish to ride in this exhibition, darling? Are you timid?
Because there are a great many here, it seems; and you need not if you
do not like. It will be different from an ordinary occasion.”

“But I do wish, Papa dear, if you don’t mind; because Bob would break
his heart if I didn’t. He told me so. And I’m going to win, too. Then
I’ll get a lot of money to give poor old Jim, for his mother. Yes, yes!
I want to ride! And I will--win!”



CHAPTER IV.


[Illustration: SUTRO’S EXHIBITION.]

Before the entertainment really began, Sutro Vives gave a little
private exhibition on his own account; and his dashings to and fro
across the arena, directly in Lord Plunkett’s point of view, were
intended to excite that gentleman’s curiosity and admiration,--which
object was accomplished.

“Gorgeous. Old Spaniard. Silver. Robbed a mine.”

Steenie, mounted on her piebald Tito, was standing close to the seat
erected for the proprietor, and explained for his benefit: “Oh, Sutro
has had all those things for ever so long; since he was a young man, I
b’lieve. He said he would show you what an ‘old Ca’fornian caballero
was like!’ See! He’s all red and yellow and white. Listen to the tinkle
of the silver chains among his trappings! Isn’t he proud as proud--my
Sutro? My father says his vanity would be ’musing if it weren’t so
’thetic.”

“Pathetic, dear;” corrected Mr. Calthorp, guided by her voice to her
side.

“Pathetic? Why?” demanded Lord Plunkett.

“Because although his family was once wealthy, almost beyond compute,
this poor old fellow is reduced to live a dependent on the lands that
were his fathers’, now a stranger’s. His shrivelled body in that gay
attire is but a fitting type of his changed fortunes.”

“Why! Pshaw! Hm-m,” commented his lordship, uneasily, distressed, as he
ever was, by thought of any other’s unhappiness.

“But, Papa dear, isn’t he always talking about his ‘estate’? He says
that he is richer still than anybody hereabout; and that if he wants
money all he has to do is--something or other!”

“The case with most of us,” laughed Mr. Calthorp. “But Sutro does still
retain a small piece of property,--small as compared with his former
possessions, apparently as worthless as the Mojave. It is the last
spur of the mountain range on the east, there; and, from its peculiar
summit--a gigantic rock cleft into three peaks--called Santa Trinidad.
Can you see? Point it out, Steenie, please.”

“Yes, yes. See. Barren. Worth nothing?”

“So I think. So others have thought; or worth so little that in any
transfer of this _hacienda_ [estate] no purchaser has been anxious to
possess La Trinidad, even if it had been for sale. There are many ugly
traditions concerning it; but the plain and existing fact is quite ugly
enough for me. It is infested with rattlesnakes, its cloven crest being
their especial home.”

“Hm-m. Crime. Exterminate. Should be.”

“They do not wander far afield; but, should they become troublesome
they would, doubtless, be exterminated. The Indians are their natural
enemies--or friends; seeming to have no fear of them, yet killing them
off in great numbers for the sake of their oil, which is sold at high
prices.”

“Try to buy it. Trinidad. Hm-m. How much to offer?”

“I cannot advise you; for Sutro would fix its value at an absurdly
enormous figure. Besides, there is no hope of his selling. Hark! Isn’t
that the signal for the ‘Grand Entree’?”

The notes of a fifer, playing merrily, floated across the arena. It
was the signal agreed upon, and the thirty-odd horsemen who were to
participate in the tournament gathered hastily behind the canvas screen
on the opposite side of the campus.

Now, as has been said, Steenie was not expected to ride until the
closing part of the entertainment; and she might have remained by her
father’s side, a mere spectator of all the rest, had she so desired;
but when, at the first notes of the musician’s call, old Sutro plunged
spur into Mazan´’s flank and dashed forward to the meet, her excitement
rose to the highest. She sit still and watch!--while Tito’s dainty
hoofs were dancing up and down, like feminine feet eager for the waltz!
No, no! Not so, indeed! Away she flew, and the piebald horse followed
the brown mare behind the canvas wall.

“Tra-la-la! Tra-la-la! Toot-a-toot!” Emerged the young Mexican fifer
on his sturdy broncho; and though he was proud indeed of his position
that day, he was but the preface to the story,--unnoticed and of small
account.

Sutro Vives really led the cavalcade, having been appointed to this
honor because of his age, and perhaps of his assumption,--for he was
not the one to lose the prestige a little swagger gives to a weak
argument; and, although he was a fine rider, there were many others
finer, and Kentucky Bob’s great gray horse was far ahead of pretty
Mazan´ for symmetry and graceful strength.

However, the latter person was quite willing to “play second fiddle so
long’s the Little Un’s with me,” and she had naturally guided Tito to
the gray’s side.

The other actors in the entertainment followed in single file, and even
a captious critic would have been forced to admit that they made a
magnificent appearance. The glossy sides, the waving manes and tails,
the gay caparisons and the regular hoof-beats of the beautiful animals
fitly accorded with that free bearing of the stalwart riders, which is
native to those who dwell in wide spaces and under no roof but the sky.

Upon Lord Plunkett, to whom all this was new, the impression made by
that scene was profound. It exceeded his highest expectations, and
they had been great. It made him feel himself a bigger man--physically
and mentally--to be served by such men as these, and his kindly heart
warmed to the “Americans” then and there with a degree of respect and
cordiality he had never before accorded them.

Then the marchings and countermarchings began, and Steenie with a
childish caprice darted out of the ranks again and back to her father’s
side, to whom she eagerly described all that was going forward; already
learning with the intuition of her tender heart to become “sight to
the blind,” and assuming toward him a motherly air which sat quaintly
enough upon her merry face.

“Eh? What? Hm-m. Why?” queried the guest of honor, as, some time later,
a prolonged shout rent the air; for he could see nothing especially
fine about the half-dozen lads who now rode into the arena upon the
backs of their rough-coated bronchos.

“The programme!” cried Steenie, determined that a paper prepared with
such labor by one of her “boys” should be duly appreciated.

“Hm-m! ‘Number Seven. Knife Act!’ Well? What?”

“Watch and see, dear Mr. Plunkett! Look--look! It’s better than
telling.”

“And something as difficult as rare,” added Mr. Calthorp.

The performers of “Number Seven” rode quietly to the centre of the
field, where one stooped to plunge into the soft earth a large knife,
burying the blade to the hilt. Then the six horsemen wheeled and rode
slowly back to the starting-point, whence, at the fifer’s signal, they
began a wild and wide circuit of the “ring,” repeating this several
times. Each repetition brought them nearer to the centre; and at last,
when they had attained their maddest, fleetest pace, the contestants
uttered a shout, and bore down upon the projecting knife-handle. Each
rider leaned far out of his saddle, his brow almost sweeping the
ground, his eyes fixed upon one object, and his jaws set firmly for
their task.

“But--don’t understand. Eh?”

“The knife! the knife! See! Each has one trial; each seeks to be first.
See how they crowd! To pull it out with his teeth--See! See! Ah!
Natan´! Na-tan´!” The child’s voice rose to a shrill cheer, which was
caught up and echoed again and again.

Natan´, indeed, who with the knife-hilt still in his teeth and the
fierce-looking blade presented to the view of the spectators, lifted
his hat in acknowledgment of the plaudits, and rode straight toward his
beloved “Mascot.” Then he accomplished a second feat, scarcely less
difficult than the first; for still at break-neck speed he reached
Steenie’s side, and, without touching the knife with his hands, thrust
it deftly through a gay little cockade fixed to Tito’s head-stall. Then
he rode off again at the same unbroken pace, and the “Seventh Number”
of the programme was ended.

“Hark! the fifer again! That is my signal!” exclaimed Steenie, and
waving her hand, galloped away to join the “boys.”

“Number Eight” was a trial of skill almost as difficult as the “knife
race” had been, and consisted in lifting from the ground, while riding
at full speed, a handkerchief which had been thrown there. Now,
Steenie’s childish arms could not compete with those of grown men, and
to supplement their shortness she was to hold the knife which Natan´
had won, and catch up the handkerchief on its point,--if she could!

“Of course, it is a foregone conclusion that she will win,” remarked
some person near Mr. Calthorp. “Those fellows idolize that child, and
they won’t half try to beat her.”

“Beg pardon, but it will be a ‘fair, square’ trial,” corrected the
manager, turning toward the speaker. “Steenie would not ride if they
had not promised her that. She is determined to win, and I think she
will, but she will do so honestly. She is quicker of motion than the
others, and has a judgment about distances which seems like instinct.
Besides, she and Tito have grown up together, and he understands her
like a second self.”

“Hm-m. Not afraid? Danger? Thrown?”

“No, my lord, I am not afraid. She never was thrown, and she began her
riding in the first year of her life.”

“Eh? What? Amazing! ‘California story’?”

The proud father laughed. “A ‘California story,’ certainly, but a true
one. Those fellows adopted her from the outset. They fixed up a sort
of box-saddle, cushioned and perfectly safe, and strapped it on Tito’s
back. He was but a colt then, and I would not have allowed it perhaps;
but they persuaded Suzan´ in my absence, and when I saw how it worked I
did not object. That is how it began. To-day--it ends.”

A sudden wave of regret swept over poor Mr. Calthorp’s heart, and
turning away from a spectacle his affliction prevented his witnessing,
he sought the retirement of his own apartments. “My dear little girl!
How changed her life will be! From this freedom, this queenship, into
the restriction of a country town and the submission of a schoolroom.
Best for her, doubtless, but--poor little Steenie!”

Meanwhile Steenie neither pitied nor even thought of herself. Side
by side with four other competitors, the piebald Tito kept his own
place, and tossed his head in equine enjoyment of the excitement, while
his young mistress applauded him softly, with that praise which was
incitement as well.

Round and round the course, till the child’s eyes glittered and her
cheeks glowed at the shouts of encouragement which reached her from
every point. “Go it, Little Un!” “Hurrah for the ‘Mascot’!” “The Little
Un’ll win, you bet!”

Such admiration is not the best mental diet for a young human being,
perhaps, but it had not as yet hurt Steenie; and this was probably
the last time that it would be hers. With a loyal recognition of the
good-will expressed, she waved her hand and laughed and nodded, and
“rode her level best.”

“Don’t ye let nobody better ye, Little Un, else you’ll break Bob’s old
heart!” warned that worthy, himself urging the gray horse to its utmost.

“Not I!” returned his pupil, and dashed ahead.

Evidently the contest was between these two, who had outstripped the
rest, and now crowded each other for the shortest line toward the
fluttering bit of cambric on the path before them.

“Hurrah! Hurrah! Tito, my Tito! Now, now! _Vamos!_ Quick--a spurt!
Win--you must!”

Under the very nose of the gray, the little piebald darted, with his
rider half-hanging from the saddle and the knife ready for action. Even
Bob’s well-trained animal swerved a little,--a trifle merely, but it
cost his master the prize.

No perceptible halt, but a dip, a rise, and Tito was already half-way
across the course again, his mistress rising in her saddle, and waving
triumphantly above her head the shining knife with the handkerchief it
had pierced clinging about the hilt.

[Illustration: Waving triumphantly above her head the shining knife
with the handkerchief.--Page 58.]

If they had cheered before, the crowd went fairly wild at that. Old
Sutro and Connecticut Jim, sworn enemies that they were, turned in
their saddles and hugged each other. Lord Plunkett shouted and waved
till he looked apoplectic; and the reiterated cheers, “Another for the
Little Un!” “Another!” brought Mr. Calthorp from his darkened office
once more, this time with a smile upon his lips.

But the hour grew late, and the assemblage hungry. There was,
accordingly, no delay in giving the last exhibition, which was
Steenie’s alone.

“The child--prodigy--must not leave. Like her; like her!” said Lord
Plunkett again, as the manager approached.

“I am glad that you are pleased; but I think that you will enjoy this
driving scene even more. There is no racing, no danger. If the horses
are not out of training, their action is wonderfully fine and graceful.
Does that shout mean her entrance?”

“No. Horsemen. Single. Taking stations--regular intervals--around the
track.”

“Yes; I understand. They do that to watch the horses, for the child’s
sake. At the least intimation of any animal being fractious or out
of accord with the rest, the nearest caballero rides up and sets the
matter right. Usually a word of command will answer, but sometimes an
outrider accompanies her for the whole distance,--an extra one, I mean,
besides Bob, who always follows close behind Steenie; generally in
silence, but ready with advice if it is needed. That second signal--is
it she?”

“Yes. Pretty! pretty!”

In her little wagon, to which was attached a wide, curious
whiffle-tree, Steenie emerged from the canvas gateway, driving a
pair of matched bays. The fifer had stationed himself in the centre
of the plain, with a drummer beside him; and if the music they there
discoursed was not sweet, at least it was inspiriting, and rendered
in good time. Best of all, it was the same that had been used in
training the horses, and they recognized it at once, falling into step
immediately and almost perfectly.

The tune of “Yankee Doodle” fits perfectly the stepping of a horse;
besides which, it is patriotic, and Kentucky Bob was nothing if not
American. To the tune of “Yankee Doodle,” then, this “act” was given;
and though Mr. Calthorp smilingly apologized that they had not chosen
“God Save the Queen,” the delighted Englishman “didn’t mind in the
least.”

“What, what! another pair, eh? Hey?”

“Has she made the circuit once?”

“Yes. Four; drives four!”

Around the course again danced the horses, four abreast, and not a
break in their paces from start to finish.

“You darlings! you have never done so well! Do you know that I am to
drive you no more? And are you being just perfect and splendid for
that?”

“Maybe it’s ’cause they’re afeard of the Britisher!” said a vaquero,
teasingly.

“No, no! it’s because they love me. Now, you others, remember--not one
blunder!” This to the third pair which was being attached to the cart,
these last in advance of the other four.

It really was wonderful,--so wonderful that not a sound was heard save
the strains of the music and the unbroken “pat-pat” of those rhythmic
hoof-beats. But when the fourth circuit was completed, and waving the
soft reins which her childish hands seemed too small to hold, Steenie
stood up in her wagon behind the eight now motionless horses, a cheer
went forth that dwarfed all which had gone before, and that caused
actual tears to dim the vision of happy Kentucky Bob.

“Ah, ha! my Little Un! you done me proud! I can gin up livin’ now!
There’ll never be nothin’ better ’n that sight fer these blamed watery
eyes! Not a fail, not a break-step, not a nothin’, but jest cl’ar
bewitchments!”

“There you spoke. Nothing but a witch-bairn, yet the bonniest this
earth ever saw!” chimed in the Scotch gardener.

“Are you glad, dear Bob?”

“Glad? I’m heart-broke! I--I--Oh, my Little Un! you wouldn’t go fer to
leave San’ Felisy after this, would you?”

“Hark! the prizes! That queer little Englishman ’ll bust his b’iler
soon if somebody don’t pay heed to him! He’s a dancin’ a reg’lar jig
over there to catch our ’tention. I ’low you’ll have to be took to him,
Miss Steenie!” cried Tony Miller.

“An’ I’m the man ’at’ll do it!” responded her proud instructor, as,
swinging his small pupil to her accustomed place on his broad shoulder,
he strode away toward Lord Plunkett’s bench.

“Hm-m! Gives pleasure! Clever--wonderful! Prize--won it! Eh? What?
Everybody?”

“Huckleberries! Won it--of--course! Knew she would!”

Stooping low, Steenie extended her hand eagerly for the purse
outstretched toward her, and for a moment a revulsion of feeling swept
over the donor’s heart. For the sake of the reward, then? So mercenary,
was she?

But she had no sooner received it, and murmured her hasty “Thank you,”
than she demanded, “Jim! Jim! I want Jim!”

Ah! my lord had forgotten “Jim,” and he watched curiously as the shy
fellow made his way through the crowd to Bob’s side.

“Here, Jim! I’ve won it. It’s all for you. For your consumption,--your
mother’s, I mean. That is, I’m going to give it to you if you’ll
promise me one thing. You will, won’t you, dear Jim?”

“I--I--Miss Steenie--I don’t understand.”

“Please don’t be stupid, Jim! Think. Didn’t you tell me ’bout the
dear old mother an’ her consumption, an’ how, if it wasn’t for your
‘habits,’ you’d bring her out to California to live in the sunshine;
but fast as you get your wages, away they go on your ‘habits’? Didn’t
you, Jim Sutton?”

“Ye-es,” shamefacedly.

“Well, you thought the Little Un didn’t know what ‘habits’ were; but I
asked my father, and he says your ‘habits’ make you drink bad liquor
an’ stuff, an’ waste your earnings. You’re a good man, my father says,
an’ trustible, only for them. So now, you see, we’ve got ahead of them
for once; and I want you to take this money and send to that cold place
and bring that good old mother right away out here. Then you won’t be
lonesome when I’m gone, and she’ll keep you out of ‘habits,’ like you
said she could. Will you?”

“Will I, Little Un? You bet! An’--an’--I can’t talk. Bob, you take it.
You say sunthin’ fer me,--purty, like it orter be said. But--Lord!--I
can’t--she ain’t--no Little Un, no ‘Mascot,’ she ain’t; she’s a
genooine-angel!”

And Steenie wondered why almost everybody cried.



CHAPTER V.


[Illustration: MR. CALTHORP AND STEENIE]

Some days later a very weary gentleman in blue goggles and a restless
little girl in queer attire, occupying a section of a railway sleeper,
heard the welcome announcement of the guard passing through the train:
“Next station will be Jersey City. Jer-sey-Ci-ty’s-the-next-sta-tion!”

Then followed the expressman with his insinuating question of,
“Baggage, sir? Delivered any part of the city--baggage?” And the
newsboy with his patois of, “N’ Yo’k pape’s? Pos’-Sun-’Elegram-World!
Pape’s? N’ Yo’k pape’s?”

By that time all the passengers were in a bustle of excitement,--women
hunting and strapping stray parcels; men standing up to stretch their
cramped limbs, while smiling congratulations to one another that their
three-thousand mile journey was safely accomplished.

Cries of, “Porter, my coat!” “This way, Joe! give me a brush next!”
“Oh, we’re almost in! See?” echoed here and there. Now, through
rows of houses, crowding faster and faster upon one another; and
then over a net-work of iron rails, between numberless cars of
every sort,--constantly threatening a collision that was always
avoided,--pushed and panted the great “Overland,” like an exhausted
living creature longing for rest.

All this was very familiar to Mr. Calthorp, but quite new and
formidable to his little daughter, who nestled a bit closer to his
side, and looked about her with wide, observant eyes.

“Are you not glad, Steenie, my darling? A few more trifling changes to
make, another two hours of railway journeying, and then we shall be at
Old Knollsboro, at Grandmother’s.”

“As glad as anything, Papa dear, only--” She checked herself suddenly,
remembering her farewell promise to Kentucky Bob that she would “keep
a stiff upper lip, an’ not let the ‘Boss’ see her weaken, no matter if
she did get homesick!”

“Only what, dear?”

“Why--why--I don’t know. I feel so kind of queer and sick-y inside of
me. I’m not ill--like eating too much candy; but--I don’t feel very
nice. I mean, it’s all right, dear Papa. And I am really, truly glad.
’Cause then you’ll get rested, won’t you? And you’ll go to the eye-man
and be fixed; and then--maybe--I s’pose we’ll go home again.”

But already the train had stopped, and the porter, who had neglected
these two for more importunate passengers, hurried up to give them a
farewell “brush” and to help them with their parcels.

Alas! poor Mr. Calthorp required assistance now as he had not done at
familiar Santa Felisa. The close confinement, the almost sleepless
nights of the long journey, and the growing anxiety, had affected his
dim vision most unfavorably; and the constant attention of his little
daughter was necessary to him as he stepped from the car and joined the
throng of liberated passengers passing forward into the station.

“Lead me into the ticket office. Can you make it out? Ask any man in
uniform.”

Steenie looked up startled. There was a sharp, imperious note in her
father’s voice which was new to her, forced from him by the sudden
conviction that he was no longer losing his sight, but that it was
already lost, and that he had come eastward--too late.

Obediently the little girl touched the arm of an official, passing at
that moment. “Please, sir, will you tell us where to go? My father--”

Mr. Calthorp took the explanation from her lips, and the man in the
blue uniform looked compassionately upon these two who seemed so
helpless, and whose manner so plainly bore the stamp of the far west,
where threading narrow streets and dodging crowds are not every-day
events.

“Sorry, little one, but--I’m in a hurry. Call somebody else;” and he
turned away.

As he did so, he caught the quiver of a girlish, travel-soiled lip, and
a look of terror in a pair of big blue eyes; and his feet refused to
carry him further from the spot.

“Pshaw! Almost train-time--hm-m. All right, Sissy. Here, this way,
sir;” and slipping his arm through Mr. Calthorp’s, the conductor of an
out-going “express” wheeled sharply about, and guided his charges into
a waiting-room, where he consigned them to: “Here, you, twenty-seven!
Look out for these folks! There you are, little one. This man will--”
The rest was lost in the distance as, with the skill of a veteran
railroader, the kind conductor boarded an already moving car and
disappeared.

A little act; but it cleared the mists from Steenie’s eyes and the
anxiety from her heart, for already “Twenty-seven” was saying in tones
of cheery friendliness, “All right, little missy! Whar yo’ an’ yo’ pa
wanter go at?”

Mr. Calthorp’s explanations were repeated with such clearness that, in
another moment, a cab had been summoned, the travellers assisted into
it, and the station-man dismissed, with a smile shining on his black
face and a new quarter in his palm.

“I’m not a bit afraid now, Papa darling. I was just at first, ’cause I
didn’t understand the place. But don’t you be worried now, we’re all
right; and won’t my grandmother be glad to see you!”

The returning invalid had his own opinion on that matter; but he did
not dampen Steenie’s courage by expressing it.

She went on, heedless of his silence. “My! what folks and folks! More
than ever came to our circus--even that last one! And what makes ’em
almost run? They ’bout hit each other, don’t they? What big wagons! Oh,
that’s a pretty horse! What big ones at that wagon full of ’normousest
barrels! Why are they so many, many folks, Papa dear? Ah, we’re
stopping!”

More confusion--more changes; but always somebody at hand to guide
them, for Mr. Calthorp had recovered his usual calm, alert manner, and
could direct, if he could not see his path. A second brief railway
trip, through which Steenie slept comfortably against her father’s
arm, and then--they were standing before the great door of a big white
house, whence a brass lion’s-head knocker grinned maliciously upon
them. Though unguided by his eyes, Mr. Calthorp’s hand rose naturally
till it seized a curious bar-like tongue which hung from the beast’s
mouth, and struck it sharply against the polished plate.

“Whack! Rat-a-tat!”

Which brought the sound of approaching feet; and the door opened
noiselessly, to show within the aperture a very stiff old man.

“Is Madam Calthorp at home?”

“Yes. But--my-soul-I-declare! Is it you, Mr. Daniel?”

“And you, Resolved Tubbs? I know your voice!” The visitor’s hand was
extended and clasped, though cautiously, by the trembling one of the
old servitor. “My eyes--”

“I see, I see, sir. This way--you know--Madam is in the library. I
don’t think she expected you so soon.”

“Maybe not. Though my secretary wrote.”

“This way, sir.” Mr. Tubbs had become himself again: a wooden-visaged
old man who liked to express no opinion whatever, till it had been
formed for him by his mistress of many years. He had not been able
yet to judge whether that mistress would rejoice at this home-coming
of her only son, or not; and he waited his cue before knowing his own
sentiments.

“Ah! if it is as it used to be, I can find my own way, Resolved. The
table by the wall--I recall its red wool cover with the black stamp
exactly in the middle; the two oaken chairs here; and here--the
hat-rack! At home, indeed! Even the very aroma of lavender and
southernwood from those upper chambers is unchanged!”

Then the blue goggles could not hide the gladness which leaped to the
son’s face as he turned the brass knob of the library door, and cried
out, “Mother! are you here?”

There was a moment’s hesitation, which Daniel Calthorp’s dim eyes could
not see; then the rustle of silken skirts, and the stately old lady of
the mansion had risen from her chair and crossed the room, to take her
boy’s hands in her own, and to imprint upon his bearded cheek a kiss of
greeting. “So soon, Daniel? I had not looked for you until next week.”

“Yes; I had a message sent. You see, I was able to get through a bit
earlier, and I could endure no unnecessary delay. Here, darling, this
is Grandmother.”

In all her life Steenie had never looked upon the face of any woman who
bore a kinship to herself, and the dreams of her romantic little heart
had clustered about this unknown relative with an intensity such as
only childhood knows. So she scarcely waited to have her elders’ hands
unclasped before she sprang forward between her father and his mother,
and precipitated herself upon that lady’s neck. “Oh, I thought you
would be pretty! but you’re prettier than anything I ever saw!”

Madam Calthorp staggered a little,--perhaps from the violence of this
attack upon her person, perhaps from surprise at the words; then she
quietly loosened the child’s clinging arms and released herself. “You
are an impulsive little girl, Steenie! Let me see, how old are you?”

“Ten; going on ’leven.”

“Say ‘eleven.’ You are very large of your age; I should think you might
be older.”

Then there was an awkward silence, which the son broke by groping
across the room to a sofa in the bay-window, where he sank down as if
exhausted. Steenie bounded to his side, flashing a defiant glance at
the tall old madam as she passed. “What is it, my Papa? Are you ill?”

“No, no; not at all! But we are both travel-soiled, and unfit for your
dainty rooms, Mother. What quarters have you given us? We will go and
freshen up a bit.”

Old Tubbs, still waiting outside the door, listened critically for his
mistress’s reply. From it he would form his own basis of action.

“I gave you the spare chamber, Daniel; your daughter can take the
little room next.” But Madam’s voice, saying this, sounded as if she
were somewhat perplexed.

“Hm-m!” said Resolved to himself, “if she’d answered up quick,
‘Your old room,’ I’d a knowed she was glad, an’ meant things as
they uset ter be. But--‘spare room!’ that means he’s comp’ny. She
hain’t fergot how he went away, ner the dozen years between. Well,
my--soul--I--declare-I’m sure I know which side my bread’s buttered!
An’ comp’ny it is!”

“Shall I carry yer bag, Mr. Daniel?” asked this astute servant, as the
travellers emerged from the library.

“No! oh, no! thank you. I fancy I’m better able than you, old fellow.
Nothing wrong with me but my eyes. This way, sweetheart.”

Whatever the feeling of disappointment in Daniel Calthorp’s heart,
there was nothing but gayety in Steenie’s, as she tripped merrily up
the broad stairs behind him,--stopping now to examine the slender
polished rods which held the carpet in place, and now to gaze through
the window on the landing at the old-fashioned garden, where the late
April snows still lingered in the clefts of the lilac branches and made
a white border for the rows of box.

“Oh! isn’t it just like a storybook? And my grandmother looks like
pictures of queens. She makes me think of the cleanest things I ever
saw. Did you notice?”

“Be eyes for me, little one, and tell me just what you saw. Her face,
is it wrinkled? Is her hair gray? Did she wear glasses?”

“Her face is white,--whiter than anybody’s I ever saw, ’cept Irish
Kate’s little baby’s. And her hair is like that pretty snow out there,
all round little rolls each side her eyes; and she has some soft white
stuff on her head, and more around her neck and her wrists. Her dress
is black silk, and--I love her!”

“I’m glad--very glad of that!” exclaimed Mr. Calthorp, earnestly. The
power of Steenie’s love he believed to be irresistible.

“But isn’t Mr. Tubbs funny? He makes me think of raisin grapes that
haven’t dried right. And he wears his spectacles up on the bald part of
his head; and he looks lots older ’n Sutro. How old is he, Papa?”

“Maybe seventy; I don’t know exactly. Now, can you make yourself tidy
alone? There are no young women servants in this old house, and you
must do everything you can for yourself. But I will help you with your
hair if it bothers you, as I did, or tried to do, on the train.”

However, he was saved this trouble; for at that moment came a knock
upon the door of the little room assigned to Steenie, and, at her swift
opening of it, an old lady entered.

At least Steenie called her “lady,” and was amazed when this prim
person, in the black alpaca gown and wearing spectacles, remarked:
“Madam sent me to wash and dress you. Come here!”

“But--I--I can do it for myself. I’d rather. I’m very soiled; the car
was so dusty And you look so clean! Everybody is so ter’ble clean
here!”

“Hoity-toity! Come. I’ve no time ter waste.”

Steenie moved forward, slowly, and greatly wondering. It had seemed
all right to have gay young Suzan´ preside at her toilet, but a
severe-looking and venerable creature like this was quite a different
matter.

“Where is the bath-room, please?”

“The bath-room! There ain’t none. Hm-m. Did ye expect a palace?”

“A palace! I was talking ’bout water. What’ll I do then? I’ve been
a’most a week in that dirty car--and I--Maybe Papa knows.” She applied
at her father’s key-hole for advice, and he took the direction of
affairs into his own hands.

“Just fix up a tub in your old wash-room, won’t you, Mary Jane? And let
Steenie have her splash there. It will save messing your clean room,
and I will explain to my mother.”

Mary Jane went away with a sniff, and her nose in the air; sternly
muttering about “folks turning the house topsy-turvy, an’ thinkin’ the
hull world b’longed to ’em;” and Steenie followed, meekly. She was very
much in terror of the sharp-visaged old spinster, whose favor she had,
however, unwittingly won by her desire for cleanliness; although Mary
Jane was not the woman to admit that at once. She was shown into the
bare-floored, and rather chilly wash-room, where a round blue tub was
deposited upon the boards with a decided bang, and promptly partially
filled with several buckets full of cold water from the “system” pump,
after which Mary Jane disappeared.

Then the new-comer forgot her fear in her curiosity, and was busily
poking about, inspecting her surroundings, when her ancient attendant
re-entered, tossed another pail of boiling water into the previous ones
of cold, and again withdrew.

An hour later, Steenie, very fresh and dainty in her white frock, and
with her rebellious curls brushed into a semblance of order by her
father’s untrained hand, bounded gayly through the long, cold halls,
and in at the library door, just in time to overhear the old servant
explaining to Madam: “She’ll be a cruel lot o’ trouble, an’ mebbe the
death on us with her noise; but--she’s clean! Why, ma’am, she says she
takes a hull body-wash, ever’ day on her life, an’ sometimes twicet!
An’ if it’s the truth, she’s one youngun out of a million! an’ the
only one ’t I ever see ’t liked water in her nateral state. She’s a
phenomely. But--my floor! When I went in, half an hour arterwards,
there she stood, dancin’ a reg’lar jig, roun’ an’ roun’, an’ splashin’
the suds all over her an’ the boards, an’ ever’ conceivable thing! I
scairt her out, lively; an’ all she could say fer herself was: ‘It
seemed so good an’ funny to use a roun’ tub, stidder a reg’lar long
one.’ She’d a splotched out the last drop in another minute. She must a
be’n brung up a reg’lar heathen, an’ her Mr. Dan’l’s only!”

Steenie, poised on tip-toe, listened to the close of the harangue;
certain from the words that Mary Jane was frightfully angry and from
the tone that she was rather pleased. But, at that moment, Madam
Calthorp perceived her, and motioned silence to the speaker.

“But I’m not a heathen, Mary Jane! My father says a heathen is one who
worships idols, an’ I wouldn’t be such a dunce as that. I’ve a whole
lot of Indian idols at San’ Felisa, an’ they’re as ugly as ugly. The
silly things make them out of the same clay they do their jars and
dishes, an’ the jars are far prettier. My father says--”

“Steenie, why have you put on a white frock on such a day as this?”

“Why?” repeated the puzzled visitor. “It’s a clean one, only wrinkled
in the packing.”

“But--a white dress in April! It is wholly out of place. You will get
sick, and have to be taken care of. Take it off at once.”

All the gayety died out of the child’s face, rosy from recent
scrubbings with soap and water, and radiant with health, and a look of
strange perplexity succeeded. “I--I can’t, Grandmother. I haven’t any
other.”

“No--other--frock!”

“Not that is clean. My car one is ter’ble dirty an’ dusty. My father
says it isn’t fit to wear any more; and my horseback one isn’t
unpacked; an’ my rest are just like this. I’m sorry if it isn’t right;”
with a deprecatory little gesture that appealed strangely to Madam
Calthorp’s cold heart.

“Well, well! Do you wear such clothes as these all winter in
California?”

“Yes; I do. My father says ’at white is the only ’propriate color for a
little girl.”

“White is not a color, Steenie. Learn to be accurate. But--go and ask
Mary Jane to give you my gray cashmere shawl, then put it on directly.
If you have no suitable clothes, some must be procured for you.”

“Yes’m,” answered Steenie, obediently, and ran away,--to return
presently, sheathed in a great gray calyx, from which her flower-like
face peered mischievously out. Then her father’s steps were heard
descending the stairs, slowly, and the child darted off, once more, to
clasp his arm with a vigor that denoted deep emotion. “Oh, Papa, it was
too bad we came! Do you know she doesn’t want us? My pretty, very own
Grandmother! She doesn’t say so, but I know it. She doesn’t!”

Daniel Calthorp drew his darling closer to his side; and though he
smiled brightly enough, his own heart echoed the disappointed words. He
had known from the moment when his mother’s voice had fallen on his now
super-sensitive ear that his coming had brought her no pleasure, and
that she had been too truthful to put into her welcome a warmth which
she did not feel.

“Then we must be so patient and kind to her, sweetheart, that she can’t
help being glad, after awhile. I depend upon you, my Blue Eyes, to work
a miracle.”

So they entered the Madam’s presence once more, and together; and
though she saw something pathetic in the grouping of that helpless
pair, the disturbance and annoyance which their coming was to her calm,
self-sufficient life far outweighed her pity.



CHAPTER VI.


[Illustration: STEENIE READING.]

“My-soul-I-declare! you here? Don’t ye know Madam don’t ’low nobody to
tetch her books?” almost shouted Resolved Tubbs, entering the library
on the morning following “Mr. Daniel’s” arrival, and, early as the hour
was, finding the place already occupied by Steenie. Sprawling flat upon
the hearth rug, and supporting herself upon her elbows, she turned the
leaves of a richly illustrated folio, while piles of other volumes were
heaped about her, in careless disregard of injured bindings. She did
not heed, because she did not hear, the reproof; for at that moment
her childish soul was deep in the “Inferno,” following the poet’s
dark imagings by the aid of Doré’s darker pencillings. She had had the
handling of few books in her short life, but she “took to them” as
naturally as did her stately grandmother, whose quiet existence for
many years had been among them almost wholly.

“Don’t you hear, sissy? You mustn’t tetch ’em, I tell ye! Git up,
quick! I--I dunno what on airth she’d say if she was ter come in this
minute!”

“What, sir?” asked Steenie, absently, lifting a face white with horror,
“is it true?”

“True as the gospel; you’d better look out!”

“Is it near here,--near this very Old Knollsboro’ town?”

“Hm-m! I vum I never see nothin’ like ye! I do b’lieve ye ain’t right
bright!”

“Is it?” again demanded the child, oblivious to any personal remarks.

“I dunno nothin’ ’bout printed trash, an’ you hain’t no call to,
nuther. But you’ll hear sunthin’ ’at ’ll make yer ears buzz if you
don’t put them books right square back where ye got ’em! I ain’t a
goin’ ter wait on ye, like you ’pear ter be uset ter havin’ folks do!
I’ve got the fires ter ’tend, the chores ter do, an’ ten thousan’ more
pesky things, all this very mornin’, an’ my lumbago achin’ me fit ter
split.”

“What’s a lumbago?” asked Steenie, sitting up cross-legged, and trying
to hold the great book on her small lap.

“It’s--Thunder an’ lightnin’! Ou--uch!” With a groan that was almost
a yell, Resolved arose from the stooping posture which, in an unwary
moment, he had assumed before the grate he was cleaning, and clapped
his gnarled fingers to “the small of his back.”

Whereupon Steenie likewise sprang up and retreated to the further
corner of the apartment, leaving the volume _de luxe_ to fall where
it happened. “What’s the matter?” she demanded, from that safe
distance, half-laughing, half-crying, for her vivid imagination had
been overwrought by the lurid pictures she had been studying, and Mr.
Tubbs’s shriek seemed to presage some of the intolerable torments which
she had seen depicted.

“The lumbago, I told ye! Blast a youngun,--etarnally askin’ questions!
Wait till ye git ter be as old as I be, an’ you ’ll know, I guess!”

“I’ll wait!” responded Steenie, willingly, and with no intentional
disrespect.

“Ye will, will ye? you saas-box! Where ye ever lived ter have no
respect fer age?” And, mindless of his affliction, the exasperated Mr.
Tubbs started in pursuit of the offender, to drive her from his sight.

But she, mistaking his intention, and fancying a terrible resemblance
between his pain-contorted face and the anguished ones of the “Inferno”
engravings, crouched back in her corner, and, throwing her arms up
rigidly above her head, uttered shriek after shriek of terror. Beyond
her mild dread of “seeing folks angry,” it was her first experience of
fear, and it took absolute possession of her mind.

“Shet up! shet up! My-soul-I-declare, you’re the beatenest youngun I
ever see! Why on airth couldn’t ye stay back thar in Californy stidder
comin’ ter torment them ’at don’t want ye?” But as, in his eagerness to
quiet this unprecedented disturbance of that orderly house, the deluded
servant continued to advance menacingly, Steenie continued to scream;
until, in the midst of the uproar, a white-haired figure appeared in
the doorway, when she darted instantly forward and buried her face in
her grandmother’s skirt.

As Resolved afterwards expressed it, he “was struck dumberfoun’ an’
couldn’t say nothin’;” and as Steenie was also speechless, the
startled mistress of the house was left to draw her own conclusions
from the scene.

“Steenie, look up!”

Steenie shivered and obeyed. “Is it true, Grandmother? Does he really,
truly know?” Again that unwonted stirring in the hitherto cold heart of
the Madam moved her to ask almost gently, “What true, child?”

“About men being twisted into trees--and swimming in
flames--and--and--awful everythings! He says so.”

The lady’s eyes strayed more critically over the apartment, and, if any
of that perfectly trained woman’s movements could ever be such, the
start she gave was violent. Steenie felt herself pushed suddenly aside,
and saw her grandmother cross hastily to the ill-used Dante, which she
raised with a care far more loving than she had yet bestowed upon the
motherless child of her blind, only son.

“Steenie! Steenie Calthorp! Listen to me. Understand me--fully. I
forbid you ever touching a single volume in this room, in this house,
which I do not, personally, place in your hands.”

The little girl was too surprised to speak. When, at last, she found
her voice, she asked, innocently enough: “Aren’t they to read? The
books!”

“By those who comprehend their value. But you are to obey me,
implicitly. Will you?”

“Yes’m. So my father said,” answered Steenie, sweetly. “But, you see,
I didn’t know they weren’t to be looked at till Mr. Resolved said
so. We didn’t have any books at San’ Felisa, ’cept Papa’s figurey
ones, and some ’at didn’t have pictures. Only mine. The ‘boys’ used
to bring me lovely books, ever’ time they went to town. They was
‘Jack the Giant Killer,’ and the Andersen man’s, an’ a beau-u-tiful
‘Mother Goose’! Father Antonio sent me a prayer-book; but it was all
in Latin, and my father says I must learn English first.” The presence
of her grandmother had reassured the child against any danger from the
lumbago-frenzied Mr. Tubbs, and she now leaned contentedly against the
wall, coolly watching the disarranged volumes being returned to their
shelves, and quite free from any anger against anybody. But she could
not forget what she had seen, and when Madam Calthorp had finished
her labor, had closed and locked the glass doors of the old-fashioned
book-cases, and turned to leave the room, she went forward and clasped
the lady’s hand. “Did you ever read that book, Grandmother?”

“Yes.”

“Is it English?”

“No, Italian. Dante, who wrote it, was an Italian poet.”

“Is it near here,--where those poor people are?”

“Steenie! Ah, how can I tell!”

“Can’t you? I thought you knew everything. My father says you are the
most intelligy woman of his ’quaintance. He said he wished I could be
like you; but he didn’t think I could, ’cause something was the matter
with my nature, ’at made it diff’rent.”

“Say ‘dif-fer-ent,’ Steenie. Speak all your words distinctly.”

“Dif-fer-ent. It takes longer, doesn’t it?”

“It commonly takes longer to do things well than ill. It is the fault
of the present generation to slur everything, in its rush for ‘time.’”

“Yes’m,” assented Steenie, politely, to whom this was as Greek.

“Did you ever go to school, my dear?”

“No. But my father says I may while I’m here. I don’t much care about
it.”

“Why not?”

“Oh, ’cause. One thing, it’s in a house, he says, an’ I like out-doors.
I never stay in the house, ’cept nights. Here comes Papa! Is breakfast
ready? I’m awful hungry.”

Steenie’s manners and speech continually jarred upon Madam Calthorp’s
ideas of propriety; and propriety was the rule of her solitary life.
But, although she had dreaded this invasion of her quiet by a “noisy
child,” and by the son whose many years of absence had made him seem a
stranger to her, yet she was impartial enough to acknowledge that there
was something very winning and lovable about the little girl.

Breakfast over, mother and son retired to the library to “talk
business,” and the other member of the family party was left free to
amuse herself as she chose. “Only take care not to meddle, nor get into
mischief, darling,” added Mr. Calthorp to his kiss of dismissal.

“Not if I can help it, Papa dear, but ’most ever’thing here seems to be
‘mischief.’ I think I’ll go out-doors.”

Madam did not hear this decision, or she would have forbidden it,--not
from any desire to thwart Steenie’s enjoyment, but because the child
was not fitly apparelled to appear on the streets of respectable Old
Knollsboro, where, though fashions were not advanced, very rigid
notions were held of what should or should not be worn.

Bare-headed and in her white frock, still bundled about with the gray
cashmere shawl, the little stranger wandered out into the garden, and
thence to the street.

April was half gone, and till then the weather had been cold; but that
morning came one of those sudden changes which seem like summer warmth
gone astray. The snow-patches melted swiftly, the frozen sidewalks
thawed, and the whole earth became a bed of softest mud, over which
Steenie pursued her sticky way, too intent upon her other surroundings
to notice what went on beneath her feet.

“How the birds sing! There are more birds here than at San’ Felisa, I
do b’lieve. And the sun shines a’most as bright. Dear me! I wish I’d
worn my hat--but never mind. This shawl’s awful hot. I’ll take it off
an’ lay it on the fence. Hm-m. How funny! Everybody has a big white
house an’ a little white railing around it, an’ that’s all. But it
looks pleasant down that road. I wish Tito was here. Dear, darling
Tito! It seems--”

“Whooa! Whooa! I say! Hold--on--don’t--whooa-a!”

Steenie turned swiftly round. Down the street behind her galloped a
wildly excited horse, with a little girl on his back; while following
fast came a second beast, ridden by a terrified groom. The small
equestrian had lost her control of her animal,--if control she had
ever had,--and he had taken fright or become suddenly vicious; keeping
just so far in advance of the pursuer as to avoid capture, and dancing
upon his hind legs between whiles, in a manner inimical to any rider’s
safety and doubly dangerous to one so young as she who still clung to
her saddle, her fingers clasping the pommel in the rigidity of fear.

“Oh, he’s running away! The naughty fellow!”

Thought and action came together; for the very sound of a horse’s
foot-fall had roused Steenie’s spirit to its full activity, even before
she had turned to learn that the sound meant danger.

“_Hola! Hola!_” she cried softly, and bounded into the road; skimming
the muddy surface like a swallow and racing as her old Indian friend,
Wanka, had taught her in the games at Santa Felisa. She had thrown up
her hand, warningly, to the groom, who, aghast at seeing a second child
rush into peril, checked his own horse, almost unconsciously.

“That’s the wisest thing he could do! Why didn’t he stop before?”
thought Steenie; “that little girl’s horse knew he was being chased,
and--”

The small hands on the pommel were slowly slipping loose; but the
fleet-footed westerner had gained the gray beast’s side, had sprung
upon it, had thrown herself astride the quivering shoulders, and caught
up the dangling bridle.

“Hold on to me, girl! Tight--my waist--I’ll take care--_Hola, hola_, my
pretty one! _Ce, ce, ce!_ Wouldst thou? But, no!”

How was it done? That is Steenie’s secret, learned from Kentucky Bob
and loyally kept because of her promise; but this is what happened: she
leaned her face far forward till her pretty lips were close beside the
frantic animal’s ear, and there cooed to him in half-whispered sounds,
till he paused for one second to listen,--and in that brief instant
yielded his equine will to her human one.

“Good boy! So, so, my hero! Softly now,--as a well-bred horse should
go! Don’t you be afraid, little girl! He’s--what’s his name?”

“Ki-inks,” faltered a timid voice.

“Well, I should think so! He’s full of kinks; but he’s a beauty! Aren’t
you, dear?” which flattery the mettlesome creature seemed to heed,
for he fell into a measured pace, and tossed his mane proudly, as who
should say: “Behold me! A fine fellow am I!”

A few rods further of this movement, then Steenie checked Kinks
entirely; and though he quivered and trembled, and looked nervously
around at the groom riding up and the crowds who had collected on the
sidewalk, he suffered the restraint imposed upon him by the stroking of
her soft little hands and her caressing voice. Then she asked: “Where
do you live, girl? Do you want to go home?”

“Yes, yes! I live down there,” answered the rescued child, loosing one
arm from her preserver’s waist sufficiently to point forwards down the
avenue.

“Shall I get off? Can you ride alone?”

“No--no--no! Let me down! Please!”

“Wait. Let me tell you. Is he your horse?”

“Yes.”

“Do you love him?”

“Not--now. I did--but now I hate him! Let me down!”

The groom approached and dismounted to obey this demand; but Steenie
wheeled sidewise, so that Kinks could look his stable-mate squarely in
the face.

“Not yet, little girl. He’s beautiful, and you ought to want to ride
him. Why don’t you?”

“I’m afraid.”

“You needn’t be. Something made him angry; then he ran away. He’s
ashamed now.”

“Ashamed? Why, how do you know?”

“He says so, plain enough. See here, Kinksey, hold up your head. Look
at your little lady an’ tell her you’re sorry.”

To the astonishment of every on-looker the little bareheaded stranger
coolly seized the gray’s forelock and pulled his head backward, so
that his eyes could be seen; and laughing softly, but lovingly, she
maintained his position till his owner leaned forward and satisfied her
own curiosity.

“Why--it is so! He does look as if he wanted to hide!”

It was quite true. If ever an equine countenance expressed shame and
regret, that of the now humbled Kinks did so at that moment.

Probably it was the first time in their lives that the people in that
wondering crowd had ever thought whether a horse was capable of facial
expression; and it gave them food for reflection. Either their own eyes
deceived them, or the stranger child was a “witch,” or--a horse did
have emotions,--and showed them.

“Now, you won’t be naughty and unkind to him, will you,--just because
he didn’t behave p’lite for once?”

“I--I’m not naughty. He’s nothing but a horse, and I’m folks. I know
things.”

“So does he. He knows more’n you or I do; an’ he didn’t have to go to
school, neither.”

“You’re an awful funny girl.”

“So are you. Say, shall I get off? Will you ride him alone?”

“No--no! Stay on. If you will, I won’t get off at all. I’ll ride all
the way home. Will you?”

“May I? ‘_Sta buen_’ [that is good]! But move back. I’m sitting horrid.”

“Won’t I fall off?”

“Won’t you--pooh! Are all girls afraid in Old Knollsboro?”

“I--don’t--know.”

“I hope not. I’ve had a great cur’osity to see another girl besides
myself, but I never did,--that is, to talk to ’em. If they’re all so
scarey as you, I shall be awful dis’pointed.”

“You’re a nasty, mean, hateful thing! So there!”

“Why--what?” The face which Steenie turned toward her companion showed
not the slightest resentment, but the sincerest astonishment. “What
did I do?”

“You said I was ‘scarey’--and--and--things!”

“But aren’t you? I thought so. May be I was mistookened. But Kinks
thinks it’s time to go. Are you ready? What’s your name?”

“Beatrice. Ye--es. I--guess--so. Won’t he--run away--again?”

“He’ll run like a coyote! But he won’t behave bad any more. Ready?”

“Ye--es.”

“Now, then! _Pronto_ [get on]!” Away dashed Kinks, bearing his double
burden, as if determined to make up lost time, or to show the racing
quality of his blood; but, swift as was his pace, he was no longer
wild, and seemed but another young thing, such as those who rode him,
overflowing with spirit and vitality.

“Ah, how good it seems! A’most like Tito!”

“Ye--es. I--I like it!” assented Beatrice, so exhilarated by the rapid
motion that she forgot her fear.

“Which way now?”--as they came to the turn of the road.

“Down there, through the iron gate.”

“Is it his home,--and yours?”

“Yes.”

“Then I’ll give him his head;” and dropping the bridle-rein upon his
shoulders, Steenie folded her arms while Kinks trotted more and more
slowly over the gravel road, till he stopped, of his own accord, before
the block where he was accustomed to be mounted.

Both children were speedily off upon the ground, and Steenie, feeling
more at home and happier than at any time since she had parted from
her four-footed friends at Santa Felisa, began examining the various
straps and buckles of the gray’s harness, with a professional air which
greatly impressed the watchful Beatrice.

“Who saddled this poor fellow?”

“I--I don’t know.”

“You ought to know, then! See here! There’s a thorn in this surcingle.
That’s all how it happened!”

“That--little thing? And that big horse?”

The groom has ridden up by this time, and Steenie turned upon him
swiftly. “See here, man! I found this in the band!”

“Well. What of it?”

“That’s what made him act up.”

“That is too small to have been felt.”

“I think not. See?” The child struck the brier sharply into the flesh
of her own brown little hand, and a red flush followed the wound. “That
has hurt him ever since he went out. Bob says nothing’s so sensitive
as a horse; and then something frightened him; and then he--ran away.
So would I,--if anything kept doing this all the time!” And again she
attacked her own skin,--now so energetically that the blood oozed out;
at which she turned and clasped the soft nostrils of the thorough-bred
before her with a tender pitying touch, and laid her own bonny face
caressingly against the face of the beast, who stood in motionless
enjoyment of this new sympathy.

Nobody knew that a fourth person had observed this scene till a grave
voice quietly asked: “Little girl, who are you?”

Then the curly head was reluctantly lifted from its resting-place,
and a pair of radiant eyes were raised toward the porch where the
questioner stood. “I’m only Steenie Calthorp.”

“Only--the most wonderful child I ever saw! Where did you come from?”

“Santa Felisa, California.”

“What are you doing here?”

Memory returned to her. What, indeed, was she doing there, when she
had been told by her grandmother that she must be ready in just
half-an-hour to “go and buy some decent clothes!”

“_Caramba!_ I forgot!” And away flashed a white frock and a streaming
mass of curly hair, without so much as a good-by to any of these new
acquaintances.



CHAPTER VII.


[Illustration: STEENIE AND HER GRANDMOTHER.]

Steenie had little difficulty in retracing her way along the avenue as
far as that old street of the town on which her grandmother’s house
stood; but she stopped, confused.

“It was a big white house with a lion on it.” Alas! they were all big
white houses in that locality, and more than one had a “lion on it.”

“There is a white fence before it, and green blinds.”

So were there everywhere,--for this staid, aristocratic, inland borough
was nothing if not correct. Years and years before, when it was young,
its then leader of society had builded him a “mansion,” standing so
many paces back from the street, of such a width and stature. He had
placed about the yard a protecting paling, white,--to match the house;
with its green blinds which did not match the grass, but stared at it
in a hardness of tone, so utterly green, that it made nature’s color
look yellow,--maybe from envy.

The example set in that far-away time continued still. To the one big
square white house succeeded other big, square, white houses, as like
to the pattern as rule and measure could make them; to the ugly green
blinds other rows of ugly green blinds; while the original paling
stretched out far, far on either side.

Thus the great High Street of Old Knollsboro began and grew; and now
was far too loyal to its past to alter its own cleanly and roomy
monotony for any modern freaks of architecture.

It was on this thoroughfare that a strange little girl, who had never
been lost on the wide plains of Santa Felisa, now stood looking about
in awe-stricken perplexity. She began, also, to feel physically very
miserable. Clouds had obscured the sun, and the wind had risen chilly,
blowing through her light attire with a piercing breath new to her
experience, and most unpleasant. Her shoes were water-soaked, and her
feet stiff with the cold; and such a terrible forlornness suddenly
overcame her that she felt very much like crying.

“But if I cry I can’t see anything, then!” said this practical small
creature, and forthwith restrained her tears. “Well, it must be further
’n this, anyhow; an’ if I go on, maybe I’ll see a Maltese cat. Mary
Jane says her cat is pure Malty; and so--Ho! There she goes!”

Thinking wholly of the animal which was to be her guide, Steenie
pursued a fleeing object that she believed to be Mary Jane’s
possession; but she was disappointed at the very gateway of successful
capture, beneath which the cat darted and through which the child would
have followed but for the latch; about this her observant eye detected
a radical difference from that of Madam Calthorp’s.

“Hm-m, Miss Cat! You’ve run away again, I s’pose. Mary Jane says you
are always running away an’ ‘pestering the life out of her.’ An’,
maybe, you’re like me,--don’t know where you do b’long. Never mind. I
guess you’ll find your way home again; so I’ll go on.”

Steenie was so oddly and thinly clothed for that season and climate
that some curious eyes looked after her sturdy little figure, as she
passed swiftly up the street, darting questioning glances at every
residence; but nobody thought of offering guidance. For wasn’t Old
Knollsboro in morning attire? Besides, open curiosity concerning one’s
neighbors was a common thing, and belonged to the vulgar crowd which
did not inhabit High Street. So she made the full length of one side
the roadway and had crossed to return upon the other, when she spied in
the distance a bent, blue-coated old man, whom she recognized at once.

“It’s Mr. Tubbs! It truly is! Hurrah!” she cried, with a delight quite
contrasting to the terror this same person had caused her earlier
in the day. Then she sped forward till she had overtaken and thrown
herself upon her victim’s shoulders, who rebounded from the shock of
the attack with a groan horrible to hear, but which no longer daunted
the glad child. “Oh, you dear Mr. Resolved! Here you were, looking for
me, and all the time I was--”

“Wasn’t lookin’ fer ye ’t all! Oh, oh! Be ye born ter murder me
outright, er be ye not? Um--m! That’s what I’d like ter know.”

“Murder you? Why, you must be funny! How, why should a little girl
murder anybody?”

“My-soul-I-declare! But you seem boun’ ter! An’ in the name o’ common
sense, what be ye doin’ out here with no clothes on ter speak of?
Where’s yer bunnit er yer shawl?”

Shawl! Steenie had never thought of it from the moment when she took it
off and laid it on the fence. The fence! What fence? Where? All up and
down those two long rows of palings which faded into an indistinct line
and seemed to melt together in the distance, the child’s eyes searched
critically. But there was nothing in sight to suggest the shawl, which
had been only loaned by Madam Calthorp, and Steenie’s fear took a new
direction. What if it were lost?--as she had been, and the Maltese cat.

She had been trained to a very nice observance of “thine” and “mine;”
and even at Santa Felisa, where she was so universally loved and
indulged, she had never mislaid or used anything belonging to another
without permission. How dreadful to begin now with something owned by
that stern, beautiful grandmother whom she already loved so dearly, yet
who seemed too “intelligy” to return such a simple sentiment!

“Which is my grandmother’s house, Mr. Resolved? Please, will you show
me?--even if you weren’t sent after me.”

“Sent arter ye! Humph! Psst-t’ I’d like ter see myself bein’ sent arter
younguns, at my time o’ life!”

“Where, please? Quick!”

For answer the old man pushed his spectacles into their legitimate
place and looked at the questioner searchingly. “Well, I hate ter own
it, but I s’pose I’ll have ter. I ’lowed ter Mary Jane fust off, ’t ye
didn’t seem like common younguns; an’ then that fool kind o’ talk this
mornin’; an’ now, a losin’ of yerself in a plain straight road like
this. It’s a pity,--it’s a terr’ble pity.”

“Of course it is. But don’t you see? I did it just because it _is_ so
plain. I was never outside my grandmother’s house before, only when we
came. And I was so tired I didn’t notice; an’ these rows and rows look
just like a flock of sheep, each more the same than the other; and if
you won’t tell me”--A fit of shivering cut short her remarks.

“Gracious! You ain’t a ketchin’ cold, be ye? A’ready? This way, then,
suddent! Er there ye’ll be ter be nussed.” With which humble imitation
of his mistress’ sentiments, Mr. Tubbs faced about, and seizing
Steenie’s cold little hand, hurried back to their own domicile as fast
as age and lumbago would permit.

“Now, look a here. Take a notice. Ye mayn’t be bright, but ye can l’arn
sunthin’, an’ I’m boun’ ter teach ye. That gate-latch has a round quirl
on the top. See? an’ there hain’t another gate-latch has a nothin’
but a square quirl the hull endurin’ length o’ High Street. Do ye
understan’ what I’m a sayin’?”

“Why, yes, certainly. Why shouldn’t I?” laughed Steenie, forgetting her
fear of her guide in gratitude for his “kindness” in returning her to
her friends, and wondering why he thought her so slow of comprehension.
But no sooner was the “round quirled” latch lifted than she darted past
him and in at the front door, which, for an unusual thing, stood wide
open.

“Papa! Grandmother! Where are you? I’m so glad--I’m sorry--I lost it--I
was lost, too, and he’s--the loveliest great gray--Papa! Papa Calthorp!”

Her father emerged from the library, looking very pale and careworn;
but she sprang into his arms with such exuberant delight that a smile
rose to his lips. Then he clasped her close,--closer than she had
ever known him to do, and his cheek felt the chill of hers. “Why,
sweetheart, how cold you are! Where have you been?”

“Didn’t you hear, Papa, dear? I said I had been lost.”

Very speedily thereafter Steenie found herself in bed. She didn’t quite
comprehend it, and it certainly was her first experience of going into
such retirement in the daytime; but one glance at the child’s wet feet
and shivering body had alarmed Madam greatly.

“Right out of that warm climate into this, and clad as she is! This
way, Steenie, at once. Oh, your shoes! The tracks on the carpet!”

“Here, darling, I’ll carry you;” and as directly as if his eyes could
see, Mr. Calthorp bore his little girl to her own room and himself
assisted in tucking her into the thick blankets, while Mary Jane fussed
about with hot bricks and soap-stones, and Madam Calthorp administered
a dose of sage-tea, whose aroma carried the father back to the days of
his own childhood.

When the excitement had somewhat subsided, and Steenie had assured
them over and over that she was as “warm as a pepper-stew,” the
house-mistress sat down to listen to the tale which her grandchild had,
until then, vainly endeavored to tell.

“First, I’m so sorry about your shawl. I took it off, ’cause it was so
warm; an’ I don’t know where the place was. The fence is just the same,
and--”

“Never mind the shawl, Steenie; it is certain to be returned. Somebody
will find and recognize it; but what is that about a horse?”

Holding fast to her father’s hand, Steenie gave a graphic description
of the runaway, and its result. When she had finished, Madam sat in a
silence which was plainly that of a shocked dismay. Finally she spoke.

“This is even worse than I feared. No such accident must occur again.
Steenie, before another word is said, promise me that you will not go
into the street again without permission.”

“No, no, Mother!” interposed Mr. Calthorp, earnestly. “Pardon my
disputing your authority, but that will not answer. Steenie has never
known restraint, and--but let us settle all this at some other time.”

The lady sighed. She had her own ideas of how a little girl should be
brought up; but she felt her old hands inadequate to the task. She
had been so peaceful and free! Why had this trial been sent upon her?
Gravely she arose and left the room, and the relieved runaway went to
sleep to wake at the dinner hour with no worse feeling about her than
rebellion against being kept in bed when there was “nothing the matter
that ever was.”

The immediate result of that morning’s adventure, so far as Steenie was
concerned, was a suitable wardrobe. A dressmaker took up her abode in
the west chamber, and there the restless child was imprisoned during a
fortnight of bright days, while birds sang invitations to her through
the windows, and the crocuses coaxed her with their shining faces to
“come out of doors and be glad!”

But the only time she could command for that was after the crocuses and
the birds had gone to sleep, and the dressmaker had stopped work for
the day.

“Why do I need so many things, dear grandmother? I’m sure they’re
pretty; but--”

“Many, Steenie? I have never been an extravagant woman, and I certainly
shall not cultivate the habit now. But there must be two comfortable
school-frocks and three or four thinner ones; for I wish everything
to be accomplished at once that will be required during the summer.
There must be a simple dress for church and a richer one for visiting;
and--that is all. I’m sure you are the first little girl I ever knew
who didn’t like handsome clothes.”

“Oh, you haven’t known even me--that way! For I like the frocks well
enough, but not the fixing of them. I stand up, ‘being fitted,’ till my
feet ache like anything; and Miss Sessions’ knuckles have punched me
all over black and blue. She doesn’t mean it, of course; but when she
puts in a pin she jams against me like I was her lap-board. And I wish
needles hadn’t eyes! ’Cause I ’most put mine out threading ’em.”

“Why, Steenie! I thought you were a contented child! I have never heard
you complain of anything before.”

“Haven’t you? Am I complaining? But--it’s--it’s--awfully, awfully
lonesome! I wish Papa would come back! I can’t sleep nights for
wondering about his poor eyes; and how long it will take the man to fix
’em.”

“There, there! That will do. Don’t allow yourself to give way to habits
of despondency. Your father expected to be gone for two weeks, and he
has been for but for ten days. Maybe, if you go down into the kitchen,
you can see Mary Jane get supper.”

“Yes’m,” said Steenie, choking back her emotion, and turning toward the
stairs, whence, seeing her grandmother stoop to pick up a thread from
the carpet, she ran to save her the trouble, and ended by throwing her
arms about the silk-clad shoulders and giving them a hearty squeeze.
“Oh! I do love you so, Grandmother!”

“Why, Steenie? Because of the new frocks and pretty jackets?”

“Grandmother! How funny! ’Cause of nothing at all only--’cause!”

At which senseless reason the giver of it smiled merrily, and the
recipient smiled almost indulgently.

“Well, run now! To-morrow you will be at school, and a new life will
begin for you.”

“How? Am I not living now?”

“In one way, yes. But there is a world of books to which your school
training will open the door. To me, that world is everything, or was. I
find--some other things--begin to interest me now.”

“What things, Grandmother?”

“No matter, little questioner; but things utterly different from any
printed page.” When Madam Calthorp said anything that Steenie did
not understand, the latter readily attributed it to the lady’s great
“intelligence,” which she had now learned to call by its right name.

But, somehow, that little talk had set both old and young hearts to
lighter beating; and Steenie departed kitchen-ward, feeling that
“watching Mary Jane” was something interesting, even if it could not
quite equal a race on the sands with Tito.

But of that beloved animal she dared not think often. It was apt to
make a troublesome “ache” come “in her throat,” and it “didn’t do any
good.”

On the following morning, feeling very curious and happy, Steenie
entered the primary department of the great school for which Old
Knollsboro was famous. She did not know that girls “going on eleven”
usually disdained “primaries” as far beneath them, and she wouldn’t
have cared if she had; but, at the first recess, she was enlightened
on the subject by a young miss in braids, who remarked, patronizingly,
“Oh, you’re the new girl, aren’t you?”

“I’m not new,--not very. I’m over ten.”

“What? I don’t mean new that way. You just came.”

“No. I have been here ever so long. Grandmother says ’bout three weeks.”

“Don’t you feel mad to go with the little ones?”

“No. I think I like little ones best. I never saw any ’bout my size
’cept Beatrice, and--and--you,” concluded Steenie, stammering in her
confusion over saying something that even to her untrained ears sounded
“not just right.”

“My! Aren’t you polite! Well, what can you expect, my mother says, of a
girl that’s lived in California amongst cow-boys.”

“Cow-boys are nicer--nicer than--nice! I love them, every one!” cried
this loyal Santa Felisan.

“You’d ought to be ashamed!”

“Why?”

“Oh, because. Say, has Beatrice Courtenay been to see you?”

“Yes. Once.”

“You thought you did something smart, didn’t you? Ma said it was
disgraceful for a girl to get talked about like you have been.”

Steenie stared in amazement, then bethought herself of her
grandmother’s parting advice: “Be pleasant to all, as is natural to
you; but do not have much to say to any girl until you have learned her
name. I wish you to make only the right friends, and I can tell you
about all the families--if not all the children--in town. It is wise to
select your playmates from households of gentlewomen. ‘Even a child is
known by the company he keeps.’”

“Will you please tell me your name, miss girl?”

“It’s Annie Gibson. My father keeps a candy store.”

“Does he? Why does that bell ring? Isn’t the lady pretty who teaches
me? She thinks I read very well indeed, for--for--me.”

“Pooh! You’d ought to hear me! I’m in the Fifth Reader. I speak pieces,
examination days. Your dress is awful nice and stylish. I bet you
didn’t have that made in your old California. I bet your grandmother
had to give it to you.”

“Annie, you shouldn’t say ‘I bet.’ Grandmother c’rected me, myself,
for doing it. My grandmother is a very in-tell-i-gent woman, my father
says, an’ I’m to watch out for the way she talks; ’cause she never
says anything ’nelegant. But I think your frock is pretty, too. It’s
redder’n mine, an’ more ruffley, isn’t it? I think you are very nice to
look at. Your eyes are black, aren’t they? And your hair is nice an’
straight. An’ what beautiful big feet you have, an’ hands! Why, your
hands are a’most twice as big’s mine!”

Poor Annie Gibson didn’t know whether to laugh or “get mad;” but there
was no doubting the sincere and admiring curiosity with which Steenie
Calthorp examined this other specimen of girlhood; but the final tones
of the bell called both away toward the house.

Which, however, Steenie did not enter. Her attention had suddenly been
attracted by a commotion in the street, and everything new appealed to
her curiosity.

“My! I wonder what those boys are doing! What--What--What!”

With a shriek of delight that penetrated the building she was
deserting, the child darted from the enclosure,--through the crowd of
grinning boys straight to the cause of all their mirth. “My Sutro! My
Sutro! My own, ownest Tito!”

“_Caramba!_ My angel! Is it thou? At last--at last!”



CHAPTER VIII.


[Illustration: STEENIE AND TITO.]

Sutro and Tito, indeed!

The former in the full glory of his holiday Mexican costume, looking a
little the worse for a long journey; the latter in exuberant spirits
over his release from the car which he had occupied for nearly a week,
padded and luxurious though it had been. The extravagant caresses of
one old friend, and the pleading, loving neighings of the other, were
met by an ecstatic response, which told how greatly they had been
missed.

“Oh! How--Why--I’m so glad I shall--cry!”

“Santa Maria! We part no more, _mi niña_ [my little one].”

“But how could you come? You darlings!”

“How? Save on that horrible railway train, _de veras_, indeed! But thy
Tito suffered not at all, he. Bob and the boys sent him to thee, their
Little Un; for, in verity, he was of no use to the Lord of Plunkett,
no. Not a saddle nor a bridle would he endure, until to-day. And
so--goes thy Bob to the señor and says: ‘The Little Un’s horse travels
east to the Little Un, with old Sutro, who will not live at San’
Felisa without his heart’s dearest.’ And--here we are. _Caramba!_ Thou
lookest fine, no? But--still--thou wilt return with Sutro to the old
_hacienda_, wilt thou not, _mañana_ [to-morrow, sometime]?”

“The very first _mañana_ that ever I can! But, go away, you boys! What
do you want with us?”

“A circus! A circus!” cried the gamins, delighted at seeing Steenie now
mounted behind the old Spaniard, whose striking apparel reminded them
of nothing but the fascinating entertainment just mentioned.

“It’s that horse girl!”

“It’s her that rode Beatrice Courtenay’s runaway!”

“I’ll bet all my alleys she does b’long to a circus, an’ that’s another
of ’em!”

“Say, Sissy, what show you skedaddle out of? Give us the tip!”

“The tip, no? The whole of it, you miserables!” Suiting the action to
the word, Sutro leaned sidewise from the saddle, and laid about him
hastily with his short riding-whip. This had the effect of ridding them
from immediate persecution, and, taking advantage of this lull in the
attentions of the street boys, Steenie gave Tito his word of command,
and away they shot at a pace to distance all pursuers.

Madam Calthorp looked up from her book as the clattering of horse-hoofs
fell on the gravel of the path which led to her disused stable, and
could scarcely believe her own eyes for the story they told her.

She was still trembling from the shock of her surprise when Steenie
bounded into her presence, wild with excitement and radiantly
glad. “O, Grandmother--Grandmother! Who do you think has come?
Tito--Tito--Tito! My own Tito! And that blessed old Sutro, who is as
old as old, but didn’t mind anything but staying away from his _niña_!
Come--come--quick--and see them!”

She could not stand still, not one instant; but around and around her
grandmother’s chair she danced, while that lady slowly rose, wondering
at herself for even this concession.

“This way! This way! To the--I s’pose it’s the stable! And won’t Tito
be glad to get into a quiet stall once more? And the grass! Can he roll
on the cunning little lawn, Grandmother?”

“Steenie, silence. Be still for one moment. What is all this? Who is
‘Tito,’ who ‘Sutro’? Why are you not at school?”

“Why--why--I don’t know. I s’pose I forgot. Sutro--is Sutro. Don’t
you know I told you ’bout him? He’s my body-servant, and as old as
anything. But such a rider! There’s nobody in all San’ Felisa can
beat him, ’cept Kentucky Bob an’ some more. Bless his heart! Bob’s, I
mean. Bless everybody’s! For he’s come all these long three thousand
miles to bring me my pretty piebald Tito. The Plunketty Lord said he
should always be mine, case I ever went back; but those dear boys
wouldn’t wait for that--no! I s’pose they saw that Tito was breaking
his heart and s’posed I was mine; and so they paid all the money
for Tito’s ticket, and hired him a beautiful cushioned horse-box,
and sent Sutro to take care of him till he brought him safe to me.
And--and--he’s--they’re never going away any more till I go, too. Oh,
_hola_, _hola_! Aren’t you glad--glad--glad?”

If she were glad she did not so express herself; nor did Madam
Calthorp’s countenance exhibit any emotion brighter than dismayed
astonishment as she followed this strange child out of the room and out
of the house, in order to be presented to two more intruders.

“Sutro, Caballero Don Sutro Vives, this is my beautiful Madam
Grandmother. And Tito--my sweet!”

“I have the honor to kiss thy feet, Señora,” said the old Spaniard,
bowing profoundly.

For a moment Madam regarded him with admiring curiosity. As a “type” of
that race which she had read of in history, a race that was fast dying
out, he interested her, and for that reason she was glad to see him;
and the caballero, lifting his eyes from the ground, beheld only the
pleasure, and did not question its cause. “The Doña Steenie says truly,
Madam; the Señora is beautiful,--as the snows on the Sierras. May the
humblest of her slaves beg her gracious favor?”

Such language was new to Old Knollsboro, though to Steenie’s ears it
was as familiar and as meaningless as the ordinary salutations of the
day to other folk; and she interrupted any reply which Madam might have
made by seizing that lady’s hand and placing it on Tito’s flowing mane.
“Isn’t it fine and white,--whiter and softer than the freshest fleece
ever sheared? And see the pretty, pretty markings all over his body!
Lift your foot, my Tito. One--two--three--four! One--two--three--four!
Isn’t that a fine action? And his haunches! See how strong and shapely.
And his lovely tail, set straight and free! And his darling neck! Oh,
my Tito, I love you! I love you!”

Madam Calthorp was speechless. Not only was she amazed, but she was
touched. She had never seen anything like this. It was as if a twin
had found its mate; and the exchange of sentiment between the two
young creatures was too evident for even her untrained eyes to ignore.
Steenie was not one whit more glad than Tito; nor did she express her
emotion more clearly. The animal’s velvet nostrils moved everywhere
about the curly head and bobbing shoulders of his recovered mistress,
with an exquisite gentleness of touch she could not have believed
possible in “only a horse.” There was adoring delight in the great
brown eyes which followed Steenie’s every motion, and seemed blind to
all else; and when Sutro had unfastened the stable door, the loving
pair went joyfully away together, her arm about his neck, bent proudly
to receive it.

“My-soul-I-declare!”

This ejaculation, in the harshest utterance of Mr. Resolved Tubbs,
broke in upon this pretty scene with the force of an explosion. It
cleared the air of undue sentiment, and recalled Madam Calthorp to
a sense of her position and its consequences. Here she had not only
received these unwelcome intruders, but allowed them to believe that
she was glad to do so! She must right the mistake at once.

“Ahem, Mr. Sutro, I mean Vives, I think it would be better to take that
animal directly to the livery stable. I do not keep a horse, and should
not be willing to let Steenie. As for yourself, while your devotion is
touching, I think you can find more comfortable quarters at the village
than I can give you. This man--Tubbs, will you show this old gentleman
the way to the American House?”

Considering the lumbago, Mr. Tubbs stepped forward with amazing
alacrity. He was quite willing to prevent his small “world” being
“turned upside down” by this fresh consignment from the far west. But
his obliging readiness fell powerless before the caballero’s obtuse
serenity.

“Ten thousand pardons, most charming Señora, but whatever will serve my
hostess serves me. Old Sutro is not particular.”

“But--gracious!” retorted Resolved, and began an explanation which was
cut short by Steenie’s reappearance with the request: “Please get me
some alfalfa, or oats, or something for my Tito’s dinner; will you, Mr.
Tubbs?”

“Steenie, there is nothing for a horse to eat here. I have not kept one
in many years. The last one was your father’s, before he left home.
This animal must be taken elsewhere for the present.”

“Grandmother! My Tito? After so long, long a journey? Oh, no, no, no!”

“But, my child, be reasonable. The stable is--”

“’Xcuse my interrupting, but it’s just as nice as nice. They’s a lovely
box-stall, only wants taking those old rubbishy things out of it; an’
places for everything. We can go to the shop where you buy things for
horses, and buy him all he needs. Same’s you bought my clothes. An’
then such fun! Won’t Papa be glad! And Sutro--forgive me not thinking
’bout you, too. Are you hungry, dear Sutro? You’re ’most always, don’t
you know?”

“Ah, Señorita! The food on the way was not of Ellen’s sort. In verity,
I would like a dish of--”

“A’most anything, no? Grandmother, may Mary Jane cook Sutro some
dinner?”

“Hm. It must be near the dinner-hour for all of us; and you may
invite your old friend for this one meal.” The significance of the
lady’s tone was not lost upon her ancient servitor, Resolved, but it
was--wholly--upon the happy unconsciousness of these two reunited
comrades, whom Madam Calthorp watched with growing interest; even
herself forgetting, as Steenie had utterly forgotten, that there was
such a thing as school and its duties.

“She is a different creature! Vivacious, sparkling, charming. And all
for that queer old man and queerer horse! Is it as my son has thought
and said,--that the key to the child’s nature is love,--overflowing
love? Well, there is, certainly, no mistaking the love between those
two nor the want of it between these--two!” considered the unwilling
hostess, turning her eyes upon the two old men, as Sutro and Resolved
glared with instant and mutual dislike upon each other.

“Can it be possible that Tubbs is actually growing fond of the child,
and is jealous?”

It seemed so, strange as it was; for when dinner was served, and Sutro,
naturally, took his place behind Steenie’s chair, the other ancient
worthy remarked with considerable sharpness: “Ye kin set down, can’t
ye?” and pointedly pushed a chair back to designate where.

“Ten thousand thanks, my friend; when the Señorita has finished,”
answered Sutro, suavely.

“Sin-your-eet-her, hey? What heathen gibberish is that, I’d like ter
know? Thar’s yer place, an ’thar ye kin set er go ’ithout,--uther one,”
retorted Tubbs, forgetting in his aversion to this “furriner” the
respect due to the occasion.

“_Luego_ [presently].” With the sweetest of smiles, old Vives, who had
been watching Resolved’s manner of service, deftly turned his little
lady’s plate, exactly as the other had done Madam Calthorp’s.

When Mr. Tubbs passed to his mistress the food which Mary Jane had
carved, the stranger anticipated a similar attention to Steenie. So
with everything; till even the house-mistress’s dignity yielded to a
smile, and the little girl laughed outright.

“Why, you two funny men! What makes you go snap--snap--with things,
so? And poor Mr. Resolved, if it’s your lumbago worse, just let
Sutro take care of Grandmother, too. My Sutro can do everything
beau-u-tifully; can’t you, dear?”

“_Si?_ It is music thou speakest, _carita_.”

“T-wu-ho!” With this indescribable snort Mr. Tubbs retreated to the
kitchen and threw himself down recklessly in Mary Ann’s own rocker. But
the rocker was cushioned, and Resolved was tired; and the combination
revealed the fact that even an enemy has his uses. “My-soul-I-declare!
If he wants ter trot round waitin’ on younguns, let him trot! Ain’t no
law ag’in it, as I know of.”

“Ner ag’in your behavin’ like a great, cross youngun yerself, if I do
say so!” said Mary Jane, dishing apple-fritters with a skilful hand.

“Ain’t cross. An’ if I be, ain’t it enough ter make a critter a’most
sw’ar? Here was we livin’ like pigs in clover; and in come Mr. Daniel
an’ the gal. Now, ’s if that wa’n’t upsettin’ enough--piles in a
heathen Mexican an’ a calico horse ter boot! I do say, an’ I mean it,
folks does sometimes get more o’ trouble ’n they desarve in this world.”

“Calico horses is lucky. Hain’t you never heerd that? I always wish
when I see one, an’ that ain’t often. An’, though it does make a pile
o’ work, I--no, sir!--I ain’t a mite sorry ’t Mr. Dan’l an’ Steenie
come!”

“Ma-ry-Ja-ne!” Tubbs half rose from his chair, in astonishment at his
sister’s words. “An’ you--a perfessor!”

“Perfessor from my youth up,” assented the spinster, piously. “That’s
why it’s borne in on me ter witness fer the truth. I hated it--Here!
you Mr. Sutry! Jest fetch all them things out, fust. Don’t leave
anything on the table, savin’ the bread an’ the salt. And--there ye be!
Handy as a womern, I do declare!--Yes, sir, I hated it wuss ’n pisen.
So ’t I couldn’t sleep, worryin’ ’bout the victuals ter cook an’ the
dishes ter wash, an’ the hull job. An’ I knowed Madam hated it even
wusser. But now--mebbe it’s grace ’at’s ’gin me, an’ mebbe it’s only
natur’; but that little creetur has ’bout changed the hull outlook o’
things. She jest acted as if I loved her the terr’blest’t ever was,
an’ fust I knowed--I did! Thar wasn’t no holdin’ out ag’in them big
innercent eyes o’ her’n, a smilin’ so right inter a body till a body
can’t help smilin’ back. So--now I’ve told it out, an’ I feel better.
You b’lieve my words, brother Resolved, an’ mark ’em well: Thar’s a
blessin’ come with poor Mr. Dan’l’s comin’, an’ it’s took visible shape
in that thar child!”

“Well--I swan!”

“Hm-m. Ye needn’t swan’ nothin’. Madam’s through. Come along an’ eat
yer dinner. An’ remember ter let yer candle burn afore that poor,
yaller-skinned, heathen stranger, who, if he hain’t got the grace o’
perfessorship has got it o’ perliteness.”

Thus adjured, “professor” Tubbs arose and followed Mary Jane into
the dining-room, where Sutro had already seated himself in the
chair designated by his new _confrère_, and was smiling blandly
kitchen-wards, when that person’s bent figure darkened the doorway.
But if there was any spiritual light-shining or candle-burning, it was
not of a sort to impress the Catholic Christian with the beauty of the
Puritan creed.

Alas! It was war from the beginning with these two; and, though both
were inwardly conscious of their own blame in the matter, no amount of
self-abusive prayers on one side or muttered Ave Marias on the other
could ever change the course of nature.

“Water won’t run up-hill; an’ folks ’at ’s born contrary stays
contrary. All you kin expect is ter keep the peace,” said the shrewd
Mary Jane, and determined to make a bridge of her own patience which
should serve both sides of the hostile camp.

After dinner the question of Tito again arose; and, pending her son’s
return, Madam compromised her own judgment and sent off an order for
food and bedding sufficient for a few days’ need. “I’m growing very
weak and indulgent,” she said, apologetically, to Mary Jane. “But
this arrival was so unexpected, it may be as well to await Daniel’s
decision.”

“Yes’m. An’ I do ’low you won’t be sorry. She don’t ask ner tease fer
nothin’; hain’t never sence she come. ’Bout them books, even; I’ve
seen her a marchin’ back an’ forth, back an’ forth, a lookin’ through
the glass at ’em that longin’ ’at I’ve be’n a’most a mind ter open the
bookcases an’ show ’em to her. But, o’ course, I didn’t; an’ she didn’t
say ary word, ner even look mad, only kinder hungry-like. ’Twould be a
pity not ter let her have her pony, seems ter me. Mr. Sutry, he says
she kin beat any circuser ’tever was. She’s rid’ ever sence she was a
baby; an’ them men out ter Californy--‘boys,’ she calls ’em--’d a never
let her come east in the world if it hadn’t a be’n fer her pa’s eyes.
When’s he comin’ home, Ma’am?”

“Soon, I hope. And that he will be reassured concerning his dreaded
blindness. It cannot be that a Calthorp--such a strong, healthy,
handsome man he is, Mary Jane--should suffer such a physical blemish!”

In that sentence spoke one of Madam Calthorp’s strongest prejudices.
Against imperfection of any sort her proud heart rebelled. Her own
physique was faultless. She wore her years and her white hairs as
royally as a queen her ermine mantle. She had always prayed that she
might die thus, in her full vigor, before any mortal weakness touched
her; and her feeling of this sort extended to all belonging to her. If
her son died, she would mourn him; but if he lived, a helpless wreck,
she dared not contemplate the prospect.

“No, it don’t ’pear so; but the ‘don’t ’pear so-s’ are gen’ally what
happens; an’ though I hate ter say it, I think you’d oughter know that
Mr. Dan’l went away a’most convicted in his own mind ’at he wouldn’t
never see no more o’ this mortal speer ’an he saw then.”

“Mary Jane! But you are not always a true prophet.”

“An’ I hope, with all that’s in me, ’at I ain’t now!”

But--she was. An attendant brought Daniel Calthorp home that night; and
the first glance which his mother cast upon his face disclosed that his
last hope of restored sight had gone out from it.



CHAPTER IX.


[Illustration: TITO.]

There was no evading the fact that a terrible misfortune had fallen
upon the Calthorp household; and, for a time, this great sorrow
excluded every other thought.

But they were all brave-hearted, having that one quality in common; and
so, even while suffering most acutely, Madam found that the feeling she
had experienced in regard to her son’s blindness faded in the light of
the great pity which now filled her soul. She had feared that she could
never bear to look upon him and witness his helplessness; but, instead
of this being the case, she found herself watching him in silent
admiration for the fortitude he displayed, and growing even prouder
than before.

“Well. Blind or seeing, he is still--a man! Able to support his own
courage, and that of those who lean upon him! And how beautiful is
Steenie’s tenderness! She seems to understand that he wishes to do
everything for himself which he can do; but her own bright eyes watch
constantly to aid him in those he cannot.”

Mary Jane, observing her mistress’s face, and following the direction
of her eyes, smiled, well pleased. Then she stole away to remark to
Resolved: “You said we might ’bout as well gin up, when Mr. Dan’l come
home that night an’ laid his goggles off, ’cause they wasn’t no more
use a pertectin’ stun blindness no longer; but--they’s some kinds o’
onseeingness wuss’n ever ailded mortal eyes. An’ that’s sperritooal.
Thar was Madam, a nussin’ up wrath ag’in the day o’ jedgment, jest
’cause her only had married somebody ’t she hadn’t picked out fer him;
an’ him a cl’arin’ out ter Californy with his wife, an’ a buryin’ her
thar; an’ a comin’ back home this way he is. But I tell ye, brother
Resolved, it was the plain doin’s of the Lord, er my name ain’t Tubbs!”

“Well, mebbe. I mean--o’ course. I ain’t a goin’ back on my perfession;
but some folks has got a terr’ble gift o’ makin’ sunthin’ out
o’ nothin’. Didn’t uset ter be yer way ter call bad good; but,
my-soul-I-declare! Ain’t no makin’ ye out, now-a-days, ye’ve growed
that weak-minded an’ soft-spoke. Howsomever, one thing ye can’t turn
ner twist inter no great hilarity: an’ that’s that pesky Mexicer.”

“I should like ter know why not? Ain’t he jest like a shadder ter Mr.
Dan’l? If that poor deluded popist critter ain’t ’arnin’ his board an’
keep, I know some other folks ’at ain’t wuth their salt.”

“Hm-m. From the soond o’ that, I conclude ’at thar’s _some_--o’ the
’riginal Mary Jane left, arter all!” retorted the other, and doddered
away.

It had seemed providential, indeed, that Sutro Vives--old fellow though
he was--had come to them when he did. With the profound love which he
had always felt for little Steenie, he now turned to Steenie’s father;
and his wonderful vitality enabled him to discharge with perfect ease
tasks which would have fallen very heavily upon poor Resolved Tubbs.

Another two weeks had passed; and they had all, in a measure, become
accustomed to Mr. Calthorp’s affliction, and to the coming of the “four
Westerners,”--as Mary Jane called the three human visitors and the
equine one,--when Steenie came home from school a picture of childish
distress.

“I can’t--can’t--can’t--go to that horrid school! Never no more,
never!” with which exclamation she burrowed into the nest her father’s
arms made for her, and hid her tearful face on his breast.

He waited until her sobs had subsided, and then inquired: “Why not,
darling?”

“Because--oh, ’cause--I hate it! Maybe that’s bad, but I do. The
children go ‘buz-z, buz-z’ over their books; and it’s hot; and I can’t
breathe, a’most; and, oh, Papa, I want to go home!”

“My little one, I shall have to forbid your ‘boys’ writing to you, if
their letters make you homesick.”

“It isn’t that. It isn’t, really, truly. But--am I a ‘runaway
circuser,’ Papa, dear?”

“Why, no. Certainly not. Why should you need contradiction of such a
silly charge?”

“’Cause that’s what they all call me--’most every one. An’ they say:
‘Why won’t you give us a ride on your old Spot-back, Californy!’ And:
‘She’s the girl ’at ’s only in the Primary! ’Cause she’s brought up in
a stable;’ an’ such heaps o’ mean things that I feel--I feel’s if I
should suff’cate. Need I go, Papa, dearest?”

“I cannot tell yet. Let us talk it over with Grandmother. Rather, I
will do that, and you do what is far more to your liking and better
for you,--wash away your tears, find Sutro, and tell him he may go for
a horse at the livery-stable; then jump on Tito’s back and ride your
troubles away.”

When obedience is happiness, it is always prompt; but even happiness
has its drawbacks. It was this very riding on the piebald horse which
had excited the envy and malice of a few of Old Knollsboro small folks.
The majority of Steenie’s school-fellows were full of an unexpressed
admiration for her wonderful horsemanship as exhibited in the--to her
quiet--rides through the village streets; but she was not the first
person who has forgotten the flavor of the grapes in the sting of the
wasp hidden among them,--although, heretofore, her sunny nature had
risen above her annoyances with its own gay rebound.

Now, when she had ridden out of the yard, and the merry tones of her
farewell had satisfied her father’s ear that all was well for the
present, he went “to talk it over,” as he had promised, with the
mother, whom he now consulted in all things.

“Well, Daniel, this is very strange! It seems like a Providence. I have
observed Steenie closely; and I am sorry to say that the school plan
has not worked as successfully as I had hoped. She doesn’t know what is
the matter; but I do. It is the unwonted confinement. She asked Mary
Jane what a prison was like; and when it was described, said: ‘Oh,
I thought, maybe, it was like our school-house.’ It is really very
opportune.”

“But what, Mother? I do not understand.”

“This morning’s call from Mrs. Courtenay. She says the Judge was so
pleased with Steenie, and that Beatrice talks so much about her, they
beg me to allow our little girl to go to Rookwood every day and share
their child’s instruction and amusement. That two such lonely only
children can do each other a deal of good. What do you say?”

“Yes, with all my heart. If you approve.”

“It does seem an admirable arrangement. The Judge has always
expressed his deep obligation to your father for assistance when his
own prospects were poor; and I can understand a proud man’s desire
to render some recognition of this ‘claim,’--though such, I am
sure, I have never felt it. Steenie will have only the most helpful
surroundings at Rookwood; and she will be fully appreciated. I am
glad, very glad.”

“Why, Mother! Your voice sounds as if you--actually--loved my little
one.”

“I do, my son.”

“And have you quite forgiven her likeness to her mother?”

There was a moment’s pause. Then Daniel Calthorp felt his mother’s kiss
upon his cheek, and, in that rare caress, died from both hearts all
bitter memories.

Mary Jane witnessed this little incident through a crack in the door.
Alas, Mary Jane was a “mortal woman!” Then she stole away with misty
eyes,--misty, perhaps, from the strain of peeping,--murmuring piously:
“And a little child shall lead ’em.”

But her piety did not prevent her being the first to meet Steenie on
her return from the ride, and imparting the intelligence which was the
result of Mrs. Courtenay’s visit, instead of leaving that pleasant
business to those whose own it really was.

“You ain’t never a goin’ back to no more prisony-school, at all,
Steenie Calthorp!”

“Why--not? Will Papa let me stay home every day?”

“No. But trot along an’ hear. I ain’t a goin’ ter take the good news
out o’ nobody’s mouth, I guess!”

For once, neglecting to care for her play-fellow, Tito, Steenie bounded
in-doors, eager to have Mary Jane’s statement confirmed; which being
done, her pleasure knew no limits.

“Why, Papa Calthorp! It’ll be a’most the same as San’ Felisa! They’s a
great big house, forty times bigger’n this, an’ a great big grass all
round it; an’ trees, an’ flower-beds, an’ hammocks, an’--an’--things!
And Sutro must go, too; an’ I’ll ride Tito. An’ sometimes, maybe,
the Judge’ll let me go into the fields where the horses are. I’ve
seen them, dozens of them--beauties--corralled, I mean paddocked, in
cute little places with green fences around them, an’ a reg’lar shed
for them to go under when it rains. Just like some o’ the girls play
‘house’ at recess. Oh, do you s’pose he will?”

“I do not doubt it. Especially as he loves horses almost as well as
you, and sympathy of tastes makes ready friendships. I foresee a very
happy road to learning for you, my Steenie.”

With this assurance in her ears, the child went gayly away on Tito’s
back toward Rookwood, with Sutro walking beside her at a pace which
Resolved Tubbs could never have equalled, even in his youth.

“Oh, Steenie, how glad I am!” cried Beatrice, for welcome. “Mama says
we are to have our lessons out of doors; ’cause it’s good for me, an’
what you’re used to, as well.”

“Only I never had lessons at all, till I came to Old Knollsboro! But
just learned to read an’ write a little. An’ do you think your father
will ever let me go to see his horses?”

“I b’lieve you care more for them than for anything! You funny girl!”
answered Beatrice, reprovingly. “You’re just the same as he is; an’
Mama says horses are to my father what play-hour is to school-boys. I
don’t know ’xactly what she means--but--he loves them, anyway.”

“Course he does. He couldn’t help it, could he?”

“Mama can help it. She says she ’xpects some of us’ll get killed;
’specially with Diablo, that ’xpensive colt. He isn’t anything--yet;
never had anything on him, even a halter; but Papa says, ‘he must be
broken, if he scours the country to find somebody brave enough to do
it!’”

“Diablo? Oh, he’s the one ’at ’most killed the groom, isn’t he?”

“Yes. An’ he’s kicked a whole lot of folks. He’s out in his paddock
all alone; and the men just give him food and water, an’ let him stay
there. Mama says that he ought to be shot, and then he couldn’t hurt
anybody else.”

“Why! How dreadful!”

“What? To hurt folks?”

“To shoot a beautiful fellow like Diablo. I’ve looked at him over the
fence, when I’ve been riding with Sutro; and he is the finest horse in
Old Knollsboro.”

“How do you know that?”

“Well, he’s the finest one I’ve seen here, yet. He has better points,
even, than Gray Monarch, Kentucky Bob’s thoroughbred.”

“My! That’s what Papa calls him: thoroughbred; an’ says when he’s
trained he’ll be su-perb. But I’d like to know who’ll do it. Say. Is
that old man coming to school too? Who is he? Isn’t he queer? He’s as
wizzly-up as can be; but he makes me think of grasshoppers, he’s so
awful jumpy an’ quick.”

Steenie laughed. “He’s my body-servant, he says; but he’s a real
’ristocratic. He’s a Californian, like they used to be, and a
caballero. But after my mother died, he gave up everything but taking
care of me. He’s a perfect darling.”

“Is he?” asked Beatrice, doubtfully. “He doesn’t look very--very
pretty; but, I mean he’s beautiful, of course, only--here’s Ma’amselle!
Now for b-a-ba k-e-r-ker, baker; p-a-pa pay-e-r, I mean p-e-r-per. Do
you like to spell?”

“No. It makes me awful dizzy.”

“Me, too. But ’rithmetic’s more worser. Never mind. The quicker we get
done, the quicker recess’ll come. I think recess is the nicest part of
studying, don’t you?”

“Yes,” answered Steenie, with conviction. “Why, look there!
There’s my Sutro talking to your father! And they’re walking away
toward--oh!--do--you b’lieve they’ll go to the horse fields without us?”

“I s’pose they will.”

“Oh, dear!”

At which tone of regret, Beatrice said, kindly, “You’re the queerest
girl! But I’ll ask Papa to let us go, recess-time. Papa! Papa!”

The Judge turned about and waited while the children ran up to him.
“Well, little folks! What now? How could you tear yourselves away from
your dear books? Eh?”

“Now, Papa, please don’t tease! I’m sure you wouldn’t like to have a
whole line of hard, two-syllabled words to learn, and rows and rows of
dazzly figures to add up, would you?”

“I certainly should not; on such a morning as this, too. But if I were
a little girl, two little girls, I’d go at those words and figures
‘slap bang!’ And I’d get them all tucked away inside of my cranium, so
tight and sure that Ma’amselle would be obliged to say: ‘Really, young
ladies, _tres bien_! and I will compensate you for your so hard labor,
and give you leave at eleven of the clock, precisely, to go to the
library of the father and look in.’”

“And, what then? What then, Papa?”

“Maybe, peanuts; maybe, horses. Different tastes need different
rewards.”

To Steenie this was not as intelligible as to Beatrice, who readily
translated for her new friend’s benefit Judge Courtenay’s meaning,
which was: that he evidently wished to be let alone then; but that if
they were studious they might leave off lessons at eleven o’clock, and
come to the library, when he would take them to see the horses. “If
anybody cares about those old things!”

Steenie cared so very much that she infected Beatrice with her own
feeling; and her few weeks at a “really school” had been of such use
to her, that once her books were opened, she allowed herself no respite
till she had conquered the tasks set before her.

Which good example was, also, infectious to the untrained Beatrice, who
surprised and pleased Ma’amselle by her sudden attention to duty.

It is true that bright glances were occasionally darted back and forth,
and signs exchanged to mark the progress of learning on either side;
but, in spite of this, when eleven o’clock came they not only had done
their work with satisfaction to their teacher, but with real pleasure
to themselves,--a cause of considerable astonishment, also.

“Now, for Papa and fun! My father’s a awful jolly man. You can’t ’most
gen’ally tell if he’s teasing or earnest. But--he’s nice.”

“So’s mine. I guess fathers are always nice, aren’t they?”

“No, not always. I know a father ’at whips his girl. With a whip, like
you do horses,” asserted Beatrice, gravely.

“I never--whip horses’ Never! I wouldn’t be so cruel!”

“My--sake! Why, are you ‘mad?’ Why shouldn’t you whip ’em? Everybody
does.”

“They don’t at Santa Felisa. I’ve seen folks do it here, though; till
I’ve had to run away an’ cry. I think it’s puf-fect-ly dreadful!”

“Why, Steenie Calthorp! You are the veriest oddest one! My Papa’ll
laugh at you. Pshaw! He whips horses himself; an’ he’s a Judge,--a
Judge-of-the-Supreme-Court! If you know what that is.”

“I don’t. And I don’t care if he is, he oughtn’t to. Bob says so, an’
Bob knows. He says it’s ruiny to any poor thing to do it. Once he
caught a vaquero doing it to one of the Plunketty man’s ploughers; and
he just snatched the rawhide out of the fellow’s hand, and gave it
to the fellow himself! Just as he was hurting the horse. I tell you,
wasn’t he mad? And didn’t he jump around lively?”

“I should s’pose he did.”

“And Bob says: ‘Now you know how ’tis yourself!’ and that vaquero could
be trusted anywhere after that. Only once he tried to shoot Bob; so Bob
had to lick him again, an’--that settled it.”

“I should s’pose it did!” quoted an amused voice, and Judge Courtenay’s
hand rested lightly on Steenie’s curly head. “You see I was tired
waiting for eleven o’clock, because that old señor of yours has
promised me a treat, too; so I came out to meet you on the path from
your summer-house school-room.”

“How nice! What is it, Papa?”

“This little girl is to give it to me.”

“I? Why, what can a little girl like me do for a big man like you?”
asked Steenie, in eager wonder.

“Show me how Kentucky Bob tackles an unbroken colt.”

An instant’s critical scrutiny of the genial face before her convinced
Steenie that the words were “earnest,” not “fun;” still--she could
hardly believe her own vision. “Do you really, truly mean it?”

“I really, truly do. If you are not afraid.”

“Afraid? My! I couldn’t be afraid of a horse, could I? I love them so;
and my father says that they know it, ’stinctively.”

“Instinctively. Well--the old caballero’s stories seem almost
incredible; but now is your chance to prove them true,” responded
Diablo’s owner, studying, in his turn, very critically the animated
face of the little girl beside him. He did not at all believe any of
the “yarns” which Sutro had “spun” to him during their ramble over the
horse-farm; but he had immensely enjoyed the boastful eloquence of one
whom he considered a “crack-brained old man;” and he did not seriously
intend allowing Steenie to approach nearer than a safe distance of the
beautiful colt with the unsubdued will. But he thought it would give
her a pleasure to watch Diablo over the paling; and he anticipated
great amusement, also, in watching Vives “back down” when once brought
face to face with fact,--fact in the shape of a “vicious” four-year-old
whom the best horse-trainers had, as yet, been unable to reduce to
submission.

But he hadn’t counted at all upon the perfect honesty and credulity of
“the Little Lady of the Horse,” nor her own proud acceptance of the
title which her adoring Santa Felisans had given their “Little Un;”
else what followed then would never have happened.

As they came to the paddock, and looked over the paling, Diablo’s owner
pointed him out as: “The handsome brute! There he is. As powerful and
wicked as his name denotes. Locked up in those shapely limbs is a mint
of money,--that nobody dares conquer for me. A fine animal, eh?”

“He’s perfect! Oh, you beauty, you darling!”

Diablo stood at the extreme end of his paddock, head up, eyes flashing,
every nerve quivering at sound of human voices. Of late, many attempts
had been made to “break him;” each resulting in fresh torment to
himself, and failure to his would-be conquerors. Already he had learned
to distrust humanity, and to watch against its assaults.

“Your lariat, Sutro,” whispered Steenie, eagerly. And from his
capacious pocket the caballero drew a fine silken cord which he always
carried, and silently gave it to her.

The Judge’s attention had been diverted, for an instant, but was
recalled by a swish of flying draperies, and Beatrice’s low cry:
“My--sake!”

Steenie had leaped over the fence, and was swiftly proceeding down the
field, with the springing step of one who merrily goes to meet a friend.

“Merciful powers! Steen--”

But Sutro’s hand was firmly placed over Judge Courtenay’s lips. “Ten
thousand pardons! Speak not--move not. Her safety and success depend on
silence,” whispered the caballero, impressively.

“Her success!” Strong man though he was, Diablo’s owner turned faint,
and he shut his eyes in horror at this terrible result of his own idle
jesting.



CHAPTER X.


[Illustration: STEENIE, DIABLO, AND THE JUDGE.]

However, the Judge quickly aroused from the inaction his terror had
caused, and, leaping over the paling, would have followed this childish
horse “breaker,” had he been allowed. But Sutro sprang forward almost
as instantly, leaned over the rails, and, with all the force of his
iron muscles, clasped his long arms around the other’s shoulders.

“_Caramba!_ I tell thee--no! Thou shalt not! Wouldst see her killed
before thy very eyes?”

In a whisper, equally hoarse, the pinioned victim of the Spaniard’s
embrace retorted: “No! For that reason--”

“Move not, hand nor foot! Watch. She is safe. I swear it. She has a
magic. I know not--she calls it love.”

Magic! It seemed so. Half way down the field Steenie slackened her
pace, began to sing softly, bits and snatches of melodies ended almost
in the same breath, and to stop and pluck at the buttercup and clover
blooms, here or there. She had the lariat loosely about her wrist; but
she paid no attention to Diablo, who stood, like a beautiful statue,
regarding the intrusion.

By slow degrees she made her way to a low-branched oak-tree standing at
one side the paddock, not far from the colt’s own position, and, with
the gentlest of motions, raised herself to its broad limb.

Diablo was now obliged to turn his head in order to watch her, but
otherwise he did not stir; and, observing this, Judge Courtenay’s heart
beat a trifle more naturally.

“Loose your arms, señor; I shall not startle her now.”

“Ah! _Si?_ Thou beholdest then that we spoke the truth? In one
half-hour my Little Un will come to thee leading the beast by the
forelock. Thou wilt see.”

“Hang the beast! That she comes out alive--unhurt--is all I care!”

“In verity she will do that. She will do a miracle. Thou shalt see.”

“Is it possible that you are not afraid? I thought you called her your
‘heart’s dearest’!”

“_En verdad._ She is the whole world to Sutro Vives. But I am not
afraid, I. She is all love, all innocence, all fearlessness. She would
win over the Evil One himself, I believe, if she could meet him!”

“She certainly has a chance now to try!” groaned Diablo’s owner, too
anxious to be greatly amused by Sutro’s extravagance of language, and
holding himself ready to rush forward to the child’s aid at the first
ugly movement on the animal’s part.

Timid Beatrice stood upon the lower round of the fence, scarcely
breathing in the fascination of her fear; yet it was her eyes which
interpreted the first overture between those two out there in the
paddock. “See! She’s laid her head down on the branch an’ pertends
she’s going to sleep; and I can hear her--I surely can--singing soft,
soft, kind of loving-y like. And now--he’s moving--but slow--as
anything.”

“Yes. I am watching.” Neither voice raised above a whisper.

“But--look now! He’s a walking up to her; curious like, isn’t he?
He’s--see him!”

Intently they gazed upon the pantomime. Steenie lay on her leafy
perch, one little foot dangling and swinging lazily back and forth, her
blue eyes turned caressingly, almost imploringly, upon Diablo, as if
beseeching him to come to her.

Her own description, afterward, was: “I just thought _at_ him as hard
as ever I could. I wouldn’t think of anything else, only that I did
love him, and was sorry he didn’t make friends with his wanted-to-be
friends, and I wanted he should know ’bout it. And by-and-by, I s’pose
my thought hit his somewhere,--as Bob believes,--and then--it was
done. He just came closer an’ closer; an’ by-an’-by he stretched out
his pretty nose and smelled of my foot. Then he waited a minute, an’ I
didn’t even wink, but just kept on saying, inside of me: ‘Don’t you see
I love you? Don’t you know I love you?’”

“Pretty soon he sniffed at my hand in my lap; and then he ate
the clover blossoms; an’ then he let me move one finger a little
bit--though he jumped at that. Afterwards, I could move my whole hand,
and smooth his face, that was soft as satin. When I could coax his
head down to mine, so I could talk into his ears, I had no more to
do. I remembered everything Bob taught me; and when I knew he was all
right, and wasn’t afraid any more, I let him smell of the lariat, and
fuss with it ’s long as he liked. Then I made a slip-halter,--Bob’s
way,--an’ that’s all.”

That was all, perhaps, but it was marvellous in Judge Courtenay’s eyes;
while those of old Sutro shone with fond pride.

“I told thee so, señor! See--she is leading him as gentle as a lamb.
Come, little señorita, let us move back a space, and leave him to be
presented to one at a time. The master first, as is right it should be.”

“Well!” ejaculated that gentleman, left in the paddock, regarding with
growing astonishment the small figure which approached, leading Diablo
by his silken thrall, and with one arm thrown upward upon his neck.
“You are the most wonderful child in the United States!”

Steenie smiled, and her eyes shone, but not from vanity at this
unbounded praise. She had been hearing just such exclamations all her
life from her beloved, outspoken Santa Felisans, and she knew that they
came only from a mutual love. But she was proud of her new conquest;
and she led Diablo close to his master, and held out the end of the
cord for the Judge to take. “If you are just gentle with him, sir,
he’ll behave beautifully. He’s been frightened; that’s all.”

He was frightened still, and, at the first motion of his owner’s
extended hand, drew backward, nervously.

“Frightened! If ever I saw ugliness in a brute, I see it in him now.
Observe his eyes.”

“Oh, don’t say that, sir, please! You don’t understand. ’Xcuse me, but
I’m sure you don’t. Bob says a fine horse is all ‘nerves,’ an’ the
’most sensitive thing in creation.’ He says folks ought to treat ’em
like babies; ’cause they feel things more. Softly, my pretty one! Don’t
you be afraid. Steenie’ll let nobody hurt you--not a body--even him!”

“Hm-m!”

“Somebody’s whipped him sometime, or struck him cruelly.”

“Why shouldn’t they? He’s acted like a villain.”

“I wish I’d been here! He wouldn’t then--’cause I know. See. He’s
all gentle now. You may put your hand on his nose; but it must be
kind--kind--’cause that’s the way.”

Diablo did permit his master to fondle him; and at the first touch of
the delicate nostrils all the Judge’s love for horse-flesh sprang to
the front, and with it a subtler appreciation of horse-nature than
he had ever before known. “Poor fellow! Is it so? Are you not really
vicious?--then I’ll not part with you.”

“Part with him? Why, sir?”

“Because I thought he would be useless to us. I bought him for a
carriage horse, to match that other colt, Brown Bess; but, while she is
breaking in like a kitten, he has resisted everybody. I think he will
again--after you go away from him.”

“Then I won’t go away. Oh, wait a moment! I’ve thought of something.
S’posin’ you teach Diablo to be your very own, ownest horse; s’posin’
you don’t let any grooms or anybody do anything for him but just you,
yourself! You could make him as smart as Tito, maybe.”

“‘Maybe’? Is Tito so brilliant, then?” asked the Judge, smiling, and
greatly delighted that Diablo now stood quietly beside them, nibbling
at the grass or sniffing about Steenie’s curly head, without resenting
their presence or voices. Sutro and Beatrice had also drawn near and
leaned against the paling to hear what the others were saying.

“Why--he doesn’t--shine. That’s ‘brilliant,’ isn’t it? But he’s awful
’telligy--I mean intelligent. Bob says, ‘He’s the brainiest horse
he’s ’quainted with, an’ sweetest tempered to boot.’ He knows every
single word I say to him; and if he can’t talk much with his tongue,
he does with his actions an’ his eyes. He drives without reins, an’ he
waltzes--beau-u-tifully! An’ he limps, an’ ‘goes it blind,’ an’ does
the cutestest things you ever saw a horse do. Oh, won’t you let Diablo
be just as clever? Either for your own self or Beatrice? Wouldn’t you
like Diablo for your very own, Beatrice?”

“No; I should not,” answered that young person, decisively.

“I’ve half a mind to try your notion, little one! There’s no fool like
an old fool, they say; and, maybe, I shall do better at horse-training
than at law. It’s a step upwards, too, from the ‘bench’ to the saddle!
But--I confess I’m very ignorant. The ‘breaking’ of my horses has
always been left to professional trainers. I have, heretofore, been
perfectly satisfied to accept results only.”

“It seems perfectly funny to hear ’bout ‘breaking’ horses like they
were dishes. Bob says it’s a wrong word, an’ it’s ’sponsible for more
suffering to the poor things ’an any other word in the language.”

“Humph! Who is this oracle, ‘Bob’?”

Steenie explained, and the Judge was so interested that he exclaimed:
“I wonder if I couldn’t induce him to come out here and take care of my
stock-farm?”

“Maybe,” answered Steenie; “but I don’t guess so. He says there isn’t
room enough for his lungs out East. He needs a great deal of breathin’
space.”

“Well--Bob or no Bob--will you give an old man like me a few lessons in
horse-break--What word shall I use?”

“It’s teaching,--just teaching ’em. Like Beatrice an’ I go to school.
It’s funny for me to tell you things, isn’t it? ’Cause my grandmother
thinks you’re a--what did she call it! A very wonderful magician--no,
lo-gician; and when I asked her what that was, she said maybe I could
understand ‘smart’ better.”

“Thank you. Now, when shall our next lesson be?”

“To-morrow--to-morrow--that ever is. ’Cause it doesn’t do to let Diablo
forget us. He’s same as babies yet. He hasn’t learned to remember.”

“To-morrow, then; and I am greatly indebted to you. I believe--with
both halves of my mind, now--I will decide to act wholly upon your
suggestion, and see what comes of it. I will train him for myself,
alone. I shall be at home, hereafter, for some weeks; and the
opportunity is mine.”

“Oh, how glad I am! Do you hear that, Diablo, darling? You’re going
to be nobody’s horse but just this kind, kind man’s! You’re never
to be whipped, nor loaded, nor over-driven, nor checked-back, nor
strapped-down, nor anything horrid like these queer Old Knollsboro
folks do to horses!”

“Hold on, hold on! I have not promised any of these ‘thousand and one’
things, little lady! I shall want him to be useful.”

“Of course, and that’s why you won’t do them. I saw some poor horses
on the street yesterday. They were before a big carriage, as heavy, as
heavy! And they had ugly straps to hold their poor heads up--this way!
Till their throats ached so they couldn’t breathe, hardly. Not like you
help them with a strap when they’re racing, so the wind won’t choke
in their ‘pipes,’--’cause that isn’t bad, just for the little minute
they have ’em so; but these were all crooked back, terr’ble, so they
couldn’t see, only a little way up toward the sky. They had a mis’able
action; ’cause they had ‘blinders’ on, besides, and all they dared to
do was just step straight up an’ down, up an’ down, fear they’d hurt
themselves. The coachman was lashing them to make them go,--’cause his
carriage folks seemed in a hurry; an’ I should have laughed at him,
if I hadn’t had to cry for them--the horses. I couldn’t help thinking
’bout ’em when I went to bed; an’ my father says ‘It’s ign’rant
cruelty,’ an’ ‘if the folks understood horses’ feelings, like they’d
ought to, why everybody’d be gladder.’”

“Humph! You’re a very close observer. And now, shall I lift you over
the fence?”

“No, thank you. I’m going to walk once around the paddock with Diablo,
and ’xplain to him ’bout our having to go, and our coming back
to-morrow, an’ everything. You can bid him good-by, if you want to.”

“May I, indeed? How shall I do it?”

“Why--same’s folks. Same’s me. Say, ‘Good-morning, Diablo; pleased
to make your ’quaintance,’ or anything nicey sounding an’ p’lite. He
knows, Diablo does. An’ you want him brought up like a gentleman’s
horse, don’t you? So he’ll understand when folks use good language, an’
not what Papa calls ‘ruffian talk.’ He knows, Diablo does. See here?
See that fine head, broad as anything above the eyes? That’s ’cause
it’s full of brains; an’ brains are where folks think an’ know things.
If he hadn’t have had a good head, he wouldn’t have understood me so
soon, first off. He looks as if he might be as clever as Tito, ’most.”

“Good-morning, Diablo. I am sincerely delighted to make friends with
you,” said Judge Courtenay, very gravely, though with a twinkle in his
eyes.

But Steenie did not care for the twinkle, only laughed in return; and,
by her hand upon his face forcing the colt’s head down, she gently
grasped his forelock and bent it still lower. “Bow p’litely, dear
Diablo, ’cause you’d ought to.” Then she walked away as she had come,
with her arm upon his shoulder, and his light leading-string held
carelessly in her other hand.

The Judge climbed back over the paling, and, catching sight of Sutro’s
exultant face, laughed and pulled out his watch. “Well, old fellow!
You’re a pretty good prophet! Five minutes past time, that’s all.”

“_Caramba!_ More than that since she brought him up to thee with the
lariat round his nozzle, no?”

“Beaten--beaten! I give it up. But do you know, señor, that you have
the honor to serve a very remarkable young person?”

“Ten thousand pardons, Señor Juez [Judge], I have known that forever.
_Si._”

“Hm-m. There she comes; and I leave it to you, Señor Vives, to convey
to her family my acknowledgment of her services. If in any way I can
serve her or them, they have but to command me.”

The Judge had a better understanding of human than equine nature. He
knew that he could not have found a messenger more delighted to carry
messages of courtesy than old Sutro, nor one who would do so more
gracefully. He knew, also, that his cordial gratitude would be shorn of
nothing, but rather embellished, by its passage over the caballero’s
lips.

“At thy feet, señor. Thy appreciation of our so beloved one will
give pleasure to our household. I have the honor to salute thee;
and--Service? Ten thousand pardons--but there is a way in which--at thy
leisure--”

Again the Judge pulled out his watch, “You have but to name, as I said.
To-morrow, during the children’s study-hour, I will be pleased to hear
your suggestions.”

“Thanks. Thanks. The service old Sutro claims is for our ‘Little Lady
of the Horse,’--not for himself. _Mañana_, then; and _Adios_!”

Five minutes later, Steenie, mounted upon her Tito, and with her
caballero walking proudly by her side, paced slowly out of the Judge’s
grounds. “It has been a good, good day, my Sutro! Such a happiness!
You will be happy too, is it not? And what do you think, besides? That
kind, splendid gentleman says that he has a pretty, black horse, whom
nobody uses much, that shall be loaned to you whenever we wish for a
long ride. Then you will not have to go hobblety-bob on those poor
worn-out livery hacks. Are you not glad?”

“Glad. _En verdad._ But of more yet, _mi niña_. Old Sutro has something
in his head besides nonsense, no? Listen. He offered service--and there
is a way, in verity. I told him. _Mañana_--he will do it, and Sutro’s
heart will be at peace. Thou wilt then have money--more than thou canst
ever use. It is so. I tell thee.”

“Su-tro-Vi-ves! What--have you done? Have you asked that gentleman for
money? Do you need it? Why not ask my father, then? Oh, Sutro!”

“_Tente_ [hold on]! Thou leapest to a blunder as Tito does over a
hurdle. I have asked no man for money, I. Why not? Because, in all
California, there is no man who has more of it than I. And what I have
I will give to thee. Thou art to be my _heredera_ [heiress], thou.
After Sutro Vives thou wilt inherit.”

“Ah! ha, ha, my rich one! And what shall I inherit, sir? All your whims
and notions, and your old sombrero, maybe? ‘No?’”

“‘_Sta buen_’! Laugh if thou wilt; in derision now, but, by-and-by, in
glee. And what shalt thou inherit? Wait and see. Wait and see. I would
have told thee but for thy ridicule. No matter. Quite time enough for
thee--when Sutro Vives is done with life. Which will be soon, no? But I
say--yes.”

“And I say no, no, no! good Sutro,” said Steenie, sobered instantly by
the gloomy look which settled upon her old comrade’s face. “You are to
live longer than any Vives who ever was, and to use every bit of your
wonderful riches for your own cristy, crusty, blessed self. Hear me say
that, my caballero,--I, your own ‘Little Lady of the Horse’! So there!
And home again!”

Sutro smiled once more. His mood was wholly dependent upon that of
his beloved “_niña’s_,” who was his one object in life; and, with the
smile still upon his face, he swung her from Tito’s back, and led the
latter away to the comfortable stall which now bade fair to become his
permanent home.

“Here we are, Papa, Grandmother! And the loveliest time in all
the world! Oh, it’s just fun, fun, fun to go to school in a
summer-house--and be a colt teacher afterward--Why, Papa! What--what is
the matter? Are your eyes--”

But she did not finish the sentence. A groan, such as is wrung from
strong men only by great trouble, fell from her father’s lips, as he
stretched out his arms to enfold her, and dropped his poor, sightless
eyes upon her shoulder. “My dear little Steenie! What is to become of
you!”

The child’s glance flew round to her grandmother’s face; but its
expression startled her even more than her father’s despondency. Madam
Calthorp sat gazing straight before her, but seeing nothing, saying
nothing, while every drop of blood seemed to have left her white cheek,
and the seams of an added decade to have fallen upon it.

“Grandmother--don’t! Don’t look like that! What awful thing has
happened? Do speak to me--please! Somebody!”

The words broke the spell of that strange silence. But Steenie had
never in her life seen anything so sorrowful as the gaze which came out
of vacancy to fix itself upon her own person.

“My poor little darling, everything has come upon us--but death. We are
ruined. Ruined!”



CHAPTER XI.

[Illustration: RESOLVED TUBBS.]


Nobody said anything more.

Steenie stood perfectly still, too perplexed to even try to understand
what “ruin” meant; till, after awhile, her father lifted his head and
released her from this, to her terrible, position. Then she darted from
the room and from those tragic faces, as if, by turning her back upon
them, she could banish them from her thought.

In the kitchen she found Resolved Tubbs with his Bible on his knee.

Now Resolved was a good man, a really sincere Christian; but Steenie
had lived long enough in the house to learn that when Brother Tubbs
sat down at midday with his Bible on his knee and his spectacles pulled
into place, he was in a state of mind to read Jeremiah only, and ignore
the more joyful prophets.

She had come with the gayest of spirits into the astonishing gloom of
the household, and she wanted no more dismalness; so she tarried in the
kitchen but long enough to catch one sepulchral gleam from Resolved’s
uplifted “glasses,” and passed out into the garden where she had seen
Mary Jane calmly gathering strawberries.

“Well, it can’t be so awful, I believe, or she wouldn’t be doing that!”
thought the troubled child, and hurried forward to the housekeeper’s
side.

“Mary Jane! dear Mary Jane! Whatever has happened? What is ‘ruin,’ and
who has done it?”

“Hm-m. That’s a’most more’n I can say. Didn’t they tell ye nothin’,
dearie?”

“Not a thing. Only Papa says: ‘What’s to become of me!’ and
Grandmother: ‘We’re ruined.’ But I think Mr. Resolved knows, ’cause
he’s sitting down an’ looking unhappy reading. What is it?”

“The miser’ble unbeliever!--even if he is my own flesh an’ blood! Why
can’t he turn to an’ do sunthin’, an’ keep a-thinkin’: ‘The Lord’ll
provide,’ stidder huntin’ out more trouble from the blessed Book? I’ve
a mind ter go in an’ shake him!”

“Why, Mary Jane! Shake Mr. Tubbs!” Steenie’s horrified imagination
picturing that lumbago-tortured old man in his sister’s vigorous grasp.

“Well, o’ course, not really. But, I’d like ter know! Here comes
the bad news, an’ down flops the hull fambly, an’ goes ter
sighin’--furnaces! Stidder ary one liftin’ finger ter see what kin be
done ’bout it. That ain’t my way o’ ’terpretin’ the Scripters; an’ I
don’t want it ter be your’n.”

“I guess it won’t be, Mary Jane. I don’t like to feel bad, never.”

“No more do I! So--reckin you’ll be as well off out here ’ith me, doin’
sunthin’, as anywheres elset, fer the space o’ the next short time.
So--jest set down on the grass there, dearie, an’ hull what berries
I’ve got picked, while I get some more; an’ I’ll tell yer all I know
’bout anything.”

Steenie promptly obeyed. Mary Jane’s cheerfulness of temper was very
pleasant, and they had long ago become fast friends. “Now--tell,
please.”

“Hm-m. Plain’s I understand it, it’s this way: Your pa an’ yer granma
has lost every dollar they had in the world. They’re as poor now as I
be,--poorer.”

“Well?” asked Steenie, to whom “dollars” and “poverty” conveyed no
distinct impression.

“Well? Ain’t that enough? But I don’t b’lieve you re’lize it a mite. I
can’t, hardly myself yet, nuther. But all the money yer granma had, an’
it wa’n’t more’n jest enough ter keep us livin’, plain an’ comfort’ble
as we do, was up in a bank, some’res. I hain’t no faith in banks.
They’re ’tarnally bu’stin’, er doin’ sunthin’ startlin’. I always
keep mine in a stockin’; an’ the stockin’ ’s in a big blue box in the
bottom o’ that hair trunk o’ mine. Things bein’ so uncertain in this
life, I think it’s best ter tell ye; but don’t ye lisp a word,--not
even to brother Resolved. ’Cause he’d be boun’ ter have it put in some
differ’nt place not half so safe. In case I should be took off suddent,
as folks sometimes is, somebody’d oughter know; an’ you’re trustible.
I’ve found that out.”

“Thank you. But, about the bank. What is it?”

“Beat if I kin tell ye plain. ’Cause I don’t scurce know myself.
Old Knollsboro bank is that big brick buildin’ acrost from the stun
church. An’ in it, somehow, folks hides all the money they have; an’
the bank folks pays ’em out little dribs on ’t to a time; an’ that’s
all they have ter keep house on. That’s as near as I kin put it. Most
every town has a bank, too; but, ’cause yer pa thought they wasn’t
no other so safe as the old one here to Knollsboro he uset ter put
all his sellery, too, inter this one; an’ now it’s done jest like the
rest on ’em often does,--it’s bu’sted. That’s what Resolved calls
it. Yer granma said ‘failed;’ but I ’low it comes ter the same thing
when it means ’at every dollar they had, uther one, is lost, somehow.
An’ what’s wusser: yer granma owned ‘stawk’ in it, too; though how
anybody could keep a livin’ head er critter an’ not never let it be
seen, ’s more’n I fathom er try ter. I s’pose they partered it out, er
sunthin.’ An’ now that stawk’s gone too, an’ ter make it good, she’s
li’ble ter a hull lot o’ thousan’ dollars. Think on it! Ever so many
hull--‘durin’--thousan’--dollars! An she says--I heered her tellin’
Mr. Dan’l--that ‘she must pay it if it took this house.’ An’ he says:
‘Mother! Where you’ve lived yer hull life! It would kill you!’--an’ I
’low it would.”

“But how could a body pay anything with a house?”

“Sell it, I s’pose, an’ take that money an’ throw it arter t’other
’at’s gone. I dunno, rightly; fer that’s jest what I asted Resolved,
an’ all he said was: ‘Sil-ly women! Sell er mortgage--sil-ly wom-en!
They don’t never have no heads fer business!’ So, arter that, I knowed
no more’n I did afore,--which wasn’t nothin’, square. But how’s a body
to l’arn if their men critters won’t l’arn ’em? An’ I guess we’ve got
as many berries as we shall eat ter-day; an’ that’s knowledge more in
my line ’n tryin’ ter explain things I don’t understan’. So let’s go in
out o’ the sun.”

They entered the house, whither Sutro had preceded them, and found that
sociable person vainly endeavoring to extract more than monosyllables
from the lips of his house-mate, Tubbs. At which Mary Jane’s ready
wrath burst forth upon her pessimistic brother.

“I don’t see what ails you--Resolved, ’at ye can’t give a body a civil
answer! You--hain’t lost nothin’, ’at I knows on. An’ if ye call it a
Christian way o’ meetin’ trials, ter set there an’ let a poor heathen
Mexicer pester the life out on ye ’fore ye’ll speak him a decent word,
I dunno! It ain’t the way with good Baptist folks, anyhow.”

As Mr. Tubbs had long before accepted the Methodist creed, while his
sister had professed another, this was an old bone of contention, which
he was quite ready to pick up, to the forgetfulness of newer grievances.

Which was exactly what Mary Jane desired. “Best way ter stir Resolved
out o’ the hypoes is ter make him mad! Then he’ll fly ’round an’ fergit
lumbago an’ ever’thing elset. He’ll chop more kindlin’ in ten minutes
when he’s riled, ’an he will in a hull day when things goes ter suit
him.”

He became “riled” on the instant, and shut his Bible with a bang, while
his spectacles were shoved into their usual resting-place upon his bald
head with an energy that endangered the glass.

To escape an impending war of words, Steenie retreated to the presence
of her own kin once more, and this time with a determination to beg
from them enough information to enable her to understand clearly this
new anxiety they were suffering.

“Yes, Steenie, I will tell you,” said Madam Calthorp, gently, and
quite in her natural manner again. “But do you go out of doors, Daniel.
The air is better for you, and Sutro has returned. I will be careful
in my disclosures, but there is no need for you to hear the painful
repetition.”

Mr. Calthorp rose wearily. There was a look of hopelessness about his
fine face which even blindness had not brought to it; and Steenie
watched him depart with a heavier heart than she had ever known.

“Now, Grandmother.”

“Yes, dear. To begin with, though we were never rich, neither
were we poor. We had enough, with economy, to provide for all our
ordinary needs, and a surplus for emergencies. What your father had
inherited and acquired, together with my own money, was all in one
place,--intrusted to a corporation of which your grandfather was the
founder, and which people said was ‘as good as the bank of England.’
Some weeks ago, about the time you came from Santa Felisa, I heard
rumors of trouble about this money of ours, and I instituted inquiries
to verify or disprove them. The report brought to me was that they were
without foundation, that our possessions were as secure as they had
always seemed, and that I need have no uneasiness whatever. I did not
mention these rumors to my son, because his own personal affliction
appeared to be as much as he--as any of us--could bear; but now I wish
that I had done so. Of course he could not read; and his sensitiveness
about meeting people, together with my mistaken kindness, kept him
wholly ignorant until the blow fell. This morning, after you left us,
a messenger was sent to us by the directors, announcing the sudden
and utter failure of the bank; as well as that I, a stockholder, am
liable--that is, in debt--for several thousand dollars. Now, this is
exactly our situation: I own this house and a small farm in another
part of the county. That I can sell for enough to pay my indebtedness,
except about one thousand dollars. Many poor people will be losers
by this failure, and I cannot rest, retaining anything--even if I
might--which would relieve their necessities. So, the only course
left us is to sell this house also; and out of its proceeds pay the
extra one thousand. There will be a small sum remaining, or should
be,--enough I hope to hire a tiny cottage somewhere; but how we are to
exist in that cottage the future alone can prove.”

Steenie listened attentively, breathlessly; her big blue eyes fixed
upon her grandmother’s face, and rejoicing in the calmness which had
returned to it. She did not know that the only expression of distress
which the proud Madam had given, had been the one exclamation at first
sight of her own self. “Everything has come upon us--but death. We are
ruined. Ruined!”

“When, Grandmother? When will we go to the cottage?”

“Oh, I do not know. Not just yet. The adjustment of these matters will
take time; we shall not be disturbed in the immediate present; but the
eventual condition of affairs will be what I have decided already. And
Steenie, my dear little child, now you have a chance to be even doubly
helpful to your poor father. Blindness is a trial which no seeing
person can comprehend; but for a strong man to suffer it, and to know
that he cannot do one thing to alleviate the necessities of those who
are dear to him, is terrible. It is this which is so intolerable to my
son. If he could regain his sight, no matter how poor he was, he would
face the world gayly for your sake and mine. He would work for us and
forget all the mishap; but to be idle in such a strait--ah! I know from
my own heart what it must be to him.”

“Poor, poor papa! But can’t _I_ do something? Maybe I can! I’m not
blind nor old, and I’m as strong as strong. See here! I can lift
a chair ever so high! And Judge Courtenay says I’m most puffectly
’veloped for a ten-year-old goin’ on ’leven. I’m much bigger’n
Beatrice, an’ she’s half-past twelve. Isn’t there some way,
Grandmother, dear Grandmother? Think, please; in that in-telligence of
yours, maybe you’ll find out something. And if you do--won’t I do it!
Just you see!”

“You precious baby! If your ability only matched your courage,
Grandmother knows that you would banish every care from all our hearts!
But, yes; there is one thing you can do: bear whatever deprivations you
may have with that same sunny spirit; be patient when, by-and-by, we
older folks begin to lose our own serenity, and grow fretful, perhaps,
and difficult to get along with. You can remember then that it isn’t
what you call our ‘truly selves,’ but the worn nerves and depressed
hearts that cause the sharp words and moods. Early to learn a woman’s
lesson, my gay little Steenie; but I believe you are capable of
learning it well.”

All which Steenie did not quite understand. This book-loving old
student was apt to “talk over the head” of a “’most-’leven”-year-old;
but she gained this much: that, no matter what happened, she was to
make things as bright as she could, and her loving heart responded
loyally.

“I’ll be as patient as patient. And I’ll never let my papa think a
thing I can help; and--Oh! There’s the dinner-bell!”

Probably this common, every-day sound was a relief to everybody in the
house; and though the meal was served a full hour later than usual, the
extra care which had been expended upon it more than compensated for
the delay.

“Oh, Mary Jane! How good that beefsteak does smell!”

“Humph! Better enjoy it while ye kin. Only the Lord knows how long any
on us’ll eat beefsteak!” commented Resolved Tubbs, dolefully.

“Hush yer complainin’, can’t ye! An’ as long as the Lord continners ter
bother ’ith us poor worms an’ sends porter-houses, receive ’em in the
same sperrit, an’ be thankful!” retorted Mary Jane.

“Well, I call that sacrilegious, if you have enj’yed full immersion!”
said the brother, snapping at a fly upon the table-cloth with such
energy as to upset the salt.

“There it goes! Only the quer’l come afore the upsettin’. An’
I do say it: I’d ruther be sacrilegious with my tongue, ’an so
sack-cloth-an’-ashesy with my sperrit.”

“Resolved! Mary Jane!” remonstrated Madam, sternly, yet with a
smile dawning upon her lips. And if ever a quarrel can be said to
be opportune, that one was; for Steenie laughed outright, and Sutro
tittered, while even Mr. Calthorp lost the gravity of his expression
for a little.

It was a good dinner! And there was more sense in Mary Jane’s
philosophy than in her brother’s after all; for the savory dishes
tempted appetites into existence, and through material enjoyment made
even mental disquietude easier to endure.

But after dinner was over, Mr. Calthorp retired to his own room and
closed the door, and Madam retreated to her library; so that Steenie,
driven to her own resources, did the most natural thing in the world:
got Sutro to saddle Tito and set off for a gallop, leaving the old
caballero to attend upon her father, “case he should come out an’ want
somebody an’ not both of us be gone.”

Sutro remained, partly on account of Steenie’s argument, and partly
that for a long ride he utterly disdained the livery hack it had been
his fortune to use during his stay at Old Knollsboro; for he did not
feel quite free to go to Rookwood, so soon again, and borrow “the
pretty black horse” which had been offered for his enjoyment.

Thus he was forced to hear various unpleasant remarks from Resolved
Tubbs’ grim lips about “plenty o’ mouths ter fill ’ithout no
furriners,” and so on; all which, busied in visions of his own brain,
he ignored as referring to himself. For wasn’t he at that very moment
planning the details of a scheme which should enrich everybody?

As for Steenie, she gave Tito his head, and he took it, far out into
the open country, with a will and spirit that drove every care from
his little rider’s mind. But after he had travelled a long distance he
cast a shoe; and, seeing a smithy near, Steenie rode up to the door and
coolly requested to have the shoe set.

[Illustration: Steenie coolly requested to have the shoe set.--Page
178.]

“Humph! Who are you, any way, child? And who is going to pay me for my
trouble?” demanded the farrier, with equal coolness.

Pay for it? Why, at Santa Felisa, the smith was “their own”--nobody
paid. Here--Steenie didn’t like such difficult questions, but she
answered, simply enough: “I s’pose somebody will. I’m Steenie Calthorp;
and Tito can’t go home barefoot, over these rough roads, can he? You
must see that for yourself, Mr. Smith, don’t you?”

“I see that, plain enough; and if you are one of the Calthorps down
at Knollsboro--here goes! They’re honest folks, and always have been.
Never a poor man lost a cent by them, and that’s the truth. They’re
the right kind of aristocrats, they are. Pay for what they have, and
what they can’t pay for go without, and no complaining. But no matter
this time aboot pay for a trifle of kindness like this. I’ll shoe this
handsome fellow, and proud of the job, any time you choose to ride out
this way and show me how a little girl _can_ ride when she puts her
mind to it. That’s so. You may count upon it.”

“Why, Mr. Smith! I’m sure that’s very kind of you, an’ I ’preciate it.
I like to see a man shoe a horse, when he does it neatly, an’ what Bob
calls ‘with sense of a horse’s feelings.’ I think I could almost be a
farrier myself, sometimes. I do, so.”

“A farrier, hey? There’s something you could do far better than that.
Where did you learn to ride?”

“I never learned. I always rode.”

“Where?”

“At Santa Felisa, California.”

“So? Then all I have to say is that you had better set up a school and
teach some of these young folks round here, who almost murder their
horses with their blundering clumsiness. For I never saw anybody sit a
horse as well as you do; and that’s the truth.”

When the shoe was set, Steenie thanked the helpful smith, promised
to visit him again, and went on her way homeward. But she was very
thoughtful and preoccupied; and Tito, fully sympathizing with her mood,
dropped into a gentle canter, and broke his pleasant pace not once till
his mistress suddenly bent forward and threw her arms around his neck.

“Tito, my Tito! I’ll do it! I will, I will!”

Tito softly nodded up and down. Whatever she meant to do,--and it was
something which made her eyes shine and her face dimple with hopeful
smiles,--be sure that her wise playfellow fully intended to help her.



CHAPTER XII.

[Illustration: RATTLESNAKE.]


“Well, Señor Vives, I am at your service now,” announced Judge
Courtenay, at the next appearance of Steenie and her caballero at
Rookwood. “In what can I advise you?”

“Hm-m. It is a profound secret. Ten thousand pardons, Señor Juez [Mr.
Judge]; but I may close the door, no?”

“Close it, certainly, if you wish; but we are not likely to be
disturbed. This is my private office.”

“I would not for a hundred worlds that others should hear what I
disclose!” repeated old Sutro, cautiously.

“You are perfectly safe. Be assured.”

“_Si?_ Then here is my desire: I wish to prepare my _testamento_
[will]. In verity, that is my hope and prayer.” The Spaniard’s face
wore an expression of grave importance.

“Your will? Well, that is, indeed, a serious matter. Have you fully
considered it?”

“_Caramba!_ Have I not? _En verdad_, it has long since been
arranged--in here,” said the client, tapping his forehead, solemnly.

“Very well, then, let us to business. Give me the points of the matter,
and my clerk shall draw up the paper.”

“Clerk? No, no! No. _Por Dios!_ No. Thinkest thou that I would give
such knowledge as I shall make known to the winds? It is a secret, I
tell thee. A secret!”

“Very well, then,” answered the Judge, a little impatiently. He was a
very busy man, just then enjoying a needed vacation, and he had little
inclination for clerical work, especially in a case like this where the
interests at stake were, presumably, very small. He was doing what he
did for Steenie’s sake only; because the old Californian was dear to
the child in whom he was so much interested. “Very well, then; let us
begin. What is the first bequest?”

“The first? It is the last,--first, last, and the whole. I wish to give
everything I possess--that is Santa Trinidad--to the most adorable
Doña Steenie Calthorp.”

“Indeed? You are generous. What is Santa Trinidad?”

“It is a mountain. It was part of Santa Felisa Rancho, when San’ Felis’
was greater than now, and belonged to the family of Vives, yes.”

“It is valuable?”

For a moment the eye of the old man gleamed craftily; then he asked:
“Must thou know that?”

“As you please.”

Sutro considered. By nature he was not very secretive, and of lesser
matters he was as sure to babble as to breathe; but this was different.
He held, or believed that he held, knowledge of utmost importance;
and he had seen enough of property dealings among the--to him--new
possessors of his old California to understand that it was just the
knowledge which would make them defraud him if they could. Lord
Plunkett had seemed an honest man; yet it was such as Lord Plunkett who
had usurped the broad acres once belonging to his own race and people.
However, he must trust somebody. He must have help.

“_Caramba!_ Wilt thou, Señor Juez, swear--_por Dios_--that thou wilt
not betray me? That I can trust thee?”

“You can trust me entirely, but I will not swear; for I give my oath to
no man,” answered the Judge, becoming interested.

For a full half-minute Sutro stared fixedly into the face of his new
friend; then, reading in that noble countenance nothing but good-will
and uprightness, he plunged into his subject with a recklessness which
hid nothing, either of knowledge or imagination. “La Trinidad is a
cloven mountain. Its inhabitants are rattlesnakes, who, poor beasts,
the Americans fear. Not so Spaniards and men of sense--not even
Indians; a thousand times not so old Sutro. Why? Because I understand,
can meet them without peril; and because _they are the guards to
treasure untold_. No man knows it save Sutro Vives--and now thou; but
the heart of La Trinidad is a heart of--” The testator rose from his
chair, his face thrilled by excitement, and placing his lips to the
Judge’s ear, hissed one word therein.

“What is that you say?”

Sutro repeated the whisper.

“What! Man alive! Do you mean it? Do you know this to be true?”

“As I know that the sun shines now. _En verdad._”

“What proof have you?”

“This.” Sutro unfastened his buckskin vest, and opened a leathern bag
which depended from his swarthy neck. “Believest thou now?”

“I believe what I see, always. But that this came from Santa Trinidad,
how am I to know that?”

“Humph! A caballero may lie, yes; but not where he loves as I love
Doña Steenie. Sawest thou ever a child like her? Eyes of such clear
truthfulness? Lips so loving and so sweet? Face so bonny? Ways
so--not-to-be-resisted? And heart so pure? No, a thousand times. She is
one--alone. She is under the especial charge of Heaven. She is worth
all--all. If the whole of California were mine I would give it her, and
know it were well given. I would so, yes!” And warmed by his own theme,
the old man left his chair and paced the room, gesturing eloquently, as
is the custom of his race.

Judge Courtenay’s interest increased; but, at that moment, it centred
less in the bequest than in the beneficiary. “I agree with you, Señor
Vives, that there is something ‘not-to-be-resisted’ about this ‘Little
Lady of the Horse,’ as you say you Westerners call her; but still I
cannot help wondering how she has gained your devotion so entirely.”

“How? Listen and thou shalt learn. When the good _Dios_ sent her into
this world Sutro Vives was a miserable old man,--even then. He had been
wronged--wronged--wronged--till his heart was hard and bitter. He had
lost faith in everything, below and above; and he kept Santa Trinidad
in spite of everybody,--because its serpent-infested rocks were a
menace to the world. From them he meant to take his revenge. He used to
carry them, the snakes, down to the _hacienda_, and place them where
they would do the most harm. It was the only joy left.”

“One day--the day they buried the poor Señora Calthorp--he carried a
creature bigger, more venomous than any other. He turned it loose on
the threshold of Santa Felisa, and sat down to watch. By-and-by, a
little thing, all soft and white, came creeping, creeping through the
doorway, and spied the serpent, yes. It was pretty, too, and soft;
but it was not white nor good. The wicked Sutro watched. Santa Maria
watched also. The little fingers went out and touched the reptile, and
the Mother of God touched a wicked heart. In a second--before the
beautiful head of the serpent could rear itself--_la criaturita_ [the
baby girl] was in the old man’s arms. Did she hate him, no? _Gracias
a Dios_ [Thanks be to God]!--she folded her own little arms about his
neck and buried her rose-leaf face against his ugly face; and the demon
of hate and murder left him. _Si!_ That is the tale.”

It was a moving one. Judge Courtenay was not the man to resist
its influence; nor did he ever thereafter doubt one assertion of
Sutro Vives where Steenie was concerned. The love that is rooted in
superstition is love that lasts.

“Well, I will draw up the document for you as carefully as possible.
But the inheritor is a minor. She must have some one appointed to act
for her until lawfully able to act for herself; in case your demise
occurs prior to that time.”

This suggestion had a legal sound about it that captivated Sutro’s
ears; and he gathered enough of its meaning to reply: “I understand. If
I die, it is the Señor Calthorp and Kentucky Bob who will carry out my
desires, no? But I do not wish to die first. I wish to live, I myself.”

“Yes--yes! We all wish that.”

“And must I die that my little one may get the good of Santa Trinidad?”

“There is nothing to prevent your giving it to her now, while you are
still alive; but a ‘last will and testament’ implies the death of the
testator before action is taken upon it.” Then Judge Courtenay went on
to explain, as simply and briefly as he could, the various methods by
which Sutro Vives could benefit his favorite; and the old Spaniard did
the best he could to comprehend.

But gradually a belief came into Sutro’s mind, and fixed itself there,
that if he died she would be better off. Because while he lived nobody
would care to spend the necessary money to investigate the discovery he
claimed,--mining being a most expensive business; but if he were dead,
Steenie’s guardians or trustees might do so for her benefit in justice
to their ward.

Poor Sutro! It was a bitter notion, and one that made his face
grow pale as he contemplated it. He didn’t want to die; he loved
life dearly--dearly! Even at this strange East, where it rained
whenever it felt like it, and not at stated seasons when people were
prepared for it and duly expectant--as at San’ Felisa,--even here,
and with disagreeable Resolved Tubbs “to boot,” existence had many
pleasures,--not the least among these being Mary Jane’s excellent
cookery. To die--to put himself forever out of the reach not only of
the Little Un, but of Mazan´ to whom he had hoped to be reunited, and
of delicious chicken-patties, all at one fell swoop--that was too much!

“Very well, then. I will delay the evil day, no? They are not suffering
now; and if this thousand dollars is not paid yet--why, when it falls
due, there will still be time! _En verdad._ Is it not so, Señor Juez?”

“I do not understand you, Caballero; but if you have finished your
directions I will put aside these notes for the present. The will shall
be duly drawn up and read to you; when, if satisfactory, it can be
attested by your own chosen witnesses. It is about time for me to take
my second lesson in colt training; and before I go, I want to ask you
if you have heard the Calthorp family speak of this great bank failure,
which has ruined so many?”

“Have I not? _Si?_ Is it not that which has prompted, this day so
soon, the _testamento_? That, but for this sudden poverty, I could
have postponed till some far away _mañana_ [future]. Señor Tubbs
says that my people have become poor--poor--poor. My Señor Calthorp
goes into his room and broods and broods; and Señora, the Madam, she
smiles,--but with pale lips and heavy eyes. Ah, it is cruel, cruel! I
do not understand. I am no--what shall I say? Here, in my head, it is
not clear to comprehend this ‘business’ of the Americans, I. It was
that ‘business’ which was wrong when Santa Felisa Rancho passed from my
family to other men. It is ‘business’ again,--a ‘bank,’ which is worst
of all,--and, lo! to-day our pockets burst with the gold, to-morrow
they hold not a coin. _Por Dios!_ It is all wrong--”

The Judge listened gravely. The flying rumors he had heard were
confirmed by Sutro’s statement. He had known, all along, that his old
friends would be losers to some extent by this failure; but the fact
that it involved their all was new to him and very painful. How to
assist them would be the question. The legal advice he could give them
would be theirs without the asking; but if the reports were wholly
true, they would need something besides legal advice to put the bread
into their mouths.

“Papa! Are you never coming? We were as good as we could be, yesterday;
but we were better to-day! And we were let off from study five minutes
before the eleven o’clock. Come, please! Won’t you? I want to see you
and Diablo take your lesson, now Steenie and I have done.”

Beatrice’s interruption was a pleasant relief to the sombre thoughts of
both lawyer and client; and Diablo’s owner answered, promptly, “Oh! oh!
That is all, is it? Revenge? You wish to see somebody else suffer the
torture which the last two hours have been to you? Eh? For lessons and
torture are synonyms in your book-hating mind, I fancy, my daughter.”

“Now, Papa Courtenay! ’Xcuse me, but it’s no such thing. You’re teasing
me. And I shouldn’t think it hard work just to play with a colt!”

“Should you not? Unless I mistake my valiant small girl, entirely, I
think it would take a deal of persuasion to make her exchange even her
dull lessons for mine!”

At which playful irony Beatrice pouted, then laughed good-naturedly.
She had now no ambition horseward, beyond riding a very gentle old pony
at odd times; but she did enjoy the spectacle of others doing that
which she feared.

“And how about you, Miss Steenie? Are you anxious to resume your
‘teaching’?”

“Oh, yes, sir! I am a’most hungry to see Diablo! I told Papa ’bout him;
an’ he said, ‘Then you’re happy, dearie!’ and I am. Horses are so dear
and lovely. They are so--so--what is it when you love anything and it
loves you back?” asked Steenie, who had slipped her hand into one of
Judge Courtenay’s, while his own little daughter held fast to the other.

“Responsive may be the word. But what is Sir Tito being brought along
for? Is he to be introduced to Diablo?”

“Ye-es. But that wasn’t the first, the truly why. I--I have--there’s
something I want to ask you, by-and-by. That is, do you own that big
race-track over yonder, as Sutro says?”

“Yes. I had it prepared for speeding my own horses; but some of
the neighbors use it also. I am anxious to increase the interest,
hereabouts, in well-bred stock, and so we have trials on it
occasionally. By the way, there is to be a public affair soon. The very
best horses in the county are entered for the contest,--prizes, and
so forth. I am quite anxious and doubtful over the result; for, till
now, my black filly Trix has carried everything before her. But Doctor
Gerould, of South Knollsboro, has just bought the famous Mordaunt, and
I fear my lady Trix will be hard pushed this time.”

“Isn’t it funny, Steenie? My mama says that Papa would rather win that
race than the biggest ‘case’ that ever was! She says live horses are
his hobby-horses, ’at he rides to death! ’Cause she says ’at a’most
every rich man finds out some way to use money foolishly, an’ Papa’s
way is the goodest way there is, maybe.”

“Come, come, Miss Beatrice! Retailing family affairs for a stranger’s
benefit?” asked the father, pinching his little girl’s cheek, roguishly.

“Steenie an’ Sutro aren’t strangers, are they? They’re just--us, I
thought.”

“‘Just us’--quite right. But here we are! Now, my fine fellow, look out
for yourself!”

“I’ll go in first with this halter, please. Then you can come when I
call you,” said the small mistress of ceremonies, and vaulted over the
paling, lightly and joyously.

There was no pretence about the sincerity of her pleasure. Her
sparkling eyes and dimpling face declared that without words; and,
to his utter amazement, Judge Courtenay saw that the pleasure was
mutual, for, instead of showing fear or resentment, or any trace of
forgetfulness, up marched Diablo, with all the eagerness in the world,
and extended his handsome nose with a neigh of salutation.

“Well--well--well! Has the age of miracles returned?” exclaimed the
observer, almost unable to believe his own eyes.

But when Diablo’s friendliness was forced to extend to himself, and
when, after an hour or two of a “lesson” which the gray-haired pupil
enjoyed beyond expression, he was able to lead the “unbreakable brute”
quietly out of the paddock to the “track,” his delight knew no bounds.

“Upon my word, my little lady, I am your debtor to a very great extent.
I am ready to give you anything you ask!”

“Huyler’s!” suggested Beatrice, in an eager whisper. “Ask him for
‘Huyler’s’--do!”

“No conspiracy! What’s that you’re whispering, missy?”

“Now, Papa! You said ‘anything,’ and I thought--candy.”

“Is ‘Huyler’s’ candy? Pooh! I don’t care for that. I want you to do
something, though, Beatrice. Will you?”

“Course. What?”

“Let me show you how to ride. On my own Tito, that nobody ever rode
but me, that could be helped, that--Oh, you know!”

“Why? What for?”

“’Cause. Won’t you?”

“Will he run away?”

“He never did such a mean thing in all his darling life! Swing her up,
dear Sutro, please!”

Sutro lifted Beatrice, who uttered a little squeal, half of terror,
half of pleasure, and placed her squarely on Steenie’s own comfortable
saddle. Then followed “lesson two,” while the Judge continued his own
experiments in horse-training on another part of the course. At the
close of which, all came gayly together at the entrance, and not a
face showed any care,--not even Sutro’s, who had now relegated to that
convenient “mañana” of his, the time when he should “die.”

“Really, little Steenie, can I not serve you in some practical way? I
wish to do so most heartily,” asked the master of Rookwood, gratefully.

“Yes, sir. You can give me some advice. I mean if you will,” answered
she.

“Heigho! my practice is increasing!” thought the legal magnate. Aloud
he said: “To the best of my ability.”

“I want to earn some money. I want to show other little girls how to
ride, same as I showed Beatrice, here. An’ maybe to teach other folks
horses, too, like Diablo. ’Cause we’re ‘ruined,’ Grandmother says; an’
she’s an old lady, an’ my father’s blind, an’--an’--Can I?”

“Wh-e-ew! You baby, you!”

A hurt, indignant flush rose into Steenie’s eager face, and her lip
trembled.

“There, there! My dear child! It was only
astonishment--admiration--which made me say that! Don’t misunderstand
me. You can do anything--anything--which you set out to do,
you--you--brave little thing!”

With that the Judge wheeled sharply round, and tears gathered in
somebody’s eyes, but not in Steenie’s.



CHAPTER XIII.


[Illustration: SUTRO.]

“My dear, suppose you let our friend Sutro, here, ride home and tell
your people that I am going to keep you for dinner? Then they will
not be anxious, and we will have leisure to consider this matter
thoroughly. What do you say?” The Judge’s tone, addressing Steenie, was
as grave and considerate as if she had been Madam Calthorp herself, and
it restored her wounded pride at once.

Nobody likes being laughed at, least of all a child, about whose
earnestness there is never any pretence. “Baby” had been a hard word
for ambitious ears to hear.

“Thank you. I should be as glad as glad to stay! If--my grandmother
said I was never to ’trude upon your ‘family life;’ that just
’cause you asked me to study with Beatrice, I mustn’t forget an’
be too--something or other. It meant I mustn’t go round an’ be a
‘noosance,’ like Sutro is to Mr. Tubbs.”

“‘Noosance’! She couldn’t be a ‘noosance,’ could she, Papa Courtenay?”
cried Beatrice, dancing gayly about her friend, delighted with the
prospect of a visit.

“Never,” responded the Judge, cordially. “Señor Vives, it is settled,
then. Please convey my regards to Madam Calthorp and her son, and say
to them that I will give myself the pleasure of calling upon them
toward nightfall, and will bring this little girl with me. Your own
affair--the legal document--shall, also, be duly arranged. Good day.”

“I have the happiness to salute thee, Señor Juez. In verity, I am
proud of the honor done my little one. I will discharge thy message
immediately. Ten thousand thanks. _Adios._” With the lightness of youth
the old Spaniard sprung upon Tito’s back, doffed his sombrero, bowed
profoundly, and rode cheerfully away.

“How funny! It’s a side-saddle, too,” said Beatrice.

“Yes. But that makes no difference to my caballero. He can ride in any
way on any animal, and always well. My father says he is a wonderful
old man; but he doesn’t seem any older ’n me, I think. He’s very good
an’ dear. My grandmother says ’at Sutro is worth everything to my
father now, in his blindness.”

“I should think so, indeed! And now for dinner. After that--for a
talk about this teaching business. A race to the house! Here we go!
And a box of that coveted ‘Huyler’s’ to the winner! Step--step--step!
One--two--three! Off!” Away flashed the gay frocks, up and down flew
the little black-stockinged legs, and long before the Judge had
covered half the distance, the children sat cuddled together on the
piazza-step, hugging each other in the exuberance of their love and
happiness. “It’s so puffectly nice to have a little girl, same’s me!”
cried Steenie, ecstatically. “I used to have the ‘boys’ an’ nobody
else. I didn’t know ’bout girls, then, an’ the ‘boys’ are dear as dear!
But I like girls, now I’ve seen ’em,--some girls.”

“Me? Do you like me?”

“Course I do. Wasn’t I just telling you? Say, would you like to ride in
a circus?”

“My--sake! No! Would you?”

“Course. I have,--lots of times.”

“Why--Steenie--Calthorp! Where? When? How? Who let you?”

“Out home. Santa Felisa. Ever so many whens. Last one, just before we
came away; to show the Plunketty man--Lord--what his own ranchmen could
do. My father let me. Course.”

“Was he nice?”

“Who?”

“The Plunketty man-lord. What is a man-lord, any way?”

“Think I didn’t say it right. I mean lord-man. That is an Englishman.
My father says he can’t find land enough in their little bit o’ island
to buy, so he came to California an’ bought San’ Felisa. But he didn’t
come again for twelve years, a’most. An’ I never saw him, an’ then I
did; an’ he didn’t wear a cor’net at all! And he laughed like anything
when I told him what Suzan´ said. An’ he ’xplained beautiful. He does
have the cor’net, but he doesn’t have it for himself. It’s his houses’.
An’ sometimes the women of ‘his house’ wear it, when they ‘want to make
a stunnin’ show of theirselfs.’ But mostly they ‘have more sense,’ an’
leave it where it b’longs, ’mongst the family plates an’ ‘gew-gaws.’
That’s what he told me.”

“Gew-gaws? Ginger! Was he a really, truly, lively lord? Was he?”

“Live as anything. Live as you. Live as me or your papa. But, Beatrice,
you shouldn’t say ‘ginger.’ My grandmother says it’s not c’rect to use
’spressions.”

“But there _is_--ginger! The cook puts it in molasses-cake. So there!”

“Well. It’s c’rect enough to eat, I s’pose. But little gentlewomen
should show they’s little gentlewomen by their languages. So my
grandmother says, an’ she knows. ’Cause she knows everything in this
whole world.”

“She couldn’t! She isn’t big enough. My papa says nobody knows
everything. An’ he talks mostest ’bout grammar, not gentlewomens. He
wouldn’t let you say ‘hisself’ or ‘theirselfs,’--I mean if he could
help it. ’Cause he wouldn’t me. An’ I know better ’n you, you see,
’cause I’ve been teached longer.”

“Well, I s’pose you do. Though my grandmother’s c’rected me lots o’
times ’bout them very same words. I--Only I forget. My forgettery
is always easier ’n my memory. Isn’t yours? An’ anyhow I don’t know
anything, ’cept ’bout horses. But I know more ’bout them ’an I could
tell you ‘in a month o’ Sundays.’”

“How long is a ‘month o’ Sundays?’ When does it come? Before Christmas?”

“I don’t know. Mary Jane knows. She talks ’bout it. An’ it comes--why
it must come any time! ’Cause when Mr. Resolved goes to market she
tells him not to be a ‘month o’ Sundays,’ or she can’t get the dinner
cooked in time. And--lots--Here’s your papa! Oh, I tell you I love him!
He’s so dear.”

“You needn’t! He isn’t yours. You can’t have him,” cried Beatrice,
feeling her young heart swell with jealousy.

“But I can love him, can’t I? If you couldn’t love my father you would
be funny. And, oh, isn’t it happy to be so glad! Most always, anyhow, I
think this is an awful nice world. Folks are so cosey an’ kind.”

“An’ I don’t think it’s nice one bit. You’ll get the candy; I know you
will. You got here first!”

“Well--if I did? Wouldn’t I give you half,--the evenest half we could
measure? S’pose I’d want it if you didn’t have it too? Say, s’pose
they’ll be dinner enough?”

“What do you mean? Course they will.”

“Then I’m glad. But you see they didn’t know I was coming; an’ Mary
Jane says I’m the ‘beatenest eater for a little girl she ever saw;’ an’
sometimes when comp’ny comes to my grandmother’s she scolds, Mary Jane
does. ’Cause she says: ‘I have enough cooked for my own folks, but not
enough for my neighbors,’ an’ it makes her angry. An’ my grandmother
says, solemn-like: ‘Ma-ry-Ja-ne!’ an’ then Mary Jane goes in the
kitchen an’ bangs things around; an’ Mr. Tubbs laughs, an’ she gets
madder, an’--I shouldn’t like to make your cook feel that way.”

“Don’t you be afraid! You can have all you want to eat; an’ if they
isn’t enough you can have mine, too. I ain’t ever hungry.”

“My! Thank you. You’re a lovely, nice girl. But I wouldn’t eat it. Why
aren’t you hungry? There’s the bell!”

Away they ran dinner-wards, and found the Judge rehearsing to his wife
the incidents of the morning, and evidently something of Steenie’s
ambition; for the lady bestowed upon the child a caress more cordial
even than usual, and called her a “dear, brave, helpful little thing.”

There proved to be not only enough of food but to spare; and when
the meal was over Judge Courtenay retired to his office with his
secretary, while the children went into the parlor, where Steenie was
asked to tell her hostess all about her desired “riding-school,” and
what had suggested it to her.

“It was the blacksmith made me think about it, when he shod Tito. He
said I ‘ought to;’ an’ I s’pose maybe he knows ’bout my father being
blind, an’ my grandmother an old lady that never did anything but read
books, an’ they both being so ‘helpless,’ Mr. Tubbs says. But he, Mr.
Resolved, thought I was ‘helpless,’ too; only I don’t want to be.
’Cause I’m not old nor blind, an’ I’m strong as anything. But I don’t
know very much, ’cept ’bout horses; an’ I do know ’bout them, way
through. So--well, you see--after the blacksmith talk--I thought an’
thought--an’ thought. First off, it made me dizzy--just the thinking.
Then I wasn’t dizzy any more for being sorry--but just for glad! An’
I hurried home fast as fast; an’ there was my father taking a nap,
’cause he doesn’t sleep good nights; an’ after supper some comp’ny
came, an’ they stayed till I went away to bed. Then this morning there
they were again; an’ they were a man an’ his clerk, or something, an’
my grandmother an’ my father went into the library an’ shut the door,
so I didn’t have any chance to ask him. Then when I was coming here, I
thought maybe I was glad I hadn’t. ’Cause my grandmother says your Mr.
Judge is a terr’ble wise gentleman; an’ I know so too. An’ I thought
prob’ly he knew all the little girls an’ colts in Old Knollsboro; an’
maybe they’d like to learn to ride the right way. And the blacksmith
said I’d ‘make a fortune’ showing ’em. I’d like to make it, or some
money, I mean. Any way if I could do one thing to buy beefsteaks with,
I ought to, hadn’t I? ’Cause Mr. Tubbs says, ‘The Lord only knows
how long any on us’ll eat beefsteak,’--an’ we all like it. Even my
grandmother does. It would be awful, wouldn’t it, for an old lady like
her to not have any more?”

“Yes, my dear, it would be very bad indeed; but I hope matters are not
quite so serious as that,” answered Mrs. Courtenay, smiling.

“Well, I don’t know, course. But Mary Jane says we’d all ‘better be
lookin’ out to earn an honest penny, those on us ’at can.’ An’ Mr., her
brother, said she ‘needn’t cast no ’flections on him, ’cause hadn’t he
got the lumbago, he’d like to know?’ So, you see, it’s just this one
straight way: Grandmother can’t, ’cause she can’t, an’ she oughtn’t
to; Papa can’t, ’cause he can’t see to do anything; Sutro can’t, ’cause
he’s just Sutro; Mr. Tubbs can’t, ’cause he’s a lumbagorer an’ a
‘reg’lar funeral-dark-sider,’ Mary Jane says; Mary Jane can’t, ’cause
her ‘hands an’ heart is full every ’durin’ minute, an’ so she tells
you;’ an’ so, after them, they isn’t anybody left but me. So I want to;
’cause I love ’em--love ’em--love ’em--every one! An’ I’m young, an’
I can see, an’ I haven’t any lumbago, an’ I’m not just Sutro, an’ my
hands an’ heart isn’t full, and--do--you s’pose I can?”

“My dear little girl, I have perfect faith that you can!--providing
that your people will consent,” answered Mrs. Courtenay, with the most
confident of smiles, and very shining eyes.

“Why shouldn’t they consent? Wouldn’t they be the most gladdest they
could be? ’Cause I’d give them the money, an’ they could buy the
things.”

“Who told you about ‘money,’ and money-earning, Steenie?” asked the
lady, somewhat curiously, wondering how a child brought up “in the
wilderness” had learned its value.

“Why, Sutro. I asked him what it meant to be ‘ruined,’ an’ he told
me. He’s ruined, himself, he says; anyhow he’s lost his home, same
as Grandmother’ll have to lose hers; an’ he says that he had to go
to work an’ earn money, an’ that was why he didn’t ‘starve to death,
_en verdad_!’ I should think it would be dreadful to starve to death,
shouldn’t you?”

“I certainly should.”

“You see Sutro--I don’t know ’xactly how it was. But when I was as
little as little, my father told Sutro ’at if he’d tend to me an’ not
let anything bad ever happen to me, he’d pay Sutro money. Wages, it’s
called. So they did it; an’ Sutro was my body-servant forever after
that. Papa paid him every month, ’cause it wasn’t the Plunkett man’s
money at all. An’ Sutro has saved it. An’ I don’t know. He showed me
most of it ’at he hadn’t spended; an’ it does seem funny that folks’ll
give you food an’ clothes an’ things just for it; but he says yes. An’
if I earn, an’ he helps me, don’t you see? Oh, I hope they will let me,
don’t you?”

“I--hardly know. I wish you to be happy with all my heart; and so I
mean that you shall succeed--if they are willing. But they are a proud
family,--the very leading family of Old Knollsboro; and they may feel
it--well, not just the thing for the little daughter of the house to
teach even a ‘riding-school.’ But we’ll see. By the way, where would
you like to hold your school? Tell me all that you have thought about
it, please.”

“Why, on your race-course. Why not?” asked Steenie, brightly and
innocently.

“Why, Steenie Calthorp! My papa’s race-track is my papa’s! He won’t let
anybody, ’cept them he invites, go on it, not once at all. He says it’s
private, for his own ’musement, an’ if folks want tracks let ’em have
their own. He wouldn’t let other little girls, ’cept you an’ me, ride
their ponies there, ever; would he, Mama?”

“I cannot answer for another, even your father, my dear. But I think
that some fitting place could be found,” replied the mother, quietly.

Steenie looked up quickly. Her big blue eyes were filled with
astonishment, and a pink flush stole deeper and deeper into her pretty
face. Her native instinct, the instinct of a gentlewoman, told her that
she had blundered in some way, yet she could not see how. If Judge
Courtenay was her friend,--why, he was!--and that was the end of it.
Why should he draw the line anywhere?

“Please, Mrs. Courtenay, was I ’truding then? Grandmother said I was
never to do that. She said I had lived in a beau-tiful big, big place
like Santa Felisa, an’ I was used to being mistress of everything; but
I was to ’member that here, in this little bit o’ Old Knollsboro, I was
only a little bit o’ girl. But if the dear Judge doesn’t want me to
use his course, why I can find a place, somewhere, big enough. I guess
maybe the blacksmith can tell me. He was a very nice man, too.”

Mrs. Courtenay watched the troubled little face grow bright and sunny
again, and then she sent the children out to play; after which an
elegant carriage was brought round, and a groom in livery assisted the
lady into it, and lifted Beatrice to a place beside her. But Steenie
needed no assistance, and was quite contented when the Judge took
the empty seat next her, and she heard the order given, “To Madam
Calthorp’s, High Street.”

It was a gay and happy party, and they carried their own good cheer
with them into the care-shadowed home which they entered,--the
greetings of the elders being even more cordial and sympathetic than
ever, could that have seemed possible.

Nothing, not even heart-break, could make Madam Calthorp other than the
noble, gracious woman she had always been; and no sign of the burden
she was bearing was permitted to inflict itself upon her guests. Yet
even her self-reliant spirit gained fresh courage from the support of
these friends whom she held in such high esteem; and she was delicately
forced to remember that the Judge would be honored if she would make
use of him in any way.

“Yes, Steenie, show Beatrice anything. And you will find some roses
in the garden, the sort her mother likes. Thank you; but, Judge, such
things are usually very simple. I have had one of the bank men here
over night. There is nothing left, absolutely, beyond my trifling
amount of real estate. I shall put this house on the market, and
dispose of it as speedily as possible. I have already written to accept
an offer which I had for the little farm; and--that is all. If you hear
of a small cottage anywhere in town, that is not in an objectionable
neighborhood, will you kindly let me know? And now--let us talk about
your horses. I’m sure that Daniel will enjoy a description of them. He
is quite a horse-lover, though not like Steenie--all horse! Did you
ever know a taste so marked? It amounts almost to a passion with her;
due to her training at Santa Felisa, I suppose. Well, it has made her
a perfectly healthy and wonderfully happy child. I am grateful to the
odd rearing for that much, at least.”

“And for much more!--that is, you may be!” returned the Judge,
impulsively. His heart was still glowing warmly with thoughts of
Steenie’s brave desire, and the words escaped him almost unconsciously.

“Indeed! How so? I fear that even her last intercourse with the equine
race is about over for poor little Steenie.”

“It should not be. No, no; it must not be!--that would be a crime.
Let me tell you, please,” and the gentleman described, far more
minutely and eloquently than the little girl had done, her marvellous
influence over Diablo, and her instruction of himself. He concluded
enthusiastically: “It is her gift--Heaven-sent! She is the best friend
the horse ever had, I believe. And that child’s beneficent influence
is destined to work a complete revolution, hereabouts, in the future
treatment of the noble animals. It is as if she had a magical power of
entering into their very feelings, inclinations, joys, and sufferings.
I never witnessed anything like it! Yet the only explanation she can
give is: ‘It isn’t anything I do. I don’t know how to explain it--only
I just love them so!’ My dear Madam, your grandchild is a phenomenon.
Better than that--she is the bravest, noblest little creature who ever
lived.”

“Judge, Judge! You are too enthusiastic, and too kind!” answered
Steenie’s amazed grandmother.

“Enthusiastic, perhaps; but I could not be too kind to a child like
that. It is an honor to serve her. She has taught me, not only what
a fool I have been about horses, but how to meet trouble, disaster.
Listen to this: here is her idea--that baby’s!”

Launched upon his subject, Judge Courtenay poured out the whole story.
Steenie’s half-formed plans had taken full shape and detail under the
consideration of his own maturer mind, and not only this, but he had
actually decided, mentally, upon the children to be selected for her
first pupils. He could not see one good reason why the project was
not wholly feasible, with Sutro and himself to “back” it with age and
experience.

“She shall have the course at Rookwood for ordinary weather; and I will
have a great building erected for stormy days. I know several persons
who have valuable colts, and they will gladly avail themselves of her
gentle method of ‘breaking in.’ They shall pay her well, too! The
school terms we will regulate by those of city riding-schools; and she
shall have the use of as many of my horses as is necessary, besides her
own Tito. That old Sutro is just the fellow to assist; and my grooms
shall do the rough work.”

“Pardon me, Judge, but it appears to me as if this were to be your
school,--not my little daughter’s!” exclaimed Mr. Calthorp, smilingly.

“All right--all right! Make it so, then! Let it be my institution, and
she my salaried instructor. Why not? That is an improvement upon the
original plan,--decidedly an improvement. People will be less inclined
to shirk their tuition fees to me, a grim old lawyer, maybe, than to
her. Yet I think she would never lose a penny. How could she,--if men
and women are human?”

Mrs. Courtenay had been observing their hostess, and interrupted,
gently: “My dear, you are taking for granted the consent of Steenie’s
guardians. However, I trust it will not be wanting.” The speaker
noticed, regretfully, that the children had returned, and that the
little subject of the discussion was standing on the threshold of
the room, her lithe young body eagerly poised and her eyes intently
watching her grandmother’s face for the answer forthcoming, which was
made speedily and courteously, but it struck upon Steenie’s heart with
intolerable cruelty.

“Thank you, cordially, my dear friend. Your generous kindness is
fully appreciated--fully. But I have already reached a more practical
decision,--one which will put more money, even, into Steenie’s pocket
than this chimerical, if unselfish scheme of hers could ever do. We
will sell Tito. Do you know of a purchaser?”

In the silence which followed this unexpected suggestion, Steenie heard
her own heart beat. Then she bounded into the centre of the room, white
with fear and indignation.

“Grandmother! Sell--my--Tito!”

“Yes, darling. We can no longer afford to keep him.”

“You mustn’t! You mustn’t! It would break his very heart! I’d rather
you’d sell me!”



CHAPTER XIV.


[Illustration: “POOR MR. TUBBS.”]

For a time nobody said anything more. Then Madam Calthorp resumed, but
in a very kindly and sympathetic tone: “Yes, my darling, we can no
longer indulge in any luxury.”

Steenie found courage to speak again. “I don’t know what that is. But
Tito isn’t a ‘luxury,’ is he? He’s just a dear, darling little horse!”

“Which, under our changed circumstances, means that he is a luxury, as
well.”

“You mustn’t! You shall not! You dare not! He’s mine--mine--mine!”

“Steenie!” said the father, in a pained voice, and opening his lips for
the first time.

The child flew to him in a passion of tears. “She can’t--she--she--He’s
folks! He can’t be sold. It would--break--his very--heart!”

Touched by the distress of her little friend, Beatrice grew angry and
resentful also, and darted to her own father, who put his arm about
her and kissed her, glad of anything upon which to vent his emotion;
for it must be owned that the big, wise man was almost as vexed and
uncomfortable as the two children were.

Mrs. Courtenay walked over to the bay-window and examined an album of
etchings, trying, but failing, to appear at ease. To all present it was
a very unpleasant scene.

Yet there was no disputing the plain common-sense of Madam Calthorp’s
decision, who, it is also true, had no real conception of the strength
of the bond between the child and her beloved four-footed friend, her
only playmate during all her little life.

Steenie had parted from Tito at Santa Felisa, bravely and cheerfully as
she could, “for Papa’s sake;” but she had believed it to be a parting
for a time, merely. She had then full faith in the cure of her father’s
blindness, which was to be effected by some unknown physician in an
equally unknown “East;” and she had looked forward to a joyful return
and reunion, when everything and everybody was to be even happier than
before.

Now she knew better what “trouble” meant; and to part with Tito forever
seemed like cutting her own heart in two.

“Steenie, my granddaughter! Do not forget that there are others
present to whom an exhibition of domestic misunderstanding must be
most disagreeable. You may take the basket of sea-shells into the
dining-room, if you like, and show them to Beatrice.”

“I don’t care about sea-shells, ma’am,” responded Beatrice, with what
she considered great politeness.

“An’--an’--please ’xcuse me!” said Steenie, tremulously, and ran out of
the house, stableward, faster than even her fleet feet had ever sped
before.

Mrs. Courtenay rose, “I think, Judge, that it is really time we should
go. I have another call to make, and it is growing late. I hope, dear
madam, that you are satisfied with Steenie’s progress under Miss Allen.
She tells me that the little thing is very bright at her studies.”

“Thank you; fully satisfied. Yes, I think, I am sure that our little
girl has intelligence; only her instruction has heretofore been so
deficient,--in every way. I trust you will pardon her rudeness, and
expect better things of her by-and-by. She has been a trifle spoiled,
I fear. However, I believe that she will make rapid advancement after
she is once well started. And pray do not think, Judge, that because I
found your ‘riding-school’ too big a venture for a child not yet eleven
to undertake, that I do not estimate your own unselfish motive most
highly. It simply--could not be.” Madam Calthorp’s smile as she said
this was very bright and very proud.

“That’s it! It’s the miserable Calthorp pride that is at the bottom
of it!” muttered the Judge, as he rode away. “The father had more
sense; he saw no objection to our idea any more than I do, or any other
sensible person could. It is an original scheme, of course; but where
would the world be if it were not for original people now and then? The
child has a talent--a genius--in a unique line. Well, then, why not
develop it,--same as music, art, or any other great gift? And she’d be
perfectly safe,--I’d see to that; they must have known it.”

“Doubtless they did; and I know something else.”

“What’s that?”--a trifle shortly. It does not improve the temper of
most people to have their generosity declined, and the Judge was no
exception to the rule.

“That you will buy Tito, if he must be sold, and keep him at Rookwood
for his own little mistress.”

“Or for me, Mama, maybe.”

“No, dear Beatrice, for Steenie. Surely you do not wish to take her
beloved horse away from her?”

“No, course I don’t; but, you see, I thought maybe that old Madam lady
would say she couldn’t have him. ’Cause she ’peared to me’s if she
liked to be kind of mis’able an’ give up things. Same’s I don’t.”

“Beatrice!”

“The child is right. Madam Calthorp is a fine woman, but she is as
proud as Lucifer. He had to tumble, and she will, or I’m mightily
mistaken. It takes a very noble nature to accept favors graciously;
and she had an idea that I was conferring, or trying to confer, a
favor, which I was not at all. I think it would be the best thing
ever happened in this locality, and to the dumb beasts in it, if that
blessed, loving little thing could have a chance to preach to us in
her innocent way. I mean she shall yet, too! And I suppose that to have
a little girl earn anything towards the family support was a bitter
motion, also.”

“The most bitter, I think, husband. However, we can do nothing more.
But we must have Steenie at Rookwood as much as possible. If one is
bound to be kind and helpful one can generally find a way, though not
always the way first chosen. Remember that, Beatrice, and be watchful
for Steenie’s happiness.”

“Yes, Mama, I think somebody ought to watch it; ’cause herself’s bein’
comf’table is the last thing she cares about.”

“That’s right, my darling,” said the mother, fondly, as she alighted
to pay her second call, and thinking very tenderly of the other little
girl who had never known the sweetness of a mother’s commendation.

Meanwhile, at the house in High Street, a few earnest words had been
said by blind Daniel Calthorp, which touched, if they did not convince,
the proud heart of its mistress.

“The scheme is not as wild as it seems, dear mother. If you could see
my darling among her friends, the horses, you would understand.”

“But to have it said that a child--a little girl-child--is our
maintenance! Daniel, is it not absurd? Besides, could she actually earn
enough to amount to anything?”

“I think so. However, we will not discuss further to-night,--perhaps
not at all. Only, if you think it would be difficult for you to accept
aid from the hand of a child, what do you think it is for me--a man?
My blindness was not of my own choosing; and Steenie’s talent has not
been given to her for nothing. Do you remember what my father used to
say? ‘God never shuts one door but He opens another.’ The doors seem to
be pretty fast closed on every side our lives, just now, Mother. Was
this--one of His opening? Let us find out that; and--I’ll go to Steenie
now.”

“You need not. She comes here to you,” and, despite her decision, which
had made her seem so “hard” and stern to her little granddaughter, it
was a very proud and loving glance which rested upon the now dejected
face of the household darling. “Come here, my little one. I have
something to say to you.”

Steenie obeyed; but she did not raise her eyes from the floor, and
her small hands were clinched tight together,--in a habit she had
adopted to help “keep the tears back.” She expected a reprimand
for her rudeness, and she anticipated it. “I came back--’cause--my
father says--no matter--I mustn’t never--be anything but nice--as
nice--to you. I didn’t mean you--Grandmother; not you--yourself. I--I
only--Tito--”

“Kiss me, Steenie. I understand you fully. I have quite forgiven
anything that there is to forgive. I should have broken the sad news
to you more gently if I could, but you happened to overhear it. What
I want to tell you, now, dear, is that I think you are the bravest,
dearest child I ever knew. It was a very kind desire of yours to
help us in the only way which was natural to your peculiar life and
training; but what would do in the far West would hardly answer here in
Old Knollsboro. However, you still have an opportunity to be brave and
kind. I have decided--I trust that your father agrees with me--that the
first sacrifice demanded of you is--Tito. It is painful to me to ask
it; but it is right. I hope you will meet this trial in the same spirit
which you displayed in this other impracticable scheme. May I depend
upon you, my darling?”

A sob that shook her whole sturdy little body welled up and broke from
Steenie’s lips; and though the great tears now rolled over the round
cheeks her blue eyes were raised steadfastly and her dainty mouth
forced itself into a smile, so brave and determined, yet so pitiful,
that it pierced Madam Calthorp’s heart like a knife.

With an impulse foreign to her self-controlled nature she caught her
grandchild to her heart, and bent her white head upon the brown curls,
while a sympathetic sob escaped her own lips. This was the first actual
taste of the poverty which had befallen her household, and she found it
bitter indeed.

But from that moment, strange as it seemed to Steenie’s own self, she
loved her grandmother as she had not done before, and felt so sorry for
her that personal grief was almost forgotten.

“Now,” said Madam, lifting her head,--“now, what is to be done,
I want done quickly; to me waiting and suspense are intolerable.
We know that we must leave this house; let us leave it as soon as
possible. To-morrow I will advertise it for sale, and hope for a
speedy purchaser. Fortunately, High-Street property is rarely offered,
and there is always a greater demand than supply. Hark! Is that the
supper-bell?”

“Yes,’m. Come. Papa, dear, I’m hungry, anyhow. And I gave Tito heaps
and heaps. But I think you’ll have to speak to Sutro. He didn’t--he
didn’t behave very nice. But he--felt--pretty mis’able, an’--Why, Mr.
Tubbs!”

Mr. Tubbs, indeed! Never within Madam Calthorp’s memory had that worthy
“professor” entered her presence in such a condition as this. His hair
looked as if it had never been combed; his spectacles were broken and
dangling from his neck, instead of reposing respectably upon his bald
forehead; his coat was torn and covered with bits of hay; and--must
the truth be owned?--one pale gray eye was bruised and half-hidden by
the rapidly swelling flesh which surrounded it; worst indignity of
all, he was being marched into the dining-room by Mary Jane’s forcible
grip upon his shoulder, and it was her disgusted voice which called
attention to his damaged condition.

“Yis! I should say so! ‘Mis-ter Tubbs!’ Here he is! A wolf in sheep’s
clothin’! Him a Methodist an’ a class-leader! Look at him! Drink him
in! He ain’t nobody but my brother--oh, oh, oh!”

“Resolved! Mary Jane! Explain this matter at once. What has happened?”

“Happened, ma’am? Nothin’ but a--fight! A reg’lar, school-bubby actin’
up! It’s them two old simpletons, Sutro an’ Resolved. They’ve always
wrangled an’ jangled ever sence they fust sot eyes on one another. But
I’ve managed ter keep ’em from fisticuffin’ up till now. An’ him my
only brother! A shinin’ light in the church, he is! Wait till I get my
dishes washed, an’ I’ll step down ter Presidin’ Elder Boutwell’s, an’
let him hear what kind o’ sperritooal goin’s on we have down this way!”

“But why should you and Sutro Vives quarrel, Resolved? What provocation
did he give you?” asked Mr. Calthorp, anxiously.

“Nothin’ in the world! It’s my poor, sinful old brother here, that’s
done all the prov-ockin’! A tellin’ that poor heathen old Catholic
that they wasn’t no use fer him here, no more. An’ no bread ter fill
the mouths o’ our own household, let alone Mexicers. When he knowed
well enough ’t I’d jest done my reg’lar bakin’, an’ no beautifuller
never come out o’ that oven this hull summer, let alone more. An’ then
pilin’ it on top o’ that, how if it hadn’t a be’n fer him--Sutry--’at
Steenie needn’t ’a’ gin up her pony! Don’t wonder old feller was
mad; an’ fust he knowed Resolved got a snap-word back--an’ then!
Well, you know, ma’am, better ’n I kin tell ye, how quer’ls grows.
Bad tempers--sass-hatefulness--candles hid--no light shinin’--an’
then--blows! Yis, ma’am,--blows!”

“Mary Jane! Those two old men!”

“Nobody elset. I don’t wonder ye’re dumberfoun’, I was myself. But
fust whack I heered out I hurried an’ there they was! Reg’lar rough
an’ tumble, right in the hay-mow, afore Teety pony’s own eyes; an’ I
declar’, if that knowin’ critter didn’t actilly ’pear ter be laughin’.
An’ ’shamed I am ter have lived ter this day! But--so much fer the
Methodist doctrine! No, ma’am, nobody needn’t tell me ’at anything
short o’ full ’mersion ’ll ever wash the wickedness out o’ poor humans
like Resolved Tubbs! No, ma’am, ye needn’t.”

As Madam Calthorp had never “told” anything of the sort, she could
afford to smile; and lamentable as the silly affair was, it yet, as a
previous “quer’l” had done, served to divert the thoughts of the family
from more serious troubles.

“Poor Mr. Tubbs! Naughty Mr. Tubbs! You--look--so funny!” cried
Steenie, laughing. “Did my bad, darling old Sutro-boy hurt your
lumbago?” And carried away by a mental picture of the strange conflict,
she danced about the victim of his own valor in a manner which
provoked his smiles, even if it did his anger, also.

“Well--well--hesh up, can’t ye? I know--I know as well as anybody ’t
I’d oughter be ashamed; but--I--but--I--I got that riled I clean fergot
everything. Hm-m. The furrin’ vagabones! A tellin’--ME--’t I’d oughter
go ter work an’ do sunthin’ ter help the fambly! ’S if I wasn’t a
doin’ all a mortal man could, now! An’ a sayin’ ’t he’d show me! He’d
let ever’body know ’at where he gin his heart’s love thar he gin his
mis’able airthly possessions, as well. He’d show! That tantalizin’
like, I felt I’d like ter ’nihilate him. I couldn’t help it. An’ if I
did take my poor mites o’ savin’s--how fur would it go towards keepin’
a hull fambly, an’ heathen furriners an’ circus horses, ter boot,--I’d
like ter know?”

“No matter, Tubbs. I am profoundly sorry that you should have
quarrelled with anybody on our account, least of all with a poor,
dependent old man like the caballero. I agree with Mary Jane, that one
who has enjoyed the privileges which you have, here in the East, should
have been too wise for any such trumpery nonsense; and I trust that
you will duly apologize to Sutro Vives, and make him forget, if it is
possible, your unkind words about his being a burden upon us. Your zeal
on our behalf is appreciated; but please consult me before you give
expression to it in the future. Enough of this. Serve supper, please,
Mary Jane.”

Mr. Tubbs escaped to his own apartment, a very astonished and
self-disgusted old man. If anybody had prophesied to him such an utter
collapse of Christian conduct, he would have scouted the suggestion
with scorn. But here was the stubborn fact: he, Resolved Tubbs, a
“perfessor an’ a beakin light, have gone and buried my candle under the
bushel! Jest fer what?”

Mary Jane could have told him in one word what it took him many hours
of Bible-reading and self-examination to find out. “Jealousy,” Mr.
Tubbs, jealousy, the meanest, most obdurate sin that ever gets into a
human soul, old or young, to twist it out of shape.

“Well--I’m glad of that! ’Cause I’m hungry. I always am, and I didn’t
know, first off, whether I’d ought to stay at Mrs. Courtenay’s; but
they said ‘yes,’ an’ I had a lovely time. Papa, aren’t rooks funny?
They’re English, imported, the Judge says, and they’re dozens an’
bushels an’ more, in those splendid great trees in the park. That’s
what makes ’em call it Rookwood. An’ now, soon’s I’ve finished, I’m
goin’ to find my poor blessed Sutro Vives. He’s been naughty, course,
same’s Mr. Resolved has. Just like they were little boys, isn’t it? But
he mustn’t stay naughty. I couldn’t ’low that, could I, Papa? ’Cause
he’s very, very good ’most always, an’ I hope Mary Jane will give him
a nice supper. Can she, Grandmother? ’Cause it must be terr’ble to
be told not to eat. I think--I think--I could do ’most anything else
better than not eat.”

“I think you could, sweetheart! But hunger at your age is both natural
and desirable. You are growing very fast. I can feel that even if I
cannot see it,” responded Mr. Calthorp, caressing the curly head which
rested for a moment against his shoulder.

“And when I find Sutro, I’ll make him ’pologize to you, Grandmother;
’cause he oughtn’t to fight at your house, anyhow, no matter if he does
sometimes at San’ Felisa. I s’pose he’s over his anger by this time,
don’t you? I can’t bear to see folks angry; it makes me shivery all
inside, and if he isn’t I’d rather wait.”

“I think you are safe, my dear; and go at once. I would not have the
poor old fellow feel himself an intruder, now, if I could help it. I
fear the plain-spoken Tubbs was not very careful of his remarks.”

Steenie departed; and it was quite lamp-lighting time before she
returned, with a very troubled face. “I cannot find my Sutro anywhere.
I’ve looked an’ looked, an’ called--called--called--low an’ loud--but
he isn’t anywhere at all. And his blanket that he keeps in the hay to
take his siesta on is gone, too. What do you s’pose, Papa?”

“That he probably has gone somewhere to walk off his anger and
mortification; and that he will soon be back.”

“It would be awful mis’able if he didn’t come back at all, wouldn’t it?”

“Yes; too miserable to contemplate for a moment. Come, my darling, and
sing to me for a little while; then, most likely, he will return.”

But, at that very moment, a solitary old man, in curious attire, and
with a gay Navajo blanket folded over his shoulder, was making his way
through the gathering twilight toward Rookwood. His head was bowed, and
his face hidden by his wide sombrero, and he moved slowly as one whose
footsteps are hindered by a heavy heart.

A pathetic figure which the growing gloom receives and hides, the
humblest, and the noblest, perhaps, of all those whose hearts have been
touched by the love of the child Steenie, he passes thus out of the
story of her life at Old Knollsboro.



CHAPTER XV.


[Illustration: MR. TUBBS AND STEENIE.]

Mr. Tubbs sat with his spectacles in place, his Bible on his knee;
and Steenie, peering in at the kitchen-door and seeing it otherwise
deserted, would speedily have retreated, had she been allowed. But an
outrageous groan from Resolved arrested her flight, and awoke her ready
sympathy.

“Is it so bad, poor dear? Is it worser ’n usual?”

“Oh! Ah-h-h!” That sigh appeared to have arisen in the sigher’s very
feet, it was so long drawn out and so unutterably doleful. “To think
I’d a lived ter see this day! Man an’ boy, forty odd years, have I been
uset ter settin’ beside this very fire an’ a peroosin’ o’ Scripters by
this very winder; an’ now--My-soul-I-declare,--life ain’t wuth livin’!”

“Oh, pooh! You only feel hypoey, Mary Jane says. Try an’ not think
’bout troubles so much, please. An’ I do think, like she does, ’at it’s
the queerest thing your hypoey comes whenever they’s such a lot to do,
isn’t it? I know you can’t help it, an’ it must make you feel dreadful
bad not to be able to help more; but do try an’ not mind it, there’s a
dear!”

“I’ll try; but I ain’t the man I uset ter was. I’ve got the neuraligy
in my head, an’ the dyspepsy in my stummick, an’ the lumbago in my
back, an’ I ain’t a good deal well. You know it, don’t ye, Steenie?
Ye’re sorry fer the old man, ain’t ye?”

“Why, ye-es. But I’m lots sorrier for all the rest of the folks. My
father says it’s a’most more than Grandmother can bear, this leaving
her old home; but _she_ doesn’t go ‘Oh!’ and ‘Ah-h!’ over it. She just
shuts her lips tight, an’ goes hard to work; an’ I guess that’s what
you’d better do, dear Mr. Tubbs. It seems to help her, an’ maybe it
will you. Why, she’s packed every one o’ her ‘precious books,’ all her
own self, without nobody touching to help her; an’ Mary Jane says it’s
the best thing she could have done.”

“Some folks hain’t no fine feelin’s, Steenie. Mary Jane hain’t,--I
grieve ter say it.”

“What makes you, then?”

“Because--be-cause, I tell ye! Here they ain’t nobody payin’ no
’tention ter me; ner thinkin’ o’ my--’motions, a tearin’ myself up by
the ruts, this ’ere way; an’ jest a goin’ on as if this break-up wasn’t
nothin’.”

“Well. ’Xcuse me, but I don’t see as it is to--you. ’Cause it wasn’t
your house, see? An’ the little new one is cuter than cute! It’s as
cunning as a doll-house. An’ Mary Jane says, ‘Make the best on ’t,
honey, an’ thank the Lord it’s in a decent neighborhood!’ An’ I’m going
to do it. Mary Jane Tubbs is a real Christian, my father says.”

“Yer ‘father says’--‘father says’--tacked onter the end o’ every verse!
Yer father don’t know ever’thing!”

“He does, too, Resolved Tubbs!--Mister, I mean. Everybody says ’at
he’s the best man in the world! He can’t see a single thing, yet he’s
going to work an’ try an’ write down, all in the dark, all ’at he knows
’bout managing a great rancho; an’ Judge Courtenay says ’at he’ll get
it copied out ‘fair an’ square,’ an’ then printed; an’ the world’ll
have to see that it takes ‘more ’n blindness to kill a brave man,’--so
there! And he doesn’t groan, either. Since he’s thought ’bout this
book business he’s just as jolly as he used to be, an’ never lets
Grandmother nor me nor anybody see if he feels bad--not once! S’posin’
he got the hypo, too! Wouldn’t Grandmother an’ Mary Jane an’ me have a
terr’ble time, then?”

“Hm-m. I don’t see where Mary Jane’s sech a great Christian!
My-soul-I-declare! I hain’t seen her tetch her Bible once sence we
begun ter tear up.”

“That’s it! That’s just it! My father says ’at she has its teachings
so deep down inside her ’at she can’t forget them, an’ doesn’t
need to read ’em so much. He says her keeping the meals regular
an’ well-cooked, an’ the house sun-shiny an’ clean, an’ herself
good-tempered through all her hard work, has taught him a beautiful
lesson. Think of it! Just Mary Jane teaching my papa! Anyhow, I love
her, an’ I came to bid her good-by. ’Cause I’m off to Rookwood an’
lessons an’ fun, now! Where is she? Do you know?”

“No, ner keer; an’ you’re a ungrateful little girl. Thar I sot, all
yisterday arternoon, a crackin’ butternuts an’ pickin’ the meats fer
ye--an’ ye never! Well, well; it’s a hard kind o’ world.”

“_Puss-ley!_ Do shet up, an’ git up an’ take a holt o’ some kind o’
job, brother Resolved! You’re enough ter make a critter backslide, a
lookin’ at yer limpsey-lumpsey laziness!”

“Thar! Thar Steenie Calthorp! Ye hear her? That’s yer fine Ch--”

“Please don’t quarrel, dear folks! Don’t! An’ it isn’t so bad, is it?
We’ll all be so cosey an’ cunning in the little new house. Good-by,
Mary Jane. Dear, dear Mary Jane! I love you! You’re so lively an’ kind,
an’ fly-about-y! You make everybody feel so good, dear Mary Jane!
Good-by.”

At the door the child paused; her conscience upbraided her for
manifesting the partiality she could not help feeling, and with a
sudden dash across the room, she caught Mr. Tubbs’s neck in her arms
and gave him a hearty kiss. Then she darted out again, and in a moment
was speeding down the street toward Rookwood, where she still went
every day, but now quite by herself. Tito had for some weeks been
domiciled in Judge Courtenay’s roomy stables, and his little mistress
saw him daily. Almost daily, also, she had a long ride on his back,
so that she scarcely missed him from the High-Street home; and thus
one trouble which had seemed unendurable in prospect became quite the
contrary in reality.

“Because, you see, Mary Jane, they isn’t any nice cunning little barn
to keep him in at the new cottage, so I’m glad after all.”

“Yis, dearie; an’ so you’ll find out, long’s you live. Trouble is a
great hand ter stan’ a ways off an’ make up faces at ye: an’ ye feel’s
if ye couldn’t endure it, no way. But jest you pluck up spunk ever’
time, an’ march straight up ter the old thing, and there,--lo! an’
behold!--she’s a grinnin’ an’ a smilin’ as if she’s the best friend
you’ve got. An’ most the times she is. Folks ’at don’t have no real
trouble ter git along with, don’t gen’ally amount ter shucks. Life
ain’t all catnip; an’ it hain’t meant ter be. An’ ye better, by far,
bear the yoke in yer youth ’an in yer old age.”

“Like Mr. Resolved? He’s bearing it now, isn’t he, in his old age? Is
that what you mean?”

“Not by a jug-full! He ain’t a bearin’--nothin’; he’s squat right down
under it, an’ a lettin’ it squash all the marrer o’ religion out o’ his
poor old bones. Foolish brother Resolved! I’ve be’n a bolsterin’ an’
a highsterin’ him up all my life, an’ I ’spect I’ll have ter continner
on ter the end. No matter; I didn’t have the choosin’ o’ my own trials
er I wouldn’t a chose that kind o’ relations. An’ the good Lord is a
lookin’ out fer poor Mary Jane; so why should she bother ter look out
fer herself?”

Even the sorrow of losing Sutro had taken on a softer aspect when,
after his first night’s absence, Steenie learned from Judge Courtenay
that the old caballero had been at Rookwood just at nightfall, had
remained long enough to “transact some business” with himself, and then
had started on a late train across the continent to Santa Felisa. The
Judge had also given her Sutro’s last loving message:--

“Tell, _mi niña_, that her love has made old Sutro Vives a better man.
That he could not stay to be a burden to anybody; that he’ll be well
and happy in the spot where he was born; and that he goes to make his
last home on his own property of Santa Trinidad. _Caramba!_ He will
rest well, with old Californian soil for his bed, and Californian
sunshine for his blanket. Thou wilt say to her these words, Señor Juez?”

When the gentleman answered warmly: “I will do everything I can for
your ‘Little Lady of the Horse,’ Señor Vives; I will carry out your
instructions to the letter,” Sutro murmured: “Ten thousand thanks, most
generous. _Gracias a Dios!_ I shall see San’ Felis once more!” and
departed.

But all this was sometime past; and as Steenie went now to Rookwood,
the brilliant autumn leaves were beginning to fade on the paths, and
the Michaelmas daisies bloomed thickly by the roadside. She passed
along, a gay, cheerful, loving little maiden, feeling that the world
held but one trouble for her now, and that one so far beyond her power
to remove, that she was trying to “march straight up to it,” and see if
it would smile at her, as Mary Jane had said.

The trouble has probably been foreseen; and Judge Courtenay put it into
words for her as she danced up to the porch where he was pacing, and
swept him a grave, graceful Spanish “courtesy,” that she had learned
“at home” from dark-eyed Suzan´.

“Good-morning, good-morning, Miss Sunbeam! You look as bright as if we
elder people were not worrying our heads off this minute! So when does
the ‘flitting’ occur? The removal from High Street to that miserable
cottage?”

“To-morrow, sir, thank you! An’, please ’xcuse me, but it isn’t
mis’able. It’s as pretty as it can be, I think.”

“And ‘I think’ settles it, eh? Well, well; you ought to thank Heaven
for your temperament! Now if I only had it, I shouldn’t be feeling this
minute angry enough to ‘bite a ten-penny nail in two.’”

Down sat the funny gentleman in the big Plymouth rocker, and opened
his arms to “his other little girl,” who nestled in them quite as
confidently and almost as lovingly as Beatrice would have done. “Why,
sir, whatever can be the matter to make _you_--look cross?”

“I look it, too, do I?--as well as feel it. Hm-m. Thank you. Children,
et cetera,--truth, you know. First reason, please: I’m deserted. My
wife and daughter are busy with all these guests, and I’ve had to
retreat to the schoolroom for a bit of quiet.”

“Never mind. They have to be p’lite, I s’pose. My grandmother
says ’at folks who live in high stations, like you do, owes great
’sponsibilities to s’ciety an’ its demandings.”

“Your grandmother is an oracle! She’s making you one. But draw up that
other chair and hear me grumble; it does me good to express myself to
somebody. My wife says that I cannot keep anything, save clients’
business, to myself. Hm-m. What do you think of that?”

“I s’pose she knows, prob’ly. But am I to have no lessons?”

“No. Not unless you are suffering to rattle off: ‘I have been, thou
hast been or you have been, he has been,’--and all the rest of it.
Seems to me I heard you say, yesterday, that you thought grammar was
not very ‘exciting,’ eh?”

“Oh! no, sir, it isn’t! And if I could have a holiday, maybe Diablo
could have another waltzing lesson, couldn’t he? He’s such a graceful,
teachable horse, I love him!”

“So do I, thanks to your wise interpretation of his character. But
Diablo isn’t in today’s programme. And I’m greatly disturbed, absurdly
disturbed, for such a foolish cause. However, I cannot help it, cannot
throw it off.”

“Can I help it? I wish I could! What is the thing ’at disturbs you?”

“The afternoon’s race.”

“Why--what? I thought everything was all fixed. I hope it isn’t given
up, is it?”

“Not yet. Nor do I like to postpone it; but--There comes John with a
telegram. I hope a favorable one.”

The race referred to was a proposed contest for supremacy to be held at
the “private track” of Rookwood, between the Courtenay horses and those
of neighboring county magnates. As has been said before, that part of
the state was famous for its fine stock; and these millionnaire owners
of world-renowned animals spared no expense in the indulgence of their
equine “hobby,” or the furtherance of their ambition to lead in the
matter of speed and purity of breed.

Steenie had been deeply interested in the preparations, and her heart
beat in sympathy with a distress she had now learned was connected with
the day’s event.

“Pshaw! It’s too bad! Too contemptibly pitiful and mean! I can’t get
the other jockey, either!” exclaimed the Judge, thrusting the yellow
missive behind him, and striding up and down the school-room porch.

Steenie waited but a moment, then she stole to his side, slipped her
warm little hand into his great palm, and made an absurd attempt with
her own shorter limbs to equal the pace of her perplexed friend.

“Hm-m. You good little thing! But even your encouragement can’t help me
now.”

“Would you just as lief tell me what it is? Maybe I could help, maybe.
I’m awful anxious to, ’cause, ’cause--you’re so good to me an’ every
single body. Maybe I can.”

“I wish you could! If you were a boy! Hm-m. No use. Yet it is so trying
to be balked by a little thing like that!”

“Like what, sir?”

“Oh, you persistent little monkey! There--you know I mean that for
a compliment! Come then, sit you down and hear an old simpleton’s
trouble, then laugh at him as you laugh at all annoyance.”

“But not folks. Dear Judge Courtenay, I don’t mean to laugh at folks.”

“You don’t! Listen. You know Lady Trix?”

“Course.”

“You know she’s fast, don’t you?”

“Faster ’n lightning!”

“Pretty near, I declare. Well, you know, also, that boy Tretter who was
going to ride her against Doctor Gerould’s Mordaunt?”

“Yes. Well?”

“Anything but well! That imp has gone and tumbled off a wood-shed roof,
playing circus, and broke his leg.”

“Oh, my! Poor Tretter!”

“Poor Tretter? Poor Courtenay! Lady Trix was never ridden by anybody
else, at any such time as this. He was just right weight, and had a
good head,--or I thought that he had till this performance.”

“But I s’pose he couldn’t help it.”

“Couldn’t help it? What did he get up there for, any way? I’d have
given him a thousand dollars to stay off that roof,--or at least to
postpone the leg-break for another twenty-four hours.”

Steenie gazed at her old friend’s face in astonishment; then her own
countenance flushed. “Oh, I said maybe I could help you, and I can--I
can!”

“What? Do you know any jockey round here, worth a cent? One that Trix
will bear?” asked the other, eagerly.

“No, sir. I ain’t ’quainted with any jockeys in Old Knollsboro; but
_I_--can ride her.”

There was utter silence for an instant, and the horse-fancier’s face
brightened. “You?” Then it sobered again. “Thank you, dearie, but that
wouldn’t answer.”

“Why wouldn’t it? I’m sure I could! And I want you to win; I do, I do!
I’d be so glad! Do let me try?”

“Steenie Calthorp, don’t tempt me; in a case like this my will is
water!”

“But why not? Don’t you know that I could? Haven’t you seen me ride
Diablo bareback,--standing--sitting--every way? And once, before I knew
how ’ticular you were ’bout her, I came dreadful near riding Trixie
myself,--I did, indeed, only Beatrice told me better. But I could.
Mayn’t I?”

“I want to win!”

“I will.”

“How do you know?”

“Try me; please try me! You’ve done things an’ things an’ things--for
me; an’ now--please let me do this wee, wee little thing for you.”

“Wee? It’s a tremendous undertaking.”

“Pouf!” Steenie shrugged her shoulders in one of her little Spanish
fashions, and made a motion of blowing thistle-down from her
fingertips. “Wait till I tell you. Do sit down a minute, please. I can
ride anything. I can ride standing, an’ jumping through rings, an’ over
hurdles, an’ any way a horse can go I can ride. If you’ll let me show
you now,--once this morning,--before everybody much is on the track,
I’ll make you see. Then you’ll say yes, won’t you?”

“Steenie--I’m--I’m wax. But your grandmother--Do with me as you will!”
cried the Judge, comically, but looking very much relieved. “And there
certainly is no harm in your riding Trixie once, now--as you say.”

Within the next half-hour Steenie demonstrated fully her ability to
ride Lady Trix, “anyhow, any shape,” and to that sensitive animal’s
perfect satisfaction, which, in such a case, was far more important
than the satisfaction of her master.

“But, my little girl, what shall we say to the people at home? What
will they think of me as a guardian for their jealously-loved child?”

Steenie sat thoughtful for a moment; then her face cleared. “They’ll
say I ought to do it if I can,--that is, if he was here to know
’bout it my father would say so. He tells me all the time to show my
’preciation of your kindness; an’ how am I going to if you don’t let me
have any chance? The only one way I can do things for you is through
your horses, ’cause I know ’bout ’em. Isn’t it? I’m puffectly sure my
father would say yes.”

The Judge was reasonably certain of that also; but he was not so
positive concerning Madam’s opinion. However, his inclination urged him
so strongly that he at last replied: “Then, my brave, helpful little
girl, hear me. If I let you ride you must take the thousand dollars I
offered. Wait--listen--understand. It is the want of just that paltry
sum which necessitates your grandmother’s leaving her old home; she was
‘short’ just that amount in her indebtedness, or ‘liability,’ after the
farm was sold. To raise this money she is to sell her home. She would
not accept the loan of it, because she saw no way of ever repaying it;
and if your dear father’s writing ever comes to anything, it will be in
the future,--some distance.”

“If you ride and win the race you must consider that you earn the
money fairly; and must take it. Else--no--decidedly--to the whole
proposition.”

Again Steenie considered seriously. Her hesitation was not for herself,
of course, but for that proud old lady whom she so loved and, also,
feared. “If I earned it that way it couldn’t be wrong, could it? To
keep a dear grandmother in ‘the home of her youth.’ My father says what
we do things for, makes the things hono’ble, or dishono’ble. That was
’bout the riding-school. He would have let me, only he didn’t like--You
know. ’Count o’ Grandmother. This won’t be wrong, will it?”

“From my point of view it seems very right, in every way; unless you
are afraid of the horse, or the publicity.”

“What’s that?”

“The people,--the being stared at. Will it make any difference with
your nerves?”

“No! Oh, no! Grandmother says I haven’t any nerves, she guesses. And
I’m not afraid of folks--no more than horses. Why should I be? They’re
awful nice to me. Everybody is.”

“How can they help being? Is it a compact, then?”

“Yes, yes, yes! Oh, what fun! It makes me think of San’ Felis’ an’
my dear ‘boys,’ an’ most of all of darling Bob. He’d be proud of the
Little Un, wouldn’t he? Oh, if he only knew!” She turned from Trixie’s
stall toward the stable door, and looked up at somebody who stood
there, the attendant groom, she had supposed.

“He does, Little Un! Here he is! All the way from Californy to see you
win!”

“Bob! My Bob!”



CHAPTER XVI.


[Illustration: STEENIE AND LADY TRIX.]

“What? What is this?” Judge Courtenay looked incredulously around; and
there was Steenie clasping her arms about the neck of a tall stranger
who had knelt upon the stable floor, the better to receive her caress,
and whose brown, honest face shone with a delight which matched her
own. “Bob, is it? Why, sir, I know all about you! And right glad I am
to see you.”

“The same, sir. Judge Courtenay, I presume. Just got in from the West.
Hunted up the ‘boss’ first, and he shipped me on here. Knew it wouldn’t
do to keep my eyes from the sight of this here young lady, not no
longer ’n necessary, no.”

“Oh, Bob, why didn’t you send me word so that I could have been
’xpecting you? I’m so glad--glad--glad!”

“Glad I didn’t, hey? But you’ve growed! You’ve growed a power sence I
lifted you aboard cars at San’ Felis’ station. How’s ever’thing?”

“Everything? Well. No--I don’t know. Did Sutro Vives get safely back
home?”

“Yes; Sutry’s all right,” answered the Kentuckian, quietly, and fixing
a significant glance upon Judge Courtenay’s face. “But let me in on
this racket. What is it? A horse-race, eh?”

“Yes; and I’m to drive and ride this beauty. I must win, Bob! I must.
But now I know I shall--with you on hand to ’courage me. Oh, I’m so
glad, so glad!”

“Give me the hull business. What’s about this thousand dollars?”

“Down here,--sit right down here, an’ wait till I tell you.” Down sat
the ranchman, obediently, and Steenie close beside him, while she
poured into his ears a rapid history of what had befallen her since her
departure from her childhood’s home.

Much of this he had already learned from her letters; much more Sutro
had told him; but this last threatened calamity--the family moving on
the morrow from the old house in High Street to the tiny cottage in the
suburbs--and the privations which menaced this child so dear to him,
was news and sad news. Still, he had come East to put his own powerful
shoulder to the burden his beloved Little Un was so bravely trying to
lift with her own childish strength, and there “was no such word as
fail” in Kentucky Bob’s vocabulary.

“Well! Where’s yer rig-out? Ain’t a goin’ to ’pear afore the assembled
multitudes in just that flimsy frock, are you,--or is it a new style?”

“No! Course not. Did I ever? But I’ve the cutest little habit ’at ever
was! Grandmother had it made for me; ’cause Mary Jane said, ‘If I was
bound ter break my neck, I’d better break it lookin’ ’spectable.’ Oh,
that Mary Jane! She’s the dearest, best, funniest little old body;
moves all of a jerk, an’ so quick she makes Mr. Resolved dizzy to watch
her,--so he says. He’s way down, down at the bottom of everything, all
the whole time; but he has the lumbago, an’ it’s that I s’pose. Though
she’s his sister an’ she doesn’t get hypoey, never. An’--oh, my habit?
Why, you see, dear Bob, when we had to sell Tito--”

“Wh-at? Say that again. ’Pears like I don’t understand very sharp.”

“Didn’t I tell you ’bout that? But it was so. We couldn’t ’ford to keep
him, my grandmother says; an’ Judge Courtenay bought him; an’ Papa put
the money in the savings bank toward my education, ’cause he said it
was a’most like takin’ money for folks, an’ it shouldn’t be used ’cept
for the best purpose. And dear Mrs. Courtenay made me bring my habit
an’ keep it here; so’s when I’ve done my lessons extra well I can have
a ride on Tito for a ‘reward.’ Anyhow, I see him every day; an’ I’ve
’xplained it to him best I could; but he doesn’t understand it very
well, I think. Any way he doesn’t behave real nice. When I go away he
whinnies an’ cries an’ acts--he acts quite naughty, sometimes. But he
oughtn’t; for everybody is as good as good to him. Come and see him
this minute.”

Away went the reunited friends, and Tito’s intelligent eyes lighted
with almost human joy when his kind old instructor laid a caressing
hand upon his head, and cried out gayly: “Howdy, old boy! Shake, my
hearty, shake!”

Up went Tito’s graceful fore-leg, and “shake” it was, literally
and emphatically. When this ceremony was over and the magnificent
stables of Rookwood had been duly examined and admired, Steenie was
commissioned to bring her friend into dinner, which was early that
day on account of the afternoon’s arrangements. During its progress,
Bob managed to give considerable information concerning Santa Felisa
happenings, as well as dispose of a hearty meal. He had “begged off”
from going to table with “these high-toned Easteners; ’cause you
know, Little Un, ’t I never et to no comp’ny table nowheres,--not
even to your’n an’ your pa’s. I’m a free-born American, an’ all that
rubbish--but I know what’s what: the more for that reason. In--my place
I’m as good as the next feller an’-a-little-better-too-sir; but outen
it--I’m outen it. Them ’at rides the plains an’ looks arter stawk, as
I’ve done the last hunderd years, more or less, hain’t learned to dip
their fingers into no fingerbowls nor wipe their mustache on no fringed
napkins.”

But Judge Courtenay overruled the stranger’s objections, and once
having accepted the situation, Bob made the best of it. He was
awkward, of course, and ignorant concerning table etiquette; but he
let his awkwardness apologize for itself by his simple good nature
in the matter; and if his talk was not polished, it was full of wit,
originality, and a verve that carried his listeners captive.

“Well!” said Mrs. Courtenay, when at last they could no longer delay
their rising from the board, “I do not know when I have enjoyed
anything so much as your descriptions of ranch-life. It is almost as
good as seeing it for myself; and it gives me a real longing for its
breeziness and freedom from social cares and restrictions.”

“It’s the only life worth livin’, ma’am, in my opinion. Which same I
don’t go for to set up ag’in that of any other man or woman, only for
myself. I--I couldn’t exist anywheres elst, for any great length o’
time. I don’t want nothin’ less ’an a ten-mile field to swing my long
arms round in. There ain’t--But, what’s the use? If I talked all day I
couldn’t tell nobody what them big open spaces o’ airth an’ sky is to
me; an’ if they’s a good Lord anywheres about, He’s out there in them
blossomin’ plains an’ snow-capped mountains an’ etarnal sunshine.”

“My old Marm uset ter sing ’bout the ‘Beautiful Heaven above,’
an’ ’pear to enjoy thinkin’ on ’t; an’ once I ast her what she
’lowed it was like. She said if ’t was like anything she knowed,
she’d ruther it’d be like Salem village,--out hum in the State o’
Massachusetts,--an’ ary other place she’d ever seen. But I don’t want
no villages in mine; an’ if ever I git thar I don’t ask no purtier
place ’an Californy to go ridin’ round in, forever an’ ever. Amen.”

“Ah! Well, to most of us, probably, Heaven is typical of what we like
best,” said the Judge, gravely, and led the way library-ward. Where,
for a while, he held a most absorbing conversation with this stranger
from the West; and when it was ended his genial countenance was even
more serious than before.

Then came the shouts of the children, eager to be off to the “course;”
and thither, presently, everybody repaired.

“Well, Little Un, you look prime! Bless my eyes! ’Pears ye’ve growed
more ’n five months’ wuth, in these five months o’ time, long as they
has be’n to old Bob, without ye. An’, huckleberries! They is quite a
crowd around, ain’t they! Well, you don’t mind that none, do ye?”

“Why, of course not; an’, Bob, let me tell you, you stand in some
certain place,--you pick out where,--an’ every time I go round I’ll
look at you, see? Then you can make all the old signs you used to
make, an’ it’ll be a’most as good as Santa Felisa. But, think of it!
A thousand dollars! I want to win just as much. I truly do. Don’t I?
If only for Judge Courtenay’s sake, ’cause he’s so dear an’ kind, an’
he’s Beatrice’s papa,--an’ I love her so very, very much. But most of
all, now--an’ it grows more an’ more so--I wish to get that money so my
darling old grandmother won’t have to leave her own home an’ her pretty
library, nor anything. Oh, do you think I’ll do it?”

“Sartain. Sartain as I live. But you an’ I’ve got a job to tackle
arterwards. Look at these horses round here! Did ye ever see sech a lot
o’ poor, tortured, mis’able critters? Look at that check-strap yonder!
The man ’at owns the poor thing ’pears quite peart an’ quality-like,
but he’s a fool all the same. Wish I could hitch a string to his front
lock o’ hair an’ yank his idiotic old head over back’ards, same way!
Bet he wouldn’t go trot, trot, round that peaceable. No, siree, he’d
yell like a painter, an’ smash things if he couldn’t get loose. An’
that other nincompoop further down that way, see that breechin’ he’s
put on his horse? He’d oughter be shot, ’cause big’s the world is thar
ain’t room enough in it for sech idiots as him! If I was that horse I’d
set right down on that strap an’ go to sleep, I would.”

“Oh, you dear old scolder! You’ll see lots o’ cruelty to horses here in
Old Knollsboro; but the folks don’t understand ’em as well as you an’ I
do. That’s the reason. My father says it isn’t ’tentional unkindness,
it’s only ignorance. Ah! There they are calling me. Come!”

The news had spread that Judge Courtenay had found a jockey to ride
his Trix, and one who was to drive her in the trainer’s place; so the
spirit of his wealthy opponent sank a little. However, an untried,
unpractised assistant, as this new hand must be, was quite as liable
to lose as win the contest for his employer, even though the animal he
rode was unequalled for speed. This second thought sent a thrill of
satisfaction to the heart of Doctor Gerould, the master of Rookwood’s
rival, and he now felt confident of his own success. Like his friend,
the Judge, he was warmly enthusiastic over his “hobby,” and would, in
the height of his excitement, have gone to any honest length to carry
off that day’s laurels.

But when, after some preliminary contests between inferior beasts, the
real one began, and the four thoroughbreds who were to compete for the
famous “Rookwood cup” were drawn into line at the starting place, he
saw the girlish little figure which was lifted into the sulky behind
Trixie, his courage ebbed again.

“That child! Why how in the world did he obtain her family’s consent!”
exclaimed a neighbor.

“No matter how; there she is.”

“But, have confidence, sir. She’s only a girl. She cannot have the
wisdom and skill--”

“Cannot she? Maybe you haven’t heard about her; though, wasn’t it
yourself expatiating upon her wonderful riding over our country-roads
on her piebald mount? Why, man alive, the child’s a witch! So they
claim; and--Jupiter! If they haven’t imported a regular ‘Wild
Westerner’ besides! Well, I might as well give it up. Mordaunt’s
beaten.”

Kentucky Bob was moving about Trixie as she stood waiting, examining
every strap and buckle of the light harness she wore, testing its
strength and that of the skeleton-like vehicle in which he had placed
his beloved “Little Lady of the Horse.” His gaunt face was grave and
anxious. He did not like this experimenting with untried animals, and
at such a stake. Still, he knew the mettle of the driver if not the
steed, and his superstitious faith in Steenie’s ability to succeed
everywhere and in everything made his words cheerful, if not his heart
wholly so.

“I come jest in time, didn’t I, Little Un? An’ don’t you get excited
an’ ferget. You take the outside. Thar ain’t no legs in this show
’cept Trixie’s an’ that Mordaunt’s thar. Them two other critters’ll
drop out in no time; then you jest keep a steady head--an’ hand--_an’
the outside_! Don’t you ferget it. I ain’t a goin’ to have ye crowded
up ag’in no railin’ an’ so caught an’ beat--mebbe hurt. Keep to the
outside, though they be so p’lite as ter offer ye the inside show.
Steady, is the word. Go it slow--warm her up--put on steam--get in
ahead. Thar ye go! Californy to win!”

But not so easily. It was a contest hardly, barely won. Yet it was
won--and honestly; and, the driving over, Steenie was swung to the
ground once more by her attentive Bob, who was far more pleased and
proud than she.

“Ye did it, Little Un! Ye did it! Though, o’ course, I didn’t expect
nothin’ else o’ my ‘Mascot’!”

But the child’s face was downcast. The cheers and plaudits which
followed her as she went into the waiting-room were almost unheard and
quite unnoticed, and she bounded toward Judge Courtenay with actual
tears of vexation in her blue eyes. “Oh, I’m so sorry! You’ll never
have any faith in me again, will you?”

“Why, my dear little girl! You’ve won! Didn’t you know that you had
won?” cried the master of Rookwood, in high delight.

“Call it ‘won,’ sir? That little bit o’ ways? Trixie should have been
in a dozen lengths ahead, ’stead of just a teeny, tiny bit! I’m so
sorry, so sorry!”

That was the only way in which she could be induced to regard her
victory; but when, later on, the riding was announced, her vivacity and
hopefulness returned. “Now--I’m all right! I can ride--anything! Same’s
I can breathe, just as easy. An’ see here, my Lady Trix, you have got
to ’xert yourself this time, you dear, beautiful, lazy thing! You hear?
If you don’t, I’ll never speak to you again as long as I live! So
there, my dainty one!”

Whether Trixie understood, who can tell? Certainly the dire calamity
her small friend threatened was not destined to befall the proud queen
of Judge Courtenay’s stables. Maybe because riding was, as Steenie
said, more natural to her than driving, it was evident from the word
“Go!” that she was the winner by long odds.

Almost it seemed, toward the last, that there was practically no
contest at all; but the truth was that such wonderful equestrianship as
Steenie Calthorp accomplished that day had never been seen on that or
any other course thereabouts.

“I’m bound to beat!--and beat so far that I’ll feel all nice and clean
about it in my heart, too!” she declared at starting; then she kissed
her hand to Beatrice, watching wide-eyed from a seat of honor, and
rode gayly away to victory. With her little face smiling and rosy,
yet tremendously in earnest, the far-away look in the bonny eyes,
the aureole of sun-kissed ringlets streaming on the air, she seemed
to communicate to her mount her very thoughts and feelings,--“For
Grandmother and Home!”

[Illustration: She kissed her hand to Beatrice--Page 261.]

It was love, then, that won!--love and unselfishness, which even in
the person of a little child were irresistible, as they are always
irresistible. And so well she did her part, so noble was her aim, that,
now he had learned it, even Doctor Gerould lost every opposing wish.

“Well! well! If that’s the case, I’d rather she’d beat than not--of
course!--even if it damages Mordaunt’s record. And I’ll double the
price if they’ll let me.”

“But, of course, also, that can’t be, my friend,” explained the Judge.
“It’s just as probable as not that the Calthorp pride will up and
make a rumpus about the whole matter, even now. I shall feel more
comfortable after I know how the check is received. But if anything was
ever honestly earned that was!--and never did I draw one so willingly.
There they go! Good luck go with them!”

There they went, indeed! Riding in state through the streets of Old
Knollsboro, in the Courtenay carriage, with the Courtenay livery on the
box, and crowds of admiring people, returning village-ward, watching
their progress. Straight from love’s triumph to the square white house
in High Street, and to the brilliant smile of the polished old “lion”
on its door, a smile of welcome Steenie had long since learned to
regard it.

Grandmother Calthorp, sitting sadly at the window of her beloved and
now denuded library, saw this royal approach, and wondered. Then her
heart chilled with fear lest harm had befallen the child who had grown
into its very depths, and had now become the centre of life to it,
dearer than any other living creature, dearer even than the precious
packed-away books which had for so long outranked humanity in the
Madam’s estimation.

But Steenie was not hurt! A second glance showed that; for through the
hastily-donned eye-glasses the waiting woman saw that the child had
risen in her place, and stood waving joyously above her head a tiny
strip of paper, while the sparkling little face proclaimed in advance:
“Good news!”

Then the carriage stopped; and, although the bearer of the paper longed
to jump out, she restrained herself till the footman had opened the
cumbrous door which stayed her impatient feet. Then, out upon the
ground and up the path she sped, scarcely touching the ground in her
eagerness.

A noisy entrance, truly, but who could help that, or who reprove?

“Grandmother! See here! See here! You needn’t move!
Never--never--never! A thousand dollars! A whole one thousand splendid
dollars! I earned it! I won the race! For you--for you!”

Then the white paper fluttered into the trembling old hands; and
Steenie’s dancing feet bore her swiftly from the room to find and share
with the proud father her happy news.



CHAPTER XVII.

CONCLUSION.


[Illustration: RESOLVED AND MARY JANE.]

“Land o’ Goshen! Madam’s a cryin’!” Mary Jane had rubbed her eyes
repeatedly, believing they deceived her; but she was now forced to
admit the truth of their report.

“’Tain’t no sech a thing!” retorted Resolved, testily. Yet he advanced
to peep over his sister’s shoulder at this startling phenomenon;
then he pushed his spectacles up out of place, the better to “see
with his own eyes” this unprecedented proceeding, and ejaculated:
“My-soul-I-declare!”

This was what he beheld.

Daniel Calthorp sitting near the window, leaning his brow upon
his hand, not indeed to veil his sightless eyes from any untoward
spectacle, but to hide the workings of his own face.

Kentucky Bob standing in the doorway, uneasily shifting his great
length from foot to foot, and ready for flight the instant things
became “a trifle too tropercal fer a Westerner.”

While Steenie was kneeling before the Madam’s chair, her warm little
hands resting upon the worn white hands in the lady’s lap, and her
eager, loving glances trying to interpret the conflicting emotions
which pictured themselves upon the noble face above her.

The worst sign of all, in Mary Jane’s opinion, was that her proud
mistress evidently didn’t even care how many witnessed this unusual
display of weakness. “She ain’t a tryin’ ter hide nothin’! Not a tear!
Poor soul, poor soul! She’s a down deep in the waters o’ triberlation
when she lets go o’ her hefty sperrit, an’ don’t mind us a seein’ what
we do now. That ever I should a lived ter look at Madam Calthorp a
weepin’ tears! Oh, my soul, oh! I did think ’at we’d manage ter go out
the old house, as Steenie says, ‘colors flyin’’ an’ hearts braced up,
even if bust. But when she--_she_--gins out, let us _all_ gin out. Oh,
me--me!”

“Shat up carn’t ye? Hark! What’s the youngun a sayin’?”

Curiosity comforted the faithful old serving-woman’s immediate grief;
she paused in the very middle of a sigh to listen.

“Don’t look so, dear grandmother, darling grandmother! Did I do so
very, very wrong? Do b’lieve me, I didn’t mean to. An’--my! Wait,
Grandmother! If you don’t want it, please don’t cry on poor Judge
Courtenay’s check, ’cause Papa says--Oh, Grandmother! Will you? Will
you?”

The pantomime was more intelligible than the words. For the first time
the stately head was bent slightly,--even under the relaxation of these
unprecedented circumstances it had been held upright,--and a sudden
smile broke over the tear-wet face, making it beautiful as proud.

Proud it had always been, but not as now, proud with an unutterable
tenderness, proud--even that paradox--in a new, sweet, and reverent
humility, as the thin hands gently dropped upon the child’s curly
head, and the tremulous lips found voice: “Steenie, Steenie! My brave,
precious one! Hush! There is no reproach for you; there is nothing but
love and obligation. You have humbled me as I have never been humbled
in my life; and you have made me proud as I have never been proud. You
have conquered your grandmother, now come to her.”

Steenie leaped, joyfully, into the arms opened to receive her, but the
words which had fallen from the Madam’s lips mystified her, and she was
still clinging about the speaker’s shoulders, looking doubtfully upon
the narrow white check, which had fallen to the carpetless floor, when
Bob’s resonant voice cut into a scene which was becoming “too all-fired
watery round the eyes for him,” and cleared the mystery.

“Which means, my Little Un, begging your pardon, Ma’am, an’ everybody’s
pardon, that our ‘Little Lady of the Horse’ hain’t won her ticket for
nothin’. Which bein’ the case--I say, old feller? You Unresolved old
Puritan, you, I think I know a cure for your lumbago. Want to hear it?”

“Yes, yes,” answered Mr. Tubbs, eagerly.

“Here ’tis. Price nothin’. Turn to an’ fetch a hammer an’ nails, an’
unroll that strip o’ carpet thar. I don’t relish the sound o’ my own
boots on hard oak floors like this un, an’ the sooner we get the carpet
back into place, the sooner I shall feel to hum. Lively, now. We’ll get
it down afore pitch-dark, even in this region o’ short days.”

To picture Mr. Tubbs’s disgust is impossible. Then, even to his selfish
heart, crept a warm, tender, human feeling, and he cast a sidelong
glance at the mistress he had served so long, if not so well.

Observing which, Bob, that clear-sighted translator of people’s
emotions, gave friendly encouragement. “That’s the fust step.
Second--look! See here? Look at this vial? Know what it is? Ever see
anything so fine?”

“Eh? No. What is it?” demanded Resolved, who had a keen eye and ear for
anything in the shape of “medicine.”

“Rattlesnake ile,--that’s what she is. Double distilled, an’
forty-thousandth purity. Volatile as gas. Can’t fix it in no ordinary
bottles, with no ordinary stoppers. Worth its weight in gold; worth
more if it couldn’t be replaced. Sample I brought from my Little Un’s
property,--from the rancho er the mountain o’ Santa Trinidad. Hm!
Didn’t mean to say that--yet. But no matter. Step lively now. An’ if ye
do, I’ll rub some o’ this precious stuff on your worthless old back,
an’ if I don’t bounce the lumbago, my name ain’t Bob, an’ I hain’t
never rid on no Santa Felisa round-up.”

There was tonic, elixir, in the very tone; not only for the
stiff-jointed Mr. Tubbs, but for every individual there present.

Mary Jane, proper Baptist that she was, almost executed a fancy dance;
but recollecting herself in time, went hurrying away to her kitchen,
her cracked, quavering, but joyful voice proclaiming in song,--

    “I’ve reached a land of corn and wine,
    And all its riches freely mine.
    Here shines undimmed one blissful day,
    For all my night has passed away.”

Mr. Calthorp crossed over and gave his mother a grateful kiss, then
walked out whistling.

Steenie slipped down and watched her grandmother fold the beneficent
scrap of white paper safely away in her pocket-book, then danced a
_pas-de-seul_ without any of Mary Jane’s scruples of conscience.

And even Madam Calthorp began humming softly some melody of her youth,
and moved the chairs out of the room, to further the cheerful labor
of Kentucky Bob, who had the carpet unrolled and into place, “in the
jerk of a lamb’s tail,” and who whistled gayly, till he remembered that
he was the guest of a high-bred lady, when he restrained himself, and
worked away all the faster, maybe.

“My, isn’t it just too delightful to be happy!” cried small Steenie,
in the fulness of her rapture; and the instant laugh which greeted her
quaint exclamation was answer sufficient.

“It’s taken ferever ter git these things tore up an’ out o’ place; but
I guess they’ll ’bout fly back inter it ag’in, o’ their own accord,”
said Mary Jane, unwrapping the parlor “table-spread” and recklessly
throwing away the string. While Resolved puffed and stretched at that
carpet, determined to keep ahead of Bob’s resolute, speedy “tack,”
“tack,” without one grunt or groan.

Wasn’t it fun to put that old house “to rights” once more? Wasn’t it?
Such fun that, as Mary Jane prophesied, the furniture almost seemed to
march itself back into position; while Steenie was allowed, not only
to handle, but to unpack and restore to their own shelves the precious
books which seemed “folks a’most” to their loving owner.

But to all sunshine there is shadow. To the brightest day succeeds a
twilight; and a spiritual twilight fell upon these happy people, when,
after all was done that could be done, they gathered about the blazing
fire on the great hearth-stone in the dining-room, and heard the story
which Kentucky Bob had come so far to tell.

“’Pears as if I didn’t know how to begin it. But I must; though I ain’t
no oraytor, I ain’t. Come a here, Little Un. The ‘boss’ won’t mind a
sparin’ of ye to me I ’low, an’ mebbe I kin talk straighter a feelin’
yer little hand in mine. Good little hand, strong little hand, lovin’
little hand, that takes right a holt o’ everybody’s heart an’ pulls it
out o’ wickedness an’ inter the straight. Pulled old Sutry Vives out o’
malice an’ murder, ter live a Christian an’ die a martyr.”

“What? _What?_” cried Steenie, aghast.

“Hush, Little Un, don’t! It’s ’bout all old Bob kin do,
anyhow--an’--Don’t make a break in the perceedin’s ag’in, if ye kin
help it, don’t! ’Cause I ain’t much uset ter preachin’, an’ this
here--is _’bout_ a--_funeral sermon_!”

He needed not to hush any one again, not even when the “sermon” was
ended.

“Sutry, he come hum. When he come I happened ter meet him, an’ when
he stepped out o’ the car at San’ Felis’ I didn’t scurcely know him.
Some o’ his folks lived above a hunderd; but couldn’t none on ’em ever
looked so old as Sutry did that day. An’ when I spoke to him an’ told
him ‘Howdy!’ he jest stared up inter my face--No matter! He’s square;
squarest man I ever knowed.

“He told me ’t he’d made his will. He’d gin ever’thing he got ter the
Little Un. ‘Everything you’ve got?’ says I, laughin’, harsh like.

“‘Yes, La Trinidad.’

“Then I laughed more, but--not long. That night he ast me ter take a
couple o’ the boys, an’ go up inter that snake-infested peak with him.
We didn’t wanter. Snakes hadn’t be’n troublesome none, ’long back; but,
somehow, thar warn’t no refusin’, he looked that queer an’ un-Sutry
like. So next mornin’ we went; an’ goin’ up he told me all the bad
news ’bout you all, an’ his way o’ changin’ it inter good. He’d foond
out, he thought, ’at Steenie here couldn’t ’herit till he was dead. He
could gin her anything he’d a mind to; but he knowed nobody wouldn’t
b’lieve none o’ his big talk, long as he lived. But if it was her ’n,
out an’ out, they’d have ter try an’ see what this ’heritance was. He
kinder impressed me even then; an’ we went on quite chipper. Killed a
few rattlers by the way, an’ went spang up an’ up, an’ then down ag’in,
inter the very heart o’ the mountain. Then I seed thar’d be’n some
prospectin’ done thar sometime. We found a trail an’ we follered it.

“An’ I ain’t never laughed at Sutry Vives, ner La Trinidad
property--sence. What he showed us was enough ter sober a drunken man
arter a big spree.

“Then we started hum ag’in; but, half-way down, Sutry called us ter
stop.

“‘Boys,’ says he, ‘ye’ve seen what I showed ye. I picked you three out,
’cause you love the Little Un, an’ I kin trest ye. Sw’ar ’at you’ll
be true ter yer trest; sw’ar ter do the plumb square by the little
Seenoreety.’

“You bet we swore!--all an’ more’n he ast us. Then we went on ag’in,
but Sutry didn’t foller.

“‘I feel like I’d like ter stay here a little while alone,’ says he;
’an’ if I don’t come down in fair season, you kin come an’ hunt me up.’

“‘Better not,’ says I. But he would; an’ we, each on us, had our dooty
ter do, an’ so we left him.”

There was a long silence, broken, at last, by Steenie, asking softly:
“Well?”

“Well, when I rec’lect that night--I--Huckleberries! Carn’t ye guess
it? Think o’ the squarest thing a feller could do, an’ then know he
done it,--that poor, laughed-at, despised, weak-witted old Don Sutry!”

“Oh, tell me, Bob, please! My heart’s all suffocky, an’ I can’t
breathe!”

“You ’low I couldn’t rest. I kep’ a thinkin’ o’ that old vener’ble
up thar, a takin’ his last look at a property ’at had be’n his ’n,
er his folks, sence way back--an’ the lonesomeness an’ all--an’ I
couldn’t stan’ it. So I started just arter moon-rise, an’ clumb up
ag’in, callin’ myself names all the time fer a fool. An’ when I got to
the very heart o’ the place--thar he lay, sleepin’ quiet an’ a’most a
smilin’,--right thar in that den!”

“But you waked him up, Bob? Quick--didn’t you?”

“Yes, I did. Perhaps I had a job, though! ’Twas a close call fer the
old caballero. An’ when I’d rousted him a little, ye should a heered
him pitch inter me! ’Cause I wouldn’t let him lay still thar an’ die o’
rattlesnake bite!”

“Why, Bob? Why should he wish to die?”

“Fer your sake, Little Un; to make you rich an’ happy an’ ever’thing.
An’ I ’low the notion was jest as noble as if he’d be’n let ter finish
it up as he meant.”

“Well? The result?” asked Mr. Calthorp, impatiently.

“Well, he’ll live, I reckin; but his old age won’t be not very
flourishin’ ner green-bay-tree like. ’Twas an even chance, ’bout. I
carried him down on my back, an’ thar happened ter be an old Indian on
hand ’at done his level best; an’ he’ll live. So they think.

“But we had a tussle with him, fust. An’ not till Lord Plunkett
himself, who had come round that way ag’in, was lugged inter the room
ter hear the hull story, an’ ter promise ever’thing should be done same
as if he died, would Sutry consent ter take the stuff old Pueblo forced
down his throat. But, to all intents an’ purposes, he was a martyr,
Sutry Vives was.”

The graphic story cast over them all an awed and solemn feeling which
made speech seem impossible. Till, after awhile, a half-charred stick
fell into the coals, and Mary Jane looked up through her tears.
“Greater love hath no man than this,” said she, softly; and even
Resolved failed to sniff.

Finally Madam Calthorp asked: “What was in the mountain that made it so
valuable in the old Spaniard’s eyes?”

“Sunthin’, ’at when it’s developed--as Lord Plunkett an’ Jedge
Courtenay has offered ter advance the funds fer--’ill make the Little
Un rich enough ter kindle fires with jest sech checks as she fetched
home ter-day.”

“But I do not understand.”

“Silver, ma’am, silver. Quality, A one. Quantity, unlimited. That’s all
it was.”


THE END.



_Messrs. Roberts Brothers’ Publications._


THE MUSHROOM CAVE.

  =By Evelyn Raymond, author of “The Little Lady of the
  Horse.” With illustrations by Victor A. Searles. Square
  12mo. Cloth. Price, $1.50.=

[Illustration]

It is very artistically illustrated by Victor A. Searles, and is
handsomely printed and bound. The chief characters are members of a
Quaker family. The young hero and heroine, through misfortune, show
a readiness to make the best of things, he by diligent application,
and she by meeting everything with a happy disposition, which is
both entertaining and must encourage other youngsters who read their
adventures to earnest deeds. There are many exciting incidents and
surprises in the story, which is told with exceeding grace and
brightness. It should be a very popular Christmas gift book.--_Boston
Times._

It tells of the successful scheme of two bright children to raise
mushrooms, and of the way they finally lifted the cloud of debt that
rested on their home. The story is full of good moral lessons, imparted
in such a way that they do not hurt the interest. The book is finely
illustrated.--_San Francisco Chronicle._


_Mailed, postpaid, on receipt of price, by the publishers_,

                                              ROBERTS BROTHERS, Boston.


A Cape May Diamond.

  By Evelyn Raymond, author of “The Little Lady of the
  Horse,” “The Little Red Schoolhouse,” and “The Mushroom
  Cave.” Illustrated by Lilian Crawford True. Square 12mo.
  Cloth. Price, $1.50.

[Illustration: A CAPE MAY DIAMOND.]

One of the most delightful stories for young readers that have been
published for many years was the book given to them two years ago,
entitled “The Little Lady of the Horse,” written by Evelyn Raymond.
It has already become a classic. But the same gifted author has well
matched this favorite story with a new one which she has produced for
the present holiday season, entitled “A Cape May Diamond.” The heroine
of this story was cast upon the beach at Cape May in a basket, made
waterproof, when little more than an infant, and was adopted by a
worthy German and his wife. She was called a Diamond by the life-saving
men because she was found in the sand, and she grew to girlhood a
universal favorite on the beach, because of her splendid character.
She was healthy, true as steel, ready to help anybody in need, and
as brave as the most faithful dog. Every reader is sure to love the
sunny-hearted little Karen, and will rejoice in the happy solution of
the mystery that surrounded her parentage and her advent at Cape May.
The book is finely illustrated by Lilian Crawford True, and it will be
sure to be a holiday favorite.

_Sold by all booksellers. Mailed, postpaid, by the Publishers_,

                                              ROBERTS BROTHERS, Boston.


THE LITTLE RED SCHOOLHOUSE.

By EVELYN RAYMOND,

Author of “Little Lady of the Horse,” etc.

Illustrated by Victor A. Searles. 12mo. Cloth. Price, $1.25.

[Illustration]

  A good, wholesome, carefully written story of a district
  school, its teacher, its scholars, and the members of the
  school-board.

                                        ROBERTS BROTHERS, Boston, Mass.


THE Keeper of the Salamander’s Order.

_=A TALE OF STRANGE ADVENTURE IN UNKNOWN CLIMES.=_

  By William Shattuck, author of “The Secret of the Black
  Butte.” With Ninety-Five Illustrations by Walter and Isabel
  Shattuck. Small 4to. Cloth. Gilt. 326 pages. Price, $2.00.

The scene of this wonder story is a mysterious region washed by the
waves of a tropical sea yet to be explored. The young prince of this
mysterious land is induced by a fairy to ride away with her on the back
of a salamander, which rushes rapidly through the air until it reaches
the fairies’ castle on a floating mountain. Here silver and other
metal and precious stones grow on trees in abundance. While here, the
floating mountain falls into the sea, leaving the prince and the fairy
on the salamander’s back. The fairy is disenchanted, and in her place
is a little girl who is greatly troubled because she has forgotten the
word which formerly gave her command of the salamander. They decide to
try to find the Keeper of the Salamander’s Order that they may discover
the lost word. They are whirled away and meet with strange experiences,
visiting The Largest Meteor Unknown to Science, The Island of the Smoke
Bird, The Land of the Pillow-Heads, The Some Other Kind of People,
and many strange and wonderful places, where they make friends of the
queer inhabitants. The book is well printed and handsomely bound, and
contains many appropriate illustrations. This volume will be very
acceptable to young people as a Christmas gift.--_Portland Press._

The narrative is quite unique in its conception, and the underlying
motive is ingeniously carried out.... The story abounds in incidents
of a sufficiently thrilling nature, is free from anything likely to
wound the tender susceptibilities of sensitive children, and it is very
attractively and lavishly illustrated.--_The Beacon._

One of the largest and handsomest of the books for the young that
have made their appearance this year.... The tale itself is of the
fairy-like order which always enchains the minds of the young, and
which are read with relish by their fathers and mothers. It is
sufficiently extravagant in its imaginative features to satisfy the
taste of the most exacting.... It is well written.--_Kansas City
Herald._

  ROBERTS BROTHERS, Publishers,
  No. 3 Somerset Street,      BOSTON, MASS.


_Messrs. Roberts Brothers’ Juveniles._


  =FATHER GANDER’S MELODIES FOR MOTHER GOOSE’S GRANDCHILDREN.=
  By Adelaide F. Samuels. Illustrated by Lillian Trask
  Harlow. Small 4to. Cloth. $1.25.

[Illustration]

_Sold everywhere. Mailed, post-paid, on receipt of price, by the
Publishers,_

                                        ROBERTS BROTHERS, Boston, Mass.


_Messrs. Roberts Brothers’ Publications._


VOYAGE OF THE LIBERDADE

BY CAPTAIN JOSHUA SLOCUM.

_Illustrated. 4to, Cloth. Price, $1.00._

[Illustration]

  The “Voyage of the Liberdade” reads like a romance, but
  is, nevertheless, the faithful account of a marvellous
  experience in the career of that indomitable Yankee
  tar--Capt. Joshua Slocum. How the wonderful little boat,
  containing the author and his family, made a journey of
  5,000 miles in the face of perils calculated to terrify
  many of the hardiest is told without any attempt at
  rhetorical garnish, yet with a clearness that gives it a
  permanent literary value.

_Sold everywhere. Mailed, post-paid, on receipt of price, by the
Publishers_,

                                        ROBERTS BROTHERS, Boston, Mass.


Mrs. Wesselhoeft’s Stories.

  ☘☘☘

  =Jerry the Blunderer.= By Lily F. Wesselhoeft, author of
  “Sparrow the Tramp,” “Flipwing the Spy,” “Old Rough the
  Miser,” etc. 16mo. Cloth. Illustrated from photographs
  taken from life. Price, $1.25.

[Illustration]

_Sold by all Booksellers. Mailed, postpaid, on receipt of price, by the
Publishers_,

                                        ROBERTS BROTHERS, Boston, Mass.


THE CAPTAIN OF THE KITTIEWINK.

  A Cape Ann Story for Boys. By Herbert D. Ward, author of
  “The New Senior at Andover,” and other Stories. With nine
  Illustrations. Square 16mo. Cloth. Price, $1.25.

[Illustration: THE WRECK OF THE “KITTIEWINK.”]

As Capt. “Phineas Scrod,” who had charge of the Kittiewink, would have
expressed it, “That there craft wasn’t no teaspoon.” A capital good
boat she proved to be, and a prime story has Mr. Ward written, giving
the adventures of Hall, Algernon, and last but not least, of Trot, the
terrier. “The Captain of the Kittiewink” is just the kind of story to
give boys the yachting madness.--_New York Times._

_Sold by all Booksellers. Mailed, post-paid, by the Publishers_,

                                              ROBERTS BROTHERS, Boston.



Transcriber’s Notes


A number of typographical errors were corrected silently.

Cover image is in the public domain.

Left double quotes were added at the beginning of chapters where
appropriate.  Original work used illustrated capital letters without
left quotes.





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