The Range Boss by Charles Alden Seltzer (reader novel .TXT) đ
- Author: Charles Alden Seltzer
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âI think there is nothingââ she began.
âWell,â he said, âIâve got to leave here.â
Ruthâs face grew long. Uncle Jepson gagged on a mouthful of smoke. Aunt Martha ceased knitting. Masten alone seemed unmoved, but an elated gleam was in his eyes.
âIsnât that a rather sudden decision, Mr. Vickers?â questioned Ruth after a silence.
âWell, mebbe it is, to you,â said Vickers, with some embarrassment. âBut the fact is, Iâve been thinkinâ of goinâ for a long timeâabout a year to be exact. I was goinâ before your uncle died, but I kept holdinâ on because he wanted me to. You see, maâam, Iâve got a mother back East. Sheâs been poorly for quite a while now, anâ has been wantinâ me to come. Iâve been puttinâ it off, but itâs got to the point where it canât be put off any longer. I got a letter from her doctor the other day, anâ he says that she canât last a heap longer. SoâIâm goinâ.â
âThatâs too bad,â sympathized Ruth. âYou ought to go, and go quickly.â
âIâm aiminâ to, maâam. But Iâve got to tell you somethinâ before I go. Me anâ your uncle was pretty thick; he trusted me a heap.â
âYes,â said Ruth; âhe told me that he liked and trusted you.â
âWell, youâll understand then. A couple of months before he cashed in, we was talkinâ of him goinâ. He knowed it, maâam. We was talkinâ about the ranch. He knowed I wanted to leave. âWhatâll I do for a range boss when youâre gone?â he asked me. âI wonât go till you ainât here any more,â I tells him. Anâ he grinned. âIâm goinâ to leave the Flyinâ W to my niece, Ruth Harkness of Poughkeepsie,â he says. âIâd like her to stay anâ run itâif she likes it here. Youâll be gone then, anâ who in Sam Hill will be range boss then?â I told him I didnât have no thoughts on the subject, anâ he continues: âRex Randerson, Vickersâheâll be range boss. Do you understand? If you was to pull your freight right now, Rex Randerson would be range boss as soon as I could get word over to him. Anâ if youâve got any say-so after Iâm gone, anâ Ruth wants to keep the ranch, you tell her thatâthat Bill Harkness wants Rex Randerson to be range boss after Wes Vickers donât want it any more.â Thatâs what he said, maâam; themâs his very words.â
Ruth looked at Masten. He was staring stonily out into the plains. Ruthâs cheeks reddened, for she felt that she knew his thoughts. But still, Randerson hadnât really used him ill at the river, and besides, he had apologized, and it seemed to her that that should end the incident. Also, she still felt rather resentful toward Masten for his attitude toward Tom Chavis after she had complained. And also, lurking deep in her unsophisticated mind was a most feminine impulse to sting Masten to jealousy. She looked up to meet Vickersâ gaze, fixed curiously upon her.
âCould you recommend this manâRanderson?â she asked.
âWhy, maâam, heâs got the best reputation of any man in these parts!â
âBut is he efficient?â
âMeaninâ does he know his business? Well, I reckon. Heâs got the best head for range work of any man in the country! Heâs square, maâam. Anâ there ainât no man monkeyinâ with him. Iâve knowed him for five years, anâ I ainât ever knowed him to do a crooked trick, exceptinâââand here he scratched his head and grinned reminiscentlyââwhen he gets the devil in him which he does occasionally, maâamâanâ goes to jokinâ, maâam. But theyâre mostly harmless jokes, maâam; heâs never hurt nobody, bad. But he got a level headâa heap leveler than a lot of folks thatââ
âI think Tom Chavis would make a good range boss, Ruth,â said Masten. He did not look at her, and his words were expressionless.
âMister man,â said Vickers evenly, âwhat do you know about Tom Chavis?â
Masten looked quickly at Vickers, and as quickly looked away, his face slowly reddening.
âHeâs foreman now, isnât he?â he said. âIt seems that Harkness trusted him that much.â
âThereâs a first time for every man to go wrong, Mister,â said Vickers.
Mastenâs voice was almost a sneer.
âWhy donât you tell Chavis that?â
âIâve told him, Misterâto his face.â Vickersâ own face was growing dark with wrath.
âYou were range boss after Harknessâ death,â persisted Masten. âWhy didnât you discharge Chavis?â
âIâm askinâ the new boss for permission to do it now,â declared Vickers. âItâll be a good wind-up for my stay here.â
âWe shall keep Chavis for the present,â said Ruth. âHowever,â she added firmly, âhe shall not be range boss. I do not like him.â
Vickers grinned silent applause. And again Uncle Jepson had trouble with his pipe. Aunt Martha worked her knitting needles a little faster. Mastenâs face paled, and the hand that held the cigar quickly clenched, so that smoking embers fell to the porch floor. Whatever his feelings, however, he retained his self-control.
âOf course, it is your affair, Ruth,â he said. âI beg your pardon for offering the suggestion.â
But he left them shortly afterward, lighting a fresh cigar and walking toward the bunkhouse, which was deserted, for Chavis and Pickett had gone to a distant part of the range.
Thus Masten did not see Vickers, when a little later he came out on the porch with his war-bag. He said good-bye to Aunt Martha and Uncle Jepson, and then he took Ruthâs hand and held it long.
âYouâll never go a heap wrong when you use your own judgment, girl,â he said. âIâm ridinâ over to the Diamond H to tell Randerson about his new job. Donât make no mistake, girl. Rex Randerson is square. Anâ if any trouble comes sneakinâ around you, take it to Rex; heâll stick on the right side till hell freezes over.â
âI am Ruth Harkness, the new owner of the Flying Wâ
Just what Ruthâs sensations were the next morning she could not have told. She could correctly analyze one emotion: it was eager anticipation. Also, she could account for itâshe wanted to see Randerson. But her reason for wanting to see him was a mystery that she could not fathom, though between the time of arising and the moment when she got downstairs she devoted much thought to it. She knew she did not like Randerson well enough to wish to see him merely on that accountâthat was ridiculous, in spite of the vivid recollection of him that still lingered with her, for she had met him only once, and she assured herself that she was too practical-minded to fall in love with anyone at first sight. Yet by afternoon Ruth had tired of waiting; she had no special reason for certainty that Randerson would arrive that day, and so she went riding. She went alone, for Masten seemed to have hidden himselfâat least, she could not find him. She rode to the break in the wall of the canyon that he had told her about, found it, sent her pony through it and over a shallow crossing, emerging at length in a tangle of undergrowth in a wood through which wound a narrow bridle path. She followed this for some distance, and after a while came to a clearing. A little adobe house stood near the center of the clearing. Ruth halted her pony, and was debating whether to call out or to ride boldly up, when a dog came out of the door of the cabin, growling, its hair bristling belligerently. The dog was big, black, and undoubtedly savage, for the pony instantly wheeled, and when the dog came closer, lashed out with both hind hoofs at it.
âNig, you olâ duffer, git in hyeh where you bâlong! Canât you see that that thereâs a lady!â came a voice, unmistakably feminine. And the dog, still growling, but submissive, drew off.
Ruth urged the pony on and rode the remaining distance to the door. A girl, attired in a ragged underskirt and equally ragged waist of some checkered material, and a faded house-apron that was many sizes too small for her, stood in the open doorway, watching. She was bare-footed, her hair was in tumbling disorder, though Ruth could tell that it had been combed recently. But the legs, bare almost to the knees, were clean, though brown from tan, and her face and arms glowed pink and spotless, in spite of the rags. In her eyes, as she watched Ruth, was a strange mixture of admiration and defiance.
âDad ainât hyeh this morninâ,â she volunteered as Ruth climbed off her pony.
âI came to see you,â said Ruth, smiling. She threw the reins over the ponyâs head and advanced, holding out a hand. âI am Ruth Harkness,â she added, âthe new owner of the Flying W. I have been here almost a month, and I just heard that I had a neighbor. Wont you shake hands with me?â
âI reckon,â said the girl. Reluctantly, it seemed, she allowed Ruth to take her hand. But she drew it away immediately. âIâve heard of you,â she said; âyouâre a niece of that olâ devil, Bill Harkness.â She frowned. âHe was always sayinâ dad was hookinâ his doggoned cattle. Dad didnât steal âemâolâ Bill Harkness was a liar!â Her eyes glowed fiercely. âI reckon youâll be sayinâ the same thing about dad.â
âNo indeed!â declared Ruth. âYour dad and I are going to be friends. I want to be friends with you, too. I am not going to charge your dad with stealing my cattle. We are going to be neighbors, and visit each other. I want to know your dad, and I want you to come over to the Flying W and get acquainted with my aunt and uncle. Arenât you going to invite me inside? I would if you came to visit me, you know.â She smiled winningly.
The girl flushed, and cast a glance at the interior of the cabin, which, Ruth had already noted through the open door, was scantily furnished but clean. Then the girl led the way in, motioned Ruth to a chair near a rough-topped table, and stood over beside a cast-iron stove, her hands hanging at her sides, the fingers crumpling the cloth of the ragged apron. Her belligerence had departed; she seemed now to be beginning to realize that this visit was really meant to honor her, and she grew conscious of her rags, of the visible signs of poverty, of the visitorâs raiment, gorgeous in comparison with her ownâthough Ruthâs was merely a simple riding habit of brown corduroy.
Ruth had set out for this visit with a definite intention: she wanted to discover just how the girl and her father lived, and if conditions were as she suspected she was determined to help them. Conditions were worse than she had expected, but her face gave no indication. Perhaps Ruthâs wisdom was not remarkable where men were concerned, but she had a wealth of delicacy, understanding and sympathy where her own sex was in question. She stayed at the cabin for more than an hour and at the end of that time she emerged, smiling happily, her arm around the girl, with the girlâs pledge to visit her soon and an earnest invitation to come again. Best of all, she had cleverly played upon the feminine instinct for fine raiment, slyly mentioned a trunk that she had brought with her from the East, packed to the top with substantial finery which was not in the least needed by herâan incumbrance, ratherâand which, she hinted, might become the property of another, if suitable in
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