Ruth Fielding In the Saddle; Or, College Girls in the Land of Gold
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CHAPTER IX--IN THE SADDLE AT LAST
"The matter can be arranged in one, two, three order!" Ruth cried.
She had already seen just the way to go about it. Give Min Peters thechance to make money and she would jump at it.
"You see, _we_ don't mind having a girl for cook and guide. We willrather like it," she said, laughing into Min's delighted face. "Poor oldTom is our only male companion. And unless we find a man to take care ofthe horses and burros he'll have to put on overalls himself and do thatwork."
"That'll be all right. I can get a Mexican boy--a good one," Min saidquickly. "The hosses is all in Jeb's corral and you can hire of him. Itell you pop expected a big crowd of you and he was disappointed."
"You will make the money he would have made," Ruth told her cheerfully."We will pay you man's wages and we shall want you at least a month.Eighty dollars and 'found.' How is that?"
"Looks like heaven," said Min bluntly. "I ain't never seen so much moneyin my life!"
"And the Mexican boy?"
"Pedro Morales. Twenty-two fifty is all he'll expect. We don't payGreasers like we do white men in this country," said the girl with somebruskness. "But, say, Miss----"
"I am Ruth Fielding."
"Miss Fielding, then. You're the boss of this outfit?"
"I suppose so. I shall pay the bills at any rate. Until Mr. Hammond andthe moving picture people arrive."
"Well! what will them other girls say to me--dressed this here way?"
"If you had plenty of dresses and were starting into the range for atrip like this, you'd put on these same clothes, wouldn't you?"
"Oh, sure."
"All right then. You're hired to do a man's work, so I presume a man'sclothing will the better become you while you are so engaged," saidRuth, smiling at her frankly.
"All right. Though they've got some calico dresses at the store. I couldbuy one and wear it--that is, if you'd advance me that much money. But Igot a catalog from a Chicago store---- Gee! it's full of the purtiestdresses. I _dreamed_ about gettin' hold of some money some time andbuyin' one o' them--everything to go with it. But to tell you honest,when pop gits any loose change, he spends it for red liquor."
"I'll see that you have the money you are going to earn, for yourself,"Ruth assured her. "Now tell Mr. Cameron just what to buy. He will do thepurchasing at the store. And introduce him to the Mexican boy, Pedro,too. I'll run to tell the other girls how lucky we are to get you tohelp us, Min."
She hurried away, in reality to prepare her friends for the appearanceof the girl who had never worn proper feminine habiliments. She knewthat Min would not put up with any giggling on the part of the"tenderfoot" girls. As for Miss Cullam, that good woman said:
"I'm sure I can stand overalls on a girl as well as I can stand thesedivided skirts and bloomers that some of you are going to wear."
"Just think of a girl never having worn a pretty frock!" gasped Helen."Isn't that outrageous!"
"The poor thing," said Rebecca. "But she must be awfully coarse andrough."
"Don't let her see that you think so, Rebecca," commanded Ruth quickly."She has keener perceptions than the average, believe me! We must nothurt her feelings."
"Trust _you_ not to hurt anybody's feelings, Ruthie," drawled JennieStone. "But I might find a dress in my trunk that will fit her."
"Oh, girls! let's dress her up--let's give her enough of our own fineryout of the trunks to make her feel like a real girl." This from Helen.
"Not now," Ruth said quickly. "She would not thank you. She is anindependent thing--you'll see. Let her earn her new clothes--and getacquainted with us."
"Ruth possesses the 'wisdom of serpents,'" Miss Cullam said, smiling."Are the trunks going to remain here all the time we are absent in thehills?"
"Mr. Hammond is going to have several wagons to transport his goods toFreezeout; and if there is room he will bring along our trunks too. Bythat time we shall probably be glad to get into something besides ourriding habits."
Miss Cullam sighed. "I can see that this roughing it is going to be amuch more serious matter than I thought."
However, they all looked eagerly forward to the start into the hills.The hotelkeeper returned with his horse-load of beef, and he was able togive Ruth and Miss Cullam certain information regarding the two girlswho had departed with Flapjack Peters on the trail to Freezeout.
"What can Edith Phelps mean by such actions?" the Ardmore teacherdemanded in private of Ruth. "You should have told me about that letterand Edith's presence on the train. I should have gone to her and askedher what it meant."
"Perhaps that would have been well," Ruth admitted. "But, dear MissCullam! how was I to know that Edith was coming here to Yucca?"
"Yes. I presume that the blame can be attached to nobody in particular.But how could Edith Phelps have gained the confidence of your friend,Miss Hicks?"
"That certainly puzzles me. Edith made all the arrangements with Min'sfather, so Min says. Ann Hicks must have been misled in some way."
"It looks very strange to me," observed Miss Cullam. "I have mysuspicions of Edith Phelps, and always have had. There! you see that weinstructors at college cannot help being biased in our opinions of thegirls."
"Dear me, Miss Cullam!" laughed Ruth. "Isn't that merely human nature?It is not alone the nature of members of the college faculty."
The hotel was a very plainly furnished place; but the girls and MissCullam managed to spend the night comfortably. At eight o'clock in themorning Tom and a half-grown Mexican boy were at the hotel door with acavalcade of ten ponies and four burros.
Tom had learned the diamond hitch while he was at Silver Ranch and hehelped fasten the necessary baggage upon the four little gray beasts.Each rider was obliged to pack a blanket-roll and certain personalarticles. But the bulk of the provisions, and a small shelter tent forMiss Cullam, were distributed among the pack animals.
The Briarwood girls and Trix Davenport rode in men's saddles; as did MinPeters; but Sally Blanchard and Rebecca and Miss Cullam had insistedupon sidesaddles.
"And the mildest mannered pony in the lot, please," the teacher said toTom. "I am just as afraid of the little beasts as I can be. Ugh!"
"And they are so cunning!" drawled Jennie. She stepped quickly aside toescape the teeth of her own mount, who apparently considered thepossibility of eating her so as not to bear her weight.
"And can you blame him?" demanded Helen. "It would look better if youshouldered the pony instead of riding on his back."
"Is that so? Just for that I'll bear down as heavily as I can on him,"declared Jennie. "I'm not going to let any little cowpony nibble at me!"
The party started away from Yucca with Min Peters ahead and Pedrobringing up the rear with his burros. Although the ponies could travelat a much faster pace than the pack animals, the latter at their steadypace would overtake the cavalcade of riders before the day was done.
The road they struck into after leaving town was a pretty good wagontrail and the riding was easy. There was an occasional ranch-house atwhich the occupants showed considerable interest in the tourists. Butbefore noon they had ridden into the foothills and Min told them thatthereafter dwellings would be few and far between.
"'Ceptin' where there's a town. There are some regular gold washin's wepass. Hydraulic minin', you know. But they are all on this side of theRange. Nothin' doin' on t'other side. All the pay streaks petered outyears an' years ago. Even a Chink couldn't make a day's wages at themold diggin's like Freezeout."
"Well, we are not gold hunting," laughed Ruth. "We are going to mine fora better output--moving pictures."
"I've heard tell of them," said Min, curiously. "There was a fellerworked for the Lazy C that went to California and worked for thempicture fellers. He got three dollars a day and his pony's keep an' sayshe never worked so hard in his life. That is, when the sun shone; and itmost never does rain in that part o' California, he says."
The prospect of camping out of doors, even in
this warm and beautifulweather, was what most troubled Miss Cullam and some of the girls.
"With the sky for a canopy!" sighed Sally Blanchard. "Suppose there arewolves?"
"There are coyotes," Helen explained. "But they only howl at you."
"That's enough I should hope," Rebecca Frayne said. "Can't we keep on tothe next house and hire beds?"
This was along toward supper time and the burros were in sight and thesun was going down.
"The nearest ranch is Littell's," explained Min Peters. "And it's mostthirty mile ahead. We couldn't make it."
"Of course it will be _fun_ to camp out, Rebecca," declared Ruthcheerfully. "Wait and see."
"I'm likely to know more about it by morning," admitted Rebecca. "I onlyhope the experience will not be too awful."
Ruth and her chum, as well as Jennie and Tom, laughed at the girl. Theyexpected nothing unusual to happen. However----