The Freebooters of the Wilderness by Agnes C. (Agnes Christina) Laut
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page 20 of 378 (05%)
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each other by Christian names. It was the old half-breed woman, who
had first told him that the Canadian, Donald MacDonald, the rich sheep man, had a daughter travelling in Europe. One day when he had been signing grazing permits in the MacDonald ranch house, he had caught a glimpse of a piano, that had been packed up the mountains on mules, standing in an inner sitting room; and the walls were decorated with long-necked swan-necked Gibson girls and Watts' photogravures and Turner color prints and naked Sorolla boys bathing in Spanish seas. That was the beginning. She had come in suddenly, introduced herself and shaken hands. And now Wayland felt a dazed wonder how in the world they two in the course of half an hour--the first half hour they had ever been alone in their lives--had come to deciding "straddle or fight"; but that was the unusual thing about her. She got under surfaces; but, until to-night on the Holy Cross Mountain, he had been able to laugh at his own new sensations, to laugh even at an occasional sense of his tongue turning to dough in the roof of his mouth. "Look, what is that behind your shoulder, Dick?" "Oh, that," said the Forest Ranger, "that is a well known, game old elderly spinster lady commonly called the Moon; and that other on the branch chittering swear words is nothing in the world but a Douglas squirrel hunting--I think he is really hunting--a flea to mix in his spruce tips as salad." "Do you know what he is saying?" |
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