Nan Sherwood at Rose Ranch by Annie Roe Carr
page 101 of 242 (41%)
page 101 of 242 (41%)
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"Hess who?" asked Grace.
"Hess what?" demanded Nan, as the train stopped and the colored porter quickly set his stool at the foot of the car steps. "Hesitation Kane," explained Rhoda, hurrying ahead. "Come on, folks! Oh, I am glad to get home!" Bess, who was last, save Walter, to reach the station platform, gave one comprehensive glance around the barren place. "Well!" she said. "If this is home--" "'Home was never like this,'" chuckled Walter. A few board shacks, the station itself unpainted, sagebrush and patches of alkali here and there, and an endless trail leading out across a vista of flat land that seemed horizonless. The train steamed away, having halted but a moment. To all but Rhoda the scene was like something unreal. "My goodness!" murmured Grace, "even the moving pictures didn't show anything like this." "They say the desert scenes made by some of the movie companies are photographed at Coney Island. And I guess it's true," said Walter. Rhoda had run across the tracks toward where a two-seated buckboard, drawn by a pair of eager ponies, was standing. Beside it stood two saddle horses, their heads drooping and their reins trailing before them in the dust. The man who drove the ponies wore a huge straw sombrero of Mexican manufacture. When he turned to |
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