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Aunt Jane's Nieces on the Ranch Part 4

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"Miss Travers is a very skillful baby doctor," continued Louise, "and she can mend broken bones, cure diseases and make the sick well."

Inez nodded.

"I know. A witch-woman," she said in a whisper. "You can trust me senora, but you cannot trust her. No witch-woman can be trusted."

Louise smiled but thought best not to argue the point farther. Inez went back to the nursery hugging Toodlums as jealously as if she feared some one would s.n.a.t.c.h the little one from her arms.

Next morning Mildred said to Beth, in whom she confided most:

"The Mexican girl does not like me. She is devotedly attached to the baby and fears I will supplant her."

"That is true," admitted Beth, who had conceived the same idea; "but you mustn't mind her, Mildred. The poor thing's only half civilized and doesn't understand our ways very well. What do you think of little Jane?"

"I never knew a sweeter, healthier or more contented baby. She smiles and sleeps perpetually and seems thoroughly wholesome. Were she to remain in her present robust condition there would be little need of my services, I a.s.sure you. But-"

"But what?" asked Beth anxiously, as the nurse hesitated.

"All babies have their ills, and little Jane cannot escape them. The rainy season is approaching and dampness is trying to infants. There will be months of moisture, and then-I shall be needed."

"Have you been in California before?" asked Beth, impressed by Mildred's positive a.s.sertion.

The girl hesitated a moment, looking down.

"I was born here," she said in low, tense tones.

"Indeed! Why, I thought all the white people in California came from the east. I had no idea there could be such a thing as a white native."

Mildred smiled with her lips. Her imperturbable eyes never smiled.

"I am only nineteen, in spite of my years of training and hard work,"

she said, a touch of bitterness in her voice. "My father came here nearly thirty years ago."

"To Southern California?"

"Yes."

"Did you live near here, then?"

Mildred looked around her.

"I have been in this house often, as a girl," she said slowly. "Senor Cristoval was-an acquaintance of my father."

Beth stared at her, greatly interested.

"How strange!" she exclaimed. "You cannot be far from your own family, then," she added.

Mildred s.h.i.+vered a little, twisting her fingers nervously together. She was indeed sensitive, despite that calm, repellent look in her eyes.

"I hope," she said, evading Beth's remark, "to be of real use to this dear baby, whom I already love. The Mexican girl, Inez, is well enough as a caretaker, but her judgment could not be trusted in emergencies.

These Mexicans lose their heads easily and in crises are liable to do more harm than good. Mrs. Weldon's arrangement is an admirable one and I confess it relieves me of much drudgery and confinement. I shall keep a watchful supervision over my charge and be prepared to meet any emergency."

Beth was not wholly satisfied with this interview. Mildred had told her just enough to render her curious, but had withheld any information as to how a California girl happened to be in New York working as a trained nurse. She remembered the girl's fervent exclamation: "Thank heaven!"

when asked if she would go to Southern California, to a ranch called El Cajon, to take care of a new baby. Beth judged from this that Mildred was eager to get back home again; yet she had evaded any reference to her family or former friends, and since her arrival had expressed no wish to visit them.

There was something strange and unaccountable about the affair, and for this reason Beth refrained from mentioning to her cousins that Mildred Travers was a Californian by birth and was familiar with the scenes around El Cajon ranch and even with the old house itself. Perhaps some day the girl would tell her more, when she would be able to relate the whole story to Patsy and Louise.

Of course the new arrivals were eager to inspect the orange and olive groves, so on the day following that of their arrival the entire party prepared to join Arthur Weldon in a tramp over the three hundred acre ranch.

A little way back of the grounds devoted to the residence and gardens began the orange groves, the dark green foliage just now hung thick with fruit, some green, some pale yellow and others of that deep orange hue which denotes full maturity. "They consider five acres of oranges a pretty fair ranch, out here," said the young proprietor; "but I have a hundred and ten acres of bearing trees. It will take a good many freight cars to carry my oranges to the eastern markets."

"And what a job to pick them all!" exclaimed Patsy.

"We don't pick them," said Arthur. "I sell the crop on the trees and the purchaser sends a crew of men who gather the fruit in quick order. They are taken to big warehouses and sorted into sizes, wrapped and packed and loaded onto cars. That is a separate branch of the business with which we growers have nothing to do."

Between the orange and the olive groves, and facing a little lane, they came upon a group of adobe huts-a little village in itself. Many children were playing about the yards, while several stalwart Mexicans lounged in the shade quietly smoking their eternal cigarettes. Women appeared in the doorways, shading their eyes with their hands as they curiously examined the approaching strangers.

Only one man, a small, wiry fellow with plump brown cheeks and hair and beard of snowy whiteness, detached himself from the group and advanced to meet his master. Removing his wide sombrero he made a sweeping bow, a gesture so comical that Patsy nearly laughed aloud.

"This is Miguel Zaloa, the ranchero, who has charge of all my men," said Arthur. Then, addressing the man, he asked: "Any news, Miguel?"

"Ever'thing all right, Meest Weld," replied the ranchero, his bright eyes earnestly fixed upon his employer's face. "Some pardon, senor; but-Mees Jane is well?"

"Quite well, thank you, Miguel."

"Mees Jane," said the man, shyly twirling his hat in his hands as he cast an upward glance at the young ladies, "ees cherub young lade; much love an' beaut'ful. Ees not?"

"She's a dear," replied Patsy, with ready sympathy for the sentiment and greatly pleased to find the man so ardent an admirer of the baby.

"Ever'bod' love Mees Jane," continued old Miguel, simply. "Since she have came, sun ees more bright, air ees more good, tamale ees more sweet. Will Inez bring Mees Jane to see us to-day, Meest Weld?"

"Perhaps so," laughed Arthur; and then, as he turned to lead them to the olive trees, Louise, blus.h.i.+ng prettily at the praise bestowed upon her darling, pressed a piece of s.h.i.+ning silver into old Miguel's hand-which he grasped with alacrity and another low bow.

"No doubt he's right about little Jane," remarked the major, when they had pa.s.sed beyond earshot, "but I've a faint suspicion the old bandit praised her in order to get the money."

"Oh, no!" cried Louise; "he's really sincere. It is quite wonderful how completely all our Mexicans are wrapped up in baby. If Inez doesn't wheel the baby-cab over to the quarters every day, they come to the house in droves to inquire if 'Mees Jane' is well. Their love for her is almost pathetic."

"Don't the fellows ever work?" inquired Uncle John.

"Yes, indeed," said Arthur. "Have you any fault to find with the condition of this ranch? As compared with many others it is a model of perfection. At daybreak the mules are cultivating the earth around the trees; when the sun gets low the irrigating begins. We keep the harrows and the pumps busy every day. But during the hours when the sun s.h.i.+nes brightest the Mexicans do not love to work, and it is policy-so long as they accomplish their tasks-to allow them to choose their own hours for labor."

"They seem a s.h.i.+ftless lot," said the major.

"They're as good as their average type. But some-old Miguel, for instance-are better than the ordinary. Miguel is really a clever and industrious fellow. He has lived here practically all his life and knows intimately every tree on the place."

"Did he serve the old Spanish don-Cristoval?" asked Beth.

"Yes; and his father before him. I've often wondered how old Miguel is.

According to his own story he must be nearly a hundred; but that's absurd. Anyhow, he's a faithful, capable fellow, and rules the others with the rigor of an autocrat. I don't know what I should do without him."

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