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Phil looked at his companion sharply. "Well, what about him?"
"I trust you will not misunderstand my interest, Mr. Acton, when I say that it also includes Miss Reid."
Phil stopped short. Instantly Mrs. Baldwin's remark about Patches'
happiness, his own confession that he had given up all hope of winning Kitty, and the thought of the friends.h.i.+p which he had seen developing during the past months, with the realization that Patches belonged to that world to which Kitty aspired--all swept through his mind. He was looking at the man beside him so intently that the professor said again uneasily:
"I trust, Mr. Acton, that you will understand."
Phil laughed shortly. "I think I do. But just the same you'd better explain. What about Patches and Miss Reid, sir?"
The professor told how he had found them together that afternoon.
"Oh, is that all?" laughed Phil.
"But surely, Mr. Acton, you do not think that a man of that fellow's evident brutal instincts is a fit a.s.sociate for a young woman of Miss Reid's character and refinement."
"Perhaps not," admitted Phil, still laughing, "but I guess Kitty can take care of herself."
"I do not agree with you, sir," said the other authoritatively. "A young woman of Miss Reid's--ah--spirituality and worldly inexperience must always be, to a certain extent, injured by contact with such illiterate, unrefined, and, I have no doubt, morally deficient characters."
"But, look here, Professor," returned Phil, still grinning, "what do you expect me to do about it? I am not Kitty Reid's guardian. Why don't you talk to her yourself?"
"Really," returned the little man, "I--there are reasons why I do not see my way clear to such a course. I had hoped that you might keep an eye on the fellow, and, if necessary, use your authority over him to prevent any such incidents in the future."
"I'll see what I can do," answered Phil, thinking how the Dean would enjoy the joke. "But, look here; Kitty was with you when you got to the ranch. What became of Patches? Run, did he, when you appeared on the scene?"
"Oh, no; he went away with a--with a maverick."
"Went away with a maverick? What, in heaven's name, do you mean by that?"
"That's what your man Patches said the fellow was. Miss Reid told me his name was Joe--Joe something."
Phil was not laughing now. The fun of the situation had vanished.
"Was it Yavapai Joe?" he demanded.
"Yes, that was it. I am quite sure that was the name. He belongs at Tailend Mountain, I think Miss Reid said; you have such curious names in this country."
"And Patches went away with him, you say?"
"Yes, the fellow seemed to have been hiding in the bushes when we discovered him, and when Miss Reid asked what he was doing there your man said that he had come to see him about something. They went away together, I believe."
As soon as he could escape from the professor, Phil went straight to Patches, who was in his room, reading. The man looked up with a welcoming smile as Phil entered, but as he saw the foreman's face his smile vanished quickly, and he laid aside his book.
"Patches," said Phil abruptly, "what's this talk of the professor's about you and Yavapai Joe?"
"I don't know what the professor is talking," Patches replied coldly, as though he did not exactly like the tone of Phil's question.
"He says that Joe was sneaking about in the brush over on the ridge wanting to see you about something," returned Phil.
"Joe was certainly over there on the ridge, and he may have wanted to see me; at any rate, I saw him."
"Well, I've got to ask you what sort of business you have with that Tailholt Mountain thief that makes it necessary for him to sneak around in the brush for a meeting with you. If he wants to see you, why doesn't he come to the ranch, like a man?"
Honorable Patches looked the Dean's foreman straight in the eyes, as he answered in a tone that he had never used before in speaking to Phil: "And I have to answer, sir, that my business with Yavapai Joe is entirely personal; that it has no relation whatever to your business as the foreman of this ranch. As to why Joe didn't come to the house, you must ask him; I don't know."
"You refuse to explain?" demanded Phil.
"I certainly refuse to discuss Joe Dryden's private affairs--that, so far as I can see, are of no importance to anyone but himself--with you or anyone else. Just as I should refuse to discuss any of your private affairs, with which I happened, by some chance, to be, in a way, familiar. I have made all the explanation necessary when I say that my business with him has nothing to do with your business. You have no right to ask me anything further."
"I have the right to fire you," retorted Phil, angrily.
Patches smiled, as he answered gently, "You have the right, Phil, but you won't use it."
"And why not?"
"Because you are not that kind of a man, Phil Acton," answered Patches slowly. "You know perfectly well that if you discharged me because of my friends.h.i.+p with poor Yavapai Joe, no ranch in this part of the country would give me a job. You are too honest yourself to condemn any man on mere suspicion, and you are too much of a gentleman to d.a.m.n another simply because he, too, aspires to that distinction."
"Very well, Patches," Phil returned, with less heat, "but I want you to understand one thing; I am responsible for the Cross-Triangle property and there is no friends.h.i.+p in the world strong enough to influence me in the slightest degree when it comes to a question of Uncle Will's interests. Do you get that?"
"I got that months ago, Phil."
Without another word, the Dean's foreman left the room.
Patches sat for some time considering the situation. And now and then his lips curled in that old, self-mocking smile; realizing that he was caught in the trap of circ.u.mstance, he found a curious humor in his predicament.
CHAPTER XII.
FRONTIER DAY.
Again it was July. And, with the time of the cattlemen's celebration of the Fourth at hand, riders from every part of the great western cow country a.s.sembled in Prescott for their annual contests. From Texas and Montana, from Oklahoma and New Mexico and Wyoming, the cowboys came with their saddles and riatas to meet each other and the men of Arizona in friendly trials of strength and skill. From many a wild pasture, outlaw horses famous for their vicious, unsubdued spirits, and their fierce, untamed strength, were brought to match their wicked, unbroken wills against the cool, determined courage of the riders. From the wide ranges, the steers that were to partic.i.p.ate in the roping and bull-d.o.g.g.i.ng contests were gathered and driven in. From many a ranch the fastest and best of the trained cow-horses were sent for the various cowboy races. And the little city, in its rocky, mile-high basin, upon which the higher surrounding mountains look so steadfastly down, again decked itself in gala colors, and opened wide its doors to welcome all who chose to come.
From the Cross-Triangle and the neighboring ranches the cowboys, dressed in the best of their picturesque regalia, rode into the town, to witness and take part in the sports. With them rode Honorable Patches.
And this was not the carefully groomed and immaculately attired gentleman who, in troubled spirit, had walked alone over that long, unfenced way a year before. This was not the timid, hesitating, shamefaced man at whom Phil Acton had laughed on the summit of the Divide. This was a man among men--a cowboy of the cowboys--bronzed, and lean, and rugged; vitally alive in every inch of his long body; with self-reliant courage and daring hardihood written all over him, expressed in every tone of his voice, and ringing in every note of his laughter.
The Dean and Mrs. Baldwin and Little Billy drove in the buckboard, but the distinguished guest of the Cross-Triangle went with the Reid family in the automobile. The professor was not at all interested in the celebration, but he could not well remain at the ranch alone, and, it may be supposed, the invitation from Kitty helped to make the occasion endurable.
The celebration this year--the posters and circulars declared--was to be the biggest and best that Prescott had ever offered. In proof of the bold a.s.sertion, the program promised, in addition to the usual events, an automobile race. Shades of all those mighty heroes of the saddle, whose names may not be erased from the history of the great West, think of it! An automobile race offered as the chief event in a Frontier Day Celebration!
No wonder that Mrs. Manning said to her husband that day, "But Stan, where are the cowboys?"
Stanford Manning answered laughingly, "Oh, they are here, all right, Helen; just wait a little and you will see."
Mr. and Mrs. Manning had arrived from Cleveland, Ohio, the evening before, and Helen was eager and excited with the prospect of meeting the people, and witnessing the scenes of which her husband had told her with so much enthusiasm.