The Honorable Percival - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Yes," said Percival, shamelessly, "we have seen it."
"He doesn't know me if he thinks I'll give in," went on Bobby where she had left off. "I am just as stubborn as he is."
"There, now, I shouldn't talk about it if it made me cry," advised Percival, patting her shoulder.
"But I've got to talk to somebody," she said almost savagely. "What did he give me to the Fords for if he didn't think they were good enough?
Pa Joe's as good as he is any day in the week."
"Who is Pa Joe?" asked Percival, groping in the dark.
"He's the darlingest old man in the world, and he owns the best cattle ranch in Wyoming. Anybody'll tell you so. He's been a real father to me, and the boys are real brothers--at least three of them are. They are just as good as anybody that ever lived, I don't care what the captain says."
There was another pa.s.sionate burst of tears, and Percival had just succeeded in stemming the tide when the Scotchman bore down upon them.
"I beg your pardon, but did you know we were pa.s.sing Bird Island?" he asked them.
"Yes," said Percival, hastily getting up and piloting him safely past.
"As a matter of fact, some one was just asking for you in the smoking-room."
"I told the captain," sobbed Bobby, beating her hands together and apparently oblivious of interruptions, "that I'd come on this trip with him, but that it wouldn't make a bit of difference, and it hasn't."
"No, of course it hasn't," agreed Percival, soothingly, not in the least comprehending the drift of her remarks, but pleasantly aware that he was being confided in and that something very limp and lovely was under his protection.
"Isn't there a--a--Mrs. Ford on the ranch?" he asked by way of prolonging the interview.
"Not now. Dear Aunt Kitty died four years ago. That was when they sent me in to Cheyenne to school. But I'm finished now, and I'm going to stay on the ranch and take care of Pa Joe and the boys."
"Can't say it sounds exciting. How many children are there?"
"Children! Why, they are all as tall as you are, except Piffles. There's Ted, and d.i.c.k, and Piffles, and--Hal. I guess you saw Hal that day at the station."
For the first time since he had known her, her black lashes drooped consciously over her blue eyes. They were very long and thick lashes, and as they swept her flushed cheek, Percival not only forgot what she was saying, but went so far as to forget himself.
"I saw only one thing that day at the station," he said, with such an ardent look that it made Bobby smile through her tears. As a rule he disliked dimples, especially the stationary kind. But the one that now occupied, his attention was a very shy and elusive affair that kept the beholder watching very closely for fear he should miss it.
"Come," he said, taking advantage of the momentary suns.h.i.+ne, "you are a bit of a sportsman, you know. You mustn't come off by yourself and cry like this. Makes you feel so beastly seedy afterward, doesn't it?"
"Yes. But you don't understand. I want to do something that the captain's perfectly determined I sha'n't do. He didn't bring me on this trip just to give me a good time. Not on your life! He brought me to make me forget."
"Oh, that's the game, is it? Scuttling you off to sea to make you forget. Deuced interesting! I don't mind telling you I'm in something of the same sort of a hole myself."
"Really?" Her interest was roused instantly.
A mysterious change was taking place in their acquaintance. Bobby's tears had in some unaccountable manner taken all the starch out of Percival's manner.
"You mean," she went on, "that they are sending you off to keep you from marrying some one they don't like?"
"Not exactly. I shouldn't put up with that for a moment, you know."
"Of course you wouldn't, because you are a man. But suppose you were a girl, and your father was perfectly unreasonable. What would you do then?"
"I'd drop the matter for a bit," advised Percival, at a venture. "Let him think you didn't care a tuppeny. Pretend to be awfully keen about something else, and, likely as not, he'll come round. Not a bad idea that, by Jove! I've tried it."
"Do you think it would work?" asked Bobby, scanning his finely chiseled profile as eagerly as if she were consulting the Delphic oracle.
"No harm in trying. Keep him on tenter-hooks, at any rate."
"s.h.i.+p ahoy!" came in joyous tones from Andy Black as he rounded the corner of the saloon, clinging to his cap. "Been looking for you all over. Say, did you all know we were pa.s.sing Bird Island?"
"If we don't," said Percival, with his most deliberate stare, "it is not because we have failed to be informed of the uninteresting fact every five minutes for the last half-hour."
"Consider me the third stanza," said Andy; "please omit me!"
Bobby laughed as he disappeared, and pushed back her tumbled hair.
"I love to hear you say 'hawf,'" she said; then she added impetuously, "You aren't a bit like anybody I ever saw before."
"I dare say," said Percival, returning her smile.
"Not only your talk, but your walk, and the way you wear your clothes."
"I suppose my tailor does rather understand my figure," said Percival; "but what puzzles you about my speech?"
"I don't know. It's different. And then I never can tell what you are thinking about."
"Do you wish to know what I'm thinking about just now?"
"Yes."
"I am wondering why you wear high-heeled, gold-beaded slippers in the morning."
Bobby thrust forth two dainty feet and contemplated them in surprise.
"What's wrong with them?" she asked.
"Rather dressy for the morning, aren't they?" he gently suggested.
"I don't know," she said good-humoredly. "I've got a trunkful of clothes down in my state-room, but I never know which ones to put on. You see, we never dike up like this on the ranch. When the captain brought me to San Francisco, he handed me over to a woman at the hotel and told her to rig me out for the trip."
"Did--did she buy your steamer-coat?" asked Percival.
Bobby's laugh rang out contagiously.
"Isn't it a tulip? I knew it was wrong the minute I came on board and saw Elise Weston's. Honest, now, have I got anything else as bad as that?"
"No, oh, no; I was a beastly cad to mention it. You are most awfully charming in anything you choose to wear. But as a matter of fact, I do like you best in white, with your hair low, as it is now."
"Hair low, shoes high, all in white. Anything else you'd like?" All trace of tears had vanished, and her eyes were dancing audaciously.