[DOWNLOAD] "Dorothy Dale in the West" by Margaret Penrose # Book PDF Kindle ePub Free

eBook details
- Title: Dorothy Dale in the West
- Author : Margaret Penrose
- Release Date : January 10, 2020
- Genre: Fiction,Books,Young Adult,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 12386 KB
Description
CHAPTER I
A SURPRISE IS COMING
âHe, he, he!â giggled Tavia.
âWhat is the matter now, child?â demanded Dorothy Dale, haughtily. âThere are no âhesâ in this lane. The road is empty before usâââ
âAnd the world would be, too, if it wasnât for the possible âhesâ that are to come into our lives,â quoth Tavia, with shocking frankness.
âYou talk like a cave girl,â declared her chum. âIs there nothing on your mind but boys?â
âYesâm! More boys!â chuckled Tavia. âIt is June. The bridal-wreath is in bloom. If âIn spring the young manâs fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love,â canât our girlsâ fancies turn in June to thoughts of white lace veils, shoes that pinch your feet horriblyâand canât we dream of hobbling up to the altar to the sound of Mendelssohnâs march?â
âHobble to the haltar, you mean,â sniffed Dorothy, with her best suffragette air.
âHow smart!â crowed her chum. âBut you
2
mustnât blame me for giggling this morningâyou mustnât!â
âWhy not? What particular excuse have you?â
âThat shad we had for breakfast. Shad is as full of bones as Cologneâs shoes are of feet. I always manage to swallow some of themâthe bones, I mean, not dear Florida WaterâRosemaryâs tootsiesâand those said bones are tickling me right now.â
âHow absurd,â said Dorothy Dale, as Tavia went off in another âspasm.â âDo you realize that you are growing up, Taviaâor, pretty near?â
ââPretty near,â or ânear prettyâ?â asked Tavia, making a little face at her.
âBaiting your hook for a compliment, I see,â laughed Dorothy. âWell, you get none, Miss. I want you to behave. Think!â
Tavia immediately struck an attitude that seemed possible for only a jointed doll to get into. âBusiness of thinking,â she said.
âSuppose anybody should see you?â pursued Dorothy, admonishingly.
âThen you do expect the boys to motor in by this road?â cried Tavia. âSly Puss!â
âNo, Maâam. I am not thinking of Ned and Natâor even of Bob Niles.â
Tavia made another little face at mention of
3
Bobâs name. âPoor Bob!â she sighed. âNo fun for him this summer. His father says he must go to work and begin to learn the businessâwhatever that may mean. Bob wrote me a dreadfully mournful letter. It almost tempted me to go to the same town and get a job in his fatherâs office, and so alleviate the poor boyâs misery.â
âYou wouldnât!â gasped Dorothy.
âGot to go to work somewhere,â decided Tavia. âAnd I hate housework and cleaning up after a lot of children.â
âBut just think! how proud your father will be to have you at the head of the household. And remember, too, how much your brothers and sisters need you.â
âGoodness, Doro! You talk like the back end of the spelling-bookâwhere all the hard words are. And the hardest word in the whole vocabulary is âduty.â Donât remind me of it while I am here with you at North Birchlands.â
âAnd think!â cried Dorothy, giving a little skip as they walked on. âThink! we are not a week away from dear old Glenwood School yet, and to-day Aunt Winnieâs surprise is coming. Gracious, Tavia! I can scarcely wait for ten oâclock.â
âI knowâI know,â said Tavia. âIf your Aunt Winnie wasnât the very dearest little gray-haired, pink-cheeked woman who ever lived, Iâd
4
have shaken the secret out of her long ago. I just would! And we canât even guess what the surprise is going to be like.â
âGoodness! No!â gasped Dorothy. âIâve given up guessing. I know it is something perfectly scrumptious, but nothing like anything we ever had before.â
âI hope, whatever it is, that Iâll be in it,â groaned Tavia.
âI am sure you will be, or Aunt Winnie wouldnât have invited you here to her home at just this time,â declared Dorothy.
They were walking down the shady road toward the railroad station âkilling time,â before the family conference which had been called for ten oâclock.
Nat and Ned White, Dorothyâs cousins, had gone off in their auto, the Fire Bird, on an errand, and the girls had an idea they might come home by this route, and so pick them up.
âHush!â cried Tavia, suddenly. âMethinks I hear footsteps approaching on horseback.â
âThatâs no horse you hear,â Dorothy said. âIt is somebody walking on the bridge over the brook.â
There was a turn in the road just ahead and the girls could not see the bridge. But in a moment they could descry the figure of a man striding toward them.
5
âThis must have been what you were he-heing for,â whispered Dorothy.
âHow romantic!â was Taviaâs utterance.
âWhat is romantic about a man coming up from the station?â
âDonât you see his long, silky black mustache? And his long hair and broad hat? Goodness! heâs a picture.â
âYes. The stage picture of a villainâSimon Legree type,â scoffed Dorothy. âThat red silk handkerchief sticking out of his pocketâand the big diamond in his shirt frontâand another flashing on his fingerâââ
âMy!â gasped Tavia, clasping her hands. âHe might have stepped right out of Bret Harte. Ah-ha! ah-ha! Jack Dalton! unhand me!â
âHush, Tavia!â begged her chum. âHe will hear you.â
âOh!â exclaimed Tavia, suddenly disturbed. âHeâs looking at usâand heâs crossing over to this side of the road.â
âWell, donât you look at him any more andâweâll cross the road, too.â
âDo you suppose he eats little girls?â queried Tavia, with a most ridiculous air.
Dorothy felt as though she wanted to shake her chum. But then, she frequently felt that desire. The man was too near for her to speak again, but the girls crossed the road suddenly.
6
The man stopped, half turned as though to approach them, and leered at Dorothy and Tavia. He was not a large man, but he was remarkably dressed. His black suit was rather wrinkled, as though he had been traveling some time in it. The broad-brimmed hat gave him the air of a Westerner, or Southerner. And his flashy appearance made him very distasteful to Dorothy.
She made Tavia hurry on, and soon they reached the bridge themselves. Tavia was âravingâ again:
âThose wonderful eyes! Did you see them? Deep brown pools of lightâonly one was green? Did you notice it, Doro?â
âNo, I didnât. I told you not to look at him again. You might have encouraged him to follow us.â
âI wonder how it would feel to be a gamblerâs bride. I just feel that heâs from the West and is a gambler, or a cowpuncherâor a maverickâorâââ
âYou donât even know what a maverick is,â scoffed Dorothy.
âYes, I do! A maverick steals cattle,â declared Tavia, quite soberly.
âYou ridiculous thing! Itâs ârustlersâ that steal cattleâor used to. A âmaverickâ is a stray calf without a brand.â
âWell! he looked as though he had strayedââ Oh,
7
Doro!â gasped Tavia, suddenly. âHeâs coming back.â
The girls had reached the bridge and had stopped upon it. The brown water was gurgling over the stones, the birds were twittering in the bushes, and the scent of the wild roses was wafted to them as they leaned upon the bridge-rail.
It was a lovely picture, and Dorothy and Tavia fitted right into it. But the picture did not suit Dorothy and Tavia at all when they saw the black-hatted man round the turn in the road.
They felt just as though the picture needed some action. An automobile with Ned and Nat in it, would have furnished just the life the girls thought would improve the scene.
âCome on!â whispered Dorothy. âDonât let him speak.â
But it was too late to escape that. âLittle ladies!â exclaimed the man. âYouâre not going to run away from me, are you?â
Tavia would have run; only, as she confessed to Dorothy later, her skirt âwas not built that way.â Now, however, Dorothy had to face the man.
âWhat do you want?â she asked, just as sternly as she could speak.
âOh, now, little lady,â began the fellow, âyou mustnât be angry.â
Dorothy turned her back and seized Taviaâs arm. âCome on,â she said, with much more
8
confidence in her voice than she actually felt.
âNed and Nat will soon be along. Come!â
The girls began walking briskly. âIsâis he going to follow us?â whispered Tavia.
âDonât you dare look back to see,â commanded Dorothy, fiercely.
Either the black-hatted man was not very bold and bad, after all, or Dorothyâs remark about expecting the boys fulfilled its duty. He did not follow them beyond the bridge.
âOh, Doro! You canât blame me this time,â urged Tavia, as they hurried on.
âI do not believe the fellow would have dared speak to us if you had not rolled your big eyes at him,â declared Dorothy, rather sharply.
âOh, Doro! I didnât!â Then she began giggling again. âIt is your fatal beauty that gets us into such scrapesâyou know it is.â
It was little use scolding Tavia. Dorothy was well aware of that. She had âsummered and winteredâ her chum too long not to know how incorrigible she was.
For fear the man might still follow them, Dorothy insisted upon taking the first side road and so walking back to Aunt Winnie Whiteâs home, the Cedars, by another way. When they arrived the boys were there before them.
âHi, girls! where were you?â shouted Nat. âWe looked for you along the station road.â
9
âDid you come right up from the station?â demanded Tavia, eagerly.
âSure!â
âDid you see a black-mustached pirate down there by the bridge, with a yellow diamond in his bosomâââ
âIn the bridgeâs bosom?â demanded Nat.
âOf the pirateâs shirt,â finished Tavia. âSuch a mustache! He looked deliciously villainous.â
âAnother conquest?â grunted Nat, who never liked to see any fellow âtagging about after Tavia,â as he expressed it, unless it was a gallant of his own choosing.
âHe followed Dorothyâand spoke to her,â declared Tavia, with effrontery. âAnd she spoke to him.â
âSoft pedal! soft pedal, there, Tavia!â urged Ned, who had overheard. âWe know Dorothy.â
âAnd we know you,â added his brother. âYouâll have to unwind a better string than that, Tavia. Thereâs a âknotâ in itâDorothy did not.â
âAsk her!â snapped Tavia, quite offended, and marched away toward the house.
Dorothy at that moment appeared on the side porch. âCome in, boys, do,â she urged. âItâs ten oâclock and everybody else is in the library. Your mother is all ready to unveil the Great Surprise.â