“No—no conveniences,” said Aunt Martha. “But it’s a wonderful country, my boy—wonderful!”
A pulse of something shot through him at the word, “boy.”
“I’m glad you like it,” he said gravely.
Aunt Martha folded her hands in her lap and looked long at him over the rims of her glasses. There was interest in her eyes, and kindliness. For she saw something in this figure of a new type that sat before her—something that the two big guns, at his hips did not hint at—nor his leather chaps, the cartridge belt, the broad hat, the spurs, the high-heeled boots, the colored scarf at his throat. These things were the badges of his calling, and were, of course, indispensable, but she saw them not. But the virile manhood of him; the indomitability; the quiet fearlessness, indicated by his steady, serene eyes; the rugged, sterling honesty that radiated from him, she saw—and admired. But above all she saw the boy in him—the generous impulses that lay behind his mask of grimness, the love of fun that she had seen him exhibit at Calamity.
“You were born here?” she asked.
“In Colfax, ma’am.”
“Is that a city?”
“Bless yu’, ma’am, no. It’s a county.”
“And you were born on a ranch, then.”
“Yes, ma’am.”