“Face the truth, ma’am. If you’re ever in a tight place, we’ll send you what help we can, hard men, such as can’t be raised in your cities, to keep the flag flying, but we stop there. Don’t think we belong to you—we stand firm on our own feet, a new free nation. I”—he paused in an impressive manner—“am a Canadian.”
Muriel felt a responsive thrill. His ideas were certainly not English, nor was his mode of expressing them, but his boldness appealed to her. Her companions were frankly astonished and rather hurt, which he seemed to realize, for he resumed with a laugh:
“But we won’t talk politics. Things I’ve heard English people say out here make one tired.”
Then he turned toward the girl, adding softly:
“Was that a very bad break I made?”
“I think it could be forgiven,” she told him.
“The years you have spent in Canada seem to have had their full effect on you,” Colston remarked dryly.
Prescott turned his attention to his team, slightly checking their pace.
“What did you mean when you said we should reach your ranch in three hours, if we had good luck?” Muriel asked.
“Oh,” he said, “there are badger burrows about, and a little beast called a gopher makes almost as bad a hole; they’re fond of digging up the trail. If a horse steps into one of those holes, it’s apt to bring him down. Besides, we trust a good deal to our luck in this country—one has to run risks that can’t be estimated: harvest frost, rust, dry seasons, winds that blow destroying sand about. I’ve lost two crops in the eight years I’ve been here.”