“Louise! Did you really have the hardihood to presume to encroach on Mother White’s preserves—you—a mere bride of five months’ standing? You should be grateful she didn’t take the broom to you.”
“She can cook,” said Louise, laughing. “I admit that. I only offered to peel potatoes. When one stops to consider that the whole county is coming to the ‘house-warming’ of the Lazy S, one can’t help being worried about potatoes and such minor things.”
“Do you think the whole county is coming, Louise?” asked Mary.
“Of course,” said Louise Gordon, positively, slipping away again. She was a welcome guest at the ranch, and her heart was in the success of to-night’s party.
Mary had dressed early. As hostess, she had laid aside her short skirt, leather leggings, and other boyish “fixings” which she usually assumed for better ease in her life of riding. She was clad simply in a long black skirt and white shirt-waist. Her hair was coiled in thick braids about her well-shaped head, lending her a most becoming stateliness.
Would Paul Langford come? He had been bidden. Her father could not know that he would not care to come. Her father did not know that she had sent Langford away that long-ago night in December and that he had not come back—at least to her. Naturally, he had been bidden first to George Williston’s ‘house-warming.’ The men of the Three Bars and of the Lazy S were tried friends—but he would not care to come.
Listen! Some one was coming. It was much too soon for guests. The early October twilight was only now creeping softly over the landscape. It was a still evening. She heard distinctly the rhythmical pound of hoof-beats on the hardened trail. Would the rider go on to Kemah, or would he turn in at the Lazy S?
“Hello, the house!” hailed the horseman, cheerily, drawing rein at the very door. “Hello, within!”
The visitor threw wide the door, and Williston’s voice called cordially:
“Come in, come in, Langford! I am glad you came early.”