“I’m going into town, ride along?” Virginia asked, coming into the ranch house living room the next morning. “I will,” Gale said immediately. “And me,” agreed Valerie. “Did you say ride?” groaned Janet. “On a horse?” “Of course,” Virginia laughed. Janet made a wry face and with the greatest care eased herself into a chair piled with cushions. “Not this morning, my dear Virginia. I don’t believe the horse likes me.” Carol laughed from her position before the fireplace. “For once in my life I agree with Janet. You won’t get me on a horse today.” “I shall stay right here, too,” Madge murmured. “Somehow I appreciate comfort this morning.” Accordingly the four mounted and rode away, leaving the other three comfortably fixed with books and magazines. It was almost an hour’s ride into the little town of Coxton at the pace the girls went, but they enjoyed it. They found a lot of things to talk about and besides they were in no great hurry. “I’m going to get me a rope,” Gale proposed as the girls left their horses and mounted the sidewalk. “If I’m going to be a westerner, I’m going to learn to rope.” “And I want a pair of gloves,” Valerie added. “I have to see a man at the bank on business for Father,” Virginia said, “do you want to come along? Or do you want to do your shopping and meet me here in a few minutes?” “We’ll meet you here,” said Gale. “We won’t get lost,” she added with a smile, taking in the few stores and buildings on the single street the town afforded. “No danger,” laughed Virginia. “See you here then.” With a cheery wave of the hand she was off across the street. The girls sauntered along, “I wish we’d seen an Indian,” murmured Phyllis. “Just to prove that we are in the West.” Valerie laughed. “I doubt if you would know one if you did. They don’t wear war paint any more, you know.” “Of course I’d know one,” Phyllis said indignantly. “I--look, there is a general store. Perhaps you can get your rope in there, Gale.” The girls mounted the single wooden step to the store and stepped into the queerest conglomeration of articles they had ever seen. It developed that Gale got her rope, Valerie got her gloves; in fact, they could get anything they wanted. Even postcards, of which they took a goodly supply. There were few people on the street when they left the store. An automobile drew up before the bank and two men stepped out, a third remained at the wheel. “Guess Virginia hasn’t come out of the bank yet,” Phyllis said, looking the length of the street and not seeing the western girl. The three of them strolled to the bank and waited outside. Suddenly from inside the bank Valerie grasped one end of Gale’s rope and sprang across the pavement. Gale, realizing immediately her friend’s intention, grasped her end of the rope more securely. The bandits, running from the bank to their waiting car, tripped headlong over the rope. The first man’s gun flew one way and the black bag in which was the money from the bank flew the other. Phyllis reached over, picked up the gun, and leveled it calmly at the bandits. Valerie secured the black bag. It had been alarmingly easy and so quickly done that the spectators did not at first realize that a robbery had been committed and foiled almost on the same instant. Then there arose a buzz of excited talk while two men stepped from the group of spectators and took charge of the thieves. Unnoticed, the car that had been meant for the bandits’ means of escape, sprang away from the curb and was gone in a cloud of dust. In the bank all was disorder and excitement. Virginia, when she joined the girls to go home, was flushed and excited. “You certainly acted quickly,” she declared admiringly. “The town owes you a vote of thanks. They would have gotten away sure if you hadn’t tripped them.” “Catching bandits is just one of the things we do,” laughed Phyllis. “You ought to really see us in action.” “I had use for my rope before I thought I would,” Gale said smilingly. “I haven’t even learned how to use it yet--when we catch two bandits.” Back at the ranch the three of the Adventure Girls would have said nothing about their part in the robbery, but Virginia promptly declared them heroines and told with harrowing details every bit of the robbery, including the shooting of the bank teller. |