Uncle Bob would have been glad to put himself and Arthur on a friendly footing with his nephew, but the latter would not give him the opportunity. As soon as the train stopped, he and George went into another car, and stayed there. When they reached Leavenworth, Bob telegraphed Mr. Evans, as the latter had instructed him to do, winding up the message with the following words:
“I want nothing to do with the old hypocrite,” said Bob, as he and George went back to the train, “and by sending for two saddle horses I have made it possible for you and me to have a little private conversation with When they reached Dixon Spring, which was as far as the track was laid at the time of which we write, their journey by rail was ended. Now came a ride of a hundred and sixty miles, part of the way lying through the southwestern portion of New Mexico and the rest through Arizona. Mr. Evans was on hand when the train stopped at Dixon Spring, and when Bob had greeted him cordially, he presented his friend, George Edwards. He paid no attention to Uncle Bob, but that gentleman was not to be put off in any such way. He kept a sharp eye upon his nephew, and seeing him in the act of shaking hands with a roughly dressed man, who wore a brace of revolvers about his waist, he walked up and broke in upon the conversation without offering an apology for so doing, thereby committing a breach of etiquette, which, under different circumstances, would have been pretty certain to bring him into trouble. “You have,” replied the owner of that name, running his eye over Uncle Bob’s figure, and then over Arthur’s, taking in at a glance, their fine clothes, gloves, canes, patent-leather shoes, and all their ornaments, but making no move toward accepting the proffered hand. Like all men of his calling, he heartily despised finery of every sort, and he was suspicious of it, too. There was only one class of persons in that country who dressed in that way, and they were rascals without a single exception. “I supposed that my nephew would introduce me,” said Uncle Bob, throwing off a hint of his haughtiness and pomposity, and speaking in his ordinary tone of voice; “but as he seems to have forgotten me, I must do it myself. I am Robert Howard, at your service, the brother of the late Eben Howard, who, I believe, was—” “Oh, why didn’t you say so?” interrupted Mr. Evans. “I received your telegram, and He looked inquiringly at the boy as he said this, and then he reluctantly took the outstretched hand; but he did not shake it as though he was glad to see Uncle Bob. And indeed he wasn’t. He knew more of the man’s history than the latter thought he did. “Now, then,” said Mr. Evans, who had no desire to prolong the interview, having already seen as much of Uncle Bob and Arthur as he cared to see, “I will bring up the wagon, and while I am gone, you can present your checks and get your trunks. We have about twenty-five miles to go to reach our camping-ground, and, if we want to get there before dark, we have no time to waste.” “Camping-ground!” repeated Arthur. “Do you mean that we must sleep out of doors?” “Oh, no! Knowing that you were tenderfeet, I took the liberty to stop at Bob’s house and get his tent.” “Why, I was under the impression that a “Hotels in this country!” exclaimed Mr. Evans. “There are stations along the route, if they are what you mean; and if you want to eat soggy potatoes, green biscuit, and oleomargarine butter, and be eaten up with fleas when you go to bed, you can do it and welcome; but I won’t. Well-cooked camp-fare and a bed of clean prairie-grass are good enough for me.” Mr. Evans hurried away, and when he returned a few minutes later, he was driving a span of mules, which were hitched to a light spring wagon with a canopy top. There was one seat in the wagon, placed in the extreme forward end, so that the driver’s feet hung out over the pole; and the body of the vehicle was filled with camp-equipage. Still, there was room enough in it for Bob’s trunk and George’s, as well as for the valises which the others had brought with them. Arthur was not at all satisfied with this arrangement, and neither was his father. The former was wondering what his aristocratic acquaintances in Bolton would say if they could see him dressed in his fine clothes and perched behind a span of lazy mules; while Uncle Bob told himself that he was losing something by leaving his nephew and Mr. Evans together. He wanted an opportunity to tell his story before Bob could say anything to prejudice the man against him. “So that’s the man who is to act as your guardian, is it?” said Mr. Evans, as the wagon moved off. “He is the chap who borrowed money of your father to start him in business, and then failed and cheated him out of the most of it?” “Yes; and when father came out here, in the hope of recovering the health he had lost by overwork, Uncle Bob industriously circulated “No, he didn’t forget it, but he forgave it,” said Mr. Evans. “I know that the fierce quarrel he had with his brother was the cause of much sorrow to him; and as soon as he had paid all your Uncle Bob’s debts, he went to work to heal the breach—” “And Uncle Bob helped him; and this is the result,” broke in the boy. “That seems to be about the way the thing stands. I know what sort of a will he made, and I know, too, that it was his intention to speak to you about it when you came home this fall, and to change it, if you raised the least objection to it.” “I shouldn’t have done it,” said Bob, with tears in his eyes. “As it was his wish that my uncle should act in his stead, I shall submit, and be as dutiful and respectful as I can; but, unless he changes very much, I shall be Neither did Mr. Evans. Regrets could not change the situation. He was sorry for Bob, and he made the mental resolution that he would keep an eye on this guardian of his, and at the very first sign of tyranny or unfaithfulness, he would raise a storm about his ears that would drive him from the country. The journey from Dixon Spring to Bob Howard’s home consumed the best part of five days, and during that time Arthur and George had opportunity to learn what Western life, of which they had often read the most glowing accounts, really was. George was delighted with it, but Arthur did not like it at all, and told himself over and over again that he would make his way back to Bolton just as soon as he could induce his father to give him money enough to take him there. There was no fun in sleeping on the hard ground every night. The tent which he “Young man,” said he, shaking a piece of hardtack at Arthur, “I have traveled a good deal, spent some years in the army, associated with all sorts and kinds of people, and I have always noticed one thing—that those who never have anything worth eating at home are the very ones who growl the loudest at what is set before them when they are away from home.” Arthur would have been glad to make an angry reply to this merited rebuke, but something in the clear brown eye that was fastened Both he and his father took the hint, and from that time forward conducted themselves like reasonable beings. The result was just what might have been expected. Mr. Evans became more sociable and communicative, and instead of following behind the wagon, as he had formerly done, he rode beside it, patiently answering all Uncle Bob’s questions and trying his best to enlighten him on every subject on which he sought information. The latter was astonished at his knowledge, and could hardly believe his nephew when the latter told him that those rough clothes covered a Yale College graduate. While Mr. Evans was devoting himself to the senior member of the party, Arthur was not neglected. As soon as he threw off his assumed dignity—which did not set well on him, anyway—George and Bob met him half-way, and the latter, having come to the sensible conclusion that it was useless to fight against the inevitable, went to work He gave him his horse when he saw that he was tired of riding in the wagon, took pains to direct his attention to all the interesting objects along the trail, and showed him his new home while they were yet ten hours’ journey distant from it. “What a grand view this is!” exclaimed Arthur, as he drew rein on the brink of a frightful precipice and gazed down into the valley below him. He was riding Mr. Evans’ horse, that gentleman having taken his seat in the wagon. Bob did not object to this arrangement now. He knew that Mr. Evans was his friend, and it mattered little what his uncle said to him. “Yes, it’s a splendid sight,” said Bob, who was thinking of the lonely grave there was somewhere in that valley, and not of the beauty of the scenery. “People who have traveled among the Alps say that Switzerland has nothing that can beat it. Every foot of that valley belonged to my father.” “And if anything should happen to you This thought had been uppermost in his mind ever since the day that telegram was received. He had pondered upon it day and night, and he continued to ponder upon it until it led to something—something that created the greatest excitement, and came pretty near ending in a fearful tragedy. |