Whinstane Sandy about the middle of last week brought home the startling information that Sing Lo had sold Lady Allie’s heavy work-team to Bud O’Malley for the paltry sum of sixty dollars. He further reported that Sing Lo had decamped, taking with him as rich a haul as he could carry. I was in doubt on what to do, for a while. But I eventually decided to go in to Buckhorn and send a telegram to the owner of Casa Grande. I felt sure, if Lady Allie was in Banff, that she’d be at the C. P. R. hotel there, and that even if she had gone on to the Anglesey Ranch my telegram would be forwarded to Wallachie. So I wired her: “Chinaman left in charge has been selling ranch property. Advise me what action you wish taken.” A two-day wait brought no reply to this, so I then telegraphed to the hotel-manager asking for information as to her ladyship. I was anxious for that information, I’ll confess, for more personal reasons than those arising out of the activities of Sing Lo. When I went in for my house supplies on Friday there was a message there from the Banff hotel-manager stating that Lady Newland had left, ten days “Would advise consulting my ranch manager on the matter mentioned in your wire,” and was signed “Alicia Newland.” There was a sense of satisfaction in having located the lady, but there was a distinctly nettling note in the tenor of that little message. I decided, accordingly, to give her the retort courteous by wiring back to her: “Kindly advise me of ranch manager’s present whereabouts,” and at the bottom of that message inscribed, “Mrs. Duncan Argyll McKail.” And I’ve been smiling a little at the telegram which has just been sent on to me, for now that I come to review our electric intercourse in a cooler frame of mind it looks suspiciously like back-biting over a thousand miles of telegraph-wire. This second message from San Francisco said: “Have no knowledge whatever of the gentleman’s movements or whereabouts.” It was, I found, both a pleasant and a puzzling bit of information, and my earlier regrets at wasting time that I could ill spare betrayed a tendency to evaporate. It was satisfying, and yet it was not satisfying, for |