Part 18 (1/2)

There it was! A pale gray streak was drawn along the very edge of the world, far, far away. It was just as though a brushful of gray paint had been dashed along that line where the earth and the sky met.

The gray line remained, though growing more distinct, while above it a band of faint pink rimmed the east as far as she could see.

Nan drew her kimono about her shoulders and s.h.i.+vered ecstatically.

This was the wonderful thing that she had awakened with in her mind.

Sunrise!

A gun could have shot the earth away out there across the rolling plain no more suddenly with yellow than now was done by the sun's reflection. It had not come into sight yet; but Nan could see the colors reaching upward toward the zenith. A riot of color hurried everywhere, over the earth and up in the sky; and then--

”There he is!” shouted Nan aloud, as the edge of a fiery red ball appeared.

”What is the matter with you, Nan Sherwood?” complained Bess, from her bed.

”Oh, what is it? Nan!” shrieked Grace, sitting straight up in bed and evidently expecting that the very worst had happened.

”It's morning, you lazy things,” whispered Nan. ”s.h.!.+ Get up and see the most wonderful sight you ever did see.”

”I bet the sun is getting up in the west,” gasped Bess, hopping out of bed at this announcement.

Already there was a stir about the place. Down at the bunk houses the dogs began to yap and some full-throated cow-puncher sent forth a ”Yee! Yee! Yee! Yip!” that acted as rising call for all the hands. As the three girls from so much farther east gathered at the low window to peer out, there sounded another cowboy salute and there dashed by with the drumming of hoofs a little party of mounted men who rode just as the cowboys do in the moving pictures.

Rhoda burst into the room and ran to hug her three friends. She was already dressed.

”There goes Dan's bunch already,” she said. ”And see 'em turn and look back. They're just showing off; they know we sleep on this side of the house. Daddy will give them a wigging, for maybe Mrs.

Janeway wants to sleep.”

Breakfast was an early repast at Rose Ranch. Mrs. Hammond and Mrs.

Janeway were served in their rooms; but the rest of the family were soon at the table. It was a bountiful repast, with Ah Foon, the Chinese cook, coming to the door every few minutes to see for himself if the flapjack plates did not need replenis.h.i.+ng.

”We are going to get our ponies first of all,” Rhoda announced. ”Oh!

I am so hungry for a ride--a good ride--again.”

”But, goodness! don't we have to be fitted to them?” demanded Bess, the incorrigible. ”I would not like to walk right up to a pony and say 'You're mine!'--just like that!”

”Hess will pick them out for us, won't he. Daddy?”

”I reckon so,” said her father, without looking up from his mail that one of the Mexicans had brought in the minute before.

”Goodness!” exclaimed Grace. ”We'll never be able to get the ponies to-day, then, that is sure. He won't be able to answer you so quickly.”

”That's all right,” laughed Rhoda. ”I asked him about them last night”

They ran out to the corral as soon as the girls got into their new riding habits. They had had them made something like Rhoda's.

”You see,” the latter had said, ”our ponies are not often trained for side-saddles and skirts. And, then, they are dangerous.”

The silent Hesitation was on hand. He had a bunch of ponies gathered in a particular corral, and pointed to them in answer to Rhoda when she asked if they were perfectly safe. About the time the girls and Walter had looked them over and chosen those they liked, the horse wrangler said:

”All broke for tenderfoots. You can trust any of 'em as long as you keep your eyes open.”