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"No, yu' oughtn't!" said Lin, with sudden ardor; and then, in a voice of
deprecation, "You'll think us plumb ignorant."

"You know enough to be kind to folks," said she.
"We'd like to."

"It's the only thing makes the world go round!" she declared, with an
emotion that I had heard in her tone once or twice already. But she

caught herself up, and said gayly to me, "And where's that house you were
going to build for a lone girl to sleep in?"

"I'm afraid the foundations aren't laid yet," said I.
"Now you gentlemen needn't bother about me."

"We'll have to, m'm. You ain't used to Separ."
"Oh, I am no--tenderfoot, don't you call them?" She whipped out her

pistol, and held it at the cow-puncher, laughing.
This would have given no pleasure to me; but over Lin's features went a

glow of delight, and he stood gazing at the pointedweapon and the girl
behind it. "My!" he said, at length, almost in a whisper, "she's got the

drop on me!"
"I reckon I'd be afraid to shoot that one of yours," said Miss Buckner.

"But this hits a target real good and straight at fifteen yards." And she
handed it to him for inspection.

He received it, hugely grinning, and turned it over and over. "My!" he
murmured again. "Why, shucks!" He looked at Miss Buckner with stark

rapture, caressing the polished revolver at the same time with a fond,
unconscious thumb. "You hold it just as steady as I could," he said with

pride, and added, insinuatingly, "I could learn yu' the professional drop
in a morning. This here is a little dandy gun."

"You'd not trade, though," said she, "for all your flattery."
"Will yu' trade?" pounced Lin. "Won't yu'?"

"Now, Mr. McLean, I am afraid you're thoughtless. How could a girl like
me ever hold that awful .45 Colt steady?"

"She knows the brands, too!" cried Lin, in ecstasy. "See here," he
remarked to me with a manner that smacked of command, "we're losing time

right now. You go and tell the agent to hustle and fix his room up for a
lady, and I'll bring her along."

I found the agent willing, of course, to sleep on the floor of the
office. The toy station was also his home. The front compartment held the

ticket and telegraph and mail and express chattels, and the railing, and
room for the public to stand; through a door you then passed to the

sitting, dining, and sleeping box; and through another to a cooking-stove
in a pigeon-hole. Here flourished the agent and his lungs, and here the

company's strict orders bade him sleep in charge; so I helped him put his
room to rights. But we need not have hurried ourselves. Mr. McLean was so

long in bringing the lady that I went out and found him walking and
talking with her, while fifty yards away skulked poor Texas, alone. This

boy's name was, like himself, of the somewhat unexpected order, being
Manassas Donohoe.

As I came towards the new friends they did not appear to be joking, and
on seeing me Miss Buckner said to Lin, "Did he know?"

Lin hesitated.
"You did know!" she exclaimed, but lost her resentment at once, and

continued, very quietly and with a friendly tone, "I reckon you don't
like to have to tell folks bad news."

It was I that now hesitated.
"Not to a strange girl, anyway!" said she. "Well, now I have good news to

tell you. You would not have given me any shock if you had said you knew
about poor Nate, for that's the reason--Of course those things can't be

secrets! Why, he's only twenty, sir! How should he know about this world?
He hadn't learned the first little thing when he left home five years

ago. And I am twenty-three--old enough to be Nate's grandmother, he's
that young and thoughtless. He couldn't ever realize bad companions when

they came around. See that!" She showed me a paper, taking it out like a
precious thing, as indeed it was; for it was a pardon signed by Governor

Barker. "And the Governor has let me carry it to Nate myself. He won't
know a thing about it till I tell him. The Governor was real kind, and we

will never forget him. I reckon Nate must have a mustache by now?" said
she to Lin.

"Yes," Lin answered, gruffly, looking away from her, "he has got a
mustache all right."

"He'll be glad to see you," said I, for something to say.
"Of course he will! How many hours did you say we will be?" she asked

Lin, turning from me again, for Mr. McLean had not been losing time. It
was plain that between these two had arisen a freemasonry from which I

was already shut out. Her woman's heart had answered his right impulse to
tell her about her brother, and I had been found wanting!

So now she listened over again to the hours of stage jolting that "we"
had before us, and that lay between her and Nate. "We would be four--

herself, Lin, myself, and the boy Billy. Was Billy the one at supper? Oh
no; just Billy Lusk, of Laramie. "He's a kid I'm taking up the country,"

Lin explained. "Ain't you most tuckered out?"
"Oh, me!" she confessed, with a laugh and a sigh.

There again! She had put aside my solicitude lightly, but was willing Lin
should know her fatigue. Yet, fatigue and all, she would not sleep in the

agent's room. At sight of it and the close quarters she drew back into
the outer office, so prompted by that inner, unsuspected strictness she

had shown me before.
"Come out!" she cried, laughing. "Indeed, I thank you. But I can't have

you sleep on this hard floor out here. No politeness, now! Thank you ever
so much. I'm used to roughing it pretty near as well as if I was--a

cowboy!" And she glanced at Lin. "They're calling forty-seven," she added
to the agent.

"That's me," he said, coming out to the telegraphinstrument. "So you're
one of us?"

"I didn't know forty-seven meant Separ," said I. "How in the world do you
know that?"

"I didn't. I heard forty-seven, forty-seven, forty-seven, start and go
right along, so I guessed they wanted him, and he couldn't hear them from

his room."
"Can yu' do astronomy and Spanish too?" inquired the proud and smiling

McLean.
"Why, it's nothing! I've been day operator back home. Why is a deputy

coming through on a special engine?"
"Please don't say it out loud!" quavered the agent, as the machine

clicked its news.
"Yu' needn't be scared of a girl," said Lin. "Another sheriff! So they're

not quit bothering us yet."
However, this meddling was not the company's, but the county's; a sheriff

sent to arrest, on a charge of murder, a man named Trampas, said to be at
the Sand Hill Ranch. That was near Rawhide, two stations beyond, and the

engine might not stop at Separ, even to water. So here was no molesting
of Separ's liberties.

"All the same," Lin said, for pistols now and then still sounded at the
corrals, "the boys'll not understand that till it's explained, and they

may act wayward first. I'd feel easier if you slept here," he urged to
the girl. But she would not. "Well, then, we must rustle some other

private place for you. How's the section-house?"
"Rank," said the agent, "since those Italians used it. The pump engineer

has been scouring, but he's scared to bunk there yet himself."
"Too bad you couldn't try my plan of a freight-car!" said I.

"An empty?" she cried. "Is there a clean one?"
"You've sure never done that?" Lin burst out.

"So you're scandalized," said she, punishing him instantly. "I reckon it
does take a decent girl to shock you." And while she stood laughing at

him with robust irony, poor Lin began to stammer that he meant no
offence. "Why, to be sure you didn't!" said she. "But I do enjoy you real

thoroughly."
"Well, m'm," protested the wincing cow-puncher, driven back to addressing

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