<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h3>THE RANCH GIRLS SERIES</h3>
<h1>The Ranch Girls at Rainbow Lodge</h1>
<h3> BY MARGARET VANDERCOOK</h3>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>THE LOST TRAIL.<br/><br/></div>
<div class='cap'>OVER the brown plain a shaggy broncho
trotted slowly, with its head drooping.</div>
<p>A girl stood up in her saddle with one hand
to her lips. "Halloo! Halloo!" she cried.
"I wonder where on earth I am? I thought
I knew every inch of this country, yet here
I am lost and I can't be but a few miles from
our ranch. I must have missed the trail
somewhere. Jim! Jim Colter! If there is
anybody near, please answer me."</p>
<p>Jacqueline Ralston rode astride. Her eyes
and cheeks were glowing and her gold brown
hair, deep grey eyes and brilliant color,
formed an unusually attractive picture.</p>
<p>She leaned over and gave her pony a penitent
hug. "Poor little Hotspur, you shall
have a rest pretty soon, even if I have to
spend the night out of doors. But won't
Jean and Frieda be frightened? Jim will
scour the prairies for me."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The pony was treading through a vast field
of purple clover fading to brown in the autumn
sun. It was just before sunset. Away to the
right, Jacqueline could see a group of slow
moving objects, which she knew to be cattle.
Half a mile on the opposite side was a sparse
group of evergreen trees and low bushes.
But there was nothing else that broke the
vision of a long line of level country, until the
snow-capped peaks of the distant mountains
shone like gold in the rays of the setting sun.</p>
<p>"We will try the trees, Hotspur," Jacqueline
urged coaxingly. "Perhaps we may find
a trail over there. Anyhow I believe I would
rather be a solitary babe in the woods, than
to wander around here in the alfalfa fields
until to-morrow morning."</p>
<p>The girl wore a short, brown corduroy
jacket and skirt, leather leggings and riding
boots. Over the pommel of her saddle hung
a bunch of silver grouse and a smart little rifle
was suspended at her side.</p>
<p>"I am desperately hungry," she announced
aloud. "I do wish I had a match so I could
light a fire. Jolly good advice that of Jim's
for a ranch girl, 'never try to find your match,
always carry it with you.'"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Jacqueline laughed. She was not willing
to confess that she was tired, although she
had been riding since eight o'clock that morning.
Against the wishes of her sister Frieda,
her cousin Jean, and the overseer of their
ranch, Jim Colter, she had gone off alone to
inspect the corral which had been recently
built to protect their sheep for the winter.</p>
<p>Inside the woods the way was darker and
there was no sign of a road. Jacqueline let
the reins slacken on her pony's neck. Really
Hotspur would have to find the right trail
home, if they were to reach the ranch house
that night. She could hear the rabbits and
squirrels scurrying back into their retreats.
They were not accustomed to being disturbed
at their supper time and at first there was no
other sound.</p>
<p>"Who goes there?" suddenly a rough voice
demanded, and a horse came plunging through
an opening in the trees.</p>
<p>Jacqueline's color paled. She recognized
the rider, a boy of about sixteen, nearly her
own age. "I am Jacqueline Ralston," she
answered quietly. "I have lost the trail.
Will you please show me the way to the Rainbow
Ranch?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The young fellow laughed rudely. "Miss
Ralston, is it?" he sneered. "Don't tell me
you are lost on our ranch. You have been
over here spying at our cattle. Just you
trot along home as fast as you can. I shall
report to my father what I caught you
doing." The boy's light blue eyes blazed
angrily.</p>
<p>Jacqueline had reined in her pony and
waited. Her temper was not her strong point,
but she replied politely: "I am not spying,
Dan Norton; I wonder why you should think
it necessary. I will leave your ranch as soon
as I can get away from it. Will you please
show me the trail?"</p>
<p>Jacqueline held her head very high.
"Won't you tell me?" she asked again. "Because
we happen to be enemies is no reason
why you shouldn't believe my word." The
young girl's tones were gentle, but her face
was white with anger in the gathering dusk.
Her firm red lips were pressed tight together
to keep her from saying the things she really
felt.</p>
<p>Dan Norton rode closer toward her and for
reply struck her pony sharply with his short
riding whip. Tired little Hotspur quivered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span>
with pain, but stood still under his mistress'
gentle words.</p>
<p>"Don't do that again, Dan," Jacqueline protested,
feeling the hot blood rush to her face
and then leave her cold and still with anger.
"There is not another person in Wyoming
who would be so rude to me. But there has
been trouble enough between you and us.
I shall not speak of this, but I shall never be
able to forgive you to the longest day I
live;" and Jacqueline's grey eyes looked so
proudly and so scornfully into the boy's that
his own dropped.</p>
<p>"Your way's to the left," he muttered.
"If you ride quick, you will soon be on the
boundary of your own ranch. Hurry, there
is some one else coming this way."</p>
<p>Jacqueline did not stir. A few minutes
before, she would have trotted off gladly.
Now nothing would have induced her to go.
She would not run away from her enemy.
Indeed she preferred to explain her presence
on his ranch to Mr. Norton.</p>
<p>In the silence between the two young people
another voice entered, but it was not Mr.
Norton's. Some one was singing.</p>
<p>Dan Norton rode hurriedly out of sight and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span>
Jacqueline lifted her rifle, letting it rest in her
arm.</p>
<div class='poem'>
"If a body meet a body,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Comin' through the rye;</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">If a body kiss a body,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Need a body cry?</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Every lassie has her laddie,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Nane they say have—</span><br/></div>
<p>"Oh!" the song stopped abruptly. The
singer threw up both hands and burst into a
merry boyish laugh. "I surrender in the name
of—in the name of most anything, if you will
only put down that gun," he declared. "Who
would have thought of meeting a girl in these
woods? Whatever are you doing here?
Poaching? No, I believe you don't have
game preserves in this country, so poaching
isn't against your law." The stranger
laughed, though he had taken off his hat and
bowed courteously to his fellow traveler.
"Please tell me, are you Rosalind in the forest
of Arden? You look like her, although I never
heard of her on horseback," he ended merrily.</p>
<p>Jacqueline bit her lips. The young man
was evidently a newcomer in the neighborhood
and at any other time Jacqueline would
have liked him. He must have been about<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span>
seventeen and was tall and slender, with
light brown hair and clever brown eyes. His
dress was that of a cowboy, but Jacqueline
saw with a feeling of instant disdain that his
clothes were too new and his face too white
for him to have lived long in her country.
Besides he did not ride or talk like a Westerner.</p>
<p>"I am Frank Kent, at your service," he
explained, puzzled by Jacqueline's haughty
silence. "I am an Englishman and I don't
quite know what I ought to do or say out in
Wyoming. But may I be of any service to
you?"</p>
<p>Jacqueline's feeling of hurt and anger began
to subside and she smiled in a more friendly
fashion. Frank Kent decided that he had
never seen such a pretty girl before in his life.
Had she been a city girl, her skin would
have been fair, but from her outdoor life it
had become exquisitely darkened by the
wind and sun of the prairies. Her hair was
like bronze and her color a deep rose.</p>
<p>"I ought not to be asking favors of you,"
Jacqueline replied in her usual manner.
"You are a stranger in a strange land, while I
have lived out West since I was a baby. But
can you show me the trail to the Rainbow<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span>
Ranch? Anyhow tell me how to get off of
this place. I have never been on it before,
and—" To save her life Jacqueline could not
keep her voice from trembling.</p>
<p>"Surely I can show you," Frank answered.
He spoke with such a funny English accent,
that Jacqueline would have liked to have
made fun of him, if she had known him better.</p>
<p>"I have heard a lot about the girls who run
Rainbow Ranch," he went on quickly. "They
sound like such an awfully good sort that
I have made Dan Norton tell me a lot about
them. I am visiting him, surely you must
know him," the young fellow concluded
eagerly.</p>
<p>What in the world had he said? Frank
Kent was startled. The girl he had just met
seemed quite friendly a moment before. Now
she stiffened up on her pony, her cheeks
turned scarlet and her eyes flashed.</p>
<p>"I won't trouble you any further," she
announced. "I will find my own way home
from here." Without another word or a
backward glance, Jacqueline gave her pony a
gentle cut and Hotspur galloped quickly away.</p>
<p>"Whew," Frank Kent whistled, "methinks
some one told me that the people one met out<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span>
West were awfully friendly and informal.
That girl was as touchy as you find them.
But I wonder who she is? I think I will ride
after her and show her the trail, even if she
is so high and mighty."</p>
<p>Jacqueline pretended not to hear the
young man trotting along behind her, and
did not turn her head. She rode faster
and faster until a sound like a stifled moan
arrested her. Jacqueline paused and saw
that the young fellow who had been so
polite to her a few minutes before was
ghastly white. He was swaying so in his
saddle that he had not the strength to stop
his horse.</p>
<p>Jacqueline caught his bridle. "Rest a
minute," she urged gently. "You will soon
be all right. You have ridden too far and
you are not used to it. People always do too
much, when they first come to Wyoming.
My name is Jacqueline Ralston and I am one
of the girls at the Rainbow Ranch. I am
sorry I was rude to you a little while ago,
but the Nortons are not our friends." Jacqueline
was talking so that the young man
could get his breath. She could not help
admiring the brave fight he made. He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span>
seemed to be dreadfully ashamed of his own
weakness.</p>
<p>"You will let me show you the right trail,
won't you?" he asked. "I am sorry you are
not friendly with my hosts. I thought I
heard you talking to Dan, when I rode up to
you, but that won't matter about me, will
it? I don't know anything about your
quarrel and if we were properly introduced,
don't you think we could be friends? I can't
tell you how plucky I think it is for you three
girls to be managing your own ranch. Don't
you think you might tell me a thing or two
about it? It is pretty lonely out here for a
stranger."</p>
<p>The young fellow looked so nice, and so ill,
in spite of his efforts to hide it, that Jacqueline
almost relented. Then the thought of
Dan Norton's rudeness and the long feud
between them swept over her, and Jacqueline
shook her head firmly.</p>
<p>"I am sorry," she returned. "With any
one else it would not matter, but we can't
be friendly with any guest of the Norton's."
Jacqueline hesitated, "I can't explain it to
you, there isn't time. Good-bye. I know
the way home from here."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Frank Kent watched Jacqueline ride out of
sight, sitting on her pony as though she had
been made on it, like a figure cut from bronze,
all in soft tones of gold and brown.</p>
<p>It was quite dark when Jacqueline at last
spied the lights of her own ranch house
twinkling at her warmly through the open
windows and doors.</p>
<p>The broncho hurried faster, forgetting his
hard day and Jacqueline talked low in his ear.</p>
<p>"Home and supper, Hotspur! See the
lights of home ahead. Soon they will hear us
coming. Suppose I give our call and relieve
the suspense." Three times in rapid succession,
Jacqueline touched her red lips with
her slender fingers and gave a shrill, clear
whistle like an Indian's call.</p>
<p>Instantly figures moved about in the ranch
house. A dark lantern was swung off its
place over the front door and a man and two
girls hurried down the drive. Jacqueline
was lifted off her horse. Her sister, Frieda,
seized her by one arm, her cousin, Jean, by
the other.</p>
<p>"What has kept you so long?" Frieda demanded
anxiously.</p>
<p>"If you have had an adventure and wouldn't<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span>
let me go with you to-day, I shall never get
over it," Jean insisted. "Come into the
house this minute. Do tell us where you
have been. Jim telephoned over to the other
side of the ranch three hours back, but the sheep
herders said you started for home long ago.
We have been frightened to death ever since."</p>
<p>Frieda pulled at her sister's jacket. Jean,
although she kept up her scolding, got a pair
of soft, red felt slippers and placed them invitingly
in front of the big, living-room fire.</p>
<p>Rainbow Lodge was built of pine logs.
The great sitting-room was forty feet long and
two-thirds as wide and it looked like a man's
room, but the three ranch girls did not know
it. The floor was covered with buffalo robes
and beautiful bright Navajo blankets made
by the Indians in the nearby villages, and the
head of an elk thrusting forth giant antlers dominated
the scene from above the stone fireplace.
An Andrew Jackson table made of hewn logs,
with a smooth polished top, occupied one side
of the fireplace, holding a reading lamp and
some half-opened books.</p>
<p>In another corner the home-made book
shelves were filled with much-read novels and
books of travel. There were low, comfortable<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span>
chairs about everywhere. It was an odd
room to be occupied by three young girls,
but a very noble one. The ranch girls had
kept it just as their father had left it when
he died, six months before.</p>
<p>Jacqueline gave a comfy sigh. "I <i>am</i>
glad to be at home," she murmured. "I
haven't had any special adventure. Jean, I
know you will be disgusted with me, but I got
lost and wandered over on the Norton ranch.
I met Dan Norton and he was horrid to me.
Oh, Frieda darling, hasn't Aunt Ellen saved
me anything to eat? I am simply starving,"
Jacqueline ended, anxious to change the subject.</p>
<p>Aunt Ellen came in at this moment bearing
a waiter. She was nearly six feet tall, part
Indian and part colored, and she had lived
with the Ralstons ever since Mr. and Mrs.
Ralston came to Wyoming from the East,
bringing Jack, who was then only two years
old.</p>
<p>The old woman was frowning and shaking
her head, as she put down Jack's supper.
"Ought never to have ridden off across the
ranch alone, ought not to be coming back
home way after dark. I am sure the master<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>
never would have liked you chilluns living
here and trying to run things for yourself,"
she muttered.</p>
<p>Jack flushed, although she patted the old
woman's hand affectionately and said nothing.
Jack knew she deserved the scolding
and that she would have another from Jim
Colter, the manager of their ranch, in
the morning. To-night he had led Hotspur
away without a word and retired to his own
quarters.</p>
<p>No one, excepting strangers, ever called
Jacqueline Ralston anything but Jack. She
never thought of herself by her pretty French
name, except when she wished to appear very
grown up and impressive. As for little
Frieda, she had been born at Rainbow Ranch
house thirteen years before on Christmas eve.
She was such a fair little German-looking
baby, with her blue eyes and flaxen hair, that
her mother gave her the pretty German name
of Frieda, which means peace. Mrs. Ralston
died when Frieda was only a few months old,
but the little girl had fairly earned her name
all her life. Peace and War, Jean used to call
the two sisters, when she wanted to tease
Jack, for Jacqueline was as high-tempered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span>
and determined as Frieda was gentle and
serene.</p>
<p>Jean was a slender, graceful maiden, with
hair and eyes of the same nut brown color.
She had come to live at the ranch ten years
before, when her mother, Mr. Ralston's sister,
died, and Mr. Ralston decided it would be
better to bring up three motherless girls than
two. Jean had a gentle, far-away expression,
though Jack always asserted that Jean was
present when she wanted to be. She only
dreamed dreams and wore her aloof expression
when people bored her, or when she felt
sad and thought she needed sympathy. Jack
and Frieda knew no difference in their feeling
for Jean and for each other.</p>
<p>When Jacqueline finished supper, she curled
herself in a big armchair in front of the fire.
Frieda sat on a low stool at her feet while
Jean, with an open book, was not far away.
Jean was the reader of the three girls, but to-night
her book was neglected.</p>
<p>"Out with it, Jack," Jean insisted calmly.
"You know perfectly well that you haven't
told us all that happened to you this afternoon.
Fire away and get it over with, I want to
finish my book to-night."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>After much urging, Jack told her story in
full and Jean flung her book down and danced
about the room on her tip-toes, she was so
angry, when she heard how Dan Norton had
treated her. But she had a different feeling
about the young English fellow.</p>
<p>"I really think you were rather horrid,
Jacqueline Ralston," she announced coolly.
"Of course we can't be having visitors or
making friends with any one visiting those
hateful Nortons, but I think you might
have told that young fellow we would be nice
to him when we met him other places. He
is a far-off cousin of the Nortons, whose health
broke down while he was at college in England
and his people sent him over here to
recover. His father is a Lord, or a Sir or
something, I can't remember which. But
Mrs. Simpson says he is awfully nice and—"</p>
<p>Jack put both fingers in her ears. "For
goodness sake, hush, Jean Bruce," she protested.
"You are such a snob. What difference
can it make to us, whether this Frank
Kent is a lord or a prizefighter? We certainly
can't have anything to do with him. I
shan't even speak to him again if I can help it.
For the life of me, Jean, I don't see how you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span>
happen to find out the gossip in Wyoming
with our ranches five miles apart."</p>
<p>Jean's brown eyes sparkled. She and Jack
had many differences of opinion, but to-night
Jack was tired and her cousin decided not to
answer back.</p>
<p>"Have you gotten your lessons, Frieda?"
Jack asked gently a moment later, kissing
her hand apologetically to Jean.</p>
<p>Frieda shook her head. She had two long
blonde plaits, like a little German girl, with a
curl at the end of each one of them. Her
cheeks were a faint pink, and her nose tilted
just enough to curl her lips up into a smile.</p>
<p>"No," she replied calmly. "Jean offered
to hear me recite, but I didn't feel like it.
You and Jean haven't studied your French
for three evenings. I don't see why I have
to do all the studying, because I am the youngest.
When we planned to live by ourselves
this winter, you and Jean declared that you
were going to study three or four hours every
day."</p>
<p>Jack pulled Frieda's hair and Jean had just
picked up her French grammar with a sigh
when there came the noise of some one riding
up to the ranch house.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The three girls flew to the window. It was
too dark to recognize the figure on horseback.
But a few moments later, Aunt Ellen brought
in an envelope addressed to "Miss Jacqueline
Ralston."</p>
<p>It was a surly note of apology from Dan
Norton for his rudeness to her in the afternoon.
The girls wondered what in the world
had induced him to write it.</p>
<p>Long after Jean and Frieda were asleep,
Jacqueline lay awake. She was the oldest
and most responsible member of the ranch
girl family of three. Frieda was right, she
and Jean had been neglecting their studies
shamefully. Now and then Jack could not
help thinking that perhaps it was not wise for
them to live without a teacher or a chaperon.
They did not want to grow up perfect greenhorns,
yet how they hated the idea of introducing
a stranger into their home at Rainbow
Ranch. Jack was still puzzling, when she
fell asleep, with the familiar sound in her ears
of the far-off lowing of the wild cattle across
the prairie and the distant bark of the faithful
sheep dogs.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />