Ruth Fielding in the Great Northwest
OR
THE INDIAN GIRL STAR OF THE MOVIES
BY
ALICE B. EMERSON
AUTHOR OF "RUTH FIELDING OF THE RED MILL," "RUTH FIELDING IN THE
SADDLE," "RUTH FIELDING DOWN EAST," ETC.
NEW YORK CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY PUBLISHERS
RUTH FIELDING
IN THE GREAT NORTHWEST
CHAPTER I
RUTH IN PERIL
The gray dust, spurting from beneath the treads of the
rapidly turning wheels, drifted across the country road to
settle on the wayside hedges. The purring of the engine of
Helen Cameron's car betrayed the fact that it was tuned to
perfection. If there were any rough spots in the road being
traveled, the shock absorbers took care of them.
"Dear me! I always do love to ride in Nell's car," said the
plump and pretty girl who occupied more than her share of the
rear seat. "Even if Tom isn't here to take care of it, it
always is so comfy."
"Only one thing would suit you better, Heavy," declared the
sharp-featured and sharp-tongued girl sitting next to Jennie
Stone. "If only a motor could be connected to a
rocking-chair—"
"Right-o!" agreed the cheerful plump girl. "And have it on a
nice shady porch. I'd like to travel that way just as well.
After our experience in France we ought to be allowed to travel
in comfort for the rest of our lives. Isn't that so, Nell? And
you agree, Ruthie?"
The girl at the wheel of the flying automobile nodded only,
for she needed to keep her gaze fixed ahead. But the
brown-haired, brown-eyed girl, whose quiet face seemed rather
wistful, turned to smile upon the volatile—and
voluble—Heavy Stone, so nicknamed during their early
school days at Briarwood Hall.
"Don't let's talk about it, honey," she said. "I try not to
think of what we all went through."
"And the soup I tasted!" groaned the plump one. "That diet
kitchen in Paris! I'll never get over it—never!"
"I guess that's right," agreed Mercy Curtis, the
sharp-featured girl. "How that really nice Frenchman can stand
for such a fat girl—"
"Why," explained Heavy calmly, "the more there is of me the
more there is for him to like." Then she giggled. "There were
so few fat people left in Europe after four years of war that
everybody liked to look at me."
"You certainly are a sight for sore eyes," Helen Cameron
shot over her shoulder, but without losing sight of the road
ahead. She was a careful, if rapid, driver. "And for any other
eyes! One couldn't very well miss you, Heavy."
"Let's not talk any more about France—or the
war—or anything like that," proposed Ruth Fielding, the
shadow on her face deepening. "Both your Henri and Helen's Tom
have had to go back—"
"Helen's Tom?" repeated Mercy Curtis softly. But Jennie
Stone pinched her. She would not allow anybody to tease Ruth,
although they all knew well enough that the absence of Helen's
twin brother meant as much to Ruth Fielding as it did to his
sister.
This was strictly a girl's party, this ride in Helen
Cameron's automobile. Aside from Mercy, who was the daughter of
the Cheslow railroad station agent, and therefore lived in
Cheslow all the year around, the girls were not native to the
place. They had just left that pretty town behind them. It
appeared that Ruth, Helen, and surely Jennie Stone, knew very
few of the young men of Cheslow. So this jaunt was, as Jennie
saucily said, entirely "poulette".
"Which she thinks is French for 'old hen,'" scoffed the tart
Mercy.
"I do not know which is worse," Ruth Fielding said with a
sigh, as Helen slowed down for a railroad crossing at which
stood a flagman. "Heavy's French or her slang."
"Slang! Never!" cried the plump girl, tossing her head "Far
be it from me and et cetera. I never use slang. I am quite as
much of a purist as that professor at Ardmore—what was
his name?—that they tell the story about. The dear dean
told him that some of the undergrads complained that his
language was 'too pedantic and unintelligible.'"
"'Never, Madam! Impossible! Why,' said the prof, 'to employ
a vulgarism, perspicuity is my penultimate appellative.'"
"Ow! Ow!" groaned Helen at the wheel "I bet that hurt your
vocal cords, Heavy."
She let in the clutch again as the party broke into
laughter, and they darted across the tracks behind the passing
train.
"Just the same," added Helen, "I wish some of the boys we
used to play around with were with us. Those fellows Tom went
to Seven Oaks with were all nice boys. Dear me!"
"Most of them went into the war," Ruth reminded her.
"Nothing is as it used to be. Oh, dear!"
"I must say you are all very cheerful—not!" exclaimed
Jennie. "Ruth is a regular Grandmother Grimalkin, and the rest
of you are little better. I for one just won't think of my dear
Henri as being food for cannon. I just won't! Why! before he
and Tom can get into the nasty business again the war may be
over. Just see the reports in the papers of what our boys are
doing. They really have the Heinies on the run."
"Ye-as," murmured Mercy. "Running which way?"
"Treason!" cried Jennie. "The only way the Germans have ever
run forward is by crawling."
"Oh! Oh! Listen to the Irish bull!" cried Helen.
"Oh, is it?" exclaimed Jennie. "Maybe there is a bit of
Irish in the McStones, or O'Stones. I don't know."
She certainly was the life of the party. Helen and Ruth had
too recently bidden Tom Cameron good-bye to feel like joining
with Jennie in repartee. Though it might have been that even
the fat girl's repartee was more a matter of repertoire. She
was expected to be funny, and so forced herself to make good
her reputation.
This trip by automobile in fact was a forced attempt to
cheer each other up on the part of the chums. At the Outlook,
the Cameron's handsome country home, matters had become quite
too awful to contemplate with calm, now that Tom had gone back
to France. At least, so Helen stated. At the Red Mill Ruth had
been (she admitted it) ready to "fly to pieces." For naturally
poor Aunt Alvirah and Jabez Potter, the miller, were pot
cheerful companions. And the two chums had Jennie Stone as
their guest, for she had returned from New York with them,
where they had all gone to bid Tom and Henri Marchand
farewell.
The three college friends had picked Mercy Curtis up (she
had been with them at boarding-school "years and years before,"
to quote Jennie) and started on this trip from Cheslow to
Longhaven. On the outskirts of Longhaven a Wild West Show was
advertised as having pitched its tents.
"And, of course, if there is anything about the Wild West
close at hand our movie writer must see it," said Jennie. "Give
you local color, Ruth, for another western screen
masterpiece."
"I suppose it is one of these little fly-by-night shows!"
scoffed Mercy. "Let's see that bill. Dakota Joe's Wild West and
Frontier Round-Up' Mm! Sounds big. But the bigger they sound
the smaller they are, as a rule."
"I am glad I am not a pessimist," sighed Jennie Stone. "It
must be an awfully uncomfortable feeling inside one to wear
such a cloak."
"Ow! Ow!" cried Helen again. "Another Hibernianism, without
a doubt."
She turned the car into a much-traveled road just then. Not
a mile ahead loomed the "big top." A band was playing, and what
it lacked in sweetness it certainly made up in noise.
"Look at the cars!" exclaimed Ruth, becoming interested. "We
shall have to park before long, Helen, and walk to the show
lot."
"Right here!" returned Helen, with vigor, and turned her car
into a field where already a dozen automobiles were parked. A
man with a whisp of whisker on his chin, and actually chewing a
straw, motioned the young girl where to run her car. He was
evidently the farmer who owned the field, and he was surely
"making hay while the sun shone," for he was collecting a
quarter from every automobile owner who wished to get his car
off the public road.
"Your car'll be all right here, young ladies," he said,
reaching for the quarter Ruth offered him. "I'm going to stay
here myself and watch 'em until the show's over. Cal'late to
stay here anyway till them wild Injuns and wilder cowboys air
off Peleg Swift's land yonder. No knowing what they'll do if
they ain't watched."
"Listen to the opinion our friend has of your old Wild West
Show," hissed Jennie, as Ruth hopped out of the seat beside
Helen.
Ruth laughed. The other girls, getting out of the car on the
other side, were startled by hearing her laugh change to a
sudden ejaculation.
"Dear me! has that thing broken loose from the show?"
Jennie was the first to speak, and she stepped behind the
high car in order to catch sight of what had caused Ruth's
exclamation. Instantly the plump girl emitted a most unseemly
shout:
"Oh! Oh! Look at the bull!"
"What is the matter with you, Heavy?" demanded Mercy
snappishly.
But when she and Helen followed the plump girl behind the
automobile, they were stricken dumb with amazement, if not with
fear. Tearing down the field toward the row of automobiles was
a big black bull—head down, strings of foam flying from
his mouth, and with every other indication of extreme
wrath.
"Run!" shrieked Jennie, and turned to do so.
She bumped into Mercy and Helen, who clung to her and really
retarded the plump girl's escape. But plowing right on to the
shelter of the automobile, Jennie actually swept her two
friends with her.
Their cries and evident fright attracted the notice of the
farmer before he really knew what was happening. Then he saw
the bull and gave tongue to his own immediate excitement:
"Look at that critter! He's broke out of the
barnyard—drat him! Don't let him see you, gals, for he's
as vicious as sin!"
He started forward with a stick in his hand to attack the
enraged bull. But the animal paid no attention to him. It had
set its eyes upon something which excited its rage—Ruth
Fielding's red sweater!
"Oh, Ruth! Ruth!" shrieked Helen, suddenly seeing her chum
cornered on the other side of the car.
Ruth tried to open the car door again. But it stuck. Nor was
there time for the girl of the Red Mill to vault the door and
so escape the charge of the maddened bull. The brute was upon
her.
CHAPTER II
A PERFECT SHOT
One may endure dangers of divers kinds (and Ruth Fielding
had done so by land and sea) and be struck down unhappily by an
apparently ordinary peril. The threat of that black bull's
charge was as poignant as anything that had heretofore happened
to the girl of the Red Mill.
After that first outcry, Ruth did not raise her voice at
all. She tugged at the fouled handle of the automobile door,
looking back over her shoulder at the forefront of the bull. He
bellowed, and the very sound seemed to weaken her knees. Had
she not been clinging to that handle she must have dropped to
the earth.
And then, Crack! It ttfas ufitnistakably a rifle shot.
The bull plowed up several yards of sod, swerved, shook his
great head, bellowing again, and then started off at a tangent
across the field with the farmer, brandishing a stick, close on
his heels.
Saved, Ruth Fielding did sink to the earth now, and when the
other girls ran clamorously around the motor-car she was
scarcely possessed of her senses. Truly, however, she had been
through too many exciting events to be long overcome by this
one.
Many queer experiences and perilous adventures had come into
Ruth Fielding's life since the time when, as an orphan of
twelve years, she had come to the Red Mill, just outside the
town of Cheslow, to live with her Great Uncle Jabez and his
queer little old housekeeper, Aunt Alvirah.
The miller was not the man generously to offer Ruth the
advantages she craved. Had it not been for her dearest friend,
Helen Cameron, at first Ruth would not have been dressed well
enough to enter the local school. But if Jabez Potter was a
miser, he was a just man after his fashion. Ruth saved him a
considerable sum of money during the first few months of her
sojourn at the Red Mill, and in payment for this Uncle Jabez
allowed her to accompany Helen Cameron to that famous boarding
school, Briarwood Hall.
While at school at Briarwood, and during the vacations
between semesters, Ruth Fielding's career actually began, as
the volumes following "Ruth Fielding of the Red Mill" show. The
girl had numerous adventures at Briarwood Hall, at Snow Camp,
at Lighthouse Point, at Silver Ranch, on Cliff Island, at
Sunrise Farm, among the gypsies, in moving pictures, down in
Dixie, at college, in the saddle, in the Red Cross in France,
at the war front, and when homeward bound. The volume just
previous to this present story related Ruth's adventures "Down
East," where she went with Helen and Tom Cameron, as well as
Jennie Stone, Jennie's fiancé, Henri Marchand, and her
Aunt Kate, who was their chaperon.
The girl of the Red Mill had long before the time of the
present narrative proved her talent as a scenario writer, and
working for Mr. Hammond, president of the Alectrion Film
Corporation, had already made several very successful pictures.
It seemed that her work in life was to be connected with the
silver sheet.
Even Uncle Jabez had acknowledged Ruth's ability as a
scenario writer, and was immensely proud of her work when he
learned how much money she was making out of the pictures. For
the old miller judged everything by a monetary standard.
Aunt Alvirah was, of course, very proud of her "pretty" as
she called Ruth Fielding. Indeed, all Ruth's friends considered
her success in picture-making as only going to show just how
smart Ruth Fielding was. But the girl of the Red Mill was far
too sensible to have her head turned by such praise. Even Tom
Cameron's pride in her pictures only made the girl glad that
she succeeded in delighting him.
For Ruth and Tom were closer friends now than ever
before—and for years they had been "chummy." The
adventures which had thrown them so much together in France
while Tom was a captain in the American Expeditionary Forces
and Ruth was working with the American Red Cross, had welded
their confidence in and liking for each other until it seemed
that nothing but their youth and Tom's duties in the army kept
them from announcing their engagement.
"Do finish the war quickly, Tom," she had said to him
whimsically, not long before Tom had gone back to France. "I do
not feel as though I could return to college, or write another
scenario, or do another single solitary thing until peace is
declared."
"And then?" Tom had asked significantly, and Ruth had
given him an understanding smile.
The uncertainty of that time—the whole nation waited
and listened breathlessly for news from abroad—seemed to
Ruth more than she could bear. She had entered upon this
pleasure jaunt to the Wild West Show with the other girls
because she knew that anything to take their minds off the more
serious thoughts of the war was a good thing.
Now, as she felt herself in peril of being gored by that
black bull a tiny thought flashed into her mind:
"What terrible peril may be facing Tom Cameron at this
identical moment?"
When the bull was gone, wounded by that unexpected rifle
shot, and her three chums gathered about her, this thought of
Tom's danger was still uppermost in Ruth's mind.
"Dear me, how silly of me!" she murmured. "There are lots
worse things happening every moment over there than being gored
by a bull."
"What an idea!" ejaculated Helen. "Are you crazy? What has
that to do with you being pitched over that fence, for
instance?"
She glanced at the fence which divided the field in which
the automobiles stood from that where the two great tents of
the Wild West Show were pitched. A broad-hatted man was
standing at the bars. He drawled:
"Gal ain't hurt none, is she? That was a close
shave—closer, a pile, than I'd want to have myself. Some
savage critter, that bull. And if Dakota Joe's gal wasn't a
crack shot that young lady would sure been throwed higher than
Haman."
Ruth had now struggled to her feet with the aid of Jenny and
Mercy.
"Do find out who it was shot the bull!" she cried.
Jennie, although still white-faced, grinned broadly again.
"Now who is guilty of the most atrocious slang? 'Shot
the bull,' indeed!"
"Thar she is," answered the broad-hatted man, pointing to a
figure approaching the fence. Helen fairly gasped at sight of
her.
"Right out of a Remington black-and-white," she shrilled in
Ruth Fielding's ear.
The sight actually jolted Ruth's mind away from the fright
which had overwhelmed it. She stared at the person indicated
with growing interest as well as appreciation of the
picturesque figure she made. She was an Indian girl in the gala
costume of her tribe, feather head-dress and all. Or, perhaps,
one would better say she was dressed as the white man expects
an Indian to dress when on exhibition.
But aside from her dress, which was most attractive, the
girl herself held Ruth's keen interest. Despite her high
cheekbones and the dusky copper color of her skin, this strange
girl's features were handsome. There was pride expressed in
them—pride and firmness and, withal, a certain sadness
that added not a little to the charm of the Indian girl's
visage.
"What a strange person!" murmured Helen Cameron.
"She is pretty," announced the assured Mercy Curtis, who
always held her own opinion to be right on any subject. "One
brunette never does like another," and she made a little face
at Helen.
"Listen!" commanded Jennie Stone. "What does she say?"
The Indian girl spoke again, and this time they all heard
her.
"Is the white lady injured, Conlon?"
"No, ma'am!" declared the broad-hatted man. "She'll be as
chipper as a blue-jay in a minute. That was a near shot,
Wonota. For an Injun you're some shot, I'll tell the
world."
An expression of disdain passed over the Indian girl's face.
She looked away from the man and Ruth's glance caught her
attention.
"I thank you very much, Miss—Miss—"
"I am called Wonota in the Osage tongue," interposed the
Indian maiden composedly enough.
"She's Dakota Joe's Injun sharpshooter," put in the man at
the fence. "And she ain't no business out here in her
play-actin' costume—or with her gun loaded that-a-way.
Aginst the law. That gun she uses is for shootin' glass balls
and clay pigeons in the show."
"Well, Miss Wonota," said Ruth, trying to ignore the
officious man who evidently annoyed the Indian maiden, "I am
very thankful you did have your rifle with you at this
particular juncture." She approached the fence and reached over
it to clasp the Indian girl's hand warmly.
"We are going in to see you shoot at the glass balls, for I
see the show is about to start. But afterward, Wonota, can't we
see you again?"
The Indian girl's expression betrayed some faint surprise.
But she bowed gravely.
"If the white ladies desire," she said. "I must appear now
in the tent. The boss is strict."
"You bet he is," added the broad-hatted man, who seemed
offensively determined to push himself forward.
"After the show, then," said Ruth promptly to the girl. "I
will tell you then just how much obliged to you I am," and she
smiled in a most friendly fashion.
Wonota's smile was faint, but her black eyes seemed suddenly
to sparkle. The man at the fence looked suspiciously from the
white girls to the Indian maid, but he made no further comment
as Wonota hastened away.
CHAPTER III
IN THE RING
"What do you know about that Indian girl?" demanded Jennie
Stone excitedly. "She was just as cool as a cucumber. Think of
her shooting that bull just in the nick of time and saving our
Ruth!"
"It does seem," remarked Mercy Curtis in her sharp way,
"that Ruthie Fielding cannot venture abroad without getting
into trouble."
"And getting out of it, I thank you," rejoined Helen,
somewhat offended by Mercy's remark.
"Certainly I have not been killed yet," was Ruth's mild
observation, pinching Helen's arm to warn her that she was not
to quarrel with the rather caustic lame girl. Mercy's
affliction, which still somewhat troubled her, had never
improved her naturally crabbed disposition, and few of her girl
friends had Ruth's patience with her.
"I don't know that I feel much like seeing cowboys rope
steers and all that after seeing that horrid black bull charge
our Ruthie," complained Helen. "Shall we really go to the
show?"
"Why! Ruth just told that girl we would," said Jennie.
"I wouldn't miss seeing that Wonota shoot for anything,"
Ruth declared.
"But there is nobody here to watch the automobile now," went
on Helen, who was more nervous than her chum.
"Yes," Jennie remarked. "Here comes 'Silas Simpkins, the
straw-chewing rube,'" and she giggled.
The farmer was at hand, puffing and blowing. He assured them
that "that critter" was tightly housed and would do no more
harm.
"Hope none o' you warn't hurt," he added. "By jinks! that
bull is jest as much excited by this here Wild West Show as I
be. Did you pay me for your ortymobile, young ladies?"
"I most certainly did," said Ruth. "Your bull did not drive
all memory away."
"All right. All right," said the farmer hastily. "I thought
you did, but I wasn't positive you'd remember it."
With which frank confession he turned away to meet another
motor-car party that was attempting to park their machine on
his land.
The four girls got out into the dusty road and marched to
the ticket wagon that was gaily painted with the sign of
"Dakota Joe's Wild West and Frontier Round-Up."
"This is my treat," declared Ruth, going ahead to the ticket
window with the crowd. "I certainly should pay for all this
excitement I have got you girls into."
"Go as far as you like," said Jennie. "But to tell the
truth, I think the owner of the black bull should be taxed for
this treat."
Dakota Joe's show was apparently very popular, for people
were coming to it not only from Longhaven and Cheslow, but from
many other towns and hamlets. This afternoon performance
attracted many women and children, and when the four young
women from Cheslow got into their reserved seats they found
that they were right in the midst of a lot of little folks.
The big ring, separated from the plank seats by a board
fence put up in sections, offered a large enough
tanbark-covered course to enable steers to be roped, bucking
broncos exhibited, Indian riding races, and various other
events dear to the heart of the Wild West Show fans. And the
program of Dakota Joe's show was much like that of similar
exhibitions. He had some "real cowboys" and "sure-enough
Indians," as well as employees who were not thus advertised.
The steers turned loose for the cowboys to "bulldog" were
rather tame animals, for they were used to the employment. The
"bronco busters" rode trick horses so well trained that they
really acted better than their masters. Some of the roping and
riding—especially by the Indians—was really
good.
And then came a number on the program that the four girls
from Cheslow had impatiently awaited. The announcer (Dakota Joe
himself, on horseback and wearing hair to his shoulders
à la Buffalo Bill) rode into the center of the
ring and held up a gauntleted hand for attention.
"We now offer you, ladies and gentlemen, an exhibition in
rifle shooting second to none on any program of any show in
America to-day. The men of the old West were most wonderful
shots with rifle or six-gun. To-day the new West produces a
rifle shot that equals Wild Bill Hickok, Colonel Cody himself,
or Major Lillie. And to show that the new West, ladies and
gentlemen, is right up to the minute in this as in every other
pertic'lar, we offer Wonota, daughter of Chief Totantora,
princess of the Osage Indians, in a rifle-shooting act that,
ladies and gentlemen, is simply marv'lous—simply
marv'lous!"
He waved a lordly hand, the band struck up a strident tune,
and on a "perfect love of a white pony," as Helen declared,
Wonota rode into the ring.
She looked just as calm as she had when she had shot the
bull which threatened Ruth. Nothing seemed to flutter the
Indian girl's pulse or to change her staid expression. Yet the
girls noticed that Dakota Joe spurred his big horse to the
white pony's side, and, unless they were mistaken, the man said
something to Wonota in no pleasant manner.
"Look at that fellow!" exclaimed Helen. "Hasn't he an ugly
look?"
"I guess he didn't say anything pleasant to her," Ruth
rejoined, for she was a keen observer. "I shouldn't wonder if
that girl was far from happy."
"I shouldn't want to work for that Dakota Joe," added Mercy
Curtis. "Look at him!"
Unable to make Wonota's expression of countenance change,
the man, who was evidently angry with the Indian girl, struck
the white pony sharply with his whip. The pony jumped, and some
of the spectators, thinking it a part of the program,
laughed,
Unexpecting Dakota Joe's act, Wonota was not prepared for
her mount's jump. She was almost thrown from the saddle. But
the next instant she had tightened the pony's rein, hauled it
back on its haunches with a strong hand, and wheeled the animal
to face Dakota Joe.
What she said to the man certainly Ruth and her friends
could not understand. It was said in the Osage tongue in any
case. But with the words the Indian girl thrust forward the
light rifle which she carried. For a moment its blue muzzle was
set full against the white man's chest.
"Oh!" gasped Jennie. And she was not alone in thus giving
vent to her excitement. "Oh!"
"Why doesn't she shoot him?" drawled Mercy Curtis.
"I—I guess It was only in fun," said Helen rather
shakingly, as the Indian girl wheeled her mount again and rode
away from Dakota Joe.
"I wouldn't want her to be that funny with me," gasped
Jennie Stone. "She must be a regular wild Indian, after
all."
"I am sure, at least, that this Dakota Joe person would have
deserved little sympathy if she had shot him," declared Mercy,
with confidence.
"Dear me," admitted Ruth herself, "I want to meet that girl
more than ever now. There must be some mystery regarding her
connection with the owner of the show. They certainly are not
in accord."
"You've said something!" agreed Jennie, likewise with
conviction.
If Wonota had been at all flurried because of her treatment
by her employer, she no longer showed it. Having ridden to the
proper spot, she wheeled the white pony again and faced the
place where there was a steel shield against which the objects
she was to shoot at were thrown.
Dakota Joe rode forward as though to affix the first clay
ball to the string. Then he pulled in his horse, scowled across
the ring at Wonota, and beckoned one of the cowboys to
approach. This man took up the duty of affixing the targets for
the Indian girl.
"Do you see that?" chuckled Jennie Stone. "He's afraid she
might change her mind and shoot him after all."
"Sh!" cautioned Ruth. "Somebody might hear you. Now
look."
The swinging targets were shattered by Wonota as fast as the
man could hook them to the string and set the string to
swinging. Then he threw glass balls filled with feathers into
the air for the Indian girl to explode.
It was evident that she was not doing as well as usual, for
she missed several shots. But this was not because of her own
nervousness. Since the pony had been cut with Dakota Joe's whip
it would not stand still, and its nervousness was plainly the
cause of Wonota's misses.
The owner of the show was, however, the last person to admit
this. He showed more than annoyance as the act progressed.
Perhaps it was the strained relations so evident between the
owner of the show and Wonota that affected the man attending to
the targets, for he became rather wild. He threw a glass ball
so far to one side that to have shot at it would have
endangered the spectators, and the Indian girl dropped the
muzzle of her rifle and shook her head. The curving ball came
within Dakota Joe's reach.
"Some baseball player, I'll say!" ejaculated Jennie Stone
slangily.
For the owner of the show caught the flying ball. He wheeled
his spirited horse, and, holding the ball at arm's length, he
spurred down the field toward the Indian girl.
"Oh!" cried Ruth under her breath. "He is going to throw it
at her!"
"The villain!" ejaculated Mercy Curtis, her eyes
flashing.
But if that was his intention, Dakota Joe did not fulfill
it. The Indian girl whipped up the muzzle of her rifle and
seemed to take deliberate aim at the angry man. Evidently this
act was not on the bill!
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