SYNOPSIS CHAPTER Il.—Arriving at the lonely little railroad station of El Cajon, New Mexico, Madeline Hammond, New York finds no one to meet her. While in e waiting rocm a drunken cowboy en- ters, asks if she is married, and departs, leaving her terrified, He returns with a priest, who goes through some sort of ceremony, and the cowboy forces her to say “Si.” Asking her name and learning her identity the cowboy seems dazed. In & shooting scrape outside the room a Mexican is killed. The cowboy lets a rl, “Bonita,” take his horse and escape, en conducts Madeline to Florence Kingsley, friend of her brother. CHAPTER II.—Florence welcomes her, learns her story, and dismisses the cow- boy, Gene Stewart. Next day Alfred Hammond, Madeline's brother, Stewart to task. Madeline exonerates him of any wrong intent. CHAPTER III.—Alfred, scion of a wealthy family, had been dismissed from his home because of his dissipation. Madeline sees that the West has re- deemed him. She meets Stillwell, Al's employer, typical western ranchman. Madeline learns Stewart has gone over the border. CHAPTER IV.—Danny Mains, one of Stillwell’s cowboys, has disappeared, with some of Stillwell’'s money. His jrienas link his name with the girl Bo- a. CHAPTER V.—Madeline gets a glimpse of life on a western ranch, CHAPTER VI.—Stewart’s horse comes to the ranch with a note on the saddle asking Madeline to accept the beautiful animal. With her brother's consent she does so, naming him ‘“‘Majesty,” her own pet nickname. Madeline, independently rich, arranges to buy Stiliwell’s ranch fod that of Don Carlos, a Mexican neigh- T. She rode back across the mesz and down the trail, and, once more upon the flat, she called to the horse and made him run. His spirit seemed to race with hers. The wind of his speed blew her hair from its fastenings. When he thundered to a halt at the porch steps Madeline, breathless and disheveled, alighted with the mass of her hair tumbling around her. Alfred met her, and his exclamation and Florence's rapt eyes shining on her face, and Stillwell’s speechless- ness made her self-conscious. Laugh- ing, she tried to put up the mass of hair. “My hat—and my combs—went to the wind. I thought—my hair would £0,100. , . There is the evening star. . + + 1 think 1 am very hun- gry.” And then she gave up trying to fasten up her hair, which fell again in a golden mass. “Mr. Stillwell,” she began, and paused, strangely aware of a hurried note, a deeper ring in her voice. “Mr. Stillwell, I want to buy your ranch— to engage you as my superintendent. I want to buy Don Carlos’ ranch and other property to the extent, say, of fifty thousand acres. I want you to buy horses and cattle—in short, to make all those improvements which you said you had so long dreamed of. Then I have ideas of my own, in the development of which I must have your advice and Alfred’s. I intend to better the condition of those poor Mex- icans in the valley. I intend to make life a little more worth living for them and for the cowboys of this range. Tomorrow we shall talk fit all over, plan all the business details.” Madeiine turned from the huge, ever-widening smile that beamed down upon her and held out her hands to her brother. “Alfred, strange, is it not, my com- ing out to you? Nay, don't smile. I hope T have found myself—my work, my happiness—here under the light of that western star.” CHAPTER VII Her Majesty’s Rancho. Five months brought all that Still- weli had dreamed of, and so many more changes and improvements and innovations that it was as if a magic touch had transformed the old ranch. Madeline and Alfred and Florence had talked over a fitting name, and had decided on one chosen by Made- line. But this instance was the only one in the course of developments in which Madeline's wishes were not complied with. The cowboys named the new ranch “Her Majesty's Ran- cho.” Stillwell said the names cow- boys bestowed were felicitous, and as unchangeable as the everlasting hills; Florence went over to the enemy; and Alfred, laughing at Madeline's protest, declared the cowboys had elected her queen of the ranges, and that there was no help for it. So the name stood “Her Majesty’s Rancho.” All that had been left of the old Spanish house which had been Still- well’s home for so long was the bare, massive structure, and some of this had been cut away for new doors and windows. Every modern convenience, even to hot and cold running water and acetylene light, had been Iin- stalled; and the whole interior painted and carpentered and furnished. The ideal sought had not been luxury, but comfort. Every door into the patio looked out upon dark, rich grass and sweet-faced flowers, and every win- dow looked down the green slopes. Madeline Hammond cherished a ERTS a or coer FNS RREEE takes | EBTES OF. ES 1) fancy that the transformation she had wrought in the old Spanish house and in the people with whom she had sur- rounded herself, great as that trans- formation had been, was as nothing compared to the one wrought in her- self. She had found an object in life. She had seen her brother through his difficulties, on the road to all the suc cess and prosperity that he cared for. Madeline had been a conscientious student of ranching and an apt pupil nf Stillwell. The old cattleman, in his simplicity, gave her the place in his heart that was meant for the daugh- ter he had never had. His pride in her, Madeline thought, was beyond reason or helief or words to tell Under his guidance, sometimes: accom- panied by Alfred and Florence, Made- line had ridden the ranges and had studied the life and work of the cow- boys. Sometimes she looked in her mirror and laughed with sheer joy at sight of the lithe, audacious, brown- faced, flashing-eyed creature reflected there. Tt was not so much joy in her beauty as sheer joy of life. HKastern critics had heen wont to call her beautiful in those days when she had been pale and slender and proud and cold. She langhed. If they could oaly see her now! From the tip of her golden head to her feet she was alive. pulsating, on fire, Sometimes she thought of her par ents, sister, friends, of how they ha: persistently refused to believe she could or would stay in the West. They were always asking her to come home She wrote that she would return tc her old home some time, of course, foi a visit; and letters such as this brought returns that amused Made line, sometimes saddened her. Her father’s business had been such that he could not leave it for the time re quired for a western trip, or else. according to his letter, he would have come for her. Mrs. Hammond couid not have been driven to cross the Hudson river; her un-American idez of the wilderness westward was thai Indians still chased buffalo on the out skirts of Chicago. Madeline's sister Helen had long been eager to come, && much from curiosity, Madeline thought, as from sisterly regard. And at length Madeline concluded that the proof of her breaking permanent tles might better he seen by visiting rela- tives and friends befere she went back Bast. With that in mind she Invited Helen to visit her during the summer, and bring as many friends as she liked. * * » * * * * No slight task indeed was it to over- see the many business details of Her Majesty's Rancho and to keep a rec- ord of them. Madeline found the course of business training upon which her father had insisted to be invalu- able to her now. It helped her to as- similate and arrange the practical details of cattleraising as put forth by the blunt Stillwell. She established an extensive vegetable farm, and she planted orchards. The climate was superior to that of California, and. with abundant water, trees and plants and gardens flourished and bloomed in a way wonderful to behold. Here in the farming section of the ranch Madeline found employment for the little colony of Mexicans. Their lives had been as hard and barren as the dry valley where they had lived. But as the valley had been transformed by the soft, rich touch of water, so their lives had been transformed by help and sympathy and work. The children were wretched no more, and many that had been blind could now see, and Madeline had become to them a new and blessed Virgin. Madeline looked abroad over these lands and likened the change in them and those who lived by them to the change in her heart. It may have been fancy, but the sun seemed to be brighter, the sky bluer, the wind sweeter, Certain it was that the deep green of grass and garden was not fancy, nor the white and pink of blos- som, nor the blaze and perfume of flower, nor the sheen of lake and the fluttering of new-born leaves. Where there had been monotonous gray there was now vivid and changing color. Formerly there had been silence both day and night; now during the sunny hours there was music. The whistle of prancing stallions pealed in from the grassy ridges. Innumerable birds had come and, like the northwara- journeying ducks, they had tarried to stay. The song of meadow-lark and blackbird and robin, familiar to Made- line from childhood, mingled with the new and strange heart-throbbing song of the mocking-bird and the piercing blast of the desert eagle and the mel- ancholy moan of the turtle-dove. CHAPTER VIII E! Capitan. Stillwell’s interest in the revolution across the Mexican line had mapifestly increased with the news that Gene Stewart had achieved distimction with the rebel forces. Thereafter the old ‘least since the night it had been : SE —— cattleman sent for El Paso and Doug- | | las newspapers, wrote to ranchmen he knew on the big bend of the Rio Grande, and he would talk indefinitely to anyone who would listen to him, There appeared to be no doubt that the cowboy had performed some dar- ing feats for the rebels. Madeline found his name mentioned in several of the border papers. When the rebels under Madero stormed and captured the city of Juarez, Stewart did fight- ing that won him the name of El Capi- tan. This battle apparently ended the revolution. The capitulation of Presi- dent Diaz followed shortly, and there was a feeling of relief among ranchers on the border from Texas to Caiifor- nia. Nothing more was heard of Gene Stewart until April, when a re- port reached Stillwell that the cow- boy had arrived in El Cajon, eviderkly hunting trouble. The old cattleman saddled a horse and started post-haste for town. In two days he returned, depressed in spirit. Madeline hap- pened to be present when Stillwell talked to Alfred. “Wal, it’s sure amazin’ strange about Gene. It’s got me locoed. He arrived in El Cajon week or so ago. He was trained down like as if he'd been ridin’ the range all winter. He had plenty of money—Mex., they said. An’ all the Greasers was crazy about him, ' Called him El Capitan. He got drunk an’ went roarin’ round fer Pat Hawe. 22 7 == \} Gg 72 ‘Gene Walked Up an’ Down, Up an’ Down, All Day -and Night, Lookin’ fer Pat.” You remember that Greaser who was | plugged last October—the night Miss | Majesty arrived? Wal, he’s daid, an’ people say thet Pat is a-goin’ to lay thet killin’ onto Gene. I reckon thet's jest talk, though Pat is mean enough to do it, if he hed the nerve. Any- way, if he was in El Cajon he kept mighty much to hisself. Gene walked up an’ down, up an’ down, all day an’ night, lookin’ fer Pat. Then Gene met Danny an’ tried to get Danny | drunk. An’ he couldn’t! What do you think of that? Danny hedn’t been drinkin’—wouldn’t touch a drop. I'm | sure glad of thet, but it’s so amazin’ | strange. red liquor. Why, Danny was a fish fer . I guess he an’ Gene had some pretty hard words, though Tm not sure abcat thet. Anyway, Gene went down to the railroad an’ he Zot on an engine, an’ he was in the engine | when it pulled out. I jest hed an idee, Miss Majesty. If I can get him, Gene Stewart is the cowboy I want for my foreman. He can manage this bunch of cow-punchers that are drivin’ me dotty. What's more, since he’s tought fer the rebels an’ got that name Kl Capitan, all the Greasers in the coun- try will kneel to him. Now, Miss Majesty, we hevn't got rid of Don Carlos an’ his vaqueros yet. 1 don't like the looks of things a little bit. I'll tell you now thet Don Carlos knows somethin’ about the cattle I lost, an’ thet you've been losin’ right along. Thet Greaser is hand an’ glove with the rebels. I'm willin’ to gamble thet when he does get out he an’ his vaqueros will make another cne of the bands of guerrillas thet are har- | assin’ the border. This revolution ain't over yet. It’s jest commenced. An’ these gangs of outlaws are goin’ to take advantage of it. We'll see some old times, mebbe. Wal, I need Gene Stewart. I need him bad. Will you let me hire him, Miss Majesty, if I can get him straightened up?” The old cattleman ended huskily. “Stillwell, by all means find Stew- art, and do not wait to straighten him up. Bring him to the ranch,” replied Madeline. Thanking her, Stillwell led his horse away. Madeline had discovered that a good deal of her sympathy for Stillwell in his hunt for the reckless Stewart had insensibly grown to be sympathy for the cowboy. It was rather a paradox, she thought, that opposed to the con- tinual reports of Stewart's wildness as he caroused from town to town were the continual expressions of good will and faith and hope universally given out by those near her at the ranch. Stillwell loved the cowboy; Florence was fond of him; Alfred liked and admired him, pitied him; the cowboys swore their regard for him the more he disgraced himself. The Mexicans called him Kl Gran Capitan. Madeline’s personal opinion of Stewart had not changed in the formed. But certain attributes of his, not clearly defined in her mind, and the gift of his beautiful horse, his valor with the fighting rebels, and all this strange regard for him, especially that of her brother, made her exceed- Sh ARATE ce ion meee, ingly regret the cowboy's present be- havior. Meanwhile Stillwell was so earnest and zealous that one not familiar with the situation would have believed he was trying to find and reclaim his own son. He made several trips to little stations in the valley, and from these he returned with a gloomy face. Made- line got the details from Alfred. Stew- art was going from bad to worse— drunk, disorderly, savage, sure to land in the penitentiary. Then came ,a report that hurried Stillwell off to Rodeo. He returned on the third day, a crushed man. He had been so bit- terly hurt that no one. not even Made- line, could get out of him what had happened. He admitted finding Stew- art, failing to intluence him; and when the old cattleman got so far he turned purple in the face and talked to him- self, as if dazed: drunk. He was drunk, or he couldn’t hev treated old Bill like thet!” Madeline was stirred with an anger toward the brutal cowboy that was as strong as her sorrow for the loyal old cattleman. And it was when Stillwell gave up that she resolved to take hand. She yearned to have the faith in human nature that Stillwell had in Stewart. She sent Nels, own horse, and leading Majesty, to Rodeo in search of Stewart. Nels had instructions to bring Stewart back to the ranch. In due time Nels re- turned, leading the roan without a rider, “But Gene was mounted upon his “Yep, I shore found him,” replied , Nels, when questioned. “Found him half sobered up. He'd been in a scrap, an’ somebody hed put him to sleep, 1 guess. Wal, when he seen thet roan hoss he let out a yell an’ grabbed him round the neck. The hoss knowed him, all right. Then Gene hugged the hoss an’ cried—cried like—I never seen no one who cried like he did. | waited awhile, an’ was jest goin’ to, say somethin’ to him when he turned on me red-eyed, mad as fire. ‘Nels/ he said, ‘I care a h—Il of a lot fer thet hoss, an’ I liked you pretty well, but if you don’t take him away quick T'il shoot you both.’ Wal, I lit out. I didn’t even git to say howdy to him.” #Nels, you think it useless—any at- tempt to see him—persuade him?’ asked Madeline, “] shore do, Miss Hammond,” re- piled Nels, gravely. “I've seen a few gun-blinded an’ locoed an’ snake- poisoned and skunk-bitten cow-punch- ers in my day, but Gene Stewart beats em all. He's shore runnin’ wild fer the divide.” Madeline dismissed Nels, but before fte got out of earshot she heard him | speak to Stillwell, who awaited him on the porch. “Bill, put this in your pipe an’ smoke it—none of them scraps Gene has hed was over a woman! It used ¢0 be thet when he was drunk he'd gorap over every pretty Greaser girl he’d run across. Wal, Gene's scrap- pin’ now is jest to git shot up his- welf, for some reason thet only God Almighty knows.” Nels’ story of how Stewart wept sver his horse influenced Madeline powerfully. Her next move was to persuade Alfred to see if he could not do better with this doggedly bent cow- | boy. Alfred needed only a word of i persuasion, for he said he had con- gldered going to Rodeo of his own accord, He went, and returned alone, “Majesty, I can’t expiain Stewards singular actions,” said Alfred. “ne Las changed terribly. I fancy his once magnificent strength is breaking. (t— it actually hurt me to look at him. i couldn’t have fetched him back nere— not as he is now. Bill did all any man could do for another, We've all doe our best for Stewart. If you'd been given a chance perhaps you could have | saved him. Bat it's too late. Put it out of mind now, dear.” Madeline, however, did not forget nor give it up. Days passed, and each one brought additional gossip of Stewart's headlong career toward the Yuma penitentiary. For he had crossed the line into Cochise county, Arizona, where sheriffs kept a stricter observ- ance of law. Finally a letter came from a friend of Nels’ in Chiricahua saying that Stewart had been hurt in a brawl there. This epistle inclosed a letter to Stewart from his sister. KEvi- dently, it had been found upon him. It told a story of illness and made an appeal for aid. Nels’ friend forwarded this letter without Stewart’s knowl- edge, thinking Stillwell might care to help Stewart’s family. Stewart had no money, he said. The sister's letter found its way to Madeline, She read it, tears In her eyes. It told Madeline’ much more than its brief story of illness and pov- erty and wonder why Gene had not written home for so long. It told of motherly love, sisterly love, brotherly love—dear family ties that had not been broken. It spoke of pride in this El Capitan brother who had become famous. It was signed “your loving sister Letty.” Not improbably, Madeline revolved in her mind, this letter was one reason for Stewart's headstrong, long-contin- ued abatement. It had been received too late—after he had squandered the money that would have meant so much to mother and sister. Be that as it might, Madeline immediately sent a bank-draft to Stewart's sister with a letter explaining that the money was drawn in advance on Stewart's salary. This done, she impulsively determined to go to Chiricahua herself. Nels, when Madeline asked him to accompany her to Chiricahua, replied, reluctantly, that he would rather fol- low on his horse. However, she pre- valled over his hesitancy, and with Florence alse in the car they set out. For miles and miles the valley road was smooth, hard-packed, and slightly downhill, And when speeding was ATE A AEE ol le... = —— perfectly safe, Madeline was not averse to it. And when the car stopped in the wide, dusty street of Chiricahua Nels gladly tumbled out. “Nels, we shall wait here in the car while you find Stewart,” said Made- line, : Nels crossed the railroad track and disappeared behind the low, flat houses. After a little time he reap- peared and hurried up to the car. “Miss Hammond, I found him,” said Nels. “He was sleepin’. I woke him, He's sober an’ not bad hurt; but I don’t believe you ought to see him. Mebbe Florence—" “Nels, I want to see him myself. Why not? What did he say when you told him I was here?” “Shore I didn’t tell him that. I jest says, ‘Hullo, Gene! an’ he says, ‘My : Gawd! Nels! mebbe I ain’t glad to see a human bein’. He asked me who was with me, an’ I told him Link an’ some friends. I said I'd fetch them in. He hollered at thet. But I went, anyway. Now, if you really will see him, Miss Hammond, it's a good chance. But shore it’s a touchy matter, an’ you'll be some sick at sight of him. He's layin’ in a Greaser hole over here, Likely the Greasers hev been kind to him. But they're shore a poor lot.” Madeline did not hesitate a moment. “Thank you, Nels. Take me at once. Come, Florence.” They left the car, now surrounded by gaping-eyed Mexican children, and crossed the dusty space to a narrow | Pass- | ing by several houses, Nels stopped at | lane between red adobe walls, the door of what appeared to be an alleyway leading back. It was filthy. “He’s in there, round thet first cor- ner. It’s a patio, open an’ sunny. An’, Miss Hammond, if you don’t mind, I'll | wait here for you. I reckon Gene wouldn't like any fellers around when he sees you girls.” “Florence, you wait also,” said Madeline, at the doorway, and turned in alone. And she had stepped into a brokei- down patio littered with alfalfa straw and debris, all clear in the sunlight. Upon a bench, back toward her, sat a man looking out through the rents in the broken wall. He had not heard her. Madeline did not recognize Stew- art. The side of his face exposed to her was black, bruised, bearded. His clothes were ragged and soiled. There were bits of alfalfa in his hair. His shoulders sagged. He made a wretched and hopeless figure sitting there, Madeline divined something of = why Nels shrank from being present. “Mr. Stewart. It is I, Miss Ham- mond, come to see you,” she said. He grew suddenly perfectly motion- less, as if he had been changed to stone. She repeated her greeting. His body jerked. Ee moved violent- ly as if instinctively to turn and face this intruder; but a more violent movement checked him. Madeline waited. - ‘How singular that this ruined cowboy had pride which kept him from showing his face! And was It not shame more than pride? “Go away,” he muttered. “Mr. Stewart!” she began. “I have come to help you. Will you let me?" “For God's sake! You—you—" he choked over the words. “Go away!” “Stewart, perhaps it was for God's sake that TI came,” said Madeline, gently. “Surely it was for yours— Ai and your sister's—" Madeline bit her Jongue, for she had not meant to be- tray her knowledge of Letty. He groaned, and, staggering up to the broken wall, he leaned there with his face hidden. Madeline reflected that perhaps the slip of speech had i been well, | “Stewart, please let me say what I | have to say?” He was silent. And she gathered courage and inspiration. “Stillwell is deeply hurt, deeply grieved that he could not turn you back from this—this fatal course. My brother is, also. They wanted to help you. And so dol. I have come, think- fng somehow I might succeed where they have failed. Nels brought your sister's letter. I—I read it. [I was only the more determined to try to help you, and indirectly help your mother and Letty. Stewart, we want you to come to the ranch. My cow- iin B\ — Z “My Cowboys Are Without a Capable Leader, Will You Come? boys are without a capable leader. Will you come?” “No.” he answered. “But Stillwell wants you so badly.” “No.” “Stewart, I want you to come.” “No.” His replies had been hoarse, loud, furious. All his motions, like his speach, had been violent. “}%ill you please go away?” he asked. “Stewart, certainly 1 cannot remain ; here longer if you insist upon my go- ing. But why not listen to me when I want so much to help you? Why?” “I'm a d—d blackguard,” he burst out. “But I was a gentleman once, and I'm not so low that I can stand for you seeing me here.” “When I made up my mind to help you I made it up to see you wherever you were, Stewart, come away, come back with us to the ranch. When you are among friends again you will get well. You will be your old self. The very fact that you were once a gentle- man, that you come of good family, makes you owe so much more to your- | self. Why, Stewart, think how young vou are! It is a shame to waste your life. Come back with me.” “Miss Hammond, this was my last plunge.” he replied, despondently. “It’s too late.” “At least make an effort, Stewart. Try!” “No. There's no use. I'm done for. Please leave me—thank you for—" He had been savage, then sullen, gnd now he was grim. Madeline all . but lost power to resist his strange, deadly, cold finality. No doubt he knew he was doomed. Yet something halted her—held her even as she took a backward step. And she became conscious of a subtle change in her own feeling. She had come into that squalid hole. Madeline Hammond, earnest enough, kind enough in her own intentions; but she had been al- most imperious-—a woman habitually, proudly used to being obeyed, She di- vined that all the pride, blue blood, wealth, culture, distinction, all the im- personal condescending persuasion, all the fatuous philanthropy on earth would not avail to turn this man a single hair’s-breadth from his down- ward career to destruction. She was going to fail to help him. She experi- enced a sensation of impotence that amounted almost to distress. The sit- uation assumed a tragic keenness. And all at once she became merely a woman, brave and sweet and indomit- able. “Stewart, look at me,” she asked. He shuddered. He was abject, crushed. He dared not show his swollen, blackened face. His fierce, cramped posture reveaied more than his features might have shown; it be- trayed the torturing shame of a mao of pride and passion, a man who had been confronted in his degradation hy the woman he had dared to enshrine in his heart. It betrayed his love. “Listen, then,” went on Madeline, and her voice was unsteady. “Listen to me, Stewart. You can shake off this desperate mood and be a man.” “No!” he cried. “Listen to me again. Somehow I know you're worthy of Stillwell’'s lova. Will you come back with us—for his sake?” “No. It's too late, I tell you.” “Stewart, the best thing in life is faith in human nature. I have faith in you. I believe you are worth it.” “You're only kind and good—saying that. You can’t mean it.” “I mean it with all my heart,” she replied, a sudden rich warmth suffus- ing her body as she saw the first sign of his softening. “Will you come back —if not for your own suke or SHll- well's—then for mine?” “What am I to such a woman ss yeu ! “A man in trouble, Stewart. But I have come to help you, to show my | faith in you.” “If 1 believed that, I might try,” he | said. ! “Listen,” she began, softly, hurried- i ly. “My word is not lightly given. Let it prove my faith in you. Look at me now and say you will come.” He heaved up his big frame as if trying to cast off a giant's burden, and then slowly he turned toward her. His face was a blotched and terrible thing. The physical brutalizing marks were there, and at that instant all that appeared human to Madeline was the dawning in dead, furnace-like eyes of a beautiful light. “I'll come,” he whispered, huskily. “Give me a few days to straighten up, then I'll come.” (To be continued). —Get your job work done here. 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