The Desert Valley eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Desert Valley.

The Desert Valley eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Desert Valley.

Before his boot heels had done echoing through the living-room it was an adventure to Helen to peep into her room.  She wondered what she was going to find.  Thus far she had had no evidence of a woman upon the ranch.  She knew the sort of housekeeper her father had demonstrated himself upon occasions when she had been away visiting; she fully counted upon seeing the traces of a man’s hand here.  But she was delightfully surprised.  There was a big, old-fashioned walnut bed neatly made, covered in smooth whiteness by an ironed spread.  There was a washstand with white pitcher like a ptarmigan in the white nest of a bowl, several towels with red bands towards their ends flanking it.  There was a little rocking-chair, a table with some books.  The window, because of the thickness of the wall, offered an inviting seat whence one could look into the tangle of roses of the patio.

‘It is like a dream,’ cried Helen.  ‘A dream come true.’

She glanced into her father’s room.  It was like hers in its neatness and appointments, but did not have her charming outlook.  She was turning again into her own room when she heard Howard’s voice outside.

‘Angela,’ he was calling, ’I have brought home friends.  You will see that they have everything.  There is a young lady.  I am going to the stable.’

She heard Angela’s mumbled answer.  So there was, after all, at least one woman at the ranch.  Helen awaited her expectantly, wondering who and what she might be.  Then through her window she saw Angela come shuffling into the patio.  She was an old woman, Mexican or Indian, her hair grey and black in streaks, her body bent over her thumping stick and wrapped in a heavy shawl.  Never had Helen seen such night-black, fathomless, inscrutable eyes; never had she looked upon a face so creased and lined or skin so like dry, wrinkled parchment.

Angela pounded across the floor looking like a witch with her great stick, and waved a bony hand to indicate the bathroom.  Catching her first glimpse of Longstreet, who came to his daughter’s door, she demanded: 

‘Your papa?’

‘Yes,’ Helen answered her.

‘You frien’s Senor Alan?’ And when Helen, hesitating briefly, said ‘Yes,’ Angela asked: 

‘You come from Santa Rita, no?’

‘No,’ said Helen.  ‘From San Juan and beyond.’

‘You come far,’ mumbled Angela.  She scrutinized the girl keenly.  Then abruptly, ’Senor Alan got muchos amigos to-day.  Senor Juan Carr comes; El Joven with him.’

Helen asked politely who these two were Juan Carr and El Joven.  But the old woman merely shook her head and relapsed into silence frankly studying her.  The girl was glad of the interruption when Howard rapped at the door.  His arms were full of bundles.

’I’ve brought everything I could find that looked like your and your father’s personal traps,’ he informed her as he came in and put the things down on the floor.  ’I looked in at the kitchen and figure it out we’ve got about twenty or thirty minutes before dinner.  Come on, Angela; give Miss Longstreet a chance to get ready.’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Desert Valley from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.