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PAGE 13

The Wooing Of Miss Woppit
by [?]

Sir Charles had indeed made a confidant of Jim. One day he called him into his room at the Mears House. “Mr. City Marshal,” said Sir Charles, in atone that implied secrecy, “I have given it out that I shall leave the camp for home day after to-morrow.”

“Yes, I had heerd talk,” answered Jim Woppit. “You are going by the stage.”

“Certainly, by the stage,” said Sir Charles, “but not day after to-morrow; I go to-morrow.”

“To-morrow, sir?”

“To-morrow,” repeated Sir Charles. “The coach leaves here, as I am told, at eleven o’ clock. At four we shall arrive at Wolcott Siding, there to catch the down express, barring delay. I say ‘barring delay,’ and it is with a view to evading the probability of delay that I have given out that I am to leave on a certain day, whereas, in fact, I shall leave a day earlier. You understand?”

“You bet I do,” said Jim. “You are afraid of–of the robbers?”

“I shall have some money with me,” answered Sir Charles, “but that alone does not make me desirous of eluding the highwaymen. My daughter–a fright of that kind might lead to the most disastrous results.”

“Correct,” said Jim.

“So I have planned this secret departure,” continued Sir Charles. “No one in the camp now knows of it but you and me, and I have a favor–a distinct favor–to ask of you in pursuance of this plan. It is that you and a posse of the bravest men you can pick shall accompany the coach, or, what is perhaps better, precede the coach by a few minutes, so as to frighten away the outlaws in case they may happen to be lurking in ambush.”

Jim signified his hearty approval of the proposition. He even expressed a fervent hope that a rencontre with the outlaws might transpire, and then he muttered a cordial “d—- ’em!”

“In order, however,” suggested Sir Charles, “to avert suspicion here in camp it would be wise for your men to meet quietly at some obscure point and ride together, not along the main road, but around the mountain by the Tin Cup path, coming in on the main road this side of Lone Pine ranch. You should await our arrival, and then, everything being tranquil, your posse can precede us as an advance guard in accordance with my previous suggestion.”

“It might be a pious idea,” said Jim, “for me to give the boys a pointer. They ‘ll be on to it, anyhow, and I know ’em well enough to trust ’em.”

“You know your men; do as you please about apprising them of their errand,” said Sir Charles. “I have only to request that you assure each that he will be well rewarded for his services.”

This makes a rude break in our wooing; but I am narrating actual happenings. Poor old Hoover’s subtlety all for naught, Mary’s friendly offices incompleted, the pleasant visits to the cabin among the hollyhocks suspended perhaps forever, Miss Woppit’s lonely lot rendered still more lonely by the departure of her sweet girl friend–all this was threatened by the proposed flight–for flight it was–of Sir Charles and Mary Lackington.

That May morning was a glorious one. Summer seemed to have burst upon the camp and the noble mountain-sentinels about it.

“We are going to-day,” said Sir Charles to his daughter. “Hush! not a word about it to anybody. I have reasons for wishing our departure to be secret.”

“You have heard bad news?” asked Mary, quickly.

“Not at all,” answered Sir Charles, smilingly. “There is absolutely no cause for alarm. We must go quietly; when we reach home I will tell you my reasons and then we will have a hearty laugh together.”

Mary Lackington set about packing her effects, and all the time her thoughts were of her lonely friend in the hill-side cabin. In this hour of her departure she felt herself drawn even more strangely and tenderly toward that weird, incomprehensible creature; such a tugging at her heart the girl had never experienced till now. What would Miss Woppit say–what would she think? The thought of going away with never so much as a good-by struck Mary Lackington as being a wanton piece of heartlessness. But she would write to Miss Woppit as soon as ever she reached home–she would write a letter that would banish every suspicion of unfeelingness.