PAGE 7
Whose Business Is To Live
by
Dawn, at five, enabled them to accelerate their pace; and six o’clock found them routing out the occupants of the lodge.
“Dress for rough travel, and don’t stop for any frills,” Wemple called around the corner of Miss Drexel’s screened sleeping porch.
“Not a wash, nothing,” Davies supplemented grimly, as he shook hands with Charley Drexel, who yawned and slippered up to them in pajamas. “Where are those horses, Charley? Still alive?”
Wemple finished giving orders to the sleepy peons to remain and care for the place, occupying their spare time with hiding the more valuable things, and was calling around the corner to Miss Drexel the news of the capture of Vera Cruz, when Davies returned with the information that the horses consisted of a pair of moth-eaten skates that could be depended upon to lie down and die in the first half mile.
Beth Drexel emerged, first protesting that under no circumstances would she be guilty of riding the creatures, and, next, her brunette skin and dark eyes still flushed warm with sleep, greeting the two rescuers.
“It would be just as well if you washed your face, Stanton,” she told Davies; and, to Wemple: “You’re just as bad, Jim. You are a pair of dirty boys.”
“And so will you be,” Wemple assured her, “before you get back to Tampico. Are you ready?”
“As soon as Juanita packs my hand bag.”
“Heavens, Beth, don’t waste time!” exclaimed Wemple. “Jump in and grab up what you want.”
“Make a start–make a start,” chanted Davies. “Hustle! Hustle!–Charley, get the rifle you like best and take it along. Get a couple for us.”
“Is it as serious as that?” Miss Drexel queried.
Both men nodded.
“The Mexicans are tearing loose,” Davies explained. “How they missed this place I don’t know.” A movement in the adjoining room startled him. “Who’s that?” he cried.
“Why, Mrs. Morgan,” Miss Drexel answered.
“Good heavens, Wemple, I’d forgotten her,” groaned Davies. “How will we ever get her anywhere?”
“Let Beth walk, and relay the lady on the nags.”
“She weighs a hundred and eighty,” Miss Drexel laughed. “Oh, hurry, Martha! We’re waiting on you to start!”
Muffled speech came through the partition, and then emerged a very short, stout, much-flustered woman of middle age.
“I simply can’t walk, and you boys needn’t demand it of me,” was her plaint. “It’s no use. I couldn’t walk half a mile to save my life, and it’s six of the worst miles to the river.”
They regarded her in despair.
“Then you’ll ride,” said Davies. “Come on, Charley. We’ll get a saddle on each of the nags.”
Along the road through the tropic jungle, Miss Drexel and Juanita, her Indian maid, led the way. Her brother, carrying the three rifles, brought up the rear, while in the middle Davies and Wemple struggled with Mrs. Morgan and the two decrepit steeds. One, a flea-bitten roan, groaned continually from the moment Mrs. Morgan’s burden was put upon him till she was shifted to the other horse. And this other, a mangy sorrel, invariably lay down at the end of a quarter of a mile of Mrs. Morgan.
Miss Drexel laughed and joked and encouraged; and Wemple, in brutal fashion, compelled Mrs. Morgan to walk every third quarter of a mile. At the end of an hour the sorrel refused positively to get up, and, so, was abandoned. Thereafter, Mrs. Morgan rode the roan alternate quarters of miles, and between times walked–if walk may describe her stumbling progress on two preposterously tiny feet with a man supporting her on either side.
A mile from the river, the road became more civilized, running along the side of a thousand acres of banana plantation.
“Parslow’s,” young Drexel said. “He’ll lose a year’s crop now on account of this mix-up.”
“Oh, look what I’ve found!” Miss Drexel called from the lead.
“First machine that ever tackled this road,” was young Drexel’s judgment, as they halted to stare at the tire-tracks.
“But look at the tracks,” his sister urged. “The machine must have come right out of the bananas and climbed the bank.”