Nan Sherwood at Rose Ranch | Page 3

Annie Roe Carr
into some of the fun. And so do you, Linda! Don't act
offish," and Cora walked toward the open door to meet the new
arrivals.
It was a terrible shock to the railroad magnate's daughter--this. The
defection of her chief henchman and ally would rather break up the
little group which Laura Polk had unkindly dubbed "the School of
Snobs." With all her wealth Linda had but few retainers.
In the van of the newcomers were a rather comely, brown-eyed girl
with a bright and cheerful expression of countenance, a dark beauty
with curls and flashing eyes, and a demure but pretty girl to whom
Lillie Nevins ran with exclamations of joy. This last was Grace Mason,
the flaxen-haired girl's chum.
"Oh, Nancy! how well you look," cried Laura, hugging the brown-eyed
girl. And to the curly-haired one: "What mischief have you got into,
Bess? You look just as though you had done something."
"Don't say a word!" gasped Bess Harley in the red-haired girl's ear. "It's

what we are going to do. Some sawneys have arrived. We'll have a
procession."
"Oh, say!" exclaimed Amelia Boggs, "there is one special sawney
expected. Did she come on this train with you other girls?"
"Oh, that's so! Who has seen Roistering Rhoda of the Staked Plains?
Mrs. Cupp said she was due tonight," cried Laura.
"For goodness' sake!" exclaimed Bess, "who is that?"
"A sawney!" cried one of the other girls.
"They say she is Rhoda Hammond, from the very farthest West there
is," Laura said gravely. "Of course she will ride in on a mustang, or
something like that."
"What! with the snow two feet deep?" laughed the brown-eyed girl,
tossing off her furs and smiling at the group of her schoolmates with
happy mien.
"Say not so!" begged Laura. "No pony? What is the use of having a
cow-girl fresh from the wildest West come to Lakeview Hall unless she
comes in proper character?"
Nan Sherwood, having swept her old friends with her quick glance,
now looked back at the group that had followed her into the hall. The
bus had been so crowded and so dark that she had not known half of
those who had been with her coming up from the Freeling railroad
station.
"How nice it is to get back, isn't it?" she murmured to her special chum,
Bess Harley.
"I should say!" agreed Elizabeth, warmly and emphatically.
Laura Polk, as an older girl and, after all, one of the most thoughtful,
suddenly noticed a stranger in brown who still stood just inside the
door that somebody had thoughtfully closed.

She made quite a charming, not to say striking, figure, as she stood
there alone, just the faintest smile upon her lips, yet looking quite as
neglected and lonely as any novice could possibly look.
This stranger wore brown furs and a brown coat, with a hat to match on
which was a really wonderful brown plume. She wore bronze shoes and
hose. Even Linda Riggs was dressed no more richly than this girl; only
the latter was dressed in better taste than Linda.
Laura, leaving the gay company, went quickly toward the girl in brown
and held out her hand.
"I am sure you are a stranger here," she said. "And I am a member of
the Welcoming Committee. I am Laura Polk. And you--?"
"I am Rhoda Hammond," said the demure girl quietly.
"What!" almost shouted the startled Laura. "You're never! You can't be!
Not Rollicking Rhoda from Rustlers' Roost, the wild Western
adventuress we've heard so much about?"
"No," said the girl in brown, still placidly. "I am Rhoda Hammond
from Rose Ranch."
CHAPTER II
INTRODUCTIONS
"Oh, my auntie!" murmured Amelia Boggs, using most
uncommendable slang. "Stung!"
But Laura Polk, if inclined to be boisterous and rather rude in her jokes,
was by no means petty. She burst into such a good-natured and
disarming laugh that the girl in brown was forced to join her.
"There, Laura," said Bess Harley, "the biter for once is the bitten. I
hope you are properly overcome."

Nan Sherwood likewise hastened to offer the new girl her hand.
"I am glad to greet you, Rhoda Hammond," she said sympathetically.
"You must not mind our animal spirits. We just do slop over at this
time, my dear. Wait till you see how gentle and decorous we have to be
after the semester really begins. This is only letting off steam, you
know."
"Do you meet all newcomers with the same grade of hospitality?"
asked Rhoda Hammond, with more than a little sarcasm in both her
words and tone.
"Only more so," Bess Harley assured her. "Oh, Nan! consider what
they did to us when we came here for the first time last September.
'Member?"
Nan nodded with sudden gravity in her
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 68
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.