"There"s something coming down the road," said Russ, pointing to a cloud of dust.
"That"s so," agreed the manager.
The dust cloud drew nearer, and then from the center of it could be heard an excited shouting and yelling, and the galloping of horses.
Added to these were the sharp reports of revolvers.
"Something has happened!" cried Mr. Sneed.
"Something _is_ happening!" corrected Paul, while Mr. Bunn looked about for a safe retreat.
"Hi! Yi!" were the yells coming from the dust cloud, as the shooting increased. "Hi! Yi!"
"It"s an Indian attack!" gasped Miss Pennington. "Oh, where can we hide?"
CHAPTER XII
SUSPICIONS
On came that rushing, swirling, swaying dust-cloud, and out of it continued to come those nerve-racking shouts, yells and shrill screams, accompanied by a fusillade of pistol shots.
"Can anything have occurred to gain us the anger of any of the inhabitants of this place?" asked Mr. DeVere, as he looked about apprehensively, and then at his daughters.
"It sounds like a lot of cowboys," spoke Alice. "At least I"ve read that"s how they act when they paint the town red."
"Oh, Alice!" cried Ruth. "What language!"
"I used it merely in the technical sense," was the retort. "I believe they do not actually use red paint."
"Oh, what shall we do? What shall we do?" cried Miss Pennington.
"I"m going back to New York at once!" sobbed Miss Dixon. "Make that train come back!" she cried to the lone station agent, who, with a set grin on his face, was looking alternately from the group of picture players to the approaching dust cloud that concealed so many weird noises.
But the train was far down the track.
"We must do something!" insisted Mr. Sneed, nervously pacing up and down. "We men must organize and protect the ladies. I think we had better get inside the station and try to hold it against the savages.
Pop, you have some guns in the baggage; have you not?"
"Yep!" answered the property man; "but they ain"t loaded, and before we could git "em out those fellers will be here."
"Well, we must protect the ladies at any cost!" insisted Mr. Sneed.
"Come with us, we will protect you!" he shouted as he hurried inside the little shed that answered for the station. Probably he wanted to go first to prepare the place for the others. At any rate he was first inside.
"Whoop-ee!"
"Ki-yi!"
"Rah!"
"Bang! Bang! Bang!"
That is the way it sounded. The noise grew louder. The dust-cloud was at the station now. And then, with a fusillade of shots that was well-nigh deafening, the cause of it all came to a sudden stop.
The dust settled and blew away. The cloud parted to reveal several wagons drawn by small but muscular horses. Surrounding the vehicles were half a score of cowboys of the regulation type, save that they did not wear the "chaps," or sheepskin breeches, so often seen in moving picture depictions of the "wild west." Probably the weather was too hot for them, or these cowboys may have gotten rid of them because the garments figured so often in the "movies."
"Cowboys!" cried Russ, with a laugh. "And we thought they were going to attack us!"
"It"s one on us, all right," spoke Paul.
"But I have often read of cowboys going on a--on a rampage, I believe it is called--or is it stampede?" asked Miss Dixon, as she stood behind Paul.
"Rampage is right," he informed her.
"Well, maybe that"s what they"re on now, and they will shoot us after all," she resumed. "Oh, there"s one looking right at me!" and she covered her face with her be-ringed hands.
"Probably he hasn"t seen a pretty girl in a long time," said Paul, for Miss Dixon was pretty, in a way.
"Oh!" she exclaimed again--and took down her hands.
"And one of them is loading his pistol!" cried Miss Pennington. "Oh, dear!"
"I guess they"ll have to load up all around after the shots they fired,"
laughed Russ. "I wonder what in the world it"s all about, anyhow?"
He learned a moment later.
One of the cowboys, evidently the leader, rode his fiery little horse up to the station platform, and taking off his broad-brimmed hat with a flourish and a bow, asked:
"Is this the moving picture outfit?"
"It is," said Mr. Pertell.
"I reckoned that I"d read your brand right," the cowboy went on.
"Welcome to Rocky Ranch!"
"But where is it?" asked Alice, and then she blushed at her own boldness, for the glance of the half-score of cowboys was instantly drawn in her direction, and bold admiration shone in their eyes.
"It isn"t far from here, Miss," was the answer. "It lies just over that little rise. You can"t see it. We"ve come to take you out there. That"s why we brung the wagons, and some of the boys thought they"d like to ride in and see you, seein" as how the round-up is over and we ain"t so terrible rushed with work."
"We heard you coming," said Mr. Pertell. "Some of the ladies were a little apprehensive."
"I don"t quite get you," spoke the cowboy.
"I say some of the ladies were a bit timid on account of the firing."