Then they were off, zooming through the air, straight as an arrow for the international boundary and the Hampton ranch beyond. The flight was brief. Bob covered the distance of 150 miles in considerably less than two hours.
"Look here," he said to his father, after greetings had been exchanged, and the latter had thumped his big son so hard and often that Bob dodged when further "love taps" came his way. "I"m not going to stay here to be pounded into a jelly. Tell you what, father, that"s a long ride up here from the cave. Frank started early this morning, but he cannot arrive for another day. Suppose I go back and pick up him and Roy Stone, and leave Tom to bring in the horses?"
Reluctant though he was to let his son depart so soon after regaining him, Mr. Temple was persuaded, and Bob set off. Far down in Old Mexico, back trailing over the route they had followed in entering the country, he saw three hors.e.m.e.n leading a fourth animal, and on approaching close, saw they were his friends.
Landing near them, Bob called an explanation of his mission. Roy Stone demurred at the proposal.
"Much obliged for the offer," he said, "but I"ll ride along with Tom Bodine, if it"s all the same to you. I"m in no hurry to get anywhere, and you fellows will be having your own reunion at your ranch. Take your chum with you, but leave Tom and me. We"ll be in with the horses sooner or later. Each of us will have a spare mount now, and it"ll be an easy trip. Anyhow, I never did like those airplanes."
"Same here," said Tom Bodine, staring with awe at the machine. "You couldn"t get me in that thing on a bet."
Frank, accordingly, relinquished the reins of his horse to Tom Bodine, and with "good-byes" to his friends clambered into the airplane with Bob. Roy Stone obligingly spun the propeller, an accomplishment with which his a.s.sociation with Von Arnheim had made him familiar, and once more the plane soared upward and headed across the border.
At the ranch that night it was a jolly party that gathered around the board, with Mr. Hampton, Mr. Temple and the three boys. Gabby Pete, talkative as ever, was bursting with desire for information about all their adventures. He had prepared a surprisingly good dinner in honor of the occasion.
Rollins alone was not present. When told of Mr. Hampton"s impending arrival, he had begged Mr. Temple to let him go to a distant oil well for several days until Mr. Hampton could be informed in detail of his treachery in the past and the reason for it. This Mr. Temple had agreed to.
Back and forth across the table flew the conversation and, when the meal was at an end, all continued to sit around the table until a late hour.
During the weeks that followed Bob and Frank spent many enjoyable hours rambling on horseback over the surrounding country and taking more extended trips by airplane. The love for the country of which Jack had spoken on arrival, seized them, too. The bright hot days succeeded by cool nights--for in New Mexico the air cools immediately upon the setting of the sun--appealed powerfully to boys reared on the seacoast. The absence of raw winds and fogs especially appealed to them. The weather was something which could be counted upon. Every day was fair.
So pa.s.sed the weeks, with the boys under Jack"s pilotage travelling far and wide, scouting through the mountains to discover new beauties of scenery, making visits to the ancient Spanish ruins at Santa Fe, attending a rodeo at Gallup, to which came cowboys and cowgirls from a vast stretch of territory to perform hair-raising feats of horsemanship and exhibit well-nigh miraculous skill with the la.s.so.
A month after their advent, and when their summer vacation was not yet half spent, Mr. Temple at dinner one night announced that before ending his prolonged vacation from business--the first he had taken in ten years--he planned to go to San Francisco to consult with the manager of his western exporting office.
"Why, father," said Bob. "I"ve always wanted to see the city by the Golden Gate, and I know the fellows feel the same way about it. What do you say to taking us with you? We won"t get in your way. And you can drop us here on your way back East."
Smilingly, Mr. Temple gazed at the faces of the three eager boys. Jack and Frank enthusiastically echoed their chum"s appeal.
"Yes, do, Mr. Temple," said Jack. "That is, if we wouldn"t be in your way."
"Uncle, I"m crazy to see San Francisco," said Frank.
"Well, it"s a good deal changed from the days of the Forty-Niners,"
said Mr. Temple, smiling. "You may have your hopes too high, and may be disappointed."
"Oh, come now, father," said Bob. "If you"re going to be there only a week, it"ll be worth while for us."
"Well, that"s the length of time I planned to stay," said Mr. Temple, thoughtfully. "But I"ll be pretty busy while I"m there. Do you boys feel you can keep out of mischief if left to yourselves?"
Mr. Hampton interrupted.
"I reckon they can, Temple," he said. "They saved the day for me. I"m beginning to think they are a pretty self-reliant lot. If you can see your way to doing so, take them along. The trip will be a fine experience."
"All right, boys," said Mr. Temple. "But you"ll have to leave your airplane. If you are going to see San Francisco, you can"t do it very well by airplane. And, anyhow, I wouldn"t care to see you tackle the Rockies."
"All right, father," agreed Bob. "We"ll be too busy seeing the sights to want the plane, anyhow. When do we start?"
"In two days," said his father.
With this we take leave of the three chums, whose adventures on the Mexican border have come to so successful a conclusion. But in the next story of "The Radio Boys on Secret Service Duty" we shall follow their further adventures after they reach the city by the Golden Gate--adventures fully as thrilling as those on the Mexican border, in which they become drawn into the plots of an international gang of smugglers engaged in bringing Chinese coolies into the United States in defiance of the Exclusion Laws.
THE END.
[Ill.u.s.tration: book.]
The
Radio Boys Series
BY GERALD BRECKENRIDGE
A new series of copyright t.i.tles for boys of all ages.
Cloth Bound, with Attractive Cover Designs
THE RADIO BOYS ON THE MEXICAN BORDER
THE RADIO BOYS ON SECRET SERVICE DUTY
THE RADIO BOYS WITH THE REVENUE GUARDS
THE RADIO BOYS" SEARCH FOR THE INCA"S TREASURE
THE RADIO BOYS RESCUE THE LOST ALASKA EXPEDITION
[Ill.u.s.tration: book.]
The Ranger Boys Series
BY CLAUDE H. LA BELLE
A new series of copyright t.i.tles telling of the adventures of three boys with the Forest Rangers in the state of Maine.
Handsome Cloth Binding.