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"Good evening, folks!" he said, taking off his hat and waving it toward the Curlytops and the others.
"h.e.l.lo, Jim!" was Uncle Frank's greeting. "Everything all right?"
"No, it isn't, I'm sorry to say," answered the foreman. "I've got bad news for you, Mr. Barton!"
CHAPTER VIII
A QUEER NOISE
The Curlytops looked at the ranch foreman as he said this. Uncle Frank looked at him, too. The foreman stood twirling his big hat around in his hand. Teddy looked at the big revolver--"gun" the cowboys called it--which dangled from Jim Mason's belt.
"Bad news, is it?" asked Uncle Frank. "I'm sorry to hear that. I hope none of the boys is sick. n.o.body been shot, has there, during the celebration?"
"Oh, no, the boys are all right," answered the foreman. "But it's bad news about some of your ponies--a lot of them you had out on gra.s.s over there," and he pointed to the west--just where Ted and Janet could not see.
"Bad news about the ponies?" repeated Uncle Frank. "Well, now, I'm sorry to hear that. Some of 'em sick?"
"Not as I know of," replied Jim. "But a lot of 'em have been taken away--stolen, I guess I'd better call it."
"A lot of my ponies stolen?" cried Uncle Frank, jumping up from his chair. "That is bad news! When did it happen? Why don't you get the cowboys together and chase after the men who took the ponies?"
"Well, I would have done that if I knew where to go," said the foreman.
"But I didn't hear until a little while ago, when one of the cowboys I sent to see if the ponies were all right came in. He got there to find 'em all gone, so I came right over to tell you."
"Well, we'll have to see about this!" exclaimed Uncle Frank. "Who's the cowboy you sent to see about the ponies?"
"Henry Jensen. He just got in a little while ago, after a hard ride."
"And who does he think took the horses?"
"He said it looked as if the Indians had done it!" and at these words from the foreman Ted and Janet looked at one another with widely opened eyes.
"Indians?" said Uncle Frank. "Why, I didn't think any of them had come off their reservation."
"Some of 'em must have," the foreman went on. "They didn't have any ponies of their own, I guess, so they took yours and rode off on 'em."
"Well, this is too bad!" said Uncle Frank in a low voice. "I guess we'll have to get our boys together and chase after these Indians," he went on. "Yes, that's what I'll do. I've got to get back my ponies."
"Oh, can't I come?" cried Teddy, not understanding all that was going on, but enough to know that his uncle was going somewhere with the cowboys, and Teddy wanted to go, too.
"Oh, I'm afraid you couldn't come--Curlytop," said the foreman, giving Teddy the name almost everyone called him at first sight, and this was the first time Jim Mason had seen Teddy.
"No, you little folks must stay at home," added Uncle Frank.
"Are you really going after Indians?" Teddy wanted to know.
"Yes, to find out if they took any of my ponies. You see," went on Uncle Frank, speaking to Daddy and Mother Martin as well as to the Curlytops, "the Indians are kept on what is called a 'reservation.' That is, the government gives them certain land for their own and they are told they must stay there, though once in a while some of them come off to sell blankets and bark-work at the railroad stations.
"And, sometimes, maybe once a year, a lot of the Indians get tired of staying on the reservation and some of them will get together and run off. Sometimes they ride away on their own horses, and again they may take some from the nearest ranch. I guess this time they took some of mine."
"And how will you catch them?" asked Mrs. Martin.
"Oh, we'll try to find out which way they went and then we'll follow after them until we catch them and get back the ponies."
"It's just like hide-and-go-seek, isn't it, Uncle Frank?" asked Janet.
"Yes, something like that. But it takes longer."
"I wish I could go to hunt the Indians!" murmured Teddy.
"Why, The-o-dore Mar-tin!" exclaimed his mother. "I'm _surprised_ at you!"
"Well, I would like to go," he said. "Could I go if I knew how to ride a pony, Uncle Frank?"
"Well, I don't know. I'm afraid you're too little. But, speaking of riding a pony, to-morrow I'll have one of the cowboys start in to teach you and Janet to ride. Now I guess I'll have to go see this Henry Jensen and ask him about the Indians and my stolen ponies."
"I hope he gets them back," said Teddy to his sister.
"So do I," she agreed. "And I hope those Indians don't come here."
"Pooh! they're tame Indians!" exclaimed Teddy.
"They must be kind of wild when they steal ponies," Janet said.
A little later the Curlytops and Trouble went to bed, for they had been up early that day. They fell asleep almost at once, even though their bed was not moving along in a railroad train, as it had been the last three or four nights.
"Did Uncle Frank find his ponies?" asked Teddy the next morning at the breakfast table.
"No, Curlytop," answered Aunt Millie. "He and some of the cowboys have gone over to the field where the ponies were kept to see if they can get any news of them."
"Can we learn to ride a pony to-day?" asked Janet.
"As soon as Uncle Frank comes back," answered her father. "You and Ted and Trouble play around the house now as much as you like. When Uncle Frank comes back he'll see about getting a pony for you to ride."
"Come on!" called Ted to his sister after breakfast. "We'll have some fun."
"I come, too!" called Trouble. "I wants a wide! I wish we had Nicknack."
"It would be fun if we had our goat here, wouldn't it?" asked Janet of her brother.
"Yes, but I'd rather have a pony. I'm going to be a cowboy, and you can't be a cowboy and ride a _goat_."
"No, I s'pose not," said Janet. "But a goat isn't so high up as a pony, Ted, and if you fall off a goat's back you don't hurt yourself so much."