"Yes, yes. Let's forget the young man. Look! How very curious!"

They were crossing a high bridge over a railroad track along which a

circus train was bending. Mr. Boltwood offered judicious remarks upon

the migratory habits of circuses, and the vision of the Galahad of the

Teal bug was thoroughly befogged by parental observations, till Claire

returned from youthful romance to being a sensible Boltwood, and decided

that after all, Milt was not a lord of the sky-painted mountains.

Before they bent south, at Livingston, Claire had her first mountain

driving, and once she had to ford a stream, putting the car at it,

watching the water curve up in a lovely silver veil. She felt that she

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was conquering the hills as she had the prairies.

She pulled up on a plateau to look at her battery. She noted the edge of

a brake-band peeping beyond the drum, in a ragged line of fabric and

copper wire. Then she knew that she didn't know enough to conquer. "Do

you suppose it's dangerous?" she asked her father, who said a lot of

comforting things that didn't mean anything.

She thought of Milt. She stopped a passing car. The driver "guessed"

that the brake-band was all gone, and that it would be dangerous to

continue with it along mountain roads. Claire dustily tramped two miles

to a ranch house, and telephoned to the nearest garage, in a town called

Saddle Back.

Whenever a motorist has delirium he mutters those lamentable words,

"Telephoned to the nearest garage."

She had to wait a tedious hour before she saw a flivver rattling up with

the garage man, who wasn't a man at all, but a fourteen-year-old boy. He

snorted, "Rats, you didn't need to send for me. Could have made it

perfectly safe. Come on."

Never has the greatest boy pianist received such awe as Claire gave to

this contemptuous young god, with grease on his peachy cheeks. She did

come on. But she rather hoped that she was in great danger. It was

humiliating to telephone to a garage for nothing. When she came into the

gas-smelling garage in Saddle Back she said appealingly to the man in

charge, a serious, lip-puffing person of forty-five, "Was it safe to

come in with the brake-band like that?"

"No. Pretty risky. Wa'n't it, Mike?"

The Mike to whom he turned for authority was the same fourteen-year-old

boy. He snapped, "Heh? That? Naw! Put in new band. Get busy. Bring me

the jack. Hustle up, uncle."

While the older man stood about and vainly tried to impress people who

came in and asked questions which invariably had to be referred to his

repair boy, the precocious expert stripped the wheel down to something

that looked to Claire distressingly like an empty milk-pan. Then the boy

didn't seem to know exactly what to do. He scratched his ear a good

deal, and thought deeply. The older man could only scratch.