[Ranching for Sylvia by Harold Bindloss]@TWC D-Link book
Ranching for Sylvia

CHAPTER VII
1/18


A CATTLE DRIVE George was summer fallowing, sitting in the iron saddle of a plow which a heavy Clydesdale team hauled through the stubble.

The work should have been done earlier, for the soil on the Marston farm was very light, and, as it had already grown several crops of cereals, George was anxious to expose it to the influence of sun and wind as soon as possible.

It was about the middle of the afternoon and very hot.
Rounded cloud-masses overhung the plain, but dazzling sunshine fell on grass and stubble, and a haze of dust surrounded the team, while now and then the fine soil and sand, blown from the rest of the fallow by the fresh breeze, swept by in streams.

George wore motor-goggles to protect his eyes, but his face and hands felt scorched and sore.
Farther back, Edgar plodded behind a lighter team, making very poor progress.
Presently George looked up and saw Flora Grant riding toward him.

She sat astride, but her skirt fell in becoming lines, and he thought the gray blouse and wide Stetson hat, with a red band round it, most effective.


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