Patty Sinclair reined in her horse
at the top of a low divide and gazed helplessly around
her. The trail that had grown fainter and fainter
with its ascent of the creek bed disappeared entirely
at the slope of loose rock and bunch grass that slanted
steeply to the divide. In vain she scanned the
deeply gored valley that lay before her and the timbered
slopes of the mountains for sign of human habitation.
Her horse lowered his head and snipped at the bunch
grass. Stiffly the girl dismounted. She
had been in the saddle since early noon with only
two short intervals of rest when she had stopped to
drink and to bathe her fare in the deliciously cold
waters of mountain streams-and now the
trail had melted into the hills, and the broad shadows
of mountains were lengthening. Every muscle of
her body ached at the unaccustomed strain, and she
was very hungry. She envied her horse his enjoyment
of the bunch grass which he munched with much tongueing
of the bit and impatient shaking of the head.
With bridle reins gripped tightly she leaned wearily
against the saddle.
“I’m lost,” she
murmured. “Just plain lost.
Surely I must have come fifty miles, and I followed
their directions exactly, and now I’m tired,
and stiff, and sore, and hungry, and lost.”
A grim little smile tightened the corners of her mouth.
“But I’m glad I came. If Aunt Rebecca
could see me now! Wouldn’t she just gloat?
’I told you so, my dear, just as I often told
your poor father, to have nothing whatever to do with
that horrible country of wild Indians, and ferocious
beasts, and desperate characters.’” Hot
tears blurred her eyes at the thought of her father.
“This is the country he loved, with its mountains
and its woods and its deep mysterious valleys-and
I want to love it, too. And I will love
it! I’ll find his mine if it takes me all
the rest of my life. And I’ll show the people
back home that he was right, that he did know that
the gold was here, and that he wasn’t just a
visionary and a ne’er-do-well!”
A rattle of loose stones set her heart
thumping wildly and caused her to peer down the back
trail where a horseman was slowly ascending the slope.
The man sat loosely in his saddle with the easy grace
of the slack rein rider. A roll-brim Stetson
with its crown boxed into a peak was pushed slightly
back upon his head, and his legs were encased to the
thighs in battered leather chaps whose lacings were
studded with silver chonchas as large as trade
dollars. A coiled rope hung from a strap upon
the right side of his saddle, while a leather-covered
jug was swung upon the opposite side by a thong looped
over the horn. All this the girl took in at a
glance as the rangy buckskin picked his way easily
up the slope. She noted, also, the white butt-plates
of the revolver that protruded from its leather holster.
Her first impulse was to mount and fly, but the futility
of the attempt was apparent. If the man followed
she could hardly hope to elude him upon a horse that
was far from fresh, and even if she did it would be
only to plunge deeper into the hills-become
more hopelessly lost. Aunt Rebecca’s words
“desperate character” seemed suddenly to
assume significance. The man was very close now.
She could distinctly hear the breathing of his horse,
and the soft rattle of bit-chains. Despite her
defiant declaration that she was glad she had come,
she knew that deep down in her heart, she fervidly
wished herself elsewhere. “Maybe he’s
a ranchman,” she thought, “but why should
any honest man be threading unfrequented hill trails
armed with a revolver and a brown leather jug?”
No answer suggested itself, and summoning her haughtiest,
coldest look, she met the glance of the man who drew
rein beside her. His features were clean-cut,
bronzed, and lean-with the sinewy leanness
of health. His gray flannel shirt rolled open
at the throat, about which was loosely drawn a silk
scarf of robin’s-egg blue, held in place by
the tip of a buffalo horn polished to an onyx luster.
The hand holding the bridle reins rested carelessly
upon the horn of his saddle. With the other he
raised the Stetson from his head.
“Good evenin’, Miss,” he greeted,
pleasantly. “Lost?”
“No,” she lied brazenly,
“I came here on purpose-I-I
like it here.” She felt the lameness of
the lie and her cheeks flushed. But the man showed
no surprise at the statement, neither did he smile.
Instead, he raised his head and gravely inspected
the endless succession of mountains and valleys and
timbered ridges.
“It’s a right nice place,”
he agreed. To her surprise the girl could find
no hint of sarcasm in the words, nor was there anything
to indicate the “desperate character”
in the way he leaned forward to stroke his horse’s
mane, and remove a wisp of hair from beneath the headstall.
It was hard to maintain her air of cold reserve with
this soft-voiced, grave-eyed young stranger.
She wondered whether a “desperate character”
could love his horse, and felt a wild desire to tell
him of her plight. But as her eyes rested upon
the brown leather jug she frowned.
The man shifted himself in the saddle.
“Well, I must be goin’,” he said.
“Good evenin’.”
Patty bowed ever so slightly, as he
replaced the Stetson upon his head and touched his
horse lightly with a spur. “Come along,
you Buck, you!”
As the horse started down the steep
descent on the other side of the divide a feeling
of loneliness that was very akin to terror gripped
the girl. The sunlight showed only upon the higher
levels, and the prospect of spending the night alone
in the hills without food or shelter produced a sudden
chilling sensation in the pit of her stomach.
“Oh! Please -”
The buckskin turned in his tracks,
and once more the man was beside her upon the ridge.
“I am lost,” she
faltered. “Only, I hated to admit it.”
“Folks always do. I’ve
be’n lost a hundred times, an’ I never
would admit it.”
“I started for the Watts’s
ranch. Do you know where it is?”
“Yes, it’s over on Monte’s Creek.”
Patty smiled. “I could
have told you that. The trouble is, someone
seems to have removed all the signs.”
“They ought to put ’em
up again,” opined the stranger in the same grave
tone with which he had bid her good evening.
“They told me in town that I
was to take the left hand trail where it forked at
the first creek beyond the canyon.”
The man nodded. “Yes, that about fits the
case.”
“But I did take the trail that
turned to the left up the first creek beyond the canyon,
and I haven’t seen the slightest intimation of
a ranch.”
“No, you see, this little creek
don’t count, because most of the time it’s
dry; an’ this ain’t a regular trail.
It’s an’ old winter road that was used
to haul out cord wood an’ timber. Monte’s
Creek is two miles farther on. It’s a heap
bigger creek than this, an’ the trail’s
better, too. Watts’s is about three mile
up from the fork. You can’t miss it.
It’s the only ranch there.”
“How far is it back to the trail?”
asked the girl wearily.
“About two mile. It’s
about seven mile to Watts’s that way around.
There’s a short cut, through the hills, but I
couldn’t tell you so you’d find it.
There’s no trail, an’ it’s up one
coulee an’ down another till you get there.
I’m goin’ through that way; if you’d
like to come along you’re welcome to.”
For a moment Patty hesitated but her
eyes returned to the jug and she declined, a trifle
stiffly. “No, thank you. I-I
think I will go around by the trail.”
Either the man did not notice the
curtness of the reply, or he chose to ignore it, for
the next instant, noting the gasp of pain and the
sudden tightening of the lips that accompanied her
attempt to raise her foot to the stirrup, he swung
lightly to the ground, and before she divined what
he was about, had lifted her gently into the saddle
and pressed the reins into her hand. Without a
word he returned to his horse, and with face flushed
scarlet, the girl glared at the powerful gray shoulders
as he picked up his reins from the ground. The
next moment she headed her own horse down the back
trail and rode into the deepening shadows. Gaining
the main trail she urged her horse into a run.
“He-he’s awfully
strong,” she panted, “and just horrid!”
From the top of the divide the man
watched until she disappeared, then he stroked softly
the velvet nose that nuzzled against his cheek.
“What d’you reckon, Buck?
Are they goin’ to start a school for that litter
of young Wattses? There ain’t another kid
within twenty mile-must be.”
As he swung into the saddle the leather covered jug
bumped lightly against his knee. There was a merry
twinkle of laughter in his blue eyes as, with lips
solemn as an exhorter’s, he addressed the
offending object. “You brown rascal, you!
If it hadn’t be’n for you, me an’
Buck might of made a hit with the lady, mightn’t
we, Buck? Scratch gravel, now you old reprobate,
or we won’t get to camp till midnight.”
“Anyway, she ain’t no
kin to the Wattses,” he added reflectively, “not
an’ that clean, she ain’t.”