Silver Tip appears
The interval of silence which succeeded
to the discovery that they were surrounded by Moquis
was the most trying any of the party had ever known.
Resistance was useless, for each of the Indians carried
a rifle of modern make, and even had the boys been
armed, they could not have defended themselves.
“What do you want?” demanded
Rob at length, of an Indian who, judging by his ornate
feather headdress, seemed to be the chief of the party.
“White boys go to mountains?” demanded
the chief.
“Yes. We are going to the
Harkness ranch,” rejoined Rob, a trifle more
boldly, as there did not seem to be any active antagonism
in the chief’s tone.
“White boys got money?”
“It’s a hold up!” gasped Tubby.
“Say, hold your tongue for once, can’t
you?” snapped Merritt angrily.
“Yes, we have some money. Why?” inquired
Rob.
“We want um.”
It was a direct demand, and as the
boy hesitated, a grim look spread over the chief’s
face. Rob, like the others, carried most of his
money in a belt about his waist, but each lad had
a few bills in his wallet and some small change in
his pockets.
“Say, what is this Tag
Day?” demanded Tubby, as the chief, having solemnly
taken all Rob’s small change, drew up in front
of the stout youth and extended his dirty palm.
“All right,” said the
fat boy, hastily digging down into his pocket, as
the red man stared steadily at him. “Here’s
all I’ve got. Take it, Chief What-you-may-call-um,
and I hope whatever you get with it chokes you.”
Fortunately for Tubby, the chief did
not understand this, or it might have fared badly
with the irrepressible youth. Merritt’s
turn came next, and then Jose, with many lamentations,
surrendered a few small silver coins.
“All right. You go now,”
said the chief, as with a shrill, wild yell he dug
his naked heels into his pony’s sides, and the
little beast plunged up the steep bank. Echoing
his shrill cries, the other Indians joined him, and
the body of marauders swept off across the foothills
at a rapid pace.
“So that’s the noble red
man, is it?” demanded Tubby. “Hum!
back home we’d call them noble panhandlers.”
“What did they want the money
for?” asked Rob of the Mexican, who was still
wringing his hands over the loss of his pocket money.
“Moqui’s go snake dance.
Moocho red liquor,” explained the guide from
across the border.
“Oh, that’s it, is it?”
said Rob. As he spoke, his eyes fell suddenly
on a small piece of paper the Indian chief had dropped
when he rode up the steep side of the water hole.
He picked it up and opened its folds carefully.
It appeared to be a scrap torn from a notebook, and
the boy stared as his eyes fell on the name “Clark
Jennings, His Book.”
“Say, fellows, look here,”
he cried excitedly, as he perused some writing on
the other side. “That sneak I gave the razzle-dazzle
to yesterday is in this.”
“What, Clark Jennings?”
“The same. Listen!”
From the side of the paper which bore the writing
Rob read as follows:
“‘They will be near the water hole at
noon. All three have money.’”
“Well, what do you make of it?”
asked Tubby in a puzzled tone. “I don’t
see the connection, quite.”
“It’s plain enough.
I’ve heard that these Indians are placid enough
if they are not interfered with and given money.
That fellow Clark knew they were somewhere hereabouts you
remember he asked Harry about them yesterday.
He and Jess Randell left Mesaville early, so as to
meet them and bribe them to hold us up.”
“But can the Indians read English writing?”
asked Tubby.
“Yes. Most of the present
generation have been to government schools and are
comparatively well educated.”
“Hooray for education!”
shouted Tubby. “They sure are promising
scholars.”
There came a sudden shout from above.
“Hey, what’s the matter
with you fellows, anyhow? You’ve been gone
almost an hour.”
Harry Harkness stood at the edge of
the dip, looking down at the excited boys.
“An hour isn’t the only
thing that’s gone,” wailed Tubby; “all
our change has gone, too.”
When the laugh at Tubby’s whimsical
way of putting it had subsided, the situation was
explained to Harry, who agreed that there was nothing
to be done.
“We had better be pushing on
as fast as possible, though,” he said; “there’s
no knowing when those fellows may wake up to the fact
that we have more money about us and come back after
it.”
A hasty lunch was cooked and eaten,
and the mules watered with a bucket of water each.
This done, the team was once more hitched, and Jose,
who had in the meantime dropped off to sleep again,
awakened. But as the Mexican cracked his whip,
and his long-eared charges began to move, a sudden
surprise occurred. From a little dip ahead a horseman
suddenly appeared and hailed the boys.
He was a tall, bearded man in regulation
plainsman’s costume, and his sun-burned face
was shielded by a broad sombrero. On his face
was a look of determination and self-reliance.
As the boys looked at him they felt that here was
a man of action and character.
“Hullo, strangers,” he
said, checking the splendid horse he rode, as the
mules came to a stop. “Have you seen anything
of any Moquis hereabout?”
“Why, yes,” responded Rob; “they ”
“Saw us to the extent of all our small change,”
put in Tubby.
“Mine, too!” wailed the Mexican.
“Mucho malo Indiano.”
“What! you have been robbed by them?”
“Feels that way,” said Tubby, patting
his empty pockets.
“That’s too bad,”
said the man. “I am Jeffries Mayberry, the
Indian agent from the reservation. I am trying
to round those fellows up without making a lot of
trouble over it, and having the papers get hold of
the story and print exaggerated accounts of an uprising.
They are really harmless if they don’t get hold
of liquor.”
“Or money,” put in Tubby.
“Well, as far as we know, they swept off to
the southeast,” said Rob.
“Yes. They are going to
have their snake dance in the Santa Catapinas.
Every once in a while they break out and head for there.
All the renegade Indian rascals for miles round join
them, and besides the dance, which is a religious
ceremony, they drink and gamble. Well, I must
be getting on, and thank you for your information.”
With a wave of his hat, he dug his
big blunt-rowelled spurs into his horse’s sides
and was off in a cloud of dust.
“I’d like to help that
fellow get his Indians rounded up,” said Rob;
“he seems the right sort of a chap.”
“Yes, his name is well known
around here,” rejoined Harry, as the wagon moved
onward once more. “He is the best Indian
agent that the Moquis have ever had, my father says.
He knows them, and can handle them at all ordinary
times. He dislikes fuss, however, and hates to
see his name in the papers. Otherwise, I guess,
he’d have had the soldiers after those fellows.”
“I wish we had the Eagle Patrol
out here,” said Merritt. “We’d
soon get after that bunch of redskins.”
“Well, why not?” said Harry enigmatically.
“Why not what?”
“Why not form a patrol out here?
You know we talked about it in the East in the brief
time we had together.”
“Say, that’s a great idea,” assented
Rob.
“Who could we get to join, coyotes,
rattlers, and jack-rabbits?” asked Tubby solemnly.
“Say, Tubby, this is no joking matter,”
protested Merritt.
“I’m not joking.
Never more serious in my life. A coyote would
make a fine scout.”
“Yes, to run away,” laughed
Rob. “But seriously, Harry, could we get
enough fellows out here to form a patrol?”
“Sure; I know of a dozen who
would join. We could make it a mounted division,
and maybe we could help Mr. Mayberry round up his Moquis.”
“Say, fellows!” exclaimed
Rob, with shining face, “that would be splendid!”
“Maybe we’d get our money back then,”
grunted Tubby.
“Tell you what we’ll do,”
said Harry. “To-morrow I’ll take you
with me, Rob, and we’ll ride round all the ranches
where I know some boys, and get them to sign up.
We ought to have a patrol organized in a week at that
rate.”
“Put me in as a commissariat
officer, will you?” asked Tubby.
“That goes without saying,” laughed Rob.
As the wagon jolted on over the road,
which grew rapidly rougher and rougher, the boys eagerly
discussed their great plan.
The foothills were now passed, and
they were forging ahead through a deep canyon, or
gorge, well wooded on its rugged sides with dark trees
and shrubs. Here and there great patches of slablike
rock cropped through the soil and showed nakedly among
the vegetation. All at once Rob gave a shout
and pointed up the hillside at one of these “islands”
of rock.
“Look, look!” he shouted. “Something
moved up there.”
“Something moved,” echoed
the rest, Indians being the “something”
uppermost in every mind.
“Indians?” gasped Tubby.
“No; at least, I don’t
think so. It was some animal a huge
beast, it seemed to be.”
As he spoke there came a crashing
of brush far up on the hillside, and every one in
the party, even the sleepy Jose, gave vent to a perfect
yell of amazement. On one of the rock shelves
far above them was poised the massive form of an immense
bear. His huge body showed blackly against the
sunset-reddened shelf on which he stood. With
the exception of one spot of white on his great chest,
he was almost black.
“Silver Tip!” shouted
Harry Harkness, too excited even to remember his rifle,
which lay in the bottom of the wagon.
As he uttered the exclamation, the
great ragged brute gave a snort of apparent disdain
and clumsily lumbered off into the darker shadows.
The next instant he was gone.