“But the man’s almost dead.”
The words stung John Hare’s
fainting spirit into life. He opened his eyes.
The desert still stretched before him, the appalling
thing that had overpowered him with its deceiving
purple distance. Near by stood a sombre group
of men.
“Leave him here,” said
one, addressing a gray-bearded giant. “He’s
the fellow sent into southern Utah to spy out the
cattle thieves. He’s all but dead.
Dene’s outlaws are after him. Don’t
cross Dene.”
The stately answer might have come
from a Scottish Covenanter or a follower of Cromwell.
“Martin Cole, I will not go
a hair’s-breadth out of my way for Dene or any
other man. You forget your religion. I see
my duty to God.”
“Yes, August Naab, I know,”
replied the little man, bitterly. “You would
cast the Scriptures in my teeth, and liken this man
to one who went down from Jerusalem to Jericho and
fell among thieves. But I’ve suffered enough
at the hands of Dene.”
The formal speech, the Biblical references,
recalled to the reviving Hare that he was still in
the land of the Mormons. As he lay there the
strange words of the Mormons linked the hard experience
of the last few days with the stern reality of the
present.
“Martin Cole, I hold to the
spirit of our fathers,” replied Naab, like one
reading from the Old Testament. “They came
into this desert land to worship and multiply in peace.
They conquered the desert; they prospered with the
years that brought settlers, cattle-men, sheep-herders,
all hostile to their religion and their livelihood.
Nor did they ever fail to succor the sick and unfortunate.
What are our toils and perils compared to theirs?
Why should we forsake the path of duty, and turn from
mercy because of a cut-throat outlaw? I like not
the sign of the times, but I am a Mormon; I trust
in God.”
“August Naab, I am a Mormon
too,” returned Cole, “but my hands are
stained with blood. Soon yours will be if you
keep your water-holes and your cattle. Yes, I
know. You’re strong, stronger than any of
us, far off in your desert oasis, hemmed in by walls,
cut off by canyons, guarded by your Navajo friends.
But Holderness is creeping slowly on you. He’ll
ignore your water rights and drive your stock.
Soon Dene will steal cattle under your very eyes.
Don’t make them enemies.”
“I can’t pass by this
helpless man,” rolled out August Naab’s
sonorous voice.
Suddenly, with livid face and shaking
hand, Cole pointed westward. “There!
Dene and his band! See, under the red wall; see
the dust, not ten miles away. See them?”
The desert, gray in the foreground,
purple in the distance, sloped to the west. Eyes
keen as those of hawks searched the waste, and followed
the red mountain rampart, which, sheer in bold height
and processional in its craggy sweep, shut out the
north. Far away little puffs of dust rose above
the white sage, and creeping specks moved at a snail’s
pace.
“See them? Ah! then look,
August Naab, look in the heavens above for my prophecy,”
cried Cole, fanatically. “The red sunset the
sign of the times blood!”
A broad bar of dense black shut out
the April sky, except in the extreme west, where a
strip of pale blue formed background for several clouds
of striking color and shape. They alone, in all
that expanse, were dyed in the desert’s sunset
crimson. The largest projected from behind the
dark cloud-bank in the shape of a huge fist, and the
others, small and round, floated below. To Cole
it seemed a giant hand, clutching, with inexorable
strength, a bleeding heart. His terror spread
to his companions as they stared.
Then, as light surrendered to shade,
the sinister color faded; the tracing of the closed
hand softened; flush and glow paled, leaving the sky
purple, as if mirroring the desert floor. One
golden shaft shot up, to be blotted out by sudden
darkening change, and the sun had set.
“That may be God’s will,”
said August Naab. “So be it. Martin
Cole, take your men and go.”
There was a word, half oath, half
prayer, and then rattle of stirrups, the creak of
saddles, and clink of spurs, followed by the driving
rush of fiery horses. Cole and his men disappeared
in a pall of yellow dust.
A wan smile lightened John Hare’s
face as he spoke weakly: “I fear your generous
act can’t save me... may bring you
harm. I’d rather you left me seeing
you have women in your party.”
“Don’t try to talk yet,”
said August Naab. “You’re faint.
Here drink.” He stooped to Hare,
who was leaning against a sage-bush, and held a flask
to his lips. Rising, he called to his men:
“Make camp, sons. We’ve an hour before
the outlaws come up, and if they don’t go round
the sand-dune we’ll have longer.”
Hare’s flagging senses rallied,
and he forgot himself in wonder. While the bustle
went on, unhitching of wagon-teams, hobbling and feeding
of horses, unpacking of camp-supplies, Naab appeared
to be lost in deep meditation or prayer. Not
once did he glance backward over the trail on which
peril was fast approaching. His gaze was fastened
on a ridge to the east where desert line, fringed
by stunted cedars, met the pale-blue sky, and for
a long time he neither spoke nor stirred. At length
he turned to the camp-fire; he raked out red coals,
and placed the iron pots in position, by way of assistance
to the women who were preparing the evening meal.
A cool wind blew in from the desert,
rustling the sage, sifting the sand, fanning the dull
coals to burning opals. Twilight failed and night
fell; one by one great stars shone out, cold and bright.
From the zone of blackness surrounding the camp burst
the short bark, the hungry whine, the long-drawn-out
wail of desert wolves.
“Supper, sons,” called
Naab, as he replenished the fire with an armful of
grease-wood.
Naab’s sons had his stature,
though not his bulk. They were wiry, rangy men,
young, yet somehow old. The desert had multiplied
their years. Hare could not have told one face
from another, the bronze skin and steel eye and hard
line of each were so alike. The women, one middle-aged,
the others young, were of comely, serious aspect.
“Mescal,” called the Mormon.
A slender girl slipped from one of
the covered wagons; she was dark, supple, straight
as an Indian.
August Naab dropped to his knees,
and, as the members of his family bowed their heads,
he extended his hands over them and over the food
laid on the ground.
“Lord, we kneel in humble thanksgiving.
Bless this food to our use. Strengthen us, guide
us, keep us as Thou hast in the past. Bless this
stranger within our gates. Help us to help him.
Teach us Thy ways, O Lord Amen.”
Hare found himself flushing and thrilling,
found himself unable to control a painful binding
in his throat. In forty-eight hours he had learned
to hate the Mormons unutterably; here, in the presence
of this austere man, he felt that hatred wrenched
from his heart, and in its place stirred something
warm and living. He was glad, for if he had to
die, as he believed, either from the deed of evil men,
or from this last struggle of his wasted body, he
did not want to die in bitterness. That simple
prayer recalled the home he had long since left in
Connecticut, and the time when he used to tease his
sister and anger his father and hurt his mother while
grace was being said at the breakfast-table. Now
he was alone in the world, sick and dependent upon
the kindness of these strangers. But they were
really friends it was a wonderful thought.
“Mescal, wait on the stranger,”
said August Naab, and the girl knelt beside him, tendering
meat and drink. His nerveless fingers refused
to hold the cup, and she put it to his lips while he
drank. Hot coffee revived him; he ate and grew
stronger, and readily began to talk when the Mormon
asked for his story.
“There isn’t much to tell.
My name is Hare. I am twenty-four. My parents
are dead. I came West because the doctors said
I couldn’t live in the East. At first I
got better. But my money gave out and work became
a necessity. I tramped from place to place, ending
up ill in Salt Lake City. People were kind to
me there. Some one got me a job with a big cattle
company, and sent me to Marysvale, southward over the
bleak plains. It was cold; I was ill when I reached
Lund. Before I even knew what my duties were
for at Lund I was to begin work men called
me a spy. A fellow named Chance threatened me.
An innkeeper led me out the back way, gave me bread
and water, and said: ’Take this road to
Bane; it’s sixteen miles. If you make it
some one’ll give you a lift North.’
I walked all night, and all the next day. Then
I wandered on till I dropped here where you found
me.”
“You missed the road to Bane,”
said Naab. “This is the trail to White
Sage. It’s a trail of sand and stone that
leaves no tracks, a lucky thing for you. Dene
wasn’t in Lund while you were there else
you wouldn’t be here. He hasn’t seen
you, and he can’t be certain of your trail.
Maybe he rode to Bane, but still we may find a way ”
One of his sons whistled low, causing
Naab to rise slowly, to peer into the darkness, to
listen intently.
“Here, get up,” he said,
extending a hand to Hare. “Pretty shaky,
eh? Can you walk? Give me a hold there....
Mescal, come.” The slender girl obeyed,
gliding noiselessly like a shadow. “Take
his arm.” Between them they led Hare to
a jumble of stones on the outer edge of the circle
of light.
“It wouldn’t do to hide,”
continued Naab, lowering his voice to a swift whisper,
“that might be fatal. You’re in sight
from the camp-fire, but indistinct. By-and-by
the outlaws will get here, and if any of them prowl
around close, you and Mescal must pretend to be sweethearts.
Understand? They’ll pass by Mormon love-making
without a second look. Now, lad, courage...
Mescal, it may save his life.”
Naab returned to the fire, his shadow
looming in gigantic proportions on the white canopy
of a covered wagon. Fitful gusts of wind fretted
the blaze; it roared and crackled and sputtered, now
illuminating the still forms, then enveloping them
in fantastic obscurity. Hare shivered, perhaps
from the cold air, perhaps from growing dread.
Westward lay the desert, an impenetrable black void;
in front, the gloomy mountain wall lifted jagged peaks
close to the stars; to the right rose the ridge, the
rocks and stunted cedars of its summit standing in
weird relief. Suddenly Hare’s fugitive
glance descried a dark object; he watched intently
as it moved and rose from behind the summit of the
ridge to make a bold black figure silhouetted against
the cold clearness of sky. He saw it distinctly,
realized it was close, and breathed hard as the wind-swept
mane and tail, the lean, wild shape and single plume
resolved themselves into the unmistakable outline
of an Indian mustang and rider.
“Look!” he whispered to
the girl. “See, a mounted Indian, there
on the ridge there, he’s gone no,
I see him again. But that’s another.
Look! there are more.” He ceased in breathless
suspense and stared fearfully at a line of mounted
Indians moving in single file over the ridge to become
lost to view in the intervening blackness. A faint
rattling of gravel and the peculiar crack of unshod
hoof on stone gave reality to that shadowy train.
“Navajos,” said Mescal.
“Navajos!” he echoed.
“I heard of them at Lund; ‘desert hawks’
the men called them, worse than Piutes. Must
we not alarm the men? You aren’t
you afraid?
“No.”
“But they are hostile.”
“Not to him.” She
pointed at the stalwart figure standing against the
firelight.
“Ah! I remember. The
man Cole spoke of friendly Navajos. They must
be close by. What does it mean?”
“I’m not sure. I
think they are out there in the cedars, waiting.”
“Waiting! For what?”
“Perhaps for a signal.”
“Then they were expected?”
“I don’t know; I only
guess. We used to ride often to White Sage and
Lund; now we go seldom, and when we do there seem to
be Navajos near the camp at night, and riding the
ridges by day. I believe Father Naab knows.”
“Your father’s risking
much for me. He’s good. I wish I could
show my gratitude.”
“I call him Father Naab, but he is not my father.”
“A niece or granddaughter, then?”
“I’m no relation.
Father Naab raised me in his family. My mother
was a Navajo, my father a Spaniard.”
“Why!” exclaimed Hare.
“When you came out of the wagon I took you for
an Indian girl. But the moment you spoke you
talk so well no one would dream ”
“Mormons are well educated and
teach the children they raise,” she said, as
he paused in embarrassment.
He wanted to ask if she were a Mormon
by religion, but the question seemed curious and unnecessary.
His interest was aroused; he realized suddenly that
he had found pleasure in her low voice; it was new
and strange, unlike any woman’s voice he had
ever heard; and he regarded her closely. He had
only time for a glance at her straight, clean-cut
profile, when she turned startled eyes on him, eyes
black as the night. And they were eyes that looked
through and beyond him. She held up a hand, slowly
bent toward the wind, and whispered:
“Listen.”
Hare heard nothing save the barking
of coyotes and the breeze in the sage. He saw,
however, the men rise from round the camp-fire to face
the north, and the women climb into the wagon, and
close the canvas flaps. And he prepared himself,
with what fortitude he could command for the approach
of the outlaws. He waited, straining to catch
a sound. His heart throbbed audibly, like a muffled
drum, and for an endless moment his ears seemed deadened
to aught else. Then a stronger puff of wind whipped
in, banging the rhythmic beat of flying hoofs.
Suspense ended. Hare felt the easing of a weight
upon him. Whatever was to be his fate, it would
be soon decided. The sound grew into a clattering
roar. A black mass hurled itself over the border
of opaque circle, plunged into the light, and halted.
August Naab deliberately threw a bundle
of grease-wood upon the camp-fire. A blaze leaped
up, sending abroad a red flare. “Who comes?”
he called.
“Friends, Mormons, friends,” was the answer.
“Get down friends and
come to the fire.”
Three horsemen advanced to the foreground;
others, a troop of eight or ten, remained in the shadow,
a silent group.
Hare sank back against the stone.
He knew the foremost of those horsemen though he had
never seen him.
“Dene,” whispered Mescal,
and confirmed his instinctive fear.
Hare was nervously alive to the handsome
presence of the outlaw. Glimpses that he had
caught of “bad” men returned vividly as
he noted the clean-shaven face, the youthful, supple
body, the cool, careless mien. Dene’s eyes
glittered as he pulled off his gauntlets and beat the
sand out of them; and but for that quick fierce glance
his leisurely friendly manner would have disarmed
suspicion.
“Are you the Mormon Naab?” he queried.
“August Naab, I am.”
“Dry camp, eh? Hosses tired,
I reckon. Shore it’s a sandy trail.
Where’s the rest of you fellers?”
“Cole and his men were in a
hurry to make White Sage to-night. They were
travelling light; I’ve heavy wagons.”
“Naab, I reckon you shore wouldn’t tell
a lie?”
“I have never lied.”
“Heerd of a young feller thet
was in Lund pale chap lunger,
we’d call him back West?”
“I heard that he had been mistaken
for a spy at Lund and had fled toward Bane.”
“Hadn’t seen nothin’ of him this
side of Lund?”
“No.”
“Seen any Navvies?”
“Yes.”
The outlaw stared hard at him.
Apparently he was about to speak of the Navajos, for
his quick uplift of head at Naab’s blunt affirmative
suggested the impulse. But he checked himself
and slowly drew on his gloves.
“Naab, I’m shore comin’
to visit you some day. Never been over thet range.
Heerd you hed fine water, fine cattle. An’
say, I seen thet little Navajo girl you have, an’
I wouldn’t mind seein’ her again.”
August Naab kicked the fire into brighter
blaze. “Yes fine range,” he presently
replied, his gaze fixed on Dene. “Fine water,
fine cattle, fine browse. I’ve a fine graveyard,
too; thirty graves, and not one a woman’s.
Fine place for graves, the canyon country. You
don’t have to dig. There’s one grave
the Indians never named; it’s three thousand
feet deep.”
“Thet must be in hell,”
replied Dene, with a smile, ignoring the covert meaning.
He leisurely surveyed Naab’s four sons, the wagons
and horses, till his eye fell upon Hare and Mescal.
With that he swung in his saddle as if to dismount.
“I shore want a look around.”
“Get down, get down,”
returned the Mormon. The deep voice, unwelcoming,
vibrant with an odd ring, would have struck a less
suspicious man than Dene. The outlaw wrung his
leg back over the pommel, sagged in the saddle, and
appeared to be pondering the question. Plainly
he was uncertain of his ground. But his indecision
was brief.
“Two-Spot, you look ’em over,” he
ordered.
The third horseman dismounted and went toward the
wagons.
Hare, watching this scene, became
conscious that his fear had intensified with the recognition
of Two-Spot as Chance, the outlaw whom he would not
soon forget. In his excitement he moved against
Mescal and felt her trembling violently.
“Are you afraid?” he whispered.
“Yes, of Dene.”
The outlaw rummaged in one of the
wagons, pulled aside the canvas flaps of the other,
laughed harshly, and then with clinking spurs tramped
through the camp, kicking the beds, overturning a pile
of saddles, and making disorder generally, till he
spied the couple sitting on the stone in the shadow.
As the outlaw lurched that way, Hare,
with a start of recollection, took Mescal in his arms
and leaned his head against hers. He felt one
of her hands lightly brush his shoulder and rest there,
trembling.
Shuffling footsteps scraped the sand,
sounded nearer and nearer, slowed and paused.
“Sparkin’! Dead to the world.
Ham! Haw! Haw!”
The coarse laugh gave place to moving
footsteps. The rattling clink of stirrup and
spur mingled with the restless stamp of horse.
Chance had mounted. Dene’s voice drawled
out: “Good-bye, Naab, I shore will see
you all some day.” The heavy thuds of many
hoofs evened into a roar that diminished as it rushed
away.
In unutterable relief Hare realized
his deliverance. He tried to rise, but power
of movement had gone from him.
He was fainting, yet his sensations
were singularly acute. Mescal’s hand dropped
from his shoulder; her cheek, that had been cold against
his, grew hot; she quivered through all her slender
length. Confusion claimed his senses. Gratitude
and hope flooded his soul. Something sweet and
beautiful, the touch of this desert girl, rioted in
his blood; his heart swelled in exquisite agony.
Then he was whirling in darkness; and he knew no more.