After the departure of Dene and his
comrades Naab decided to leave White Sage at nightfall.
Martin Cole and the Bishop’s sons tried to persuade
him to remain, urging that the trouble sure to come
could be more safely met in the village. Naab,
however, was obdurate, unreasonably so, Cole said,
unless there were some good reason why he wished to
strike the trail in the night. When twilight
closed in Naab had his teams ready and the women shut
in the canvas-covered wagons. Hare was to ride
in an open wagon, one that Naab had left at White
Sage to be loaded with grain. When it grew so
dark that objects were scarcely discernible a man
vaulted the cottage fence.
“Dave, where are the boys?” asked Naab.
“Not so loud! The boys
are coming,” replied Dave in a whisper.
“Dene is wild. I guess you snapped a bone
in his arm. He swears he’ll kill us all.
But Chance and the rest of the gang won’t be
in till late. We’ve time to reach the Coconina
Trail, if we hustle.”
“Any news of Snap?”
“He rode out before sundown.”
Three more forms emerged from the gloom.
“All right, boys. Go ahead, Dave, you lead.”
Dave and George Naab mounted their
mustangs and rode through the gate; the first wagon
rolled after them, its white dome gradually dissolving
in the darkness; the second one started; then August
Naab stepped to his seat on the third with a low cluck
to the team. Hare shut the gate and climbed over
the tail-board of the wagon.
A slight swish of weeds and grasses
brushing the wheels was all the sound made in the
cautious advance. A bare field lay to the left;
to the right low roofs and sharp chimneys showed among
the trees; here and there lights twinkled. No
one hailed; not a dog barked.
Presently the leaders turned into
a road where the iron hoofs and wheels cracked and
crunched the stones.
Hare thought he saw something in the
deep shade of a line of poplar-trees; he peered closer,
and made out a motionless horse and rider, just a
shade blacker than the deepest gloom. The next
instant they vanished, and the rapid clatter of hoofs
down the road told Hare his eyes had not deceived
him.
“Getup,” growled Naab
to his horses. “Jack, did you see that fellow?”
“Yes. What was he doing there?”
“Watching the road. He’s one of Dene’s
scouts.”
“Will Dene ”
One of Naab’s sons came trotting
back. “Think that was Larsen’s pal.
He was laying in wait for Snap.”
“I thought he was a scout for Dene,” replied
August.
“Maybe he’s that too.”
“Likely enough. Hurry along
and keep the gray team going lively. They’ve
had a week’s rest.”
Hare watched the glimmering lights
of the village vanish one by one, like Jack-o’-lanterns.
The horses kept a steady, even trot on into the huge
windy hall of the desert night. Fleecy clouds
veiled the stars, yet transmitted a wan glow.
A chill crept over Hare. As he crawled under
the blankets Naab had spread for him his hand came
into contact with a polished metal surface cold as
ice. It was his rifle. Naab had placed it
under the blankets. Fingering the rifle Hare found
the spring opening on the right side of the breech,
and, pressing it down, he felt the round head of a
cartridge. Naab had loaded the weapon, he had
placed it where Hare’s hand must find it, yet
he had not spoken of it. Hare did not stop to
reason with his first impulse. Without a word,
with silent insistence, disregarding his shattered
health, August Naab had given him a man’s part
to play. The full meaning lifted Hare out of his
self-abasement; once more he felt himself a man.
Hare soon yielded to the warmth of
the blankets; a drowsiness that he endeavored in vain
to throw off smothered his thoughts; sleep glued his
eyelids tight. They opened again some hours later.
For a moment he could not realize where he was; then
the whip of the cold wind across his face, the woolly
feel and smell of the blankets, and finally the steady
trot of horses and the clink of a chain swinging somewhere
under him, recalled the actuality of the night ride.
He wondered how many miles had been covered, how the
drivers knew the direction and kept the horses in
the trail, and whether the outlaws were in pursuit.
When Naab stopped the team and, climbing down, walked
back some rods to listen, Hare felt sure that Dene
was coming. He listened, too, but the movements
of the horses and the rattle of their harness were
all the sounds he could hear. Naab returned to
his seat; the team started, now no longer in a trot;
they were climbing. After that Hare fell into
a slumber in which he could hear the slow grating
whirr of wheels, and when it ceased he awoke to raise
himself and turn his ear to the back trail. By-and-by
he discovered that the black night had changed to
gray; dawn was not far distant; he dozed and awakened
to clear light. A rose-red horizon lay far below
and to the eastward; the intervening descent was like
a rolling sea with league-long swells.
“Glad you slept some,”
was Naab’s greeting. “No sign of Dene
yet. If we can get over the divide we’re
safe. That’s Coconina there, Fire Mountain
in Navajo meaning. It’s a plateau low and
narrow at this end, but it runs far to the east and
rises nine thousand feet. It forms a hundred
miles of the north rim of the Grand Canyon. We’re
across the Arizona line now.”
Hare followed the sweep of the ridge
that rose to the eastward, but to his inexperienced
eyes its appearance carried no sense of its noble
proportions.
“Don’t form any ideas
of distance and size yet a while,” said Naab,
reading Hare’s expression. “They’d
only have to be made over as soon as you learn what
light and air are in this country. It looks only
half a mile to the top of the divide; well, if we
make it by midday we’re lucky. There, see
a black spot over this way, far under the red wall?
Look sharp. Good! That’s Holderness’s
ranch. It’s thirty miles from here.
Nine Mile Valley heads in there. Once it belonged
to Martin Cole. Holderness stole it. And
he’s begun to range over the divide.”
The sun rose and warmed the chill
air. Hare began to notice the increased height
and abundance of the sagebrush, which was darker in
color. The first cedar-tree, stunted in growth,
dead at the top, was the half-way mark up the ascent,
so Naab said; it was also the forerunner of other
cedars which increased in number toward the summit.
At length Hare, tired of looking upward at the creeping
white wagons, closed his eyes. The wheels crunched
on the stones; the horses heaved and labored; Naab’s
“Getup” was the only spoken sound; the
sun beamed down warm, then hot; and the hours passed.
Some unusual noise roused Hare out of his lethargy.
The wagon was at a standstill. Naab stood on the
seat with outstretched arm. George and Dave were
close by their mustangs, and Snap Naab, mounted on
a cream-colored pinto, reined him under August’s
arm, and faced the valley below.
“Maybe you’ll make them
out,” said August. “I can’t,
and I’ve watched those dust-clouds for hours.
George can’t decide, either.”
Hare, looking at Snap, was attracted
by the eyes from which his father and brothers expected
so much. If ever a human being had the eyes of
a hawk Snap Naab had them. The little brown flecks
danced in clear pale yellow. Evidently Snap had
not located the perplexing dust-clouds, for his glance
drifted. Suddenly the remarkable vibration of
his pupils ceased, and his glance grew fixed, steely,
certain.
“That’s a bunch of wild mustangs,”
he said.
Hare gazed till his eyes hurt, but
could see neither clouds of dust nor moving objects.
No more was said. The sons wheeled their mustangs
and rode to the fore; August Naab reseated himself
and took up the reins; the ascent proceeded.
But it proceeded leisurely, with more
frequent rests. At the end of an hour the horses
toiled over the last rise to the summit and entered
a level forest of cedars; in another hour they were
descending gradually.
“Here we are at the tanks,” said Naab.
Hare saw that they had come up with
the other wagons. George Naab was leading a team
down a rocky declivity to a pool of yellow water.
The other boys were unharnessing and unsaddling.
“About three,” said Naab,
looking at the sun. “We’re in good
time. Jack, get out and stretch yourself.
We camp here. There’s the Coconina Trail
where the Navajos go in after deer.”
It was not a pretty spot, this little
rock-strewn glade where the white hard trail forked
with the road. The yellow water with its green
scum made Hare sick. The horses drank with loud
gulps. Naab and his sons drank of it. The
women filled a pail and portioned it out in basins
and washed their faces and hands with evident pleasure.
Dave Naab whistled as he wielded an axe vigorously
on a cedar. It came home to Hare that the tension
of the past night and morning had relaxed. Whether
to attribute that fact to the distance from White
Sage or to the arrival at the water-hole he could
not determine. But the certainty was shown in
August’s cheerful talk to the horses as he slipped
bags of grain over their noses, and in the subdued
laughter of the women. Hare sent up an unspoken
thanksgiving that these good Mormons had apparently
escaped from the dangers incurred for his sake.
He sat with his back to a cedar and watched the kindling
of fires, the deft manipulating of biscuit dough in
a basin, and the steaming of pots. The generous
meal was spread on a canvas cloth, around which men
and women sat cross-legged, after the fashion of Indians.
Hare found it hard to adapt his long legs to the posture,
and he wondered how these men, whose legs were longer
than his, could sit so easily. It was the crown
of a cheerful dinner after hours of anxiety and abstinence
to have Snap Naab speak civilly to him, and to see
him bow his head meekly as his father asked the blessing.
Snap ate as though he had utterly forgotten that he
had recently killed a man; to hear the others talk
to him one would suppose that they had forgotten it
also.
All had finished eating, except Snap
and Dave Naab, when one of the mustangs neighed shrilly.
Hare would not have noticed it but for looks exchanged
among the men. The glances were explained a few
minutes later when a pattering of hoofs came from
the cedar forest, and a stream of mounted Indians
poured into the glade.
The ugly glade became a place of color
and action. The Navajos rode wiry, wild-looking
mustangs and drove ponies and burros carrying packs,
most of which consisted of deer-hides. Each Indian
dismounted, and unstrapping the blanket which had
served as a saddle headed his mustang for the water-hole
and gave him a slap. Then the hides and packs
were slipped from the pack-train, and soon the pool
became a kicking, splashing melee. Every cedar-tree
circling the glade and every branch served as a peg
for deer meat. Some of it was in the haunch, the
bulk in dark dried strips. The Indians laid their
weapons aside. Every sagebush and low stone held
a blanket. A few of these blankets were of solid
color, most of them had bars of white and gray and
red, the last color predominating. The mustangs
and burros filed out among the cedars, nipping at
the sage and the scattered tufts of spare grass.
A group of fires, sending up curling columns of blue
smoke, and surrounded by a circle of lean, half-naked,
bronze-skinned Indians, cooking and eating, completed
a picture which afforded Hare the satisfying fulfilment
of boyish dreams. What a contrast to the memory
of a camp-site on the Connecticut shore, with boy
friends telling tales in the glow of the fire, and
the wash of the waves on the beach!
The sun sank low in the west, sending
gleams through the gnarled branches of the cedars,
and turning the green into gold. At precisely
the moment of sunset, the Mormon women broke into soft
song which had the element of prayer; and the lips
of the men moved in silent harmony. Dave Naab,
the only one who smoked, removed his pipe for the moment’s
grace to dying day.
This simple ceremony over, one of
the boys put wood on the fire, and Snap took a jews’-harp
out of his pocket and began to extract doleful discords
from it, for which George kicked at him in disgust,
finally causing him to leave the circle and repair
to the cedars, where he twanged with supreme egotism.
“Jack,” said August Naab,
“our friends the Navajo chiefs, Scarbreast and
Eschtah, are coming to visit us. Take no notice
of them at first. They’ve great dignity,
and if you entered their hogans they’d sit for
some moments before appearing to see you. Scarbreast
is a war-chief. Eschtah is the wise old chief
of all the Navajos on the Painted Desert. It
may interest you to know he is Mescal’s grandfather.
Some day I’ll tell you the story.”
Hare tried very hard to appear unconscious
when two tall Indians stalked into the circle of Mormons;
he set his eyes on the white heart of the camp-fire
and waited. For several minutes no one spoke or
even moved. The Indians remained standing for
a time; then seated themselves. Presently August
Naab greeted them in the Navajo language. This
was a signal for Hare to use his eyes and ears.
Another interval of silence followed before they began
to talk. Hare could see only their blanketed
shoulders and black heads.
“Jack, come round here,”
said Naab at length. “I’ve been telling
them about you. These Indians do not like the
whites, except my own family. I hope you’ll
make friends with them.”
“How do?” said the chief
whom Naab had called Eschtah, a stately, keen-eyed
warrior, despite his age.
The next Navajo greeted him with a
guttural word. This was a warrior whose name
might well have been Scarface, for the signs of conflict
were there. It was a face like a bronze mask,
cast in the one expression of untamed desert fierceness.
Hare bowed to each and felt himself
searched by burning eyes, which were doubtful, yet
not unfriendly.
“Shake,” finally said Eschtah, offering
his hand.
“Ugh!” exclaimed Scarbreast, extending
a bare silver-braceleted arm.
This sign of friendship pleased Naab.
He wished to enlist the sympathies of the Navajo chieftains
in the young man’s behalf. In his ensuing
speech, which was plentifully emphasized with gestures,
he lapsed often into English, saying “weak no
strong” when he placed his hand on Hare’s
legs, and “bad” when he touched the young
man’s chest, concluding with the words “sick sick.”
Scarbreast regarded Hare with great
earnestness, and when Naab had finished he said:
“Chineago ping!” and rubbed
his hand over his stomach.
“He says you need meat lots
of deer-meat,” translated Naab.
“Sick,” repeated Eschtah,
whose English was intelligible. He appeared to
be casting about in his mind for additional words to
express his knowledge of the white man’s tongue,
and, failing, continued in Navajo: “Tohodena moocha malocha.”
Hare was nonplussed at the roar of
laughter from the Mormons. August shook like
a mountain in an earthquake.
“Eschtah says, ‘you hurry, get many squaws many
wives.’”
Other Indians, russet-skinned warriors,
with black hair held close by bands round their foreheads,
joined the circle, and sitting before the fire clasped
their knees and talked. Hare listened awhile,
and then, being fatigued, he sought the cedar-tree
where he had left his blankets. The dry mat of
needles made an odorous bed. He placed a sack
of grain for a pillow, and doubling up one blanket
to lie upon, he pulled the others over him. Then
he watched and listened. The cedar-wood burned
with a clear flame, and occasionally snapped out a
red spark. The voices of the Navajos, scarcely
audible, sounded “toa’s” and “taa’s” syllables
he soon learned were characteristic and dominant in
low, deep murmurs. It reminded Hare of something
that before had been pleasant to his ear. Then
it came to mind: a remembrance of Mescal’s
sweet voice, and that recalled the kinship between
her and the Navajo chieftain. He looked about,
endeavoring to find her in the ring of light, for he
felt in her a fascination akin to the charm of this
twilight hour. Dusky forms passed to and fro
under the trees; the tinkle of bells on hobbled mustangs
rang from the forest; coyotes had begun their night
quest with wild howls; the camp-fire burned red, and
shadows flickered on the blanketed Indians; the wind
now moaned, now lulled in the cedars.
Hare lay back in his blankets and
saw lustrous stars through the network of branches.
With their light in his face and the cold wind waving
his hair on his brow he thought of the strangeness
of it all, of its remoteness from anything ever known
to him before, of its inexpressible wildness.
And a rush of emotion he failed wholly to stifle proved
to him that he could have loved this life if if
he had not of late come to believe that he had not
long to live. Still Naab’s influence exorcised
even that one sad thought; and he flung it from him
in resentment.
Sleep did not come so readily; he
was not very well this night; the flush of fever was
on his cheek, and the heat of feverish blood burned
his body. He raised himself and, resolutely seeking
for distraction, once more stared at the camp-fire.
Some time must have passed during his dreaming, for
only three persons were in sight. Naab’s
broad back was bowed and his head nodded. Across
the fire in its ruddy flicker sat Eschtah beside a
slight, dark figure. At second glance Hare recognized
Mescal. Surprise claimed him, not more for her
presence there than for the white band binding her
smooth black tresses. She had not worn such an
ornament before. That slender band lent her the
one touch which made her a Navajo. Was it worn
in respect to her aged grandfather? What did
this mean for a girl reared with Christian teaching?
Was it desert blood? Hare had no answers for
these questions. They only increased the mystery
and romance. He fell asleep with the picture in
his mind of Eschtah and Mescal, sitting in the glow
of the fire, and of August Naab, nodding silently.
“Jack, Jack, wake up.”
The words broke dully into his slumbers; wearily he
opened his eyes. August Naab bent over him, shaking
him gently.
“Not so well this morning, eh?
Here’s a cup of coffee. We’re all
packed and starting. Drink now, and climb aboard.
We expect to make Seeping Springs to-night.”
Hare rose presently and, laboring
into the wagon, lay down on the sacks. He had
one of his blind, sickening headaches. The familiar
lumbering of wheels began, and the clanking of the
wagon-chain. Despite jar and jolt he dozed at
times, awakening to the scrape of the wheel on the
leathern brake. After a while the rapid descent
of the wagon changed to a roll, without the irritating
rattle. He saw a narrow valley; on one side the
green, slow-swelling cedar slope of the mountain; on
the other the perpendicular red wall, with its pinnacles
like spears against the sky. All day this backward
outlook was the same, except that each time he opened
aching eyes the valley had lengthened, the red wall
and green slope had come closer together in the distance.
By and by there came a halt, the din of stamping horses
and sharp commands, the bustle and confusion of camp.
Naab spoke kindly to him, but he refused any food,
lay still and went to sleep.
Daylight brought him the relief of
a clear head and cooled blood. The camp had been
pitched close under the red wall. A lichen-covered
cliff, wet with dripping water, overhung a round pool.
A ditch led the water down the ridge to a pond.
Cattle stood up to their knees drinking; others lay
on the yellow clay, which was packed as hard as stone;
still others were climbing the ridge and passing down
on both sides.
“You look as if you enjoyed
that water,” remarked Naab, when Hare presented
himself at the fire. “Well, it’s good,
only a little salty. Seeping Springs this is,
and it’s mine. This ridge we call The Saddle;
you see it dips between wall and mountain and separates
two valleys. This valley we go through to-day
is where my cattle range. At the other end is
Silver Cup Spring, also mine. Keep your eyes open
now, my lad.”
How different was the beginning of
this day! The sky was as blue as the sea; the
valley snuggled deep in the embrace of wall and mountain.
Hare took a place on the seat beside Naab and faced
the descent. The line of Navajos, a graceful
straggling curve of color on the trail, led the way
for the white-domed wagons.
Naab pointed to a little calf lying
half hidden under a bunch of sage. “That’s
what I hate to see. There’s a calf, just
born; its mother has gone in for water. Wolves
and lions range this valley. We lose hundreds
of calves that way.”
As far as Hare could see red and white
and black cattle speckled the valley.
“If not overstocked, this range
is the best in Utah,” said Naab. “I
say Utah, but it’s really Arizona. The
Grand Canyon seems to us Mormons to mark the line.
There’s enough browse here to feed a hundred
thousand cattle. But water’s the thing.
In some seasons the springs go almost dry, though
Silver Cup holds her own well enough for my cattle.”
Hare marked the tufts of grass lying
far apart on the yellow earth; evidently there was
sustenance enough in every two feet of ground to support
only one tuft.
“What’s that?” he
asked, noting a rolling cloud of dust with black bobbing
borders.
“Wild mustangs,” replied
Naab. “There are perhaps five thousand on
the mountain, and they are getting to be a nuisance.
They’re almost as bad as sheep on the browse;
and I should tell you that if sheep pass over a range
once the cattle will starve. The mustangs are
getting too plentiful. There are also several
bands of wild horses.”
“What’s the difference between wild horses
and mustangs?”
“I haven’t figured that
out yet. Some say the Spaniards left horses in
here three hundred years ago. Wild? They
are wilder than any naturally wild animal that ever
ran on four legs. Wait till you get a look at
Silvermane or Whitefoot.”
“What are they?”
“Wild stallions. Silvermane
is an iron gray, with a silver mane, the most beautiful
horse I ever saw. Whitefoot’s an old black
shaggy demon, with one white foot. Both stallions
ought to be killed. They fight my horses and
lead off the mares. I had a chance to shoot Silvermane
on the way over this trip, but he looked so splendid
that I just laid down my rifle.”
“Can they run?” asked
Hare eagerly, with the eyes of a man who loved a horse.
“Run? Whew! Just you
wait till you see Silvermane cover ground! He
can look over his shoulder at you and beat any horse
in this country. The Navajos have given up catching
him as a bad job. Why here! Jack!
quick, get out your rifle coyotes!”
Naab pulled on the reins, and pointed
to one side. Hare discerned three grayish sharp-nosed
beasts sneaking off in the sage, and he reached back
for the rifle. Naab whistled, stopping the coyotes;
then Hare shot. The ball cut a wisp of dust above
and beyond them. They loped away into the sage.
“How that rifle spangs!”
exclaimed Naab. “It’s good to hear
it. Jack, you shot high. That’s the
trouble with men who have never shot at game.
They can’t hold low enough. Aim low, lower
than you want. Ha! There’s another this
side hold ahead of him and low, quick! too
high again.”
It was in this way that August and
Hare fell far behind the other wagons. The nearer
Naab got to his home the more genial he became.
When he was not answering Hare’s queries he
was giving information of his own accord, telling
about the cattle and the range, the mustangs, the
Navajos, and the desert. Naab liked to talk; he
had said he had not the gift of revelation, but he
certainly had the gift of tongues.
The sun was in the west when they
began to climb a ridge. A short ascent, and a
long turn to the right brought them under a bold spur
of the mountain which shut out the northwest.
Camp had been pitched in a grove of trees of a species
new to Hare. From under a bowlder gushed the
sparkling spring, a grateful sight and sound to desert
travellers. In a niche of the rock hung a silver
cup.
“Jack, no man knows how old
this cup is, or anything about it. We named the
spring after it Silver Cup. The strange
thing is that the cup has never been lost nor stolen.
But could any desert man, or outlaw, or
Indian, take it away, after drinking here?”
The cup was nicked and battered, bright
on the sides, moss-green on the bottom. When
Hare drank from it he understood.
That evening there was rude merriment
around the campfire. Snap Naab buzzed on his
jews’-harp and sang. He stirred some of
the younger braves to dancing, and they stamped and
swung their arms, singing, “hoya-heeya-howya,”
as they moved in and out of the firelight.
Several of the braves showed great
interest in Snap’s jews’-harp and repeatedly
asked him for it. Finally the Mormon grudgingly
lent it to a curious Indian, who in trying to play
it went through such awkward motions and made such
queer sounds that his companions set upon him and
fought for possession of the instrument. Then
Snap, becoming solicitous for its welfare, jumped
into the fray. They tussled for it amid the clamor
of a delighted circle. Snap, passing from jest
to earnest, grew so strenuous in his efforts to regain
the harp that he tossed the Navajos about like shuttle-cocks.
He got the harp and, concealing it, sought to break
away. But the braves laid hold upon him, threw
him to the ground, and calmly sat astride him while
they went through his pockets. August Naab roared
his merriment and Hare laughed till he cried.
The incident was as surprising to him as it was amusing.
These serious Mormons and silent Navajos were capable
of mirth.
Hare would have stayed up as late
as any of them, but August’s saying to him,
“Get to bed: to-morrow will be bad!”
sent him off to his blankets, where he was soon fast
asleep. Morning found him well, hungry, eager
to know what the day would bring.
“Wait,” said August, soberly.
They rode out of the gray pocket in
the ridge and began to climb. Hare had not noticed
the rise till they were started, and then, as the horses
climbed steadily he grew impatient at the monotonous
ascent. There was nothing to see; frequently
it seemed that they were soon to reach the summit,
but still it rose above them. Hare went back to
his comfortable place on the sacks.
“Now, Jack,” said August.
Hare gasped. He saw a red world.
His eyes seemed bathed in blood. Red scaly ground,
bare of vegetation, sloped down, down, far down to
a vast irregular rent in the earth, which zigzagged
through the plain beneath. To the right it bent
its crooked way under the brow of a black-timbered
plateau; to the left it straightened its angles to
find a V-shaped vent in the wall, now uplifted to
a mountain range. Beyond this earth-riven line
lay something vast and illimitable, a far-reaching
vision of white wastes, of purple plains, of low mesas
lost in distance. It was the shimmering dust-veiled
desert.
“Here we come to the real thing,”
explained Naab. “This is Windy Slope; that
black line is the Grand Canyon of Arizona; on the other
side is the Painted Desert where the Navajos live;
Coconina Mountain shows his flat head there to the
right, and the wall on our left rises to the Vermillion
Cliffs. Now, look while you can, for presently
you’ll not be able to see.”
“Why?”
“Wind, sand, dust, gravel, pebbles watch
out for your eyes!”
Naab had not ceased speaking when
Hare saw that the train of Indians trailing down the
slope was enveloped in red clouds. Then the white
wagons disappeared. Soon he was struck in the
back by a gust which justified Naab’s warning.
It swept by; the air grew clear again; once more he
could see. But presently a puff, taking him unawares,
filled his eyes with dust difficult of removal.
Whereupon he turned his back to the wind.
The afternoon grew apace; the sun
glistened on the white patches of Coconina Mountain;
it set; and the wind died.
“Five miles of red sand,”
said Naab. “Here’s what kills the
horses. Getup.”
There was no trail. All before
was red sand, hollows, slopes, levels, dunes, in which
the horses sank above their fetlocks. The wheels
ploughed deep, and little red streams trailed down
from the tires. Naab trudged on foot with the
reins in his hands. Hare essayed to walk also,
soon tired, and floundered behind till Naab ordered
him to ride again. Twilight came with the horses
still toiling.
“There! thankful I am when we
get off that strip! But, Jack, that trailless
waste prevents a night raid on my home. Even the
Navajos shun it after dark. We’ll be home
soon. There’s my sign. See? Night
or day we call it the Blue Star.”
High in the black cliff a star-shaped,
wind-worn hole let the blue sky through.
There was cheer in Naab’s “Getup,”
now, and the horses quickened with it. Their
iron-shod hoofs struck fire from the rosy road.
“Easy, easy soho!” cried Naab
to his steeds. In the pitchy blackness under the
shelving cliff they picked their way cautiously, and
turned a corner. Lights twinkled in Hare’s
sight, a fresh breeze, coming from water, dampened
his cheek, and a hollow rumble, a long roll as of distant
thunder, filled his ears.
“What’s that?” he asked.
“That, my lad, is what I always
love to hear. It means I’m home. It’s
the roar of the Colorado as she takes her first plunge
into the Canyon.”