“Jack! the saddle’s slipping!”
cried Mescal, clinging closer to him. “What
luck!” Hare muttered through clinched teeth,
and pulled hard on the bridle. But the mouth
of the stallion was iron; regardless of the sawing
bit, he galloped on. Hare called steadily:
“Whoa there, Silver! Whoa slow
now whoa easy!” and finally
halted him. Hare swung down, and as he lifted
Mescal off, the saddle slipped to the ground.
“Lucky not to get a spill!
The girth snapped. It was wet, and dried out.”
Hare hurriedly began to repair the break with buckskin
thongs that he found in a saddle-bag.
“Listen! Hear the yells! Oh! hurry!”
cried Mescal.
“I’ve never ridden bareback.
Suppose you go ahead with Silver, and I’ll hide
in the cedars till dark, then walk home!”
“No No. There’s time,
but hurry.”
“It’s got to be strong,”
muttered Hare, holding the strap over his knee and
pulling the laced knot with all his strength, “for
we’ll have to ride some. If it comes loose Good-bye!”
Silvermane’s broad chest muscles
rippled and he stamped restlessly. The dog whined
and looked back. Mescal had the blanket smooth
on the gray when Hare threw the saddle over him.
The yells had ceased, but clattering hoofs on the
stony trail were a greater menace. While Hare’s
brown hands worked swiftly over buckle and strap Mescal
climbed to a seat behind the saddle.
“Get into the saddle,”
said Hare, leaping astride and pressing forward over
the pommel. “Slip down there!
and hold to me. Go! Silver!”
The rapid pounding of the stallion’s
hoofs drowned the clatter coming up the trail.
A backward glance relieved Hare, for dust-clouds some
few hundred yards in the rear showed the position
of the pursuing horsemen. He held in Silvermane
to a steady gallop. The trail was up-hill, and
steep enough to wind even a desert racer, if put to
his limit.
“Look back!” cried Mescal.
“Can you see them? Is Snap with them?”
“I can’t see for trees,”
replied Hare, over his shoulder. “There’s
dust we’re far in the lead never
fear, Mescal. The lead’s all we want.”
Cedars grew thickly all the way up
the steeper part of the divide, and ended abruptly
at a pathway of stone, where the ascent became gradual.
When Silvermane struck out of the grove upon this slope
Hare kept turning keen glances rearward. The
dust cloud rolled to the edge of the cedars, and out
of it trooped half-a-dozen horsemen who began to shoot
as soon as they had reached the open. Bullets
zipped along the red stone, cutting little puffs of
red dust, and sung through the air.
“Good God!” cried Hare.
“They’re firing on us! They’d
shoot a woman!”
“Has it taken you so long to learn that?”
Hare slashed his steed with the switch.
But Silvermane needed no goad or spur; he had been
shot at before, and the whistle of one bullet was
sufficient to stretch his gallop into a run. Then
distance between him and his pursuers grew wider and
wider and soon he was out of range. The yells
of the rustlers seemed at first to come from baffled
rage, but Mescal’s startled cry shoveled their
meaning. Other horsemen appeared ahead and to
the right of him, tearing down the ridge to the divide.
Evidently they had been returning from the western
curve of Coconina.
The direction in which Silvermane
was stretching was the only possible one for Hare.
If he swerved off the trail to the left it would be
upon rough rising ground. Not only must he outride
this second band to the point where the trail went
down on the other side of the divide, but also he
must get beyond it before they came within rifle range.
“Now! Silver! Go!
Go!” Fast as the noble stallion was speeding
he answered to the call. He was in the open now,
free of stones and brush, with the spang of rifles
in the air. The wind rushed into Hare’s
ears, filling them with a hollow roar; the ground
blurred by in reddish sheets. The horsemen cut
down the half mile to a quarter, lessened that, swept
closer and closer, till Hare recognized Chance and
Culver, and Snap Naab on his cream-colored pinto.
Seeing that they could not head the invincible stallion
they sheered more to the right. But Silvermane
thundered on, crossing the line ahead of them a full
three hundred yards, and went over the divide, drawing
them in behind him.
Then, at the sharp crack of the rifles,
leaden messengers whizzed high in the air over horse
and riders, and skipped along the red shale in front
of the running dog.
“Oh Silvermane!”
cried Hare. It was just a call, as if the horse
were human, and knew what that pace meant to his master.
The stern business of the race had ceased to rest
on Hare. Silvermane was out to the front!
He was like a level-rushing thunderbolt. Hare
felt the instantaneous pause between his long low
leaps, the gather of mighty muscles, the strain, the
tension, then the quivering expulsion of force.
It was a perilous ride down that red slope, not so
much from the hissing bullets as from the washes and
gullies which Silvermane sailed over in magnificent
leaps. Hare thrilled with savage delight in the
wonderful prowess of his desert king, in the primal
instinct of joy at escaping with the woman he loved.
“Outrun!” he cried, with
blazing eyes. Mescal’s white face was pressed
close to his shoulder. “Silver has beaten
them. They’ll hang on till we reach the
sand-strip, hoping the slow-down will let them come
up in time. But they’ll be far too late.”
The rustlers continued on the trail,
firing desultorily, till Silvermane so far distanced
them that even the necessary lapse into a walk in the
red sand placed him beyond range when they arrived
at the strip.
“They’ve turned back,
Mescal. We’re safe. Why, you look as
you did the day the bear ran for you.”
“I’d rather a bear got
me than Snap. Jack, did you see him?”
“See him? Rather!
I’ll bet he nearly killed his pinto. Mescal,
what do you think of Silvermane now? Can he run?
Can he outrun Bolly?”
“Yes yes. Oh!
Jack! how I’ll love him! Look back again.
Are we safe? Will we ever be safe?”
It was still daylight when they rounded
the portal of the oasis and entered the lane with
the familiar wall on one side, the peeled fence-pickets
on the other. Wolf dashed on ahead, and presently
a chorus of barks announced that he had been met by
the other dogs. Silvermane neighed shrilly, and
the horses and mustangs in the corrals trooped noisily
to the lower sides and hung inquisitive heads over
the top bars.
A Navajo whom Hare remembered stared
with axe idle by the woodpile, then Judith Naab dropped
a bundle of sticks and with a cry of gladness ran
from the house. Before Silvermane had come to
a full stop Mescal was off. She put her arms
around his neck and kissed him, then she left Judith
to dart to the corral where a little black mustang
had begun to whistle and stamp and try to climb over
the bars.
August Naab, bareheaded, with shaggy
locks shaking at every step, strode off the porch
and his great hands lifted Hare from the saddle.
“Every day I’ve watched
the river for you,” he said. His eyes were
warm and his grasp like a vise.
“Mescal child!”
he continued, as she came running to him. “Safe
and well. He’s brought you back. Thank
the Lord!” He took her to his breast and bent
his gray head over her.
Then the crowd of big and little Naabs
burst from the house and came under the cottonwoods
to offer noisy welcome to Mescal and Hare.
“Jack, you look done up,”
said Dave Naab solicitously, when the first greetings
had been spoken, and Mother Ruth had led Mescal indoors.
“Silvermane, too he’s wet and
winded. He’s been running?”
“Yes, a little,” replied
Hare, as he removed the saddle from the weary horse.
“Ah! What’s this?”
questioned August Naab, with his hand on Silvermane’s
flank. He touched a raw groove, and the stallion
flinched. “Hare, a bullet made that!”
“Yes.”
“Then you didn’t ride in by the Navajo
crossing?”
“No. I came by Silver Cup.”
“Silver Cup? How on earth did you get down
there?”
“We climbed out of the canyon up over Coconina,
and so made the spring.”
Naab whistled in surprise and he flashed
another keen glance over Hare and his horse.
“Your story can wait. I know about what
it is after you reached Silver Cup.
Come in, come in, Dave will look out for the stallion.”
But Hare would allow no one else to
attend to Silvermane. He rubbed the tired gray,
gave him a drink at the trough, led him to the corral,
and took leave of him with a caress like Mescal’s.
Then he went to his room and bathed himself and changed
his clothes, afterward presenting himself at the supper-table
to eat like one famished. Mescal and he ate alone,
as they had been too late for the regular hour.
The women-folk waited upon them as if they could not
do enough. There were pleasant words and smiles;
but in spite of them something sombre attended the
meal. There was a shadow in each face, each step
was slow, each voice subdued. Naab and his sons
were waiting for Hare when he entered the sitting room,
and after his entrance the door was closed. They
were all quiet and stern, especially the father.
“Tell us all,” said Naab, simply.
While Hare was telling his adventures
not a word or a move interrupted him till he spoke
of Silvermane’s running Dene down.
“That’s the second time!”
rolled out Naab. “The stallion will kill
him yet!”
Hare finished his story.
“What don’t you owe to
that whirlwind of a horse!” exclaimed Dave Naab.
No other comment on Hare or Silvermane was offered
by the Naabs.
“You knew Holderness had taken
in Silver Cup?” inquired Hare.
August Naab nodded gloomily.
“I guess we knew it,”
replied Dave for him. “While I was in White
Sage and the boys were here at home, Holderness rode
to the spring and took possession. I called to
see him on my way back, but he wasn’t around.
Snap was there, the boss of a bunch of riders.
Dene, too, was there.”
“Did you go right into camp?” asked Hare.
“Sure. I was looking for
Holderness. There were eighteen or twenty riders
in the bunch. I talked to several of them, Mormons,
good fellows, they used to be. Also I had some
words with Dene. He said: ’I shore
was sorry Snap got to my spy first. I wanted
him bad, an’ I’m shore goin’ to
have his white horse.’ Snap and Dene, all
of them, thought you were number thirty-one in dad’s
cemetery.”
“Not yet,” said Hare.
“Dene certainly looked as if he saw a ghost when
Silvermane jumped for him. Well, he’s at
Silver Cup now. They’re all there.
What’s to be done about it? They’re
openly thieves. The new brand on all your stock
proves that.”
“Such a trick we never heard
of,” replied August Naab. “If we had
we might have spared ourselves the labor of branding
the stock.”
“But that new brand of Holderness’s
upon yours proves his guilt.”
“It’s not now a question
of proof. It’s one of possession. Holderness
has stolen my water and my stock.”
“They are worse than rustlers;
firing on Mescal and me proves that.”
“Why didn’t you unlimber
the long rifle?” interposed Dave, curiously.
“I got it full of water and
sand. That reminds me I must see about cleaning
it. I never thought of shooting back. Silvermane
was running too fast.”
“Jack, you can see I am in the
worst fix of my life,” said August Naab.
“My sons have persuaded me that I was pushed
off my ranges too easily. I’ve come to
believe Martin Cole; certainly his prophecy has come
true. Dave brought news from White Sage, and it’s
almost unbelievable. Holderness has proclaimed
himself or has actually got himself elected sheriff.
He holds office over the Mormons from whom he steals.
Scarcely a day goes by in the village without a killing.
The Mormons north of Lund finally banded together,
hanged some rustlers, and drove the others out.
Many of them have come down into our country, and Holderness
now has a strong force. But the Mormons will
rise against him. I know it; I see it. I
am waiting for it. We are God-fearing, life-loving
men, slow to wrath. But ”
The deep rolling burr in his voice
showed emotion too deep for words.
“They need a leader,” replied Hare, sharply.
August Naab rose with haggard face
and his eyes had the look of a man accused.
“Dad figures this way,”
put in Dave. “On the one hand we lose our
water and stock without bloodshed. We have a
living in the oasis. There’s little here
to attract rustlers, so we may live in peace if we
give up our rights. On the other hand, suppose
Dad gets the Navajos down here and we join them and
go after Holderness and his gang. There’s
going to be an all-fired bloody fight. Of course
we’d wipe out the rustlers, but some of us would
get killed and there are the wives and kids.
See!”
The force of August Naab’s argument
for peace, entirely aside from his Christian repugnance
to the shedding of blood, was plainly unassailable.
“Remember what Snap said?”
asked Hare, suddenly. “One man to kill Dene!
Therefore one man to kill Holderness! That would
break the power of this band.”
“Ah! you’ve said it,”
replied Dave, raising a tense arm. “It’s
a one-man job. D n Snap! He could
have done it, if he hadn’t gone to the bad.
But it won’t be easy. I tried to get Holderness.
He was wise, and his men politely said they had enjoyed
my call, but I wasn’t to come again.”
“One man to kill Holderness!” repeated
Hare.
August Naab cast at the speaker one
of his far-seeing glances; then he shook himself,
as if to throw off the grip of something hard and
inevitable. “I’m still master here,”
he said, and his voice showed the conquest of his
passions.
“I give up Silver Cup and my
stock. Maybe that will content Holderness.”
Some days went by pleasantly for Hare,
as he rested from his long exertions. Naab’s
former cheer and that of his family reasserted itself
once the decision was made, and the daily life went
on as usual. The sons worked in the fields by
day, and in the evening played at pitching horseshoes
on the bare circle where the children romped.
The women went on baking, sewing, and singing.
August Naab’s prayers were more fervent than
ever, and he even prayed for the soul of the man who
had robbed him. Mescal’s cheeks soon rounded
out to their old contour and her eyes shone with a
happier light than Hare had ever seen there. The
races between Silvermane and Black Bolly were renewed
on the long stretch under the wall, and Mescal forgot
that she had once acknowledged the superiority of
the gray. The cottonwoods showered silken floss
till the cabins and grass were white; the birds returned
to the oasis; the sun kissed warm color into the cherries,
and the distant noise of the river seemed like the
humming of a swarm of bees.
“Here, Jack,” said August
Naab, one morning, “get a spade and come with
me. There’s a break somewhere in the ditch.”
Hare went with him out along the fence
by the alfalfa fields, and round the corner of red
wall toward the irrigating dam.
“Well, Jack, I suppose you’ll
be asking me for Mescal one of these days,”
said Naab.
“Yes,” replied Hare.
“There’s a little story to tell you about
Mescal, when the day comes.”
“Tell it now.”
“No. Not yet. I’m
glad you found her. I never knew her to be so
happy, not even when she was a child. But somehow
there’s a better feeling between her and my
womenfolk. The old antagonism is gone. Well,
well, life is so. I pray that things may turn
out well for you and her. But I fear I
seem to see Hare, I’m a poor man once
more. I can’t do for you what I’d
like. Still we’ll see, we’ll hope.”
Hare was perfectly happy. The
old Mormon’s hint did not disturb him; even
the thought of Snap Naab did not return to trouble
his contentment. The full present was sufficient
for Hare, and his joy bubbled over, bringing smiles
to August’s grave face. Never had a summer
afternoon in the oasis been so fair. The green
fields, the red walls, the blue sky, all seemed drenched
in deeper, richer hues. The wind-song in the crags,
the river-murmur from the canyon, filled Hare’s
ears with music. To be alive, to feel the sun,
to see the colors, to hear the sounds, was beautiful;
and to know that Mescal awaited him, was enough.
Work on the washed-out bank of the
ditch had not gone far when Naab raised his head as
if listening.
“Did you hear anything?” he asked.
“No,” replied Hare.
“The roar of the river is heavy
here. Maybe I was mistaken. I thought I
heard shots.” Then he went on spading clay
into the break, but he stopped every moment or so,
uneasily, as if he could not get rid of some disturbing
thought. Suddenly he dropped the spade and his
eyes flashed.
“Judith! Judith! Here!”
he called. Wheeling with a sudden premonition
of evil Hare saw the girl running along the wall toward
them. Her face was white as death; she wrung
her hands and her cries rose above the sound of the
river. Naab sprang toward her and Hare ran at
his heels.
“Father! Father!”
she panted. “Come quick the
rustlers! the rustlers! Snap! Dene Oh hurry!
They’ve killed Dave they’ve
got Mescal!”
Death itself shuddered through Hare’s
veins and then a raging flood of fire. He bounded
forward to be flung back by Naab’s arm.
“Fool! Would you throw
away your life? Go slowly. We’ll slip
through the fields, under the trees.”
Sick and cold Hare hurried by Naab’s
side round the wall and into the alfalfa. There
were moments when he was weak and trembling; others
when he could have leaped like a tiger to rend and
kill.
They left the fields and went on more
cautiously into the grove. The screaming and
wailing of women added certainty to their doubt and
dread.
“I see only the women the
children no there’s a man Zeke,”
said Hare, bending low to gaze under the branches.
“Go slow,” muttered Naab.
“The rustlers rode off after Mescal she’s
gone!” panted Judith.
Hare, spurred by the possibilities
in the half-crazed girl’s speech, cast caution
to the winds and dashed forward into the glade.
Naab’s heavy steps thudded behind him.
In the corner of the porch scared
and stupefied children huddled in a heap. George
and Billy bent over Dave, who sat white-faced against
the steps. Blood oozed through the fingers pressed
to his breast. Zeke was trying to calm the women.
“My God! Dave!” cried
Hare. “You’re not hard hit? Don’t
say it!”
“Hard hit Jack old
fellow,” replied Dave, with a pale smile.
His face was white and clammy.
August Naab looked once at him and
groaned, “My son! My son!”
“Dad I got Chance
and Culver there they lie in the road not
bungled, either!”
Hare saw the inert forms of two men
lying near the gate; one rested on his face, arm outstretched
with a Colt gripped in the stiff hand; the other lay
on his back, his spurs deep in the ground, as if driven
there in his last convulsion.
August Naab and Zeke carried the injured
man into the house. The women and children followed,
and Hare, with Billy and George, entered last.
“Dad I’m shot
clean through low down,” said Dave,
as they laid him on a couch. “It’s
just as well I as any one somebody
had to start this fight.”
Naab got the children and the girls
out of the room. The women were silent now, except
Dave’s wife, who clung to him with low moans.
He smiled upon all with a quick intent smile, then
he held out a hand to Hare.
“Jack, we got to
be good friends. Don’t forget that when
you meet Holderness. He shot me from
behind Chance and Culver and after I fell I
killed them both trying to get him.
You won’t hang up your
gun again will you?”
Hare wrung the cold hand clasping
his so feebly. “No! Dave, no!”
Then he fled from the room. For an hour he stood
on the porch waiting in dumb misery. George and
Zeke came noiselessly out, followed by their father.
“It’s all over, Hare.”
Another tragedy had passed by this man of the desert,
and left his strength unshaken, but his deadly quiet
and the gloom of his iron face were more terrible
to see than any grief.
“Father, and you, Hare, come
out into the road,” said George.
Another motionless form lay beyond
Chance and Culver. It was that of a slight man,
flat on his back, his arms wide, his long black hair
in the dust. Under the white level brow the face
had been crushed into a bloody curve.
“Dene!” burst from Hare, in a whisper.
“Killed by a horse!” exclaimed August
Naab. “Ah! What horse?”
“Silvermane!” replied George.
“Who rode my horse tell me quick!”
cried Hare, in a frenzy.
“It was Mescal. Listen.
Let me tell you how it all happened. I was out
at the forge when I heard a bunch of horses coming
up the lane. I wasn’t packing my gun, but
I ran anyway. When I got to the house there was
Dave facing Snap, Dene, and a bunch of rustlers.
I saw Chance at first, but not Holderness. There
must have been twenty men.
“‘I came after Mescal, that’s what,’
Snap was saying.
“‘You can’t have her,’ Dave
answered.
“‘We’ll shore take her, an’
we want Silvermane, too,’ said Dene.
“‘So you’re a horse-thief as well
as a rustler?’ asked Dave.
“‘Naab, I ain’t
in any mind to fool. Snap wants the girl, an’
I want Silvermane, an’ that damned spy that
come back to life.’
“Then Holderness spoke from
the back of the crowd: ’Naab, you’d
better hurry, if you don’t want the house burned!’
“Dave drew and Holderness fired
from behind the men. Dave fell, raised up and
shot Chance and Culver, then dropped his gun.
“With that the women in the
house began to scream, and Mescal ran out saying she’d
go with Snap if they’d do no more harm.
“‘All right,’ said Snap, ‘get
a horse, hurry hurry!’
“Then Dene dismounted and went
toward the corral saying, ’I shore want Silvermane.’
“Mescal reached the gate ahead
of Dene. ’Let me get Silvermane. He’s
wild; he doesn’t know you; he’ll kick you
if you go near him.’ She dropped the bars
and went up to the horse. He was rearing and snorting.
She coaxed him down and then stepped up on the fence
to untie him. When she had him loose she leaped
off the fence to his back, screaming as she hit him
with the halter. Silvermane snorted and jumped,
and in three jumps he was going like a bullet.
Dene tried to stop him, and was knocked twenty feet.
He was raising up when the stallion ran over him.
He never moved again. Once in the lane Silvermane
got going Lord! how he did run! Mescal
hung low over his neck like an Indian. He was
gone in a cloud of dust before Snap and the rustlers
knew what had happened. Snap came to first and,
yelling and waving his gun, spurred down the lane.
The rest of the rustlers galloped after him.”
August Naab placed a sympathetic hand
on Hare’s shaking shoulder.
“You see, lad, things are never
so bad as they seem at first. Snap might as well
try to catch a bird as Silvermane.”